WE live in times of rapid
transition. A spirit of cosmopolitanism is abroad, which, not without
its benefits, is not without its evils. Science has furnished it with
wings. It finds them in electricity and steam. Among its bad effects is
the effacement of national distinctions by the imposition of a
uniformity of ideas, taste, and character in the denationalised unit of
society. Burns prayed for the time when man to man the world o’er would
brither be an’ a' that. But he did not pray for the abolition of the
Scottish language and the destruction of the national sentiment.
Universal uniformity of character—if the expression be not absurd,—and
let us therefore rather say universal monotony of manners, is not the
consummation of brotherhood so devoutly wished. What the poet in his
capacity of prophet prayed for and foresaw was sentient and not
automatic life; it was the creation of a living, loving, many-sided and
free community of nations, and not the manufacture of wooden images cut
to a selected pattern.
There is much in national
life that is worthy of preservation, and the preservation of which is
not inimical but healthily helpful to the formation of a bond of
brotherhood the wide world over. It is a great mistake, if it is not
sheer madness, for a nation to discountenance and finally cut off as
objects which cannot be contemplated without a feeling of shame, all its
idiosyncracies, peculiarities, and distinctive growths in order to make
way for the introduction of foreign fashions and alien novelties, the
cherished, and, it may be, the deservedly and properly cherished
products of a neighbouring people, but no more adapted to the
inhabitants of the country among whom they are introduced than the palm
is adapted to the soil, and climate, and scenery in which the pine
bourgeons and grows. It is not a change in hereditary institutions,
unless they stand self-condemned, that is desiderated in this reforming,
or rather uniforming nineteenth century ; but a change in their front
and attitude, where they have become jealously exclusive, or
ungenerously hostile and aggressive. Here* in this ancient kingdom of
Scotland, now an honourable and vital part of the great British Empire,
we run much risk, from the very liberalism of our sentiments, of losing,
if not our national character, at least the more visible signs of it in
the necessary intimacy of our union with powerful and populous England.
The disappearance of those characteristic signs, in so far as they are
the exponents of what is noble, beautiful, and true in the national
history and life, is much to be lamented; for they serve as monuments
and memorials to each successive generation, the educative value of
which lies partly in the closeness and vigour of their appeal, and
partly in their maintenance of what the French have happily termed
prestige. Remove these, or suffer them by neglect to decay* and
Scotland, though unconquered by the sword, becomes a species of English
province, which has no native national past, and whose share in the
glorious ancestral possessions of England dates no farther back than the
time of the Union. The roots of the national life are mutilated, if not
absolutely cut away, at that point.
One of the most
characteristic signs of Scottish national life is to be found in the
literature and literary history of the country. Her Kirk and her
literature have been Scotland’s most distinctive monitors—are her most
distinctive memorials. Of her Kirk nothing need be said here except
that, with not more desert, it has had better fortune than her
literature. The condition of Scottish literature at the present time is
simply deplorable. It is not alone that the language, but that the
knowledge of it, is dying out, and the literature expressed in it is
becoming a sealed book except to the initiated. It exists as a living
speech in much of its traditionary purity and perfection on our isolated
uplands and in rural nooks and pastoral wildernesses, remote from the
great thoroughfares and centres of life and enlightenment. But lift and
transport to the flags of Princes Street a cock-laird who has grown
ancient among the Ochils, and his attire and demeanour will be less
outlandish than his speech will prove, in the strictest sense, uncouth
to well-nigh every man he accosts in a vain endeavour to ‘speer’ his way
out of the town. To young men under thirty his tongue will sound like a
hitherto unclassified estray from Babel. They will laugh at a language
in which their grandfathers expressed their wants and wishes, and which
their fathers may know but no longer use. It is not forgotten that many,
belonging chiefly to the humbler classes in our large towns, use what is
commonly regarded as the vernacular speech; but much of it, and the
quantity is increasing, is English, both in word and idiom, pronounced
with a semi-Anglified and wholly hybrid accent It is unavoidable, and,
some1 may think, hardly to be lamented, that
the old language of the Scottish lowlands should die away from the lips
of men; but it is a real misfortune that the knowledge of it should
decay. It enshrines a literature, especially in the department of
poetry, of which no nation need be ashamed—of which, one who knows it
may venture to say, any nation may be proud. Mr Matthew Arnold,
referring lately with little sympathy to Scottish literature, and
claiming it as a contribution to the vast storehouse of English
literature, declared, as well he might, that it is a far more serious
and important contribution than that of America. A Scottish critic, who
has felt its influence in himself, and seen it upon the national life,
would speak of it with more knowledge, more praise, and more enthusiasm,
as the names of Wilson, Hogg, Scott, Burns, Fergusson, and Ramsay, among
the modern, and Dunbar, Lyndsay, Douglas, and Barbour, among the ancient
‘makkars' crossed his memory, like the brightest links in a chain of
brightness, to which, it would not be forgotten the anonymous authors of
our lovely legendary ballads added a precious and peculiar lustre. It is
bad enough that as a people we have ceased to remember our patristic
poets, and that we are ignorant of the fact that there was an earlier
Burns, of no less vigour and versatility than the later, in William
Dunbar; but even the later Burns is becoming ancient, and his genius,
like the light enclosed in a lantern—to borrow Cowper’s metaphor—is but
dimly appreciated by our modern city youth. His very songs, partly from
a supposed coarseness in their sentiments, partly from their
unintelligibility, and partly from a wretched taste that drops as vulgar
whatever is popular or rustic, are seldom or never heard in what is
known as fashionable quarters ; and it would seem that they require the
patronage and exposition of a well-known ex-professor to make them
fairly popular among the gentility of the provinces. It is a state of
matters unjust to the memory of our native authors, disgraceful to our
patriotism, and detrimental in many ways to our national interests.
The question arises: What
should be done to arrest the decay of interest in our national
literature, and to maintain and revive in that respect one of the
fading, because neglected, influences which have a beneficial effect
upon our national life? Costly reproductions of our earlier, and cheap
reprints of our later, literature are not enough. Our Universities
should take up the question, and should answer it by founding a Chair or
at least establishing a few lectureships for Scottish literature. We
have a Chair for the preservation and elucidation of the Celtic language
and literature. Scottish literature, it is safe to say, is a more
interesting, more important, and more national subject; and the want of
a recognised and accessible authority for its interpretation is becoming
more and more clamant. At present it is merely left to shift for itself.
The professors of English literature are overburdened with their subject
proper, and have not the time, if they had in every case the
inclination, to attend to Scottish literature. Some of them have other
subjects—such as rhetoric in the case of Edinburgh University—associated
with the main duties of their office. It is not only the study of the
literature of Scotland proper, but the means of estimating distinctly
Scottish influence on English literature and in English literature, and
of safeguarding the language now in extreme danger at the hands of
impertinent writers ignorant of Scottish idiom as well as Scottish
diction, which need to be provided for. It seems a strange thing that no
provision yet exists at any of our four Universities for an object so
worthy, so necessary, and so national. Perhaps we wait till Germany
shall have shamed us into showing our piety. When a Chair has been
founded at Berlin for the exposition of Scottish literature, we may then
expect to hear some talk of establishing another in Edinburgh. |