THE years from 1880 to 1885
are significant for the Professor's public utterances and writings on the
Crofter question. His studies in Italy had been made for the express purpose
of accustoming his mind to the consideration of all problems involved in the
subject of land-tenure, varying as these problems do in the varying customs
and conditions of that country. He was thus better fitted to deal with what
was becoming a matter of immediate moment.
He began 1880 by lecturing in
Glasgow on the Crofters, and "preached a sermon to the lairds with more than
usual applause and acceptance." In February he issued a pamphlet on the
subject, which treated of the passing of Highland estates into the hands of
Southrons indifferent to the peasant population ; of eviction and
expatriation of farm added to farm; of clearance for deer- forests and
pasture-land. Letters to newspapers and a constant correspondence with
proprietors, factors, farmers, crofters followed, and kept the matter well
to the front, increasing his store of material for the 1)00k which wound up
his public action in the cause.
But Greek pronunciation and
the restoration of St Giles' Cathedral gave him relief from his more
insistent. labours. Dean Stanley sent him playful post-cards on both,
writing on February 6, 1880, from Westminster
"In accents sweet I fain would
greet
The bold restorer of Hellenic laughter.
All hail Pall Mall, And Max as well I
All hail that shall subdue the 'Times' hereafter."
On the 27th of the same month came a stanza on St Giles' :-
What shall we say when grim St
Giles'
Is beautiful through all his aisles?
When now no longer any dread is
Of 'lugs' beset by Jenny Geddes.
Instead of Law?, I find to please
My weary soul good Cameron Lees.
Instead of Claverhouse's rack, I
Salute the genial convert Mackie."
The "genial convert" was at
Taymouth when this was written, basking in the smiles of great ladies there,
and marching up and down the avenue while he meditated o' mornings.
He was due in London to give
a lecture at the Royal Institution on the last Friday of April, and left
about the 23d to spend a few days with Mr and Mrs Macmillan at Tooting, and
to discuss with the former the publication of a revised edition of his old
translation of 'Faust.' This recast was not yet completed, but he received
hearty encouragement to go oil it. After four days he left Knapdale for
Laleham in Clapham Park, where he was much fited by the "wingless angels" to
whom he lectured on Greek myths, and in whose albums he wrote wise maxims
for their guidance in life. He ended with a sonnet, afterwards included in 'Messis
Vite,' and beginning—
Beautiful Laleham! of most
lovely things
pure Named with few lovelier, and of things most
With purest ;-
which remains an honoured
script in the archives of the school.
His lecture at the Royal
Institution was on "Gaelic," and it was warmly received. While he was in
Clapham Park he gave up some time to reading the story of the "Clapham
Sects," and visited the sites sacred to its members. Afterwards he went to
stay with Mr and Mrs Archer in their new home in Cromwell Place for a week,
interrupted by two (lays at Mentmore with Lord and Lady Roseberv, which
latter deserve a word of quotation. He wrote thence on May 3
Here I am iii the central
hail of a wonderful Italian sort of house, or rather palace : all full
of pillars and porticoes, and gold and glass, and Venetian velvet and
French Gobelins, and clear outlook into the undulant greenery of this
soft and luxuriant country. I arrived in time for an eight o'clock
dinner; party small and snug, little more than family,—Mr Hayward, the
pose translator of 'Faust,' and Mr Dasent, the 'Norseman, whom all the
world knows ; conversation full of political anecdotes and English
chaff. After dinner the Countess sang "Auld Robin. Gray" with great
force and taste; another lady was Miss Gladstone, who is a very nice
young lady, with all her mother's nature and motherliness breaking out
constantly in sweet smiles on her face. I gave her a present of my 'Lays
of the Highlands and Islands,' a copy of which I had in my portmanteau,
with the simple inscription "To Mary Gladstone." I love her honest face
so much. This morning the house has almost wholly swarmed off to the
Metropolis, leaving me with the Baby Sybil, a wonderful production with
large blue eyes and serene temper.
Oxford came next, and a
supper given by the Scotch students of Balliol, with "plenty of good songs"
and applause. "No professor there but Sayce." This redeemed the inanity of
his stay, for he never breathed the academic air as one provided with the
academic lungs, and he went off with a glad heart to stay at Birdsall with
Lord and Lady Middleton. This visit was an unalloyed refreshment.
The people here are
irresistibly nice, the most 6harining simplicity, grace, and frankness -
English culture and Celtic sentiment mingled in the most happy and
harmonious way. Besides our hostess, we have Miss Gordon Cumming, as
lively as a sunlit waterfall, and flexile in thought and sentiment as a
young osier-twig. The Lady is not only a poem herself but a poetess. In
her company you feel as if you were in a flower-garden where all the
flowers speak.
A lecture in Sheffield closed
the campaign, and he returned to Edinburgh about May 16. He and Mrs Blackie
were minded to quit the house in Hill Street, and to seek a brighter and
fresher home. But he contemplated the change with a pang of regret. Mrs
Blackie was at Wemyss Bay with Mrs D. O. Hill, and he wrote to her on May 17
:-
Here I am in my old
house, my old house, small and shabby though it be; my old house, my old
house is just the proper thing for me!
One can imagine how he looked
at his book-lined walls, and foreknew the reckless confusion which the
transference would make of their perfect orderliness.
He sat to Monsieur Richeton
for all etching during these days in Edinburgh, and began to correct the
proofs of 'Faust,' submitting them later to Dr Walter C. Smith for revision.
Then he went to Altnacraig, but had to return in June for the funeral of his
friend and pastor's wife. Another of the inner and beloved circle of friends
passed away the same month, the "Little Lady," whose life is still a
hallowed memory in Tobermory, Miss Henrietta Bird.
He went back to Altnacraig in
time for a visit from Professor (now Sir Archibald Geikie, greatly enjoyed,
as it revived his dormant interest in the advancing science of geology.
During August the writer was
a guest at Altnacraig, and has many memories to relate of the visit. Five
weeks sped with but three clays of rain, and the glory of the West Highlands
in that spell of sunshine cannot be forgotten. An Italian visitor, sent by
Signor Minghetti, announced one day at lunch that in his forthcoming volume,
on the working of the poor law in Great Britain, he meant to recommend the
climate of Scotland to his compatriots as more invigorating than that of
Italy, and equally, sunny. The party listened in a silence compounded of
Scottish loyalty and blank surprise.
Early in the month, Mr
Patterson of the 'Globe' and Miss Pipe being the other visitors, we went for
a three days excursion to Iona, find- ilig quarters at the Columba Inn,
thanks to the kindness of two artists, who generously gave U their bedrooms,
and contented themselves with sofas in the parlour. The Professor knew every
creek and undulation of the island, and led the explorers, with Adamnan's
records and the Duke of Argyll's book for further help, w1.ile the red Ross
of Mull, the dark-blue sea, and the green banks of the sacred spot filled
the scene with sunny colour.
About the last week of August
Miss Flora Stevenson, the "Shirra," and Professor Robertson Smith joined the
circle and enriched its tranquillity with their presence, their talk, and
their songs. Perhaps no week of the summer was more interesting than that,
when the afternoons were spent in boating, or on the heathery heights; when
the sunsets drew all to the seat on the cliff; when the nights were closed
with song or psalm, Sheriff Nicolson delighting us ever anew with his own
Skye songs, surely the most human ever sung
"Reared in those dwellings
have brave ones been
Brave ones are still there.
Forth from their darkness on Sundays
I've seen Coming pure linen,
And like the linen the souls were clean
Of them that wore it.
See that thou kindly use them,
O man To whom God giveth
Stewardship over them, in thy short span,
Not for thy pleasure
Woe be to them who choose for a clan
Four-footed people!
Blessings be with you both now
and aye,
Dear human creatures
Yours is the love that no gold can buy,
Nor time can wither.
Peace be to thee and thy children,
O Skye I Dearest of islands!"
And the other, and earlier,
which ended:
"Pleasant it is to be here,
With friends ill company,
But I would fly to the Isle of Skye
To-morrow if I were free:
Dunedin is queenly and fair—
None feels it more than I—
But ill prime of the summer time,
Give me the Isle of Skye:"
One Sunday evening, when the
flush had faded from the sea and the moon was high, the whole party sat on
the cliff in the soft and heather- scented air, while the Sheriff led psalm
after psalm,—"The heav'ns God's glory do declare;" The Lord's my shepherd,
I'll not want; One thing I of the Lord desired;" "Now Israel may say, and
that truly;" and "All people that on earth do dwell." Now three of them sing
in the courts above—Alexander Nicolson, Dr Robertson Smith, and the old
Professor; but their voices were then already well known in heaven.
When the party broke UI) in
the early days of September, and a remnant of four was left, it fell out one
afternoon that Mrs Blackie and the writer, sitting on a garden seat, noted a
weary wayfarer with dusty boots open the little gate and climb up the
footpath. He wore a soft wide- awake and grey clothes, and displayed no
badge of saintship nor lantern of philosophy. "A dominie for Pro.," said Mrs
Blackie. The Professor's voice was ringing out from the open window of his
turret study, laden with soft Gaelic gutturals. It ceased, and the dominie
stood under the porch. A few minutes passed, and Bella came flying to the
garden seat. "Please, mum, it's Mr Herbert Spencer in the drawing-room, and
the Professor is not to be found." He had closed his book and gone by the
back-door to breathe on the "sublime heights" before dinner. Trembling with
responsibility, we faced the illustrious visitor, who restored our composure
by abusing the Highlands, libelling the innkeepers, and accusing our sex of
bribing porters with threepenny-bits, and so compassing every railway
disaster ever recorded. With some indignation we flung our gauntlet in the
face of the "father of modern philosophy," and it is to be feared that he
fled from such unwonted treatment. "This has been a very stormy interview,"
he said, and took his leave. And just afterwards, returning from his walk,
the Professor missed his visit.
He found secret hoards of
white heather on the moors, and brought its sprays home for all. One lovely
branch he sent that summer to Mr Gladstone, who was ill, and who enjoyed the
gift, and the Gaelic motto, "Hard as the heather and strong as the fir,"
which went with it.
The second edition of 'Faust'
was published about the end of September, and a copy went to the Premier,
who wrote from Whitehall on October 9 :
Of the spirit and power
of the rendering I can entertain no doubt it moves with the force and
flow of an original work. . . . I feel the immense, the overmastering
power of Goethe; but with such limited knowledge as I have of his work,
I am unable to answer the question whether he has or has not been an
evil genius of humanity.
The Professor was still
engaged on the Land question, and letters from indignant proprietors form
part of the many which he received this year. He sent a kind of manifesto on
the subject to the 'Scotsman' in November, and utilised the protest and
response which it excited.
The year 1881 began with an
interesting request from Professor Vaña of Prague University, to be allowed
to translate 'Self-Culture into the Tsheque language, that it might be added
to the borrowed literature of a country whose native literature the Jesuits
boasted to have destroyed.
Lectures on "The Covenanters"
and on "The Sabbath" as celebrated in Scotland initiated the year's platform
crusade. Both were carefully and seriously prepared, and were intended not
merely for the platform, but for a book of 'Lay Sermons,' to be published in
the autumn. The latter lecture seems to have been delivered in Glasgow,
about the middle of January, on a Sunday evening, and under the auspices of
the Sunday Society there. It was the ripe conclusion of a train of thought
and argument started in Berlin by Neander more than half a century earlier.
Its only weakness lies in the fact that while inveighing against the rigid
Sabbath-keeping of Scotland, which led to the exaltation of the letter of
the fourth commandment and the perversion of its spirit, he omitted to
protect his position by full explanation. No man ever more earnestly kept
the Sabbath-day holy, but he kept it fresh and happy also: to him the
Sabbath was a delight and honourable, not a day for dull and sour demeanour,
and unedifying because unreal observance. He brought his oblation willingly,
and indeed joyfully, to the sanctuary, His week-day work was laid aside, and
he studied all morning some passage of St Paul's Epistles, or some character
in the history of the chosen people, or some time of struggle for the
liberty of pure worship. Always practical and impelled to utter his
thoughts, this study grew into lecture or book, and his 'Lay Sermons' are
part of such results. In the afternoon he went to church, and the rest of
the day he spent in kindly, social intercourse, visiting and receiving
friends. But his lecture scarcely indicated to the prejudiced that for him
the Sabbath was a hallowed day, and it drew upon him a violent onslaught by
the Sabbatarian party for a time almost cost him his place in the Highland
heart. Further afield, too, he was misunderstood, and men with whom he had
no sympathy at all congratulated him on his abjuration of the Jewish
Sabbath. One Sunday evening in England, when he was supping with Mr and Mrs
Grant Allen, a lady expressed her delight that he approved of the Parisian
or Viennese Sunday in preference to the solemn British variety. He looked at
her with some severity and said, "The Sabbath is holy unto the Lord, and
must be so kept." It is interesting to hear, what he did not know himself,
that his words rescued her from indifference, and showed her that God is
worshipped by doing His will, not by sour observance.
I wish [wrote Sheriff
Nicolson] we had more men combining love of Christianity and of the
Covenanters with sufficient courage to protest against the unchristian
ideas and practices taught in the name of the Sinless Man, the First of
Sabbath-breakers.
Mr Gladstone, writing at the
end of the year, says of the 'Lay Sermons'
Many thanks for your
volume. You are most seductive, for on its arrival I have read your
Sermon through, of 63 pages, on the Covenanters; and the Appendix, for
which I guess that Cameron, Renwick, & Co. would have given you, if they
had been on the seat of judgment, a taste of the boot Me personally you
hit hardest when you say (p. 347) that the Homeric deities are
"radically elemental gods." I hope that if you are in London after
Easter, you will come to breakfast with me in Downing Street at ten on
some Thursday, when we will have a pitched battle on this subject; and
you may put me in the boot if you beat, or at any rate if you silence
me. Notwithstanding this pugnacious note, I am very sensible of your
kindness; and I remain, most faithfully yours, W. E. GLADSTONE.
One of the 'Lay Sermons' was
naturally devoted to the burning question of "Landlords and Land Laws," and
its text was from Isaiah v. 8, "Woe unto them that join house to house, that
lay field to field, till there be no place, that they may be placed alone in
the midst of the earth." The others were selected from a number which lie
had during a long period delivered from time to time in churches and
schoolrooms to young men or to mixed congregations. Some of them were given
at Free St John's, others at Mr Matheson's, Mr Webster's, and Dr MacGregor's
churches. Only a few of the large number were, however, included in the
volume, although many of the rest have appeared in 'Good Words' and other
popular journals.
An amusing letter in January
1881 recalls the constant confusion between the Professor and his friend
Professor Blaikie of the Free Church College :-
Yes [wrote the latter], I
spent last autumn in America, and very pleasantly. But, alas! many
mistook me for you. I got some cordial handshakings for lectures on
Atheism and on Culture and the like, but, on the other hand, I lost
character for trying to secularise the Sabbath, which all the
ungodliness of the States is sufficiently eager to do already. My wife
one day overheard the following conversation in church as I appeared in
the pulpit.. "It's not our Professor?" "Yes, it is Professor Mackie." "
But not the distinguished one." Red-headed youths would sometinies come
up and thank me for the Celtic Chair. Only yesterday a Celtic woman got
a shilling from me and an old umbrella, after buttering me for what 1
had done for the Highlands. At Philadelphia a scholar called oil to
controvert my views on homer, and thought I was sneaking out of an
untenable position when I assured him I was not the man. The thing is
beyond putting right.. We must grin and bear it.
In March Professor Blackie
was far from well. The winter had been exceptionally severe, and the strain
of regular and early attendance at the College had produced a series of
weakening colds. His condition gave some anxiety to his friends, some of
whom urged retirement from the Greek Chair upon him. It was decided that a
house in Douglas Crescent should be bought; that after the summer Altnacraig
should be let, and that country quarters should be of free election as the
time for them came round. There is no doubt that these plans were formed
with a view to his eventual retirement.
During April he was making
inquiries into such Highland details as the dates of tartans and bagpipes,
and was also concerned with the census of Gaelic-speaking districts, which,
from a flaw in the schedules, was not expected to give correct statistics.
He was one of the Edinburgh Committee for the Carlyle Memorial in May, in
which month he and Mrs Blackie went to Altnacraig for their last summer
there.
In June he made an
exploration of Colonsay, "sacred to St Oran and Lord Colonsay," and in
September he went to Pitlochry, where his friends the Archers were
summering, and thence made his way to Golspie to see the Duke of Sutherland
and inspect his mills at Brora. This flight northwards had another
object—the study of those remarkable products of rigid religiosity and
exceptional power called "The Men," whose habitat is in the northern
counties of Scotland, where they wield grim influence, narrowing,
depressing, and yet not without dignity and even sacredness. Dr Aird, of the
Free Church manse of Creich, helped him to understand their function of seer
and public censor combined.
While Professor and Mrs
Blackie lingered that autumn at Altnacraig, the transference from Hill
Street to 9 Douglas Crescent was effected under the management of Miss
Macdonald, - during those years a trusted friend and companion,— so that on
their return they stepped into a house already in partial array. The
leave-taking of Altnacraig was celebrated by its own appropriate bard, as
the home-coining had been by the "Little Lady." Dr Walter C. Smith, a
frequent guest at Altnacraig, sang its Vale:
Fair within and without,
Meet for a sage and poet,
With the pine and birch-clad clogs about,
And the islanded sea below it
And behind it a ridgey bill,
While a stream leaps down the glen,
Where the sleepy beat of a little mill
Low Pulses now and then.
Altnacraig
Fair without, but within
Is a rarer, loftier beauty,-
Womanly grace the heart to win,
And patient doing of duty
And thoughts serene and high,
And lore of the ancient days,
And gleams of the light that cannot die,
And loving homely ways.
Without and within all fair,
The form alike and the spirit
lie, blithe and gay as the bird in the air;
She, calm in her modest merit.
Greek lightsomeness in him,
In her the grave, grand Goth,
But wedding together the ages dim
By the Christian faith in both.
. . . . . .
Farewell the sea will beat
With white foam on thy shore,
And friends will sit on the rose-crowned seat,
And talk as we did of yore
But not such talk as we
Beneath the red pines had,—
And never again would I like to see
The place where I was so glad."
Soon 9 Douglas Crescent began
to wear that look which Mrs Blackie's magic touch gave to all things of her
home. The view to the Firth and beyond, the sunsets over Corstorphine Hill,
the sense of space and the inflow of light, reconciled her husband to the
West End; and two studies sacred to himself, all lined with his books, —and
supplemented by the back drawing-room when he wanted change,—completed its
triumph over the old house in Hill Street.
He settled down to work with
a sense of per- feet seclusion, and started the winter's warfare with a
stirring letter to the 'Scotsman' of October 26 on "Evictions." He was
engaged, too, as he had been all summer, with the material of 'Altavona,' a
book which was meant to express all the best experience and conviction which
he had collected from his sixteen seasons as a Highlander. The material was
in his hands, notes of repeated visits to the islands of the west, where are
the memories of clan feuds and clan fealty, of patient missionary settlement
and zeal; and notes of constant inspection of every centre of interest on
the Celtic mainland, historical, educational, industrial. His occupation was
rather with the form which all this garnered reminiscence should take, and
he was happy in choosing that of vivacious colloquy between speakers of
widely differing types and views, whom he places in the centre of every
scene, and associates in every experience. Highlanders, both Catholic and
Presbyterian, an Oxonian churchman, and a German philosopher, and casual,
local impersonations, exchange impressions, inquiries, and information on
all points intimate to the Highlands; but throughout the variety the
author's own personality binds the whole into one. This work occupied a
year's leisure, and was published in May 1882 by Mr David Douglas.
On January 10 of the same
year a dinner, which served as a kind of consecration banquet, was given to
the friends made free of the new home. Dr MacGregor, Dr Walter C. Smith, and
other kindly-minded divines, were of the number, and the talk ran on the
personal devil, to whom the company denied the material privileges of horns,
hoofs, and tail, relegating him to the world of undecorated spirits. An old
lady present, whose orthodoxy dated from more dogmatic days, held up her
hands in shocked remonstrance. "What!" she said, "would you deprive us of
the devil?"
Shortly after this
house-warming a series of colds lowered the Professor's health, and
premature east winds brought on a temporary ailment of the eyes,
sufficiently alarming to confine him to bed in the care of nurses and
doctors. This illness lasted all February and part of March. He was
practically blind during most of this time, and depended upon visitors, his
willing secretaries, for all reading and writing. The daughters of his
friend Mr Archer, Miss Macdonald, and the writer took it in turns to
minister to these needs, while Mrs Blackie sat by him to nurse and soothe.
Dr John Brown still came to see him occasionally, and Dr Bishop supplemented
the rarer visits of the "beloved physician." The latter was full of cheer as
ever, —cheer for others,—and his calls were the event of the sickroom. The
patient brightened up at his voice. "John" and "Hans" they called each
other, with the affectionate familiarity of half a century's friendship.
"Here I lie, surrounded by beautiful and delightful nurses, John."
"Delightful certainly, but not beautiful, Hans," till, catching sight of a
lady half-hidden in the bow of a window, the doctor made a dexterous volte-
face, and murmured wilily, " Beautiful indeed!"
All these weeks of suffering
were borne with perfect sweetness, and even gaiety. He never complained; he
took every dose and bore every lotion prescribed ; and he arranged his hours
for business, sleep, and social enjoyment with the same precision that
characterised him in health. From eight to nine o'clock in the evening he
held a little levee, heard the news of the day, and made his comments. His
brother professors came to sit with him, and brought the cream of academic
gossip. In the mornings from ten to twelve he had his letters read and
answered, and listened to some newspaper or hook chosen by himself. Then
came lunch and sleep, and the afternoons were given to repose and
meditation.
Mrs Blackie was convinced
that his strength was no longer equal to his College work, but the thought
of retirement was distasteful to him. His mental energy was so abounding
that he could not credit a permanent failure in its bodily equivalent. But
Dr Bishop was assured by the character of this illness that another session
of daily strain and exposure would undermine the health preserved in
equipoise by temperate habit and by method rather than by inherent vigour.
He said nothing at the time, fearing to disturb his patient's convalescence
by the pain of such an announcement, and reserved his opinion until the
summer.
Amongst the incidents of this
time testifying to the hold which Professor Blackie had upon the affections
of the working classes, was a letter dated 18th February, from the Committee
of the Caledonian Railway Company's employees, at whose annual entertainment
he was wont to preside :-
We forward to you our
heartfelt sympathy for you in your present illness, but hope and trust
that a merciful Providence may soon restore you again to health and
strength, and that your life may be spared for many years to come in
happiness, Prosperity, and Usefulness. The community at large can badly
spare so useful a member of society.
Many other bodies of men
shared this sentiment. One day a cabman came up to him. Will ye shake hands,
Professor?" he said; and after the ceremony, "Man, we all love ye." Mrs
Blackie called him in fun "the people's John," so constant was the stream of
such affectionate homage, and he esteemed it next to the love of his
students.
His return to health was
celebrated by a meeting of the Hellenic Society towards the end of March. By
that time he was able to correct the proofs of 'Altavona,' with alterations
in its genealogical matter made by Mr Skene, and in its geology by Professor
Geikie. This work took up the leisure of about six weeks, and by the
beginning of May he was busy with a lecture on Greek pronunciation and
accent for Oxford.
On May 5 he attended his
colleague Professor Cossar Ewart's inaugural lecture for the summer session.
The subject was "Evolution," and the lecturer a staunch Darwinian. After the
discourse the Professor asked him, "Do you preach evolution with God, or
without God?" "With God, of course," replied the lecturer. "Then," said the
Professor, "I have no objection to evolution. Let it go as far as it
pleases; it is only another name for growth, which is the continual
miraculous manifestation of divine plastic force and reasonable will of the
universe."
A letter to Mrs Blackie on
May 7 answers her entreaty for some modification of the indictments in
'Altavona.' "O Mrs Oke! Mrs Oke! fair words and fine fancies, dainty
conceits and delicate nerves, never pulled one tooth from the devil's jaw!"
Mrs Blackie was now at Wemyss
Bay Hydropathic with Mrs D. O. Hill. He started for London on May 8; had a
lively journey, during which he read 100 pages of Howells' 'Foregone
Conclusion,' and composed a "May Song." His bourne was Mr Archer's house,
but after three days he betook himself to Oxford, where his lecture came off
on the 12th, in the great hall of the museum, to an audience of "all sorts
and degrees, not without a fair sprinkling of ladies." The Master of Balliol
was there, and in an unlucky moment the Professor bethought him of his name
as an excellent illustration:
"We do not say Jowétt, but
Jówett." This innocent personality cost him the continued presence of the
illustrious but sensitive don.
The people here [he
wrote] are difficult to move—even in the best case wearing on their
shoulders the head of a god, but having their right arm paralysed, so
that their thought fails to leap into action. However, it is always good
to speak the truth on the house-tops.
The sad news of Dr John
Brown's death came to him on the day of this lecture. "I say nothing," he
commented, "but call this the year of warning and of preparation. While we
live, let us live like melt"
And here a word may be
interpolated upon his attitude towards loss by death. It was sometimes said
that he did not feel the death of his friends. No more undiscerning
criticism was ever ventured. It is true that he put the thought of loss
resolutely aside, but it was because of excess, not lack, of feeling. He was
unmanned when he gave way to sorrow, and the old melancholy which had
undermined the energies of his youth threatened to invade the vigour of his
maturity and old age unless resisted with all the might of his philosophy.
Once asked why he cared so seldom to return to Aberdeen he replied, "It is a
city of dead friends —I dare not go back." And when the comrades of his
lifetime died he could not speak of them, but he seemed to grow thinner and
frailer for a while until their memory had taken on the radiance of the
eternal hope. When the young and promising passed away he grieved with less
reserve, for he never quite lost his early bewilderment at the purpose
patiently prepared but unfulfilled in mortal development. His sonnet on the
death of Frederick Hallard illustrates this:
Oh, name him not, nor all the
shadowy host
Of lovely dead, whose memory haunts my soul
Be they as bright now as the starry pole,
For me they are not, and to me is lost
The presence of their beauty evermore
He was a youth whom to behold was joy,
Dowered with all grace of the fresh-hearted boy,
Pure as white light, and on his face he wore
A wealth of smiles to greet all kindred life.
Erect he grew, and light-plumed, like a flower,
More flushing-fair from fragrant hour to hour,
Till when there came a cruel, cruel knife
And lopped his pride. I turn my face away
Tears bring no hell) I can but work and pray.
From Oxford he returned to
London, to be received into its vortex of spring distractions.
I am just returned from
breakfasting with W. E. G. [he wrote on May 18]. The party was small,
select, and various: Lord Houghton just returned from Egypt; Miss
Swanwick, translator of Æschylus, second to Blackie!!! Toole the
comedian; Mr Knowles, the editor of the 'Nineteenth Century'; and a Mr
Roden Noel, a poet. The Minister was bright and eloquent, not at all
like a bound man; the conversation animated—on Goethe, Carlyle, German
Literature, the Thames Tunnel, Walter Scott, Wedgwood china, &c., &c. On
parting, Gladstone made me a present of a Greek biography of himself, on
which I caused him to write his name as a memorial.
Mr Toole has given us a
delightful comment on this occasion in his ' Reminiscences,' where lie tells
us that the conversation was on such high matters that he was glad to chum
up with a po1iceiai on his way home, to bring himself back to the common key
of life.
The Professor enjoyed his
fortnight of town to the full, and then went to Painswick near Stroud to
stay with Mrs Dobell, Here he wrote on May 26-
I am debating seriously
with myself whether I should not stay here till you come south and fetch
me back forcibly'. I was reading in Nicolson's 'Gaelic Proverbs' to-day
that three things will have their own way—a hen, a pig, and a woman!!!
When my private letters are published' your character will appear in its
true light and the gross slander to which I am now daily exposed of
deserting my pool' wife will appear in all its horrid invention.
He went to Stratford-on-Avon
a few days later, and then to Coventry, whence he returned to Mrs Blackie,
now established in summer quarters at Pitlochry.
'Altavoiia,' dedicated to Sir
Kenneth Mackenzie of Gairloch, greeted his return, and its appearance
involved him in much correspondence, some of which was controversial, as the
matters treated in its lively chapters touched many a sensitive place. But
the numberless letters did not prevent him from making his customary
appearance at the July banquet in Inverness, where, we are told, he was
"very fluent, energetic, and dramatic."
On returning to Pitlochry he
received a letter from Dr Bishop, advising him to retire from the Greek
Chair. This was written entirely on Dr Bishop's own responsibility, without
consulting Mrs Blackie. The letter is dated July 17, 1882, and opens:-
Though I know that you do
not approve of my tendering unasked advice, you must kindly allow me to
make an exception in your case. 1 felt more than a year ago that it
would be best for you to decide to resign the Chair winch you have
adorned for so many years. My feeling was deepened by the experiences of
last winter, and has been confirmed by your satisfactory progress since
the cares of the session have been left behind. You admit yourself quite
frankly that you feel the effects of age in your limbs and in various
ways. You speak of preparing for the close. Now, so far as fixed public
duties and work in crowded rooms, looking over examination papers, &c.,
1 think that you should decide that the end has come. I feel assured
that if you do so decide, you will be taking a step better calculated
than any other to give you a renewed lease of life, of usefulness, and
of rational pleasure. When freed from class burdens your strength will
not be overtaxed. If you feel tired, volt will rest: if you feel the
need of fresh air, you will seek it if you feel fit for literary work,
you will be able to go on with it without compulsion or overstrain, so
injurious to one of your age and strength. I should be grieved if you
allowed my recommendation to depress or sadden you, and still I should
wish to write with sufficient gravity and urgency to lead you to decide
in accordance with my suggestion.
This letter must have pained
him, and it is characteristic of his alert judgment and essential
reasonableness that he accepted its advice without demur, and a few days
later sent in his resignation to the University Court. "I was delighted,"
wrote Dr Bishop to Mrs Blackie, "when his manly reply came, so full of
wisdom and promptitude." This business, amongst others, took him to
Edinburgh for the last week of July. A new edition of 'Altavona' was already
called for; but Mr Douglas desired to pass the book into the hands of a
London firm, and Messrs Chapman & Hall undertook the issue. In the Highlands
'Altavona' had an immediate success. A touching recompense for his
championship of the poor came from Skye, where the women spun and dyed the
wool which was woven into a plaid for his acceptance, reaching him at
Pitlochry just before he left for Edinburgh.
He received many a proof of
goodwill from his colleagues of the Senatus Academicus. Early in August 1882
his resignation was in the news- papers, and from all parts of the kingdom
came letters of sincere regret from his students, new and old.
You can look back with
thankfulness and gladness [wrote Professor Calderwood] on the work
accomplished may God give you strength for much good work in years to
come, and cheer you with the joyous prospect of an eternity for serving
Him.
To very many of your old
students [wrote one of them] it will be a genuine sorrow to think that
you have finally left the Greek class-room, for, to judge from my own
experience, it was from that that platform that they were first taught
to take a free, tolerant, generous view of life. Charles Lowe, the
Berlin correspondent of the 'Times,' spent an evening with me last week,
and first told me of your retiral. And the greatest pleasure of our
meeting was the memories we were able to conjure from hours spent under
the gracious influence of your genius and teaching.
It was not till October 23
that a meeting of the Senatus Academicus confirmed the retirement in the
following terms:-
At this their first
meeting since time acceptance by her Majesty the Queen of Professor
Blackie's resignation, the Senatus Academicus resolve to express to
Professor Mackie their regret that he, though one of their oldest
Professors, should now be obliged by failing health to retire from the
Chair of Greek in this University, which he has held with much
distinction for thirty years. During that time by his numerous and
brilliant performances in various branches of literature, and by the
part which he has played in the social and public life of Scotland, lie
has won for himself a wide renown, which has been reflected upon the
University. The Senatus must specially call to mind oil the present
occasion the the remarkable feat performed by Professor Blackie in
collecting subscriptions through the country, which have amounted to a
sum sufficient for a handsome endowment of a Chair of the Celtic
Languages and Literature. Perhaps no other man but Professor Blackie
could have succeeded in exciting sufficient enthusiasm in the cause to
produce such a result. The Senatus record their thanks to Professor
Blackie for the service thus rendered to the University, and for the
legacy which lie has left to them in the shape of the Celtic Chair, of
which during his lifetime he will continue to be a patron.
Two-thirds of the endowment
of the Greek Chair fell to his portion as retiring pension, and this
probably amounted to about one-third of its average income.
Sir Daniel Wilson, who had so
strenuously helped him to win the Chair, wrote on August 17:—
Your resignation seems
all event in which I may claim a special interest, while it reminds inc
how time has run since those old days when I little dreamt of wandering
away to spend the best years of my life beyond the Atlantic. Let me
congratulate you as one who, ill laying down his armour, has the right
to some honest boasting.
the first occupant of the
Celtic Chair, to which Professor Donald Mackiiinoii was appointed on
December 22, 1882. Professor Mackinnon has contributed a statement with
regard to the Chair and his appointment so valuable that its due is full
quotation as a summary and completion of the subject:-
It is difficult to say
with whom the idea of founding a Celtic Chair in Scotland originated.
With the Gaelic speaking people it has been a dream for many a long day,
or rather night, and it found expression among them in speech and song
oil occasions. Sir Walter Scott, it is understood, was much in favour of
the scientific study of the Celtic tongues in our Universities. In the
year 1831 all appeared in the 'Quarterly Review,' written, it is
believed, by the editor, but inspired by Sir Walter Scott, reviewing a
volume of Gaelic Poems published some eighteen months previously. The
writer— after expressing his surprise that no Chair of Welsh existed in
the English Universities, nor of Irish in Ireland—added: "But
considering the enthusiastic interest which the Scotch have ever taken
in the old monuments of their national existence, and the abundance of
their academic apparatus for all purposes, even that (viz., the absence
of an Irish or Welsh endowment) does not surprise us so much as the
absence of any Gaelic endowment among their four Universities. Surely
the numberless Highland and Celtic Clubs, of whose proceeding for the
improvement of black cattle and the encouragement of the philabeg the
newspapers are continually reminding us, might do well to set apart a
tithe at least of their annual funds for an object of such
unquestionable importance." About the year 1853 the late Rev. Dr
M'Lauchlan, who had been settled in Edinburgh as minister of the Gaelic
congregation of the Free Church a few years previously, began to teach a
Gaelic class in the New College, Edinburgh. The class was taught, as a
rule, every alternate session until 1880. It was primarily intended and
adapted for students studying with a view to the ministry in the
Highlands of Scotland, but it was open to all. I attended it myself
during session 1871-72. The late Rev. Dr Cameron of Brodick taught a
class on similar lines for several sessions in the Free Church College,
afterwards in the University, of Glasgow. A class of the same
description is, I believe, being taught at present in the Free Church
College, Glasgow, by the Rev. Wm. Ross. These classes were taught during
the winter months for one or two days in each week. They were open to
all students free of charge. I am informed that many years ago the late
Sir William Mackinnon was prepared to give a large sum of money (5000)
as an endowment for this purpose. This munificent offer was somehow not
taken advantage of, and Sir William, I am told, gave the money, or a
portion of it, to the late Dr Duff to be used in promoting his Indian
Missions.
Within the University of
Edinburgh the movement which ended in the establishment of the Celtic
Chair originated with a motion in the General Council of the University
on the 19th April 1870. It was moved by Sheriff Nicolson, seconded by
Professor Blackie, and carried unanimously—"That it is desirable that
there should be a Chair of Celtic Literature and Antiquities in the
University, and that it be remitted to a Committee to consider and
report upon the subject." The Committee appointed at the meeting were
Lord Neaves; Principal Sir Alexander Grant; Professors Blackie and
Masson; Professor Macgregor, New College; Mr Taylor Tunes, Advocate;
Rev. Dr Cameron; Archibald M'Neill, W.S.; Sheriff Nicolson; and myself.
Other members were added from time to time, among the more prominent of
whom were Lord Colousay; Lord Gordon; Cluny Macpherson of Cluny; Sir
John M'Neill; E. Chisholm-Batten; Sheriff Clark of Ulva; Sir Archibald
Geikie; Professor Campbell Fraser; Professor Macpherson; and Donald
Beith, W.S.
Principal Sir Alexander
Grant was the first Convener of the Committee. A representation was made
to the University Court to take steps for the carrying out of the
resolution of the General Council. The Court replied that it had no
power to promote the object contemplated, which, it was added, "seems to
depend for its being carried out on private munificence." This was
reported to the General Council in October 1871, when Principal Grant
resigned the convenership, and Professor Macgregor of the New College,
Edinburgh, was appointed. The Committee under the new Convener forthwith
prepared an elaborate statement advocating the claims of the Chair, and
appealing for subscriptions. The endowment considered necessary was
£10,000. This is, I believe, the only authoritative statement ever
issued by the Committee. Several thousand copies were sent to noblemen,
gentlemen, societies, and associations in Great Britain and Ireland,
America, India, Australia, New Zealand, and elsewhere. The result was
disappointing. The Royal Celtic Society of Edinburgh promised a handsome
subscription. During the winter of 1872-73 a conversazione was held in
Edinburgh under the auspices of the Highland County Associations in the
city, Lord Colonsay presiding. The proceeds of this gathering, which
amounted to only a few pounds, were handed over to the Committee; and
this was practically all the money gathered during the convenership of
Professor Macgregor.
It was in April 1374 that
Professor Blackie became Convener. Among the very first to offer him
support was Mr John Mackay, now of Hereford, who guaranteed 100 guineas
from the Clan Mackay. Professor Blackie issued his appeal for
subscriptions from Altuacraig, Oban, in the form of a letter addressed
"To the Members of the Northern Meeting," Inverness. The letter is dated
September 12, 1874. Professor Blackie suggested that through the agency
of associations and clubs £6000 might be raised, while £4000 might be
looked for from private subscriptions. He added that he himself was
prepared to give £50.
The response to this
appeal was most satisfactory. Subscriptions poured in from all quarters
and from all classes—from the Queen's £200 to the shillings and
half-crowns contributed by Highland artisans and servant-maids
throughout the whole of the British Empire and America. During the three
years following, the exertions of Professor Blackie in promoting this
cause were almost incredible. He hardly rested night or day. There was
an occasional meeting of the committee to agree to a report, but
henceforward Professor Blackie was himself committee and convener in
one. In April 1875 he was able to report that £4600 were subscribed.
This sum was almost doubled within the next twelve months. In April 1877
the subscriptions amounted to over £10,000, when the Professor asked for
power to raise the limit to £12,000. In October 1878 he was able to
report that the amount subscribed was within £300 of this sum, and he
was authorised meantime to prepare the constitution of the Chair with
the view to the election of a Professor. During the next two or three
years he recommended from time to time that the appointment of a
Professor be postponed and the funds allowed to accumulate. In April
1882 he reported that the endowment now amounted to within a fraction of
£14,000, and had been handed over to the Senatus to constitute the
Chair; and in October he reported as follows: "I crave liberty to state
for the information of all concerned that the Celtic Chair is now in the
hands of the University, and that I understand a meeting of the Curators
will forthwith take place for proceeding to elect a Professor with the
customary intimations."
The Committee was
thereupon discharged. Professor Blackie was repeatedly thanked by the
General Council, and it was resolved that during his lifetime he should
be associated with the Curators in the patronage of the Chair. It was
freely acknowledged by all who took an interest in this work that
Professor Blackie was the only man living able to collect this
endowment, which now amounts to £14,300.
The appointment of a
Professor was made on December 22, 1882. The appointment was, I believe,
unanimous, and it had, I understood, the cordial support of Professor
Blackie. I did not enter upon my duties until the beginning of the
following session. On the 7th November 1883, at a banquet and
presentation in connection with the first appointment of a Celtic
Professor, Professor Blackie was present, and replied in a hearty speech
to the toast of "The Celtic Chair and Professor Blackie"; and on Friday
the 9th November he was present with members of the Senatus and
University, when my inaugural lecture was delivered. Professor Blackie
laid aside £50 to be given as a prize in the class during the first two
sessions of its existence. He ever showed the heartiest interest in our
work, visiting the class-rooms from time to time. He was with us
frequently at the closing day of the session, and was almost invariably
present at the opening lecture each year. We shall not, alas! see his
picturesque figure nor hear his kindly voice again.—A chuid de Phàras
dha!
DON. MACKINNON.
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