“That the Englishmen had
their supporters was shown by the cheer that went up when the men, all
in white, emerged from the pavilion to the strains of ‘The British
Grenadiers,’ but it was nothing- to the mighty shout which greeted the
Scots, -who, led by pipers, looked in the pink of condition in their
Royal blue jerseys.”— Glasgow Evening Times.
“In Scotland the Bagpipe
must be considered as the national instrument.”—Dr. MacCulloch.
NOW, if we apply the
tests in the preceding chapter, or any other tests which you may devise,
to each of the three musical instruments which have been put forward at
one time or another as Scotland’s national instrument, we will find that
the Piob-Mhor, or great War Pipe of the Highlands, is the only one of
the three which at all satisfies the conditions laid down.
It seems to me hardly
worth while to go beyond the first and most important test of all, that
“the national instrument of a country must be distinctive of the nation
using it.” Neither the harp nor the fiddle is in any way distinctive of
Scotland. The harp is distinctive of the Welsh people and of the Irish
flag, but not of the Scottish nation. The fiddle, an Anglo-Saxon
invention originally, is now the property of the whole civilised world,
and is characteristic of no one people. The Bagpipe, however, stands on
a very different footing. It is in the first place pre-eminently
distinctive of the Highlander, and this is half the argument and more.
The Lowlander is apt to forget that the Highlander is as much a Scotsman
as himself.
What would dear old
Scotland be without her Highlanders? If the glorious records of our
Highland regiments were erased to-morrow from the book of history, would
not the tale of the years that have fled be shorn of much of its glory
so far as we Scotsmen are concerned? But to most Lowland Scotsmen also,
the Bagpipe is the national instrument. This is “ the generally
accepted” notion, according to Mr Murray, and, if due to ignorance, as
he asserts, then, indeed, is the ignorance very widespread throughout
the British Empire, and shared in by every European nation. When I put
the question to people in the South, “What is our national instrument?”
the almost invariable answer is, “Why, of course, the Bagpipe!”
Occasionally, the fiddle is put forward in hesitating fashion : the harp
never.
Take the heading at the
beginning of this chapter. It is an ordinary cutting taken from one of
the evening papers, and begins a plain matter-of-fact account of the
1904 International Rugby Football match, played at Inverleith, when the
champions of the Rose and the Thistle met in friendly rivalry.
To the old football
player the words, though simple, conjure up the scene as real as when it
spread itself out before his delighted eyes on that most glorious of
days. The scene is an animated one. The grey metropolis of the Forth is
looking its brightest. Twenty to thirty thousand people, gathered from
all parts of Scotland, are there to watch the game. The peer rubs
shoulders with the peasant: the lady of high degree with the shop girl.
Every class in the community has its representatives in evidence at this
great gathering. Doctors of Divinity, Doctors of Law, Doctors of
Medicine, are here mixing freely with the humble city clerk, and the
tidy apprentice and the rough labourer; while the blacksmith fresh from
his forge, and the pitman, still grimy from his underground labours,
help to swell the throng. Here, too, you see the medical student, not
always “sicklied o’er with the pale hue of thought,” giving the tip to
his Professor: that dreaded examiner! who to-morrow, perhaps, will send
the poor devil down for another term, to do a little and much-needed
further study on the bones. Presiding over all, is the Goddess of Youth
and Beauty in the shape of crowds of gaily-dressed, sweet-faced, bright,
healthy-looking, chattering girls, whose presence lends a fresh charm
and a delightful picturesqueness to an already charming scene.
Scotland’s pride of nationality runs high on such an occasion, and she
rightly puts all distinctive traits in the foreground.
As the time of the
contest draws near, a feeling of suppressed excitement spreads through
the crowd, interfering with the smooth flow of speech. Questions are put
and answered in monosyllabic jerks. Every head is turned instinctively
towards the pavilion, and watches are anxiously scanned. And when on the
stroke of the hour the Englishmen appear in spotless white, headed by a
brass band, playing “The British Grenadiers,” a great cheer rises from
the mighty throng. But this cheer, although hearty, is as nothing to the
roar of welcome which greets the lads in blue—the lads who are destined,
ere the day is over, to carry the Scottish colours once more to victory
!—as they march on to the field, headed by Pipers. The team is entirely
composed of Scotsmen, I presume—Highland and Lowland—and contains the
pink of Scotland’s players. The occasion is international and historic.
The assembly of onlookers is representative of Scotland at its best.
Why, then, if the Bagpipe is not the national instrument, should it be
chosen to lead the Scottish team on to the field on this great day? Why
should it’s stirring notes rouse the enthusiasm of the multitude? Try
and imagine the effect a fiddler or a harper at the head of the dark
blues would have upon the crowd? It would then set them jeering, not
cheering. The manly, the heroic, the picturesque, associated as these
are with the kilt and the Bagpipe, would disappear with the
disappearance of the Piper. The harper, of course, could not even march
with the team ; he would have to hurry off in advance, to the middle of
the field, and, sitting down upon his three-legged stool, draw the
players to him, as if by hypnotism, or magnetism, or other necromantic
ism; a spectacle fit only to excite gods and men to laughter!
It is the “generally
accepted” opinion—Mr Murray concedes this much—that the Bagpipe is
Scotland’s national instrument.
To shew how true this is,
allow me to quote shortly from the public speeches of two Scotsmen—
Lowlanders, not bigoted, prejudiced Highlanders— and delivered before
two very different audiences on two very different occasions.
Colonel R. Easton Aitken,
a well-known Scotsman, who puts in no claim to be called a Highlander,
and is so far at least unprejudiced in his opinions on the Bagpipe, was
presiding this year at the distribution of prizes in connection with the
Glasgow School of Music. In opening the proceedings he said, “Most of
you probably know more about music than I do, but as a Scotsman I claim
to be a member of a musical nation which has given to the world songs
which have become more than national. We also possess a very distinctive
form of music, regarding which a certain difference of opinion is held.
I refer to the Bagpipe, but granted that those who differ as to its
being the national instrument are right ! still it has proved itself a
very stimulating military influence, and I have no doubt that the
Scottish nation at large is proud of the Bagpipe and all the memories it
conjures up.”
Now it is easy to read
between the lines, and to know which side of the controversy—if it can
be called a controversy—the gallant Colonel takes. His heart is with the
Bagpipe. He has listened to it in camp and on the battlefield, and to
him, as to so many other Scotsmen, it is the one very distinctive form
of Scottish music.
The “certain difference
of opinion” here mentioned probably refers to Mr Murray’s letters, which
appeared in the Glasgow Herald shortly before the Colonel made his
speech.
Now the Colonel, being
evidently a modest man, and not wishing to express himself too strongly
upon a musical point before a gathering of musicians, gave too much
weight to the certain difference of opinion, which was then being aired
in the Press. “That those who differ as to its being the national
instrument are right,” I would not grant for one moment. But then I am a
Highlander, and probably biased, and also on this particular subject I
have found the best informed musicians to be as ignorant as the man in
the street, for the very simple reason that the Bagpipe is never
mentioned in lectures. It has been systematically ignored by the learned
as a rude and barbarous instrument, unworthy of their notice, and its
history has yet to be written. The opinion of the expert, therefore, on
the Bagpipe is of no special value, because it is without knowledge. The
Pipe itself is, however, in evidence wherever a band of Scotsmen
foregather; and this is to me one of the best proofs of its national
character, and of the estimation in which it is held, notwithstanding
any amount of learned—or unlearned—dissertation to the contrary. In
illustration of what I mean, take the St. Andrew’s Day Celebrations in
London this year as reported in the Scotsman newspaper. Lord Rosebery
was in the chair, and made one of those delightfully racy speeches which
become the social function so well, but which I refer to later on. “The
assemblage”— I quote from the report,—“which numbered between three
hundred and four hundred, might be described as a sort of miniature
'Scotland in London.’ A considerable proportion of those present were in
Highland costume. Around the walls were hung numerous clan banners, and
the skirl of the Bagpipes was heard at frequent intervals in the course
of the evening.” Now, what gave this great and representative gathering,
in the eyes of the newspaper correspondent, its distinctively Scottish
character? Why, we have it in his description of the meeting. It was the
Highland leaven that leavened the whole lump. Without the Bagpipe, and
the kilt, and the clan banners on the wall, and the haggis—we must not
leave out the haggis, “Great Chieftain o’ the Puddin-race ”—the meeting
would be as any other meeting of Britishers.
And as at home, so
abroad, only more so. To a Scotsman landing on a foreign shore the sound
of the Bagpipe is at once cheering and inspiriting. As its first strains
fall upon his ears, the cry of “Scotland for ever!” rises to his lips.
He feels that he is among friends, and not so far from home after all;
this is irrespective of the tune altogether.
The fiddle, unless
playing some well-known melody, can convey no such sensation. Nor can
the harp.
Speaking at Rockhampton
on June 3, 1896, where he was the guest of the Scotsmen of that town,—no
distinction here between Highland Scot and Lowland Scot, although there
was a Mac in the chair ! —men grow wider in their views by travel,—Lord
Lamington, the newly - appointed Governor of Queensland, and a man who
cannot be accused of being either a Highlander or prejudiced, said, “ I
rejoiced on landing here to see well-known Scottish dresses, and also to
hear the sound of the Pipes. (Applause.) Yesterday morning, I think it
was, or the day before, I had occasion to thank those who gave that
pleasantest of music to my ears from the balcony of this hotel. Some
rather irreverent person in the street made a jeering remark. I do not
know what it is to most people, but I know this—I would rather hear the
Pipes than any other instrument. Many a time, when in London, have I
dashed down one street and up another to cut off perhaps some regiment
marching to the sound of the Pipes. . . . Whilst others may prefer such
airs as those to be heard at the opera, I can only say, in my opinion,
that in everything the beautiful is strictly allied with the useful. And
I maintain that the Pipes have done more strictly useful work in this
world than any other instrument. (Applause.)
Where the Highland
bonnets have gone forward— whether at Alma, whether in India,—if there
has been a pause in the rush, it has been the piobrach which has rallied
these Highland regiments, and enabled them to distinguish themselves in
the fierce onslaught on the enemy. (Applause.) Why, there is hardly a
war, however small, in which you will not see the name of some
well-known Highland or Scottish regiment. The Bagpipe is always to the
front. Therefore I maintain—as we all of us do, I believe—that we should
cherish our national instrument, which has played a great part in the
history of our country.” (Applause.)
Those who differ from us
on this point have their work cut out for them, and should lose no time
in taking their coats off if they are in earnest, and mean to try and
explode “the generally accepted notion that the Bagpipe is the National
Instrument of Scotland.”
It is assuredly the only
distinctive musical instrument which we possess, and at the present
time, it deposed from its proud position, there is none other to take
its place. |