N. Page 87. Highland Music
It has often been said that the music of Scotland was
borrowed from Italy, and that David Rizzio first gave it the stamp and
character which it now bears. If this opinion be well founded, it would be
desirable to show what part of the Scottish music has been borrowed, what
is original, and whether this particular kind of music was ever known in
Italy. Bagpipes are common in Italy, particularly among the Tyrolese in
the north, and the Calabrese in the south; yet, is it probable that the
Highland pibrochs came either from Italy or the Tyrol? The Reel of
Tulloch, Rothiemurchus Rant, and Jenny Dang the Weaver, cannot well claim
any near connexion with Italian music. Mackintosh's Lament, and Caguana in
the north, the Birks of Invermay in the centre, and the Flowers of the
Forest in the south of Scotland, from their melody, bear some resemblance
to the Italian but as there must be a similarity in all melodious sounds,
it is probable, that the connexion between the softer music of Scotland
and of Italy is only to be found in their beauty, and that the Pibroch,
Reel Strathspey, Lament, and Songs, are peculiar to the country. The
opinion which attributes the melody of the Scotch songs to Rizzio and the
sublime and elevated sentiments of Ossian to Macpherson seem to be founded
more on the ideas entertained of the rude and uncultivated state of
Scotland, at an early period, as being perfectly incompatible with the
delicacy of taste and feeling which both the poetry and music display,
than on any authentic information. But where there is a deficiency of
authentic information, there is more room for a diversity of opinion,
especially as, on one side, all is tradition, supported by many facts; and
on the other, all is assertion, without one fact, except some surmises
originating in the vanity of Rizzio and Macpherson. The latter had too
much honour to assert that he was the author of the poems, although, as
the MSS. of which he got possession have disappeared, perhaps he would not
have been sorry if the world had given him credit for talents equal to
such compositions. The MSS. would have been clear evidence that he was not
the author; but he has himself furnished complete evidence, by his
poetical works, and other translations, which unfortunately for his
literary reputation he published, as if it were to show how inferior they
are to his Gaelic translations. However, a fine field of disquisition is
opened, and national vanity interposes to darken the question. In the
south, it cannot be endured, that a people who have always been considered
as rude and savage, should compose, preserve for ages, and enjoy with
enthusiasm, the beauties of a body of poetry, equal to what the most
refined civilization has produced. In the north, again, the people are
impatient and irritated at the attempts to accuse them of fraud and
falsehood ; and of endeavours to palm on the public the patched-up works
of a modern author, as the genuine productions of their ancestors. Had the
question, when first agitated, been properly managed, it might have been
easily decided, when there were such a cloud of witnesses, and so many
people were living who had the poems before Macpherson was born, and who
knew that the rehearsal and learning of them formed one of the principal
winter pastimes of the people. But, even at that period, who were to be
the judges? The southern unbelievers could not have understood one word of
the poems in dispute, although all the bards in the north had been
assembled, and each had recited Macpherson's publication verbatim in the
original. The Highlanders, the only people who understood the
language, and could judge properly, would not have been believed, although
they had asserted, that the recitals of the bards and the translations
coincided perfectly. In such a determined difference of opinion, how is
the point to be settled? All, therefore, who believe that Rizzio did not,
in any manner whatever, originate the national music of Scotland, and that
the poems ascribed to Ossian are very ancient, and so authentic as to have
been handed down from father to son for ages beyond the reach of record,
will continue of this belief; while those who are of the contrary opinion
must remain so, as there are no proofs such as they require, that is,
books or manuscripts. The manuscripts on which so much stress was laid
were not many centuries old, and did in no manner prove who was the
author. Had they been preserved, they would only have established this
point,—certainly of some importance in the controversy,—that the poems
were not the composition of a modern author; but as I believe it has not
yet been ascertained in what MSS. the works of Homer were found and
transmitted to posterity, Ossian's poems, whoever may have been the author
or authors of them, are in good company when in a similar predicament.