With the suppression of the rising of the '45 the history
of Scotland, from a purely national point of view, may be said to come to an
end. The Rebellion was something more than an attempt to restore the Stewart
dynasty. It was the dramatic and final stage in the inevitable conflict
between two antagonistic ideals—the feudal and the industrial. At the Union
Scotland had entered into partnership with England in commerce and industry;
but sentiment dies hard, and many, while alive to the superiority of the new
days, gazed regretfully upon the days which were vanishing. At the Union
Scotland gained much, but it paid a heavy price in the loss of its
individuality, which meant the loss of the sharp dramatic contrasts and the
vivid heroisms which make the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
illustrious.
From a literary point of view the Union was not wholly
beneficial. In its backward state, intellectually, Scotland was compelled to
go for light and leading to France and England, and thus the leading spirits
of the nation were divorced from the aspirations and ideals of the common
people. Burns provoked a reaction which was sustained by Scott.
Carlyle contributed to the patriotic spirit by his sympathetic
interpretation of the religious side of the national life; though at the
same time, by introducing the German element, he helped to lead the Scottish
mind out of the parochial into the cosmopolitan arena.
After Burns, Scott and Carlyle we find a change coming
over Scottish literature. The national spirit grew less and less pronounced
under the influence of commerce, industry, and the gradual spread of the
English language and manners; and history clearly shows that with the decay
of nationalism literature also decays. Scott could have no successor ; he
exhausted the past and gave no guidance to the literary interpretation of
the future ; and Carlyle found an outlet for his genius in other than
Scottish spheres of thought and activity.
The result of the Union from a literary point of view was
that Scotland presented to her men of genius no self-centred,
self-developing national life which by appealing to their imagination could
result in a new form of truly national literature. Genius there was in
abundance, but it spent itself mainly in microscopic efforts, in detailed
pictures of Scottish life; not in focusing and giving literary expression to
the thoughts and ideals of a people bound together by unity of national
feeling and purpose, but in describing life as it was, or in sentimental
handling of bygone times.
In the great mass of Jacobite literature we have
enshrined in poetic forms of a high order the sentimental side of Scotland;
and in the domestic novel we find the national genius seeking the outlet
which was denied in the higher region of nationality. In the absence of a
real national life, creative genius of the highest order is impossible, and
thus we are prepared to find in the literature of Scotland from the
beginning of the eighteenth century onwards—with the exception of Carlyle's
writings—an absence of soul-stirring originality.
We have literature represented mainly by the talented but
not original writers who grouped themselves round the Edinburgh Review
and Blackwood's Magazine. We are all proud of Christopher North,
Jeffrey, Lockhart, and the others who held aloft the torch of literature in
the early years of the nineteenth century, but in reading their writings we
do not feel as if we were breathing the atmosphere of genius. Literature in
their hands was controversial, and had nothing in it distinctively Scottish.
With the decay of national feeling there was bound also to come a fall in
the Scottish mental temperature, which showed itself in the rise of a kind
of fictional literature far removed from the Romanticism of Scott. Thus we
have the rise of the domestic novel, which in the case of Miss Ferrier gave
scope for microscopic character-sketching and satirical treatment of common
life as mirrored in the middle classes. Then we have the realistic novel, as
represented by Galt, in which, as in the Annals of the Parish, we no
longer deal with human nature on the heroic side, but are introduced to the
grimly tragic side of prosaic existence.
In poetry the tone is the same. We find abundance of
talent and streaks of genius in the poets who come after Burns. We have
descriptive, sentimental, heroic, and other kinds of poetry; but it remains
unread, except by the diligent student. Who, for instance, now reads
Wilson's The Isle of Palms, or Aytoun's poems—with perhaps the
exception of the Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers—not to mention the
large army of authors who disported themselves in verse during the
nineteenth century?
With the appearance of Robert Louis Stevenson it seemed
as if Scottish literature was once more to strike the note of distinction.
About Stevenson's genius there can be no dispute; and had he lived in an
earlier time, when it was possible for him to be haunted by great ideals and
inspired by deep emotions, he would have taken a place not far below Scott.
A greater artist in the technical sense than Scott, he failed just where
Scott was strong. Scott flung himself upon life with a hearty objectivity.
Stevenson, no doubt largely owing to ill-health, and to the decay of
religious belief, was lacking in the mental healthiness which is necessary
in a genius of the first rank. Persistent introspection is fatal to success
as a novelist and Stevenson was chronically introspective His insight into
Scottish character was profound, his skill at portraiture undisputed, but
the reader longs to get away from the hothouse atmosphere of Stevenson to
the mountain breezes of Scott. Still, we must not forget to credit Stevenson
with a distinct vein of originality. He was a disciple of Scott the
Romanticist, though with Stevenson the spirit of romance was not, as with
Scott, epochal in its sweep and influence. Scott's romance was inspired by
the historic and the heroic, supplemented by a genius for character creation
which links his name with that of Shakespeare. Stevenson's romance was
inspired not by the historic spirit, but by the purely human spirit. In one
of his essays Stevenson defines the highest achievement of romance to be the
embodiment "of character, thought or emotion in some act or attitude that
shall be remarkably striking to the mind's eye." In this kind of romance
Stevenson excelled, and in order to work with effect, he calls into play the
weird, the terrible, the blood-curdling, the supernatural.
One result of dealing with out-of-the-way characters and
incidents is that in the reader's mind Stevenson is constantly identified
with his characters; the reader never loses a vivid sense of the author's
personality. This, while pleasing in a sense, is a sign of limitation, of a
self-consciousness which we do not find in the highest order of genius. With
longer life Stevenson would probably have worked clear of the affectations
which hampered his genius, but as it is his writings are a unique product in
the literature of his native land.
There are those who bluntly declare that Scottish fiction
has no future. In these days nationalism as applied to the things of the
mind is said to be losing its power. Cosmopolitan influences are gaining so
rapidly upon nationalism that the parochial field, with its strongly marked
individualities and quaint manners, is no longer available for the novelist.
We are just now suffering from a return of the ideas which were so popular
about the time of the French Revolution, when it was held as an accepted
dogma that all the differences among mankind were due to circumstances and
education. Give men equal education, social and political opportunities, and
the differences which distinguish mankind, and which we attribute to race
and nationality, would disappear. This revival of the equality dogma of the
French Revolution receives plausible sanction from science, which as a
civilizing influence is undoubtedly breaking down barriers of distance and
such-like obstacles to the fusion of races. On the other hand, science from
another point of view is a foe to the new idea of equality and the
transformation of humanity under the sway of educational, industrial and
political influences. If science has shown us the variability of all life
and its modifiability it also emphasizes the elements of heredity and
continuity by which the stability of species is secured. The school of the
French Revolutionists, which attributed almost everything to environmental
influences, has given place as a result of the doctrine of evolution to the
modern school, which holds that each people possesses a national
constitution as unaltering as its anatomical characteristics, which is the
source of its sentiments, thoughts, institutions, beliefs, and arts. From
this point of view it will be seen how superficial is the belief that
because Scotland and England were united politically two hundred years ago,
and have since been subjected to the same general influences, therefore the
two nations are so identical that there is no room for the development of
separate literatures. Is it conceivable that the intellectual and moral
characteristics of a people which have come to them from a long past age are
to be set aside by a mere change of legislative machinery ? Now and again
circumstances arise which seem to favour the equality idea. Under the spell
of imitation one nation or the leading section of a nation may, as in
Scotland at the time of the Moderates, endeavour to copy the literary ideas
and methods of other nations, but in the end race reasserts itself, and a
national literature is the result. Burns and Scott represent in Scottish
literature the re-assertion of the national spirit as opposed to the
cosmopolitan; and there is no reason why in our own day, even in the midst
of influences which make for the obliteration of national distinctions,
Scotland should not reassert once more her individuality in literature,
particularly in fiction.
Granted that Scottish fiction has a future, the question
arises: What particular form is it likely to take? Novel-writers have been
divided into two classes, Idealists and Realists. At best the division is a
rough one. There is nothing in the nature of things to prevent a writer
being at once an Idealist and a Realist. He may, like Scott, weave a world
of romance and at the same time give realistic pictures of life. Still the
distinction within limits is a real one. We call a writer a Realist who
confines himself to delineating character and manners as he finds them
existing around him. We call him an Idealist when his characters, or at
least his principal characters, embody a higher type of life; and we call
him a Romanticist when he transports his readers from the commonplace life
of to-day to the idealized world of the past. Now, as a rule, it will be
found that in fictional literature the law of action and reaction holds
sway. For instance, the novels of Scott were part of the reaction against
the ideal of the French Revolution. The thinkers of the Revolution held fast
by the doctrine of the equality of man, the iniquity of Government, and the
hideousness of the past, which to them was simply the result of superstition
and despotism. The past deserved to be blotted out ; the year of the
Revolution was the year One. Such a theory of life confined literature
within very narrow limits. It killed Romanticism by clipping the wings of
Imagination. Resting on a materialistic theory of life, it confined men's
thoughts and aspirations to the seen and tangible; it made no provision for
the higher aspirations of the soul. In fiction Scott was the most prominent
figure in the reaction. Scott did not neglect the present, but his method
did not permit him to deal with the collective life of the present.
Unrivalled in delineating the character of individuals, he did not essay a
picture of village life in the Scotland of his own time. That demanded a
more microscopic form of genius than Scott possessed. He himself somewhere
speaks of his "bow-wow " style.
In Galt we have represented the realistic side of
Scottish village life. In the Annals of the Parish we have a lifelike
picture of Scotland in the transition stage, the beginning of the new
industrial period. The rise of the new era, with its influence on the
sentiments, imagination, and feelings of the people, is given in a few
masterly strokes which, while clearly realistic, have none of the forbidding
realism of Zola. It is astonishing that Galt has had no real successor. He
created a new school, and everything seemed favourable to the new departure.
Instead of Scottish novelists utilizing the common people, they have shown a
preference for dealing with certain select classes of the community. Susan
Ferrier, for example, took for her sphere the higher middle-class element.
Sharply tinctured with the feudalism of the law and with marvellous power,
she put them under the microscope. Mrs. Oliphant, though different in spirit
and method, followed much the same plan. Coming nearer our own time we find
the ecclesiastical and religious side of life powerfully attracting our
novelists. George Macdonald was the novelist of the reaction against
Calvinism, and naturally his limitation of aim limited his influence. J. M.
Barrie and Ian Maclaren have left us remarkable portraits, antique specimens
of Scottish Dissenting life, but these are snapshots, not elaborately
finished pictures. The "Kailyard school," profiting by the interest which
Barrie created, wove their plots so completely round ecclesiastical subjects
that it seemed as if Scottish life was bounded on the one side by ordination
dinners, and on the other by church soirees. This school had not in it the
roots of permanence. It represented a temporary yearning in the public mind
for an ideal element in Scottish fiction. Weary of the realism of life, as
revealed in the newspaper press, the public readily snatch at anything which
leads the mind into the region of the poetic and the sentimental. Mr. J. M.
Barrie began idealizing certain phases of Scottish ecclesiastical and
religious life, and by his inimitable genius the popularity of the new
school was secured. But abiding popularity cannot possibly be predicted of
the "Kailyard school." In truth, the task they undertook was begun long
years before by a writer of greater genius—George Macdonald, whose
shoe-latchet the Kailyarders are not worthy to unloose. There is more hope
of the Celtic revival as evidenced by a writer like Neil Munro, whose
insight into the Highland character, and sympathy with the weird mysticism
of the Celt, give to his writings a depth and reality which his predecessor
William Black did not possess. A reaction against the sentimentalism of the
Kailyarders was soon to come, and it came with the publication of The
House with the Green Shutters, a book of terrific power, in which rural
life, character and manners are depicted with a fierce gloominess, a
persistent cynicism, and a sustained sordidness that remind the reader of
Zola. Not only was the novel very defective from the side of art, but in
addition the author neglected to use the opportunity which came to his hand.
Modern Scottish life in its commoner aspects has for some time been waiting
for adequate fictional treatment. In this respect we are far behind England,
where the various aspects of the national development, social, political and
industrial, have been worked into fiction. Dickens, as a reaction against
the romantic mood, utilized the humanitarian wave which passed over England
in the middle of the last century, while Charles Kingsley made capital out
of religious scepticism and the social and economic problems of the
Victorian period. How comes it that in these fields Scottish fiction has
been sterile? Never, surely, was there ampler material for a successful
Scottish novel on new lines. In the olden days, when the conditions of life
were stable, novelists like Miss Ferrier were limited in their scope of
treatment. The reader's interest centred on the development and play of
character, the plot being more or less a conventional affair. Under modern
conditions the field of the novelist is greatly increased. We are in the
midst of an industrial revolution, under which human conditions have lost
their stability and assume a seeming arbitrariness which frequently plunges
multitudes into poverty and despair. Economic changes at the other side of
the globe have greater effect on the happiness of humanity at home than the
most destructive of wars. Now more than at any period of history, in
consequence of the complexity and instability of commercial and industrial
conditions, the deepest feelings of human beings are in a constant state of
tragic turmoil. Men's desires have increased at a greater rate than the
power of satisfying them. The tragedy is all the greater when it is
considered that just when the material conditions of life are so unstable
the modern desire for material happiness has become more intense. In old
days, when religion was a power in Scotland, material prosperity in the form
of accumulated wealth did not wholly absorb the mind, and poverty did not
seem to be the one unutterable woe. With the decay of religious belief and
of church authority, [See the remarkable volume recently published,
Non-Churchgoing, edited by W. Forbes-Gray (Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier).]
society has no higher aim than worldly success, which takes the form of an
inordinate thirst for wealth and for the grosser pleasures which wealth can
buy. Increased leisure, so far as the people are concerned, is mainly
devoted to sordid pleasures; and thus we have a social state characterized
by great economic inequalities, and to masses of sordid poverty, giving
birth to Socialism, with its gospel of discontent. On the intellectual side
we have scepticism, with a lowering of ideals manifesting itself in the
lower orders in a painful, dreary social life; in the middle classes in
sheer Philistinism; and in the upper classes in worship at the shrine of
pleasure. Modern Scotland is unfavourable to the rise of literature of the
highest kind, whether of the Romantic or Idealistic type. We need a
literature which will not flatter our national vanity nor throw a halo round
our national materialism, but which will picture Scottish life as it really
is. The complexity of modern life, the feverish struggle for existence and
success, the thirst for pleasure, the disintegration of religious beliefs,
the smug respectability of the middle classes, the Socialistic aspirations
of the working classes, the awful contrast between riches and poverty—these
things, which characterize the Scotland of to-day, afford ample scope for a
Scottish novelist who has the courage not to pander to the sentimental side
of his countrymen, but resolutely to paint a true picture of the time.
Such a picture would reveal the extent to which Scotland
has fallen below the ideals of the great leaders of the past. The Reformers,
Moderates, and Covenanters differed seriously on fundamental questions, but
in one thing they were agreed—they sought, according to their lights, to
train their fellow-countrymen to face worthily the great problem of life. In
order to do that, it is essential that the pilgrim should be provided with a
chart by means of which he will have "a clear conception of the journey, and
so avoid the pitfalls which exist for the ignorant and the unwary. The
Reformers and Covenanters do not commend themselves to the modern apostles
of culture, but in their day and generation they did noble work for
Scotland, simply because they had a definite theory of life, which satisfied
their intelligence and inspired them to heroic deeds. The Moderates, too,
though looking askance at what they considered the fanaticism of the
"zealots," treated life as a solemn trust, and from their own standpoint, as
in the case of thinkers like Hutcheson, were able to construct for their
intellectual satisfaction a full-orbed system of philosophy. We have drifted
far from the creed of the Reformers and Covenanters, and science, with its
stern teachings, prevents us taking refuge in the optimistic Deism which
satisfied the Moderates. The modern mind in Scotland, as elsewhere, tends to
rest in Indifference, which is the congenial soil, not of heroism, but,
according to individual temperament, of sombre stoicism or riotous
epicureanism. One thing is plain—Scotland must sink into a materialistic
view of life unless it can get beyond this standpoint. Let it be understood
that life is an insoluble riddle, man's pilgrimage an aimless wandering
among fogs and quagmires, and the result will be materialism in creed and
conduct. Science left to itself tends to materialism, but under the magic
touch of religion and philosophy it is capable of subordinating material
resources to ideal ends. The intellectual task before the Scotland of to-day
is the construction of a creed in which the materialism which science brings
with it will unite with the idealism of religion, philosophy and literature
in so raising the tone of the national life that, in the firmament of
history, the Scotland of the future will shine with as great a lustre as the
Scotland of the past.