THE
next change in manners which has been
effected, in the memory of many now living, regards the habits of
conviviality, or, to speak more plainly, regards the banishment of
drunkenness from polite society. It is indeed a most important and
blessed change. But it is a change the full extent of which many persons
now alive can hardly estimate. Indeed, it is scarcely possible to
realise the scenes which took place seventy or eighty years back, or
even less.. In many houses, when a party dined, the ladies going away
was the signal for the commencement of a system of compulsory
conviviality. No one was allowed to shirk—no daylight, no heeltaps— was
the wretched jargon in which were expressed the propriety and the duty
of seeing that the glass, when filled, must be emptied and drained. We
have heard of glasses having the bottoms knocked off, so that no
shuffling tricks might be played with them, and that they could only be
put down—empty.
One cannot help looking
back with amazement at the infatuation which could for a moment tolerate
such a sore evil. To a man of sober inclinations it must have been an
intolerable nuisance to join a dinner-party at many houses, where he
knew he should have to witness the most disgusting excesses in others,
and to fight hard to preserve himself from a compliance with the example
of those around him.
The scenes of excess
which occurred in the houses where deep drinking was practised must have
been most revolting to sober persons who were unaccustomed to such
conviviality; as in the case of a drinking Angus laird, entertaining as
his guest a London merchant of formal manners and temperate habits. The
poor man was driven from the table when the drinking set in hard, and
stole away to take refuge in his bedroom. The company, however, were
determined not to let the worthy citizen off so easily, but proceeded in
a body, with the laird at their head, and invaded his privacy by
exhibiting bottles and glasses at his bedside. Losing all patience, the
wretched victim gasped out his indignation: "Sir, your hospitality
borders upon brutality." It must have had a fatal influence also on many
persons to whom drinking was most injurious, and who were yet not
strong-minded enough to resist the temptations to excess. Poor James
Boswell, who certainly required no
extraordinary
urging to take a glass too much, is found in
his letters, which have recently come to light, laying the blame of his
excesses to "falling into a habit which still prevails in Scotland"; and
then he remarks, with censorious emphasis, on the "drunken manners of
his countrymen." This was about 1770.
A friend of mine,
however, lately departed—Mr Boswell of Balmuto—showed more spirit than
the Londoner, when he found himself in a similar situation. Challenged
by the host to drink, urged and almost forced to swallow a quantity of
wine against his own inclination, he proposed a counter-challenge in the
way of eating, and made the following ludicrous and original proposal to
the company—that two or three legs of mutton should be prepared, and he
would then contest the point of who could devour most meat; and
certainly it seems as reasonable to compel people to eat, as to
compel them to drink, beyond the natural cravings of nature.
The situation of
ladies, too, must frequently have been very disagreeable when, for
instance, gentlemen came upstairs in a condition most unfit for female
society. Indeed they were often compelled to fly from scenes which were
most unfitting for them to witness. They were expected to get out of the
way at the proper time, or when a hint was given them to do so. At
Glasgow sixty years ago, when the time had come for the bowl to
be introduced, some jovial and thirsty members of the company proposed
as a toast, "The trade of Glasgow and the
outward bound!" The hint was taken, and silks
and satins moved off to the drawing-room.
In my part of the country
the traditionary stories of drinking prowess are quite marvellous. On
Deeside there flourished a certain Saunders Paul (whom I remember an old
man), an innkeeper at Banchory. He was said to have drunk whisky, glass
for glass, to the claret of Mr Maule and the Laird of Skene for a whole
evening; and in those days there was a traditional story of his
despatching, at one sitting, in company with a character celebrated for
conviviality—one of the men employed to float rafts of timber down the
Dee—three dozen of porter. Of this Mr Paul it was recorded, that on
being asked if he considered porter as a wholesome beverage, he replied,
"Oh yes, if you don’t take above a dozen." Saunders Paul was, as I have
said, the innkeeper at Banchory; his friend and porter companion
was drowned in the Dee, and when told that the body had been found down
the stream below Crathes, he coolly, remarked, "I am surprised at that,
for I never kenn’d him pass the inn before without comin’ in for a
glass."
Some relatives of mine
travelling in the Highlands were amused by observing in a small
road-side public-house a party drinking, whose apparatus for
conviviality called forth the dry quaint humour which is so thoroughly
Scottish. Three drovers had met together, and were celebrating their
meeting by a liberal consumption of whisky; the inn could only furnish
one glass without a bottom, and this the party passed on from one to
another. A queer-looking pawky chield, whenever the glass came to his
turn, remarked most gravely, "I think we wadna be the waur o’ some
water," taking care, however, never to add any of the simple element,
but quietly drank off his glass.
There was a sort of
infatuation in the supposed dignity and manliness attached to powers of
deep potation, and the fatal effects of drinking were spoken of in a
manner both reckless and unfeeling. Thus, I have been assured that a
well-known old laird of the old school expressed himself with great
indignation at the charge brought against hard drinking that it had
actually killed people. "Na, na, I never knew onybody killed wi’
drinking, but I hae kenn’d some that dee’d in the training." A positive
éclat was attached to the accomplished and well-trained consumer
of claret or of whisky toddy, which gave an importance and even merit to
the practice of drinking, and which had a most injurious effect. I am
afraid some of the Pleydells of the old school would have looked with
the most ineffable contempt on the degeneracy of the present generation
in this respect, and that the temperance movement would be little short
of insanity in their eyes; and this leads me to a remark. In considering
this portion of the subject, we should bear in mind a distinction. The
change we now speak of involves more than a mere change of a custom or
practice in social life. It is a change in men’s sentiments and feelings
on a certain great question of morals. Except we enter into this
distinction we cannot appreciate the extent of the change which has
really taken place in regard to intemperate habits.
I have an anecdote from a
descendant of Principal Robertson, of an address made to him, which
showed the real importance attached to all that concerned the system of
drinking in his time. The Principal had been invited to spend some days
in a country-house, and the minister of the parish (a jovial character)
had been asked to meet him. Before dinner he went up to Dr Robertson and
addressed him confidentially:
"Doctor, I understand ye are a brother of my gude freend Peter Robertson
of Edinburgh, therefore I’ll gie you a piece of advice—Bend [Old Scotch
for "drink hard"] weel to the Madeira at dinner, for here ye’ll get
little o’t after." I have known persons who held that a man who could
not drink must have a degree of feebleness and imbecility of character.
But as this is an important point, I will adduce the higher authority of
Lord Cockburn, and quote from him two examples, very different certainly
in their nature, but both bearing upon the question. I refer to what he
says of Lord Hermand :—"With Hermand drinking was a virtue; he had a
sincere respect for drinking, indeed a high moral approbation, and a
serious compassion for the poor wretches who could not indulge in
it, and with due contempt of those who could but did not"; and,
secondly, I refer to Lord Cockburn’s pages for an anecdote which
illustrates the perverted feeling I refer to, now happily no longer
existing. It relates the opinion expressed by an old drunken writer of
Selkirk (whose name is not mentioned) regarding his anticipation of
professional success for Mr Cranstoun, afterwards Lord Corehouse. Sir
Walter Scott, William Erskine, and Cranstoun,
had dined with this Selkirk writer, and Scott— of hardy, strong, and
healthy frame—had matched the writer himself in the matter of whisky
punch. Poor Cranstoun, of refined and delicate mental and bodily
temperament, was a bad hand at such work, and was soon off the field. On
the party breaking up, the Selkirk writer expressed his admiration of
Scott, assuring him that he would rise high in the profession,
and adding: "I’ll tell ye what, Maister Walter, that lad Cranstoun may
get to the tap o’ the Bar, if he can; but tak’ my word for’t, it’s no’
be by drinking."
There was a sort of
dogged tone of apology for excess in drinking, which marked the hold
which the practice had gained on ordinary minds. Of this we have a
remarkable example in the unwilling testimony of a witness who was
examined as to the fact of drunkenness being charged against a minister.
The person examined was beadle, or one of the church officials. He was
asked, "Did you ever see the minister the worse of drink?" "I canna say
I’ve seen him the waur o’ drink, but nae doubt I’ve seen him the
better o’t," was the evasive answer. The question, however, was
pushed further; and when he was urged to say if this state of being "the
better for drink" ever extended to a condition of absolute helpless
intoxication, the reply was: "Indeed, afore that cam’, I was blind fou
mysel’, and I could see naething."
A legal friend has told
me of a celebrated circuit where Lord Hermand was judge, and Clephane
depute-advocate. The party got drunk at Ayr, and so continued (although
quite able for their work) till the business was concluded at Jedburgh.
Some years after, my informant heard that this circuit had, at Jedburgh,
acquired the permanent name of the "daft circuit."
Lord Cockburn was fond of
describing a circuit scene at Stirling, in his early days at the Bar,
under the presidency of his friend and connection Lord Hermand. After
the circuit dinner, and when drinking had gone on for some-time, young
Cockburn observed places becoming vacant in the social circle, but no
one going out at the door. He found that the individuals had dropped
down under the table. He took the hint, and by this ruse retired from
the scene. He lay quiet till the beams of the morning sun penetrated the
apartment. The judge and some of his staunch friends coolly walked
upstairs, washed their hands and faces, came down to breakfast, and went
into court quite fresh and fit for work.
The feeling of importance
frequently attached to powers of drinking was formally attested by a
well-known western baronet of convivial habits and convivial memory. He
was desirous of bearing testimony to the probity, honour, and other high
moral qualities of a friend whom he wished to commend. Having fully
stated these claims to consideration and respect, he deemed it proper to
notice also his convivial attainments. He added accordingly, with
cautious approval on so important a point: "And he is a fair drinker."
[A friend learned in Scottish history suggests an ingenious remark, that
this might mean more than a mere full drinker. To drink "fair,"
used to imply that the person drank in the same proportion as the
company; to drink more would he unmannerly; to drink less might imply
some unfair motive. Either interpretation shows the importance attached
to drinking and all that concerned
it.]
The following anecdote is
an amusing example of Scottish servant humour and acuteness in measuring
the extent of consumption by a convivial party in Forfarshire. The party
had met at a farmer’s house not far from Arbroath, to celebrate the
reconciliation of two neighbouring farmers who had long been at enmity.
The host was pressing and hospitable; the party sat late, and consumed a
vast amount of whisky toddy. The wife was penurious, and grudged the
outlay. When at last, at a morning hour, the party dispersed, the lady,
who had not slept in her anxiety, looked over the stairs and eagerly
asked the servant girl, "How many bottles of whisky have they used,
Betty?" The lass, who had not to pay for the whisky, but had been
obliged to go to the well to fetch the water for the toddy, coolly
answered, "I dinna ken, mem, but they’ve drucken sax gang o’ water."
We cannot imagine a
better illustration of the general habits that prevailed in Scottish
society in regard to drinking about the time we speak of than one which
occurs in the recently published "Memoirs of a Banking House," that of
the late Sir William Forbes, Bait, of Pitsligo. The book comprises much
that is interesting to the family, and to Scotchmen. It contains a
pregnant hint as to the manners of polite society and business habits in
those days. Of John Courts, one of four brothers connected with the
house, Sir William records how he was "more correct in his conduct than
the others; so much so, that Sir William never but once saw him
in the counting-house disguised with liquor, and incapable of
transacting business."
In the Highlands this
sort of feeling extended to an almost incredible extent, even so much as
to obscure the moral and religious sentiments. Of this a striking proof
was afforded in a circumstance which took place in my own church soon
after I came into it. One of our Gaelic clergy had so far
forgotten himself as to appear in the church somewhat the worse of
liquor. This having happened so often as to come to the ears of the
bishop, he suspended him from the performance of divine service. Against
this decision the people were a little disposed to rebel, because,
according to their Highland notions, "a gentleman was no’ the waur for
being able to tak’ a gude glass o’ whisky." These were the notions of a
people in whose eyes the power of swallowing whisky conferred
distinction, and with whom inability to take the fitting quantity was a
mark of a mean and futile character. Sad to tell, the funeral rites of
Highland chieftains were not supposed to have been duly celebrated
except there was an immoderate and often fatal consumption of whisky. It
has been related that at the last funeral in the Highlands, conducted
according to the traditions of the olden times, several of the guests
fell victims to the usage, and actually died of the excesses.
This phase of old and
happily almost obsolete Scottish intemperance at funeral solemnities
must have been peculiarly revolting. Instances of this horrid practice
being carried to a great extent are traditionary in every part of the
country. I am assured of the truth of the following anecdote by a son of
the gentleman who acted as chief mourner on the occasion :—About seventy
years ago an old maiden lady died in Strathspey. Just previous to her
death she sent for her grandnephew, and said to him, "Willy, I’m deein’,
and as ye’ll hae the charge o’ a’ I have, mind now that as much whisky
is to be used at my funeral as there was at my baptism." Willy neglected
to ask the old lady what the quantity of whisky used at the baptism was,
but when the day of the funeral arrived believed her orders would be
best fulfilled by allowing each guest to drink as much as he pleased.
The churchyard where the body was to be deposited was about ten miles
distant from where the death occurred. It was a short day in November,
and when the funeral party came to the churchyard the shades of night
had consideably closed in. The grave-digger, whose patience had been
exhausted in waiting, was not in the least willing to accept of Captain
G----‘s (the chief mourner) apology for delay. After looking about him
he put the anxious question, "But, Captain, whaur’s Miss Ketty?" The
reply was, "In her coffin, to be sure, and get it into the earth as fast
as you can." There, however, was no coffin; the procession had sojourned
at a country inn by the way, had rested the body on a dyke, started
without it, and had to postpone the interment until next day. My
correspondent very justly adds the remark, "What would be thought of
indulgence in drinking habits now that could lead to such a result?"
Many scenes of a similar
incongruous character are still traditionally connected with such
occasions. Within the last thirty years, a laird of Dundonald, a small
estate in Ross-shire, died at Inverness. There was open house for some
days, and great eating and drinking. Here the corpse commenced its
progress toward its appointed home on the coast, and people followed in
multitudes to give it a partial convoy, all of whom had to be
entertained. It took altogether a fortnight to bury poor Dundonald, and
great expense must have been incurred. This, however, is looked back to
at Inverness as the last of the real grand old Highland funerals. Such
notions of what is due to the memory of the departed have now become
unusual if not obsolete. I myself witnessed the first decided change in
this matter. I officiated at the funeral of the late Duke of Sutherland.
The procession was a mile long. Refreshments were provided for 7000
persons—beef, bread, and beer—but not one glass of whisky was allowed on
the property that day!
It may, perhaps, be said
that the change we speak of is
not peculiar to Scotland; that in England the same change has been
apparent; and that drunkenness has passed away in the higher circles, as
a matter of course, as refinement and taste made an advancement in
society. This is true. But there were some features of the question
which were peculiar to Scotland, and which at one time rendered it less
probable that intemperance would give way in the north. It seemed in
some quarters to have taken deeper root amongst us. The system of
pressing: or of compelling, guests to drink seemed more
inveterate. Nothing can more powerfully illustrate the deep-rooted
character of intemperate habits in families than an anecdote which was
related to me, as coming from the late Mr Mackenzie, author of the
Man of Feeling. He had been involved in a regular drinking party. He
was keeping as free from the usual excesses as he was able, and as he
marked companions around him falling victims to the power of drink, he
himself dropped off under the table among the slain, as a measure of
precaution; and lying there, his attention was called to a small pair of
hands working at his throat; on asking what it was, a voice replied,
"Sir, I’m the lad that’s to lowse the neckcloths." Here, then was a
family, where, on drinking occasions, it was the appointed duty of one
of the household to attend, and, when the guests were becoming helpless,
to untie their cravats in fear of apoplexy or suffocation. [In
Burt’s Letters from the North of
Scotland, written about 1730,
similar scenes are related as occurring in Culloden House: as the
company were disabled by drink, two servants in waiting took up the
invalids with short poles in their
chairs as they sat (if not fallen down), and carried them off to their
beds.] We ought certainly to be
grateful for the change which has taken place from such a system; for
this change has made a great revolution in Scottish social life. The
charm and the romance long attached in the minds of some of our
countrymen to the whole system and concerns of hard drinking was indeed
most lamentable and absurd. At tavern suppers, where, nine times out of
ten, it was the express object of those who went to get drunk,
such stuff as "regal purple stream," "rosy wine," "quaffing the goblet,"
"bright sparkling nectar," "chasing the rosy hours," and so on, tended
to keep up the delusion, and make it a monstrous fine thing for men to
sit up drinking half the night, to have frightful headaches all next
day, to make maudlin idiots of themselves as they were going home, and
to become brutes amongst their family when they arrived. And here I may
introduce the mention of a practice connected with the convivial habits
of which we have been speaking, but which has for some time passed away,
at least from private tables—I mean the absurd system of calling for
toasts and sentiments each time the glasses were filled. During dinner
not a drop could be touched, except in conjunction with others, and with
each drinking to the health of each. But toasts came after
dinner. I can just remember the practice in partial operation; and my
astonishment as a mere boy, when accidentally dining at table and
hearing my mother called upon to "give the company a gentleman," is one
of my earliest reminiscences. Lord Cockburn must have remembered them
well, and I will quote his most amusing account of the effects :—
"After dinner, and before the ladies retired, there generally began what
was called ‘Rounds’ of toasts, when each gentleman named an
absent lady, and each lady an absent gentleman, separately; or one
person was required to give an absent lady, and another person was
required to match a gentleman with that lady, and the persons named were
toasted, generally, with allusions and jokes about the fitness of the
union. And, worst of all, there were ‘Sentiments.’ These were short
epigrammatic sentences, expressive of moral feelings and virtues, and
were thought refined and elegant productions. A faint conception of
their nauseousness may be formed from the following examples, every one
of which I have heard given a thousand times, and which indeed I only
recollect from their being favourites. The glasses being filled, a
person was asked for his or for her sentiment, when this, or something
similar, was committed: ‘May the pleasures of the evening bear the
reflections of the morning’; or, ‘may the friends of our youth be the
companions of our old age’; or, ‘delicate pleasures to susceptible
minds’; ‘may the honest heart never feel distress’; ‘may the hand of
charity wipe the tear from the eye of sorrow.’ The conceited, the ready,
or the reckless, hackneyed in the art, had a knack of making new
sentiments applicable to the passing incidents with great ease. But it
was a dreadful oppression on the timid or the awkward. They used to
shudder, ladies particularly; for nobody was spared when their turn in
the round approached. Many a struggle and blush did it cost; but
this seemed only to excite the tyranny of the masters of the craft; and
compliance could never be avoided, except by more torture than
yielding.... It is difficult for those who have been under a more
natural system to comprehend how a sensible man, a respectable matron, a
worthy old maid, and especially a girl, could be expected to go into
company easily, on such conditions."
This accompaniment of domestic drinking by a
toast or sentiment—the practice of which is now confined
to public entertainments—was then invariable in private parties, and was
supposed to enliven and promote the good fellowship of the social
circle. Thus Fergusson, in one of his poems, in describing a dinner,
says—
"The grace is said;
it’s nae ower lang,
The claret reams in bells.
Quo’ Deacon, ‘Let the toast round gang;
Come, here’s our noble sel’s
Weel met the day.’"
There was a great variety
of these toasts, some of them exclusively Scottish. A correspondent has
favoured me with a few reminiscences of such incentives to inebriety.
The ordinary form of
drinking a health was in the address, "Here’s t’ ye."
Then such as the
following were named by successive members of the company at the call of
the host :—
-
The land o’ cakes
(Scotland).
-
Mair freens and less
need o’ them.
-
Thumping luck and fat
weans.
-
When we’re gaun up the
hill o’ fortune may we ne’er meet a freen’ coming down.
-
May ne’er waur be amang
us.
-
May the binges o’
freendship never rust, or the wings o’ luve lose a feather.
-
Here’s to them that
lo’es us or lenns us a lift.
-
Here’s health to the
sick, stilts to the lame; claise to the back, and brose to the wame.
-
Here’s health, wealth,
wit, and meal.
-
The deil rock them in a
creel that does na’ wish us a’ weel.
-
Horny bands and
weather-beaten baffets (cheeks).
-
The rending o’ rocks
and the pu’in’ doun o’ auld houses.
The last two belong, to
the mason craft; the first implies a wish for plenty of work, and health
to do it; the second, to erect new buildings and clear away old ones.
-
May the winds o’
adversity ne’er blaw open our door.
-
May poortith ne’er
throw us in the dirt or gowd into the high saddle. [May we never be
cast down by adversity, or unduly elevated by prosperity.]
-
May the mouse ne’er
leave our meal-pock wi’ the tear in its e’e.
-
Blythe may we a’ be.
-
Ill may we never see.
-
Breeks and brochan
(brose).
-
May we ne’er want a
freend or a drappie to gie him.
-
Gude e’en to you a’,
an’ tak’ your nappy.
-
A willy-waught’s a gude
night cappy. [A toast at parting or breaking-up of the party.]
-
May we a’ be canty an’
cosy.
-
An’ ilk hae a wife in
his bosy.
-
A cosy but, and a canty
ben.
-
To couthie [Loving]
women and trusty men.
-
The ingle neuk wi’
routh [Plenty] o' bannocks and bairns.
-
Here’s to him wha winna
beguile ye.
-
Mair sense and mair
siller.
-
Horn, corn, wool, an’
yarn. [Toast for agricultural dinners.]
Sometimes certain toasts
were accompanied by Highland honours. This was a very exciting,
and to a stranger a somewhat alarming, proceeding. I recollect my
astonishment the first time I witnessed the ceremony—the company, from
sitting quietly drinking their wine, seemed to assume the attitude of
harmless maniacs, allowed to amuse themselves. The moment the toast was
given, and proposed to be drunk with Highland honours, the gentlemen all
rose, and with one foot on their chair and another on the table,
they drank the toast with Gaelic shrieks, which were awful to hear, the
cheering being under the direction of a toast-master appointed to direct
the proceedings. I am indebted to the kindness of the Rev. Duncan
Campbell, the esteemed minister of Moulin, for the form used on such
occasions. Here it is in the Gaelic and the Saxon :—
Gaelic |
Translation |
So! |
Prepare! |
Nish! Nish! |
Now! Now! |
Sud ris! Sud ris! |
Yon again! Yon again! |
Nish! Nish! |
Now! Now! |
Thig ris! Thig ris! |
At it again! At it again! |
A on uair eile! |
Another time, or one cheer more! |
The reader is to imagine
these words uttered with yells and vociferations, and accompanied with
frantic gestures.
The
system of giving toasts was so regularly
established, that collections of them were published to add brilliancy
to the festive board. By the kindness of the librarian, I have seen a
little volume which is in the Signet Library of Edinburgh. It is
entitled, "The Gentleman’s New Bottle Companion," Edinburgh, printed in
the year MDCCLXXVII. It contains various toasts and sentiments
which the writer considered to be suitable to such occasions. Of the
taste and decency of the companies where some of them could be made use
of, the less said the better.
I have heard also of
large traditionary collections of toasts and sentiments, belonging to
old clubs and societies, extending back above a century, but I have not
seen any of them, and I believe my readers will think they have had
quite enough.
The favourable reaction
which has taken place in regard to the whole system of intemperance may
very fairly, in the first place, be referred to an improved moral
feeling. But other causes have also assisted; and it is curious to
observe how the different changes in the modes of society bear upon one
another. The alteration in the convivial habits which we are noticing in
our own country may be partly due to alteration of hours. The old plan
of early dining favoured a system of suppers, and after supper was a
great time for convivial songs and sentiments. This of course induced
drinking to a late hour. Most drinking songs imply the night as the
season of conviviality—thus in a popular madrigal:—
"By the gaily
circling glass
We can tell how minutes pass;
By the hollow cask we’re told
How the waning night grows old."
And Burns thus marks the
time:—
"It is the moon, I
ken her horn,
That’s blinkin’ in the lift sac hie;
She shines sac bright, to wyle us hame,
But by my sooth she’ll wait a wee."
The young people of the
present day have no idea of the state of matters in regard to the supper
system when it was the normal condition of society. The late dining
hours may make the social circle more formal, but they have been far
less favourable to drinking propensities. After such dinners as ours are
now, suppers are clearly out of the question. One is astonished to look
back and recall the scenes to which were attached associations of
hilarity, conviviality, and enjoyment. Drinking parties were protracted
beyond the whole Sunday, having begun by a dinner on Saturday;
imbecility and prostrate helplessness were a common result of these
bright and jovial scenes; and by what perversion of language, or by what
obliquity of sentiment, the notions of pleasure could be attached to
scenes of such excess—to the nausea, the disgust of sated appetite, and
the racking headache—it is not easy to explain. There were men of heads
so hard, and of stomachs so insensible, that, like my friend Saunders
Paul, they could stand anything in the way of drink. But to men in
general, and to the more delicate constitutions, such a life must have
been a cause of great misery. To a certain extent, and up to a certain
point, wine may be a refreshment and a wholesome stimulant; nay, it is a
medicine, and a valuable one, and as such, comes recommended on fitting
occasions by the physician. Beyond this point, as sanctioned and
approved by nature, the use of wine is only degradation. Well did the
sacred writer call wine, when thus taken in excess, "a mocker." It makes
all men equal, because it makes them all idiotic. It allures them into a
vicious indulgence, and then mocks their folly, by depriving them of any
sense they may ever have possessed.
It has, I fear, been
injurious to the cause of temperance, that emotions of true friendship,
and the outpouring of human affections, should so frequently be
connected with the obligation that the parties should get drunk
together. Drunkenness is thus made to hold too close an association
in men’s minds with some of the best and finest feelings of their nature
is the constant acknowledged strain of poetical friendship: our own
Robert Burns calls upon the dear companion of his early happy days, with
whom he had "paidl’t i’ the burn, frae mornin’ sun till dine," and
between whom "braid seas had roar’d sin’ auld lang syne," to commemorate
their union of heart and spirit, and to welcome their meeting after
years of separation, by each one joining his pint-stoup, and by each
taking a mutual "richt guid willie-waught," in honour of the innocent
and happy times of "auld lang syne." David marks his recognition of
friendship by tokens of a different character: "We took sweet counsel
together, and walked in the house of God as friends."—Ps. lv.
14.
Reference has already
been made to Lord Hermand’s opinion of drinking, and to the high
estimation in which he held a staunch drinker, according to the
testimony of Lord Cockburn. There is a remarkable corroboration of this
opinion in a current anecdote which is traditionary regarding the same
learned judge. A case of some great offence was tried before him, and
the counsel pleaded extenuation for his client in that he was drunk
when he committed the offence. "Drunk!" exclaimed Lord Hermand, in
great indignation; "if he could do such a thing when he was drunk, what
might he not have done when he was sober!" evidently implying
that the normal condition of human nature, and its most hopeful one, was
a condition of intoxication.
Of the prevalence of hard
drinking in certain houses as a system, a remarkable proof is given on
page 95. The following anecdote still further illustrates the subject,
and corresponds exactly with the story of the "loosing the cravats,"
which was performed for guests in a state of helpless inebriety by one
of the house-hold. There had been a
carousing party at Castle Grant, many years ago, and as the evening
advanced towards morning two Highlanders were in attendance to carry the
guests upstairs, it being understood that none could by any other means
arrive at their sleeping apartments. One or two of the guests, however,
whether from their abstinence or their superior strength of head, were
walking upstairs, and declined the proffered assistance. The attendants
were quite astonished, and indignantly exclaimed, "Agh, it’s sare
cheenged times at Castle Grant, when shentlemens can gang to bed on
their ain feet."
There was a practice in
many Scottish houses which favoured most injuriously the national
tendency to spirit-drinking, and that was a foolish and inconsiderate
custom of offering a glass on all occasions as a mark of kindness or
hospitality. I mention the custom only for the purpose of offering a
remonstrance. It should never be done. Even now, I am assured, small
jobs (carpenters’ or blacksmiths’, or such like) are constantly
remunerated in the West Highlands of Scotland—and doubtless in many
other parts of’ the country—not by a pecuniary payment, but by a
dram; if the said dram be taken from a speerit-decanter out of the
family press or cupboard, the compliment is esteemed the greater, and
the offering doubly valued.
A very amusing dialogue
between a landlord and his tenant on this question of the dram has been
sent to me. John Colquhoun, an aged Dumbartonshire tenant, is asked by
his laird on Lochlomond side, to stay a minute till he tastes.
"Now, John," says the laird. "Only half a glass, Camstraddale," meekly
pleads John. "Which half," rejoins the laird, "the upper or the lower?"
John grins, and turns off both—the upper and lower too.
The upper and lower
portions of the glass furnish another drinking anecdote. A very greedy
old lady employed another John Colquhoun to cut the grass upon the lawn,
and enjoined him to cut it very close, adding, as a reason for the
injunction, that one inch at the bottom was worth two at the top. Having
finished his work much to her satisfaction, the old lady got out the
whisky-bottle and a tapering wineglass, which she filled about half
full; John suggested that it would be better to fill it up, slily
adding, "Fill it up, mem, for it’s no’ like the gress; an inch at the
tap’s worth twa at the boddom."
But the most whimsical
anecdote connected with the subject of drink, is one traditionary in the
south of Scotland, regarding an old Gallovidian lady disclaiming more
drink under the following circumstances :—The old generation of Galloway
lairds were a primitive and hospitable race, but their conviviality
sometimes led to awkward occurrences. In former days, when roads were
bad and wheeled vehicles almost unknown, an old laird was returning from
a supper party, with his lady mounted behind him on horseback. On
crossing the River Urr, at a ford at a point where it joins the sea, the
old lady dropped off, but was not missed till her husband reached his
door, when, of course, there was an immediate search made. The party who
were despatched in quest of her arrived just in time to find her
remonstrating with the advancing tide, which trickled into her mouth, in
these words, "No anither drap; neither het nor cauld."
A lady, on one occasion,
offering a dram to a porter in a rather small glass, said, "Take it off;
it will do you no harm," on which the man, looking at the diminutive
glass, observed, "Harm! Na, gin it were poushon" (poison).
I would now introduce, as
a perfect illustration of this portion of our subject, two descriptions
of clergymen, well known men in their day, which are taken from Dr
Catlyle’s work, already referred to. Of Dr Alexander Webster, a
clergyman, and one of his contemporaries, he writes thus:—"Webster,
leader of the high-flying party, had justly obtained much respect
amongst the clergy, and all ranks indeed, for having established the
Widows’ Fund. . . . His appearance of great strictness in religion, to
which he was bred under his father, who was a very popular minister of
the Tolbooth Church, not acting in restraint of his convivial humour, he
was held to be excellent company even by those of dissolute manners;
while, being a five-bottle man, he could lay them all under the table.
This had brought on him the nickname of Dr Bonum Magnum in the time of
faction. But never being indecently the worse of liquor; and a love of
claret, to any degree, not being reckoned in those days a sin in
Scotland, all his excesses were pardoned."
Dr Patrick Gumming, also
a clergyman and a contemporary, he describes in the following terms :—
"Dr Patrick Gumming was, at this time
(1751), at the head of the moderate interest, and had his temper been
equal to his talents, might have kept it long, for he had both learning
and sagacity, and very agreeable conversation,
with a constitution able to bear the
conviviality of the times."
Now, of all the anecdotes
and facts which I have collected, or of all which I have ever heard to
illustrate the state of Scottish society in the past times, as regards
its habits of intemperance, this assuredly surpasses them all:—Of two
well-known, distinguished, and leading clergymen in the middle of the
eighteenth century, one who had "obtained much respect," and "had the
appearance of great strictness in religion," is described as an enormous
drinker of claret; the other, an able leader of a powerful section in
the Church, is described as owing his influence to his power of
meeting the conviviality of the times. Suppose for a moment a future
biographer should write in this strain of eminent divines, and should
apply to distinguished members of the Scottish Church in 1863 such
description as the following: "Dr--- was a man who took a leading part
in all church affairs at this time, and was much looked up to by the
evangelical section of the General Assembly; he could always carry off
without difficulty his five bottles of claret. Dr--- had great influence
in society, and led the opposite party in the General Assembly, as he
could take his place in all companies, and drink on fair terms at the
most convivial tables!" Why, this seems to us so monstrous, that we can
scarcely believe Dr Carlyle’s account of matters in his day to be
possible.
There is a story which
illustrates, with terrible force, the power which drinking had obtained
in Scottish social life. I have been deterred from bringing it forward,
as too shocking for production. But as the story is pretty well known,
and its truth vouched for on high authority, I venture to give it, as
affording a proof that, in those days, no consideration, not even the
most awful that affects human nature, could be made to outweigh the
claims of a determined conviviality. It may, I think, be mentioned also,
in the way of warning men generally against the hardening and
demoralising effects of habitual drunkenness. The story is this:—At a
prolonged drinking bout, one of the party remarked, "What gars the laird
of Garskadden look sae gash? [Ghastly] "Ou," says his neighbour,
the laird of Kilmardinny, "deil meane him! Garskadden’s been wi’ his
Maker these twa hours; I saw him step awa’, but I didna like to disturb
gude company! [The scene is described and place mentioned in Dr Strang's
account of Glasgow Clubs, p.104, 2nd Edition.]
Before closing this
subject of excess in drinking, I may refer to another indulgence
in which our countrymen are generally supposed to partake more largely
than their neighbours:—I mean snuff-taking. The popular southern ideas
of a Scotchman and his snuff-box are inseparable. Smoking does not
appear to have been practised more in Scotland than in England, and if
Scotchmen are sometimes intemperate in the use of snuff, it is certainly
a more innocent excess than intemperance in whisky. I recollect, amongst
the common people in the north, a mode of taking snuff which showed a
determination to make the most of it, and which indicated
somewhat of intemperance in the enjoyment; this was to receive it not
through a pinch between the fingers, but through a quill or little bone
ladle, which forced it up the nose. But, besides smoking and snuffing, I
have a reminiscence of a third use of tobacco, which I apprehend
is now quite obsolete. Some of my readers will be surprised when I name
this forgotten luxury. It was called plugging, and consisted (borresco
referens) in poking a piece of pigtail tobacco tight into the
nostril. I remember this distinctly; and now, at a distance of more than
sixty years, I recall my utter astonishment as a boy, at seeing my
grand-uncle, with whom I lived in early days, put a thin piece of
tobacco fairly up his nose. I suppose the plug acted as a continued
stimulant on the olfactory nerve, and was, in short, like taking a
perpetual pinch of snuff.
The inveterate
snuff-taker, like the dram-drinker, felt severely the being deprived of
his accustomed stimulant, as in the following instance:—A severe
snow-storm in the Highlands, which lasted for several weeks, having
stopped all communication betwixt neighbouring hamlets, the snuff-boxes
were soon reduced to their last pinch. Borrowing and begging from all
the neighbours within reach were first resorted to, but when these
failed, all were alike reduced to the longing which unwilling-abstinent
snuff-takers alone know. The minister of the parish was amongst the
unhappy number; the craving was so intense that study was out of the
question, and he became quite restless. As a last resort the beadle was
despatched, through the snow, to a neighbouring glen, in the hope of
getting a supply; but he came back as unsuccessful as he went. "What’s
to be dune, John?" was the minister’s pathetic inquiry. John shook his
head, as much as to say that he could not tell; but immediately
thereafter started up, as if a new idea had occurred, to him. He came
back in a few minutes, crying, "Hae!" The minister, too eager to be
scrutinising, took a long, deep pinch, and then said, "Whaur did you get
it?" "I soupit [Swept] the poupit," was John’s expressive reply. The
minister’s accumulated superfluous Sabbath snuff now came into good use.
It does not appear that
at this time a similar excess in eating accompanied this
prevalent tendency to excess in drinking. Scottish tables were at that
period plain and abundant, but epicurism or gluttony do not seem to have
been handmaids to drunkenness. A humorous anecdote, however, of a
full-eating laird, may well accompany those which appertain to the
drinking lairds:—A lady in the north having watched the proceedings
of a guest, who ate long and largely, she ordered the servant to take
away, as he had at last laid down his knife and fork. To her surprise,
however, he resumed his work, and she apologised to him, saying, "I
thought, Mr---, you had done." "Oh, so I had, mem; but I just fan’ a doo
in the redd o’ my plate." He had discovered a pigeon lurking
amongst the bones and refuse of his plate, and could not resist
finishing it. |