It is greatly to be regretted that the spirit of
partisanship has entered so deeply into the study of Scottish history. It
might be expected that on a subject like literature it would be possible for
writers to leave behind the heated atmosphere of ecclesiastical controversy
and rise into the ampler air of cultured serenity. Instead, in the case of
literature as in the case of science, we find fierce antagonism toward the
Church for what is called its obstructive influence upon the purely human
side of Scotland's development. Echoing Buckle, disciples of the Humanist
cult are never weary of dilating upon the disastrous effects of the
Reformation upon the literary side of Scotland. They point to the brilliant
outburst of Scottish literary genius in the pre-Reformation period and
contrast it with the blight that followed the religious struggle. What is
the real explanation? Simply this, as has already been pointed out: the
literature of the golden age remained feudalistic when the nation was
preparing to enter the path which ultimately brought it within the sweep of
the great industrial epoch with the rise of the 'middle classes. The poetry
of the time had no vital connection with the new ideas which were in the end
to destroy both Feudalism and Romanism. It is a remarkable fact, which bears
out this line of thought, that the one man of letters of the pre-Reformation
period who lives in popular memory was Sir David Lyndsay. Why? Because he
busied himself not with fantastical allegories of a dying civilization, but
with the ideas and feelings which were ushering in the new time. The golden
age was ended not by the Reformation, but by its own inherent weakness. It
breathed the spirit of stagnation notwithstanding its close connection with
the Renaissance; it lived in a dying world, and had no vital relation to the
world which was being born. Another aspect of the question remains. Is it
true that the Reformation was inherently hostile to literature and the new
learning generally? That the Reformers were not likely to take kindly to
Humanism as it was represented in the semi-Paganism of Italian authors and
reflected in much of the objectionable poetry of Scottish writers is highly
probable. In their revolt from the doctrinal side of Romanism the Humanists
in too many cases revolted also from the ethical side; the result being a
kind of literature which, to put it mildly, did not make for righteousness.
The Humanists, in their rebound from the ethical strictness of the
supernatural theory of life, went to the other extreme, and revelled in a
laxity which speedily ended in open and unabashed immorality. Poetry was
used not to reveal the ideal, but to glorify the sensual. In their stern
battle against Rome, whose moral corruption was as palpable as its
theological and ecclesiastical errors, the Reformers were not likely to get
much help from a band of literary Pagans who were offering incense at the
altar of a degrading naturalism.
That the Reformers had no hostility to learning and
literature as such is plain from the great effort they made to foster the
intellectual spirit after the downfall of the Romish Church. In remodelling
the curriculum at the Universities they gave attention to the various
departments of the newest learning of their time. Science and literature
were favoured. In pressing their scheme upon the nobility the Reformers
said: "If God shall give your wisdoms grace to set forward letters in the
sort prescribed, ye shall leave wisdom and learning to your posterity— a
treasure more to be esteemed than any earthly treasure ye are able to amass
for them." In 1563 a petition was presented to the Queen and Lords of
articles requesting reform of the University, " in the name of all that
within this realm are desyrous that leirning and letters floreis." The
avarice of the nobility was stronger than their love of learning, and the
Reformers petitioned in vain.
So far from the Reformers being obstructionists in the
sphere of learning and letters, the truth is that the ideals of men like
Knox and particularly Melville were high enough and wide enough to include
all the intellectual elements of a well-ordered social state. Only ignorance
of the literary history of Scotland at the time of the Reformation can
explain the constant assertion that intolerance and fanaticism caused a
blight to fall upon the Scottish intellect. In strict truth it was only at
the Reformation that the mind of Scotland in science and literature received
its proper bent. It was only at the Reformation that Scotland became a
nation—one in religion, in belief, in sentiment, and in feeling. It was only
at the Reformation that Scotland rescued the individual from the tyranny of
the feudal despotism of the nobles as well as from the spiritual despotism
of the Pope. It was only at the Reformation that in the national mind were
sown the seeds of the great literary harvest which was to come to fruition
in the eighteenth century. That the harvest did not come sooner was not the
fault of the Reformers. That this is so is clear from the earnest efforts
made under Andrew Melville for the higher education of Scotland, and the
great enthusiasm which existed for classical learning as well as for
theology.
The influence of the Reformation in the development of
the literary spirit is admitted by no less an authority than the late
Professor Masson. In his chapter, "Literary History of Edinburgh" in his
Edinburgh Sketches and Memoirs, he says: "The first eighty years of the
sixteenth century may be regarded (the pre-Reformation authorship and the
first Reformation authorship taken together) as one definitely-marked stage,
and the earliest in the literary history of Edinburgh. It was an age of high
credit to Scottish literary history all in all."
And yet the fact remains that the literary impulse given
by the Reformation was not sustained. A period of intellectual stagnation
set in. That it was not due to what has been called the intolerance and
fanaticism of the Reformers has been abundantly shown. To what, then, was it
due? It was due to the fact that Scotland had other things to think about
than poetry and belles lettres. To her was allotted the task of
fighting for the fundamental basis of all mental activity, the right to
think for herself on religious and ecclesiastical questions. Without
independence in these matters no real enduring literature was possible; and
while the great battle so victoriously won by the Covenanters and embodied
in the Revolution Settlement was in process, the cultivation of literature
seemed as much out of place as Nero's fiddling performances while Rome was
burning. The cultivation of the Muses is fit only for a time of social
stability and leisure. The Reformers and Covenanters fought the great battle
of liberty, and it ill becomes those who have entered into their work to
traduce their memories and belittle their labours. The literary development
interrupted by the contest with Episcopacy made a fresh start when social
order was secured by the disappearance of the Stewarts from the scene.
Naturally repressed during the long period of
ecclesiastical and political turmoil, the literary side of Scotland made a
fresh start with the opening of the eighteenth century. Naturally, too, the
development took the form of a reaction from the ideals of the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. From the nature of the case those ideals were
somewhat narrow and exclusive. Protestantism, as represented by the
Covenanting section, drew much too sharp a line between sacred and secular.
They modelled the national life too closely upon the Hebrew Theocracy, and
treated as unworthy of the serious consideration of men the Hellenic side of
human nature —the side which finds expression in literature and art. In the
time of storm and stress literature could not thrive, but with some measure
of political and social stability and peace it was natural that the Scottish
mind should seek to break away from the narrow groove of ecclesiasticism.
In the form of literary activity which sprang up after
the Union we can distinctly trace the influence of the reaction. The
eighteenth-century temperament in Scotland, averse to the supernatural,
turned readily to the natural. The new movement drew its inspiration largely
from France, and showed itself in a fondness, in all forms of thought and
activity, for qualities and ideals in direct opposition to the Covenanting
regime. Instead of the Calvinism of the Reformation and Covenanting periods,
we have in the eighteenth century the Humanism of Continental thinkers,
particularly the French. In the theological literature of the one period man
is viewed a a helpless, depraved being, utterly unfit, apart from Divine
help, to rise in the scale of being; in the theological literature of the
Humanist period we have man represented as a self-regulating being, capable
of following the dictates of an enlightened self-interest. The theological
literature of the eighteenth century, as shown in the pages of Hutcheson and
Blair, finds its explanation in the fact that the preachers of the time had
moved away from the vivid supernaturalism of the early period. The Moderates
substituted the watchword Culture for the old Calvinistic watchword
Regeneration; and Culture became the watchword in all branches of Scottish
eighteenth-century literature. The thinkers of that century, wearied of the
strife of the previous century, yearned for a social state from which
theological disputes and ideas were banished, and instead there reigned
comfort, ease, good breeding and good-fellowship. Tired of the strenuous
life of the battle-field, they yearned for the calm of the study and the
drawing-room.
We find this feeling reflected in philosophy as well as
in theology. It dictated the efforts of Francis Hutcheson and Adam Smith to
dissociate moral philosophy from theology. It set them, in opposition to the
theologians, to seek in human nature, apart from supernatural stimulus, all
the necessary inspiration for a well-balanced and cultured humanity. The
Hutcheson school, in short, adopted the theory of life which had long been
dominant in England and France. In historical writing, too, we trace
influences which had their root in the Humanist movement of the eighteenth
century. Here supernaturalism is conspicuously absent. Robertson is quite
Voltairian in his methods, and Adam Ferguson quite plainly draws his
inspiration from Montesquieu. Hume is notoriously secular in his tone, and
Adam Smith's conception of society, as revealed in his Wealth of Nations,
leaves no room for the theory for which the Covenanters so strenuously
fought. In all this we are far removed from the Headship of Christ. The
Scottish thinkers did not, like their French brethren, break violently with
the current creed; they simply ignored it. They were Deists, not Atheists.
God was thought of as a monarch who reigned but did not govern. Man, endowed
with reason, was perfectly able to find his way about without supernatural
guidance.
When we come to poetry we also detect the influence of
the Humanist movement. Given a conception of man in which the elements of
mysticism and enthusiasm are absent, in which the admired qualities are
goodnature, politeness, dignity, and decorum, and the imaginative literature
will faithfully reflect the conception. Shakespeare, with his almost
Calvinistic dealings with the supernatural, his fierce energy, his portrayal
of the diabolic element in humanity, will be unpopular. In Voltairian
language, he will be treated as a barbarian. To the mild loungers of the
drawing-room poetry will be nothing if not decorous, measured, correct,
pleasing, not rousing, soothing, not stimulating. This is exactly what we
find in the poetry of the eighteenth century. Everything was done by rule.
Even when in Thomson's Seasons there is a distinct feeling for
Nature, we are very far from any higher conception of Nature than that of a
piece of wonderful mechanism, the contemplation of which gives pleasure. But
the imagination will not be satisfied with the bald literalness of mere
scientific description, so, to make it poetic, Nature had to be dotted over
with absurd shepherds and shepherdesses and all kinds of semi-mythological
extravagances.
Hitherto Scottish literature had been largely imitative.
French models were slavishly followed in history, essay-writing, and
literary criticism. Everything was sacrificed to correctness—so much that
Hume could not tolerate Shakespeare, whose great outbursts of energy and
feeling were disconcerting to the nerves of the frigid school. In the main,
the literary development of Scotland had been of the self-conscious and
hot-house type. A new phase is associated with Allan Ramsay. Somewhat of a
Pagan in his methods and ideals, Ramsay gave to the poetry of his time what
it sorely needed—naturalness and spontaneity. Moreover, he fought for a
natural poetry. He protested against the imitative school. Ramsay restored
feeling to its proper place in poetry. He broke down the artificial dykes
which had been constructed by the critics of the imitative classical school,
and allowed the emotions to play freely upon the ever-changing phenomena of
Nature and life. To be in the fashion, Ramsay, of course, had to be
anti-ecclesiastical, and in order to be that it was thought necessary also
to be anti-moral, with the result that in his poetry Naturalism at times
runs riot. Making allowance for the low standard of his age in these
matters, Allan Ramsay deserves high praise as perhaps the first Scottish
poet who broke down the notion that poetry was mainly a product of the
schools, and was intended only for the learned few. In Fergusson the humble
side of Scottish life found another representative. In his verses we have a
kind of prophetic anticipation of Burns. The Pagan element, which appears in
Ramsay's verses only, appeared in the life of Fergusson, and the result we
all know. The eighteenth-century reaction from the ideals of the seventeenth
century too often acted with disastrous effect in the sphere of personal
morality and happiness—a fact which finds dramatic illustration in the
career of Robert Burns.