I WISH my readers always
to bear in mind that these Reminiscences are meant to bear upon the
changes which would include just such a revolution as that referred to
at page 15 in the bonnet practice of Laurence-kirk. There is no
pretension to any researches of antiquarian character; they are
in fact Reminiscences which come almost within personal recognition. A
kind friend gave me anecdotes of the past in her hundredth year. In
early life I was myself consigned to the care of my granduncle, Sir
Alexander Ramsay, residing in Yorkshire, and he was born in 1715; so
that I can go pretty far back on my own experience, and have thus become
cognisant of many changes which might be expected as a consequence of
such experience.
I cannot imagine a better
illustration of the sort of change in the domestic relations of life
that has taken place in something like the time we speak of, than is
shown in the following anecdote, which was kindly communicated to me by
Professor MacGregor of the Free Church. I have pleasure in giving it in
the Professor’s own words :—"I happened one day to be at
Panmure Castle when Lord Panmure (now Dalhousie) was giving a treat to a
school, and was presented by the Monikie Free Church Deacons’ Court
with a Bible on occasion of his having cleared them finally of debt on
their buildings. Afterwards his Lordship took me into the library,
where, among other treasures, we found a handsome folio Prayer Book presented
to his ancestor Mr Maule of Kelly by the Episcopalian minister of the
district, on occasion of his having, by Mr Maule’s help, been brought
out of jail. The coincidence and contrast were curiously
interesting."
For persons to take at various intervals
a retrospective view of life, and of the characters they have met with,
seems to be a natural feeling of human nature; and every one is disposed
at times to recall to memory many circumstances and many individuals
which suggest abundant subjects for reflection. We thus find
recollections of scenes in which we have been joyous and happy. We think
of others with which we only associate thoughts of sorrow and of
sadness. Amongst these varied emotions we find subjects for
reminiscences, of which we would bury the feelings in our own hearts as
being too sacred for communication with others. Then, again, there, are
many things of the past concerning which we delight to take counsel with
friends and contemporaries. Some persons are disposed to go beyond these
personal communications with friends, and having through life been
accustomed to write down memoranda of their own feelings, have published
them to the world. Many interesting works have thus been contributed to
our literature by writers who have sent forth volumes in the form of Memoirs,
of their Own Times, Personal Recollections, Remarks upon Past Scenes, etc.,
etc. It is not within the scope of this work to examine these, nor can I
specify the many communications I have from different persons, both at
home and in our colonial possessions; in fact, the references in many
cases have been lost or mislaid. But I must acknowledge, however
briefly, my obligations to Dr Carruthers, Inverness, and to Dr Cook,
Haddington, who have favoured me with valuable contributions.
Now, when we come to examine the general
question of memoirs connected with contemporary history, no work is
better known in connection with this department of Scottish literature
than the History of his Own Times, by my distinguished relative,
Dr Gilbert Burnett, Bishop of Salisbury. Bishop Burnett’s father, Lord
Crimond, was third son of my father’s family, the Burnetts of Leys, in
Kincardineshire. There is now at Crathes Castle, the family seat, a
magnificent full-length portrait of the Bishop in his robes, as Prelate
of the Garter, by Sir Godfrey Kneller. It was presented by himself to
the head of his family. But, as one great object of the Bishop’s
history was to laud and magnify the personal character and public acts
of William of Orange, his friend and patron, and as William was held in
special abhorrence by the Jacobite party in Scotland, the Bishop holds a
prominent, and, with many, a very odious position in Scottish
Reminiscences; in fact, he drew upon himself and upon his memory the
determined hatred and unrelenting hostility of adherents to the Stuart
cause. They never failed to abuse him on all occasions, and I recollect
old ladies in Montrose, devoted to the exiled Prince, with whom the
epithet usually applied to the Prelate was that of "Leein’ Gibby."
[Lying Gilbert]
Such language has happily
become a "Reminiscence." Few would be found now to apply such
an epithet to the author of the History of his Own Times, and
certainly it would not be applied on the ground of the Jacobite
principles to which he was opposed. But a curious additional proof of
this hostility of Scottish Jacobites to the memory of Burnett has lately
come to light. In a box of political papers lately found at Brechin
Castle, belonging to the Panmure branch of the family, who, in ‘15,
were forfeited on the ground of their Jacobite opinions and adherence to
the cause of Charles Edward, there has been found a severe and bitter
supposed epitaph for Bishop Burnett. By the kindness of the Earl
of Dalhousie I was permitted to see this epitaph, and, if I chose, to
print it in this edition. I am, however, unwilling to stain my pages
with such an ungenerous and, indeed, I may say, so scurrilous a
representation of the character of one who, in the just opinion of our
Lyon King-at-Arms, himself a Burnett of the Kemnay branch, has
characterised the Bishop of Salisbury as "true and honest, and far
beyond the standard of his times as a Clergyman and as a Bishop." But
the epitaph found in these Panmure papers shows clearly the prejudices
of the age in which it was written, and in fact only embodies something
of that spirit and of those opinions which we have known as still
lingering in our own Reminiscences.
If it were not on my part a degree of
presumption, I might be inclined to consider myself in this volume a
fellow-labourer with the late accomplished and able Mr Robert Chambers.
In a very limited sphere it takes a portion of the same field of
illustration. I should consider myself to have done well if I shall
direct any of my readers to his able volumes. Whosoever wishes to know
what this country really was in times past, and to learn, with a
precision beyond what is supplied by the narratives of history, the
details of the ordinary current of our social, civil, and national life,
must carefully study the Domestic Annals of Scotland. Never
before were a nation’s domestic features so thoroughly portrayed. Of
those features the specimens of quaint Scottish humour still remembered
are unlike anything else, but they are fast becoming obsolete, and my
motive for this publication has been an endevour to preserve marks of
the past which would of themselves soon
become obliterated, and to supply the rising generation
with pictures of social life, faded and indistinct to their eyes; but
the strong lines of which an older race still remember. By thus coming
forward at a favourable moment, no doubt many beautiful specimens of
SCOTTISH MINSTRELSY have in this manner been preserved from oblivion by
the timely exertions of Bishop Percy, Ritson, Walter Scott, and others.
Lord Macaulay, in his preface to The Lays of
Ancient Rome, shows very powerfully the
tendency in all that lingers in the memory to become obsolete, and he
does not hesitate to say that "Sir Walter Scott was but
just in time
to save the precious relics of the
minstrelsy of the Border."
It is quite evident
that those who have in Scotland come to an advanced age, must have found
some things to have been really changed about them, and that on them
great alterations have already taken place. There are some, however,
which yet may be in a transition state; and others in which, although
changes are threatened, still it cannot be said that the changes are
begun. I have been led to a consideration of impending alterations as
likely to take place, by the recent appearance of two very remarkable
and very interesting papers on subjects closely connected with great
social Scottish questions, where a revolution of opinion may be
expected. These are two articles in Recess
Studies (1870), a volume edited by our
distinguished Principal, Sir Alexander Grant. One essay is by Sir
Alexander himself, upon the "Endowed Hospitals of Scotland"; the other
by the Rev. Dr Wallace of the Greyfriars, upon "Church Tendencies in
Scotland." It would be quite irrelevant for me to enlarge here upon the
merits of those articles. No one could study them attentively without
being impressed with the
ability and power displayed in them by the authors, their grasp of the
subjects, and their fair impartial judgment upon the various questions
which come under their notice.
From these able
disquisitions, and from other prognostics, it is quite evident that
sounder principles of political economy and accurate experience of human
life show that much of the old Scottish hospital system was quite wrong
and must be changed. Changes are certainly going on, which seem to
indicate that the very hard Presbyterian views of some points connected
with Church matters are in transition. I have elsewhere spoken of a past
sabbatarian strictness, and I have lately received an account of a
strictness in observing the national fast-day, or day appointed for
preparation in celebrating Holy Communion, which has in some measure
passed away. The anecdote adduced the example of two drovers who were
going on very quietly together. They had to pass through a district
whereof one was a parishioner, and during their progress through it the
one whistled with all his might, the other screwed up his mouth without
emitting a single sound. When they came to a burn, the silent one, on
then crossing the stream, gave a skip, and began whistling with all his
might, exclaiming with great triumph to his companion, "I’m beyond the
parish of Forfar now, and I’ll whistle as muckle as I like." It happened
to be the Forfar parish fast-day. But a still stricter observance was
shown by a native of Kirkcaldy, who, when asked by his companion drover
in the south of Scotland "why he didna Whistle," quietly answered, "I
canna, man; it’s our fast-day in Kirkcaldy." I have an instance of a
very grim assertion of extreme sabbatarian zeal. A maid-servant had come
to a new place, and on her mistress quietly asking her on Sunday evening
to wash up some dishes, she indignantly replied, "Mem, I hae dune mony
sins, and hae mony sins to answer for; but, thank God, I hae never been
sae far left to mysell as to wash up dishes on the Sabbath day?"
I hope it will not for a
moment be supposed we would willingly throw any ridicule or
discouragement on the Scottish national tendencies on the subject, or
that we are not proud of Scotland’s example of a sacred observance of
the fourth commandment in the letter and the spirit. We refer now to
injudicious extremes, such, indeed, as our Lord condemned, and which
seem a fair subject for notice amongst Scottish peculiarities. But the
philosophy of the question is curious. Scotland has ever made her boast
of the simplest form of worship, and a worship free from ceremonial,
more even than the Church of England, which is received as, in doctrine
and ritual, the Church of the Reformation. In some respects, therefore,
may you truly say the only standing recognised observance in the
ceremonial part of Presbyterian worship is the Sabbath day—an observance
which has been pushed in times past even beyond the extreme of a spirit
of Judaism, as if the sabbatical ceremonial were made a substitute for
all other ceremony. In this, as well as in other matters which we have
pointed out, what changes have taken place, what changes are going on!
It may be difficult to assign precise causes for such changes having
taken place among us, and that during the life-time of individuals now
living to remember them. It has been a period for many changes in
manners, habits, and forms of language, such as we have endeavoured to
mark in this volume. The fact of such changes is indisputable, and
sometimes it is difficult not only to assign the causes for them,
but even to describe in what the changes themselves consist. They are
gradual, and almost imperceptible. Scottish people lose their Scotchness;
they leave home, and return without those expressions and intonations,
and even peculiarity of voice and manner, which used to distinguish us
from Southern neighbours. In all this, I fear, we lose our originality.
It has not passed away, but with every generation becomes less like the
real type.
I would introduce here a specimen of the
precise sort of changes to which I would refer, as an example of the
reminiscences intended to be introduced into these pages. We have in
earlier editions given an account of the pains taken by Lord Gardenstone
to extend and improve his rising village of Laurencekirk; amongst other
devices he had brought down, as settlers, a variety of artificers and
workmen from England. With these he had introduced a batter from
Newcastle; but on taking him to church next day after his arrival, the
poor man saw that he might decamp without loss of time, as he could not
expect much success in his calling at Laurencekirk; in fact, he found
Lord Gardenstone’s and his own the only hats in the kirk—the men all
wore then the flat Lowland bonnet. But how quickly times change! My
excellent friend, Mr Gibbon of Johnstone, Lord Gardenstone’s own place,
which is near Laurencekirk, tells me that at the present time one
solitary Lowland bonnet lingers in the parish.
Hats are said to have been first brought
into Inverness by Duncan Forbes of Culloden, the Lord President, who
died in 1747. Forbes is reported to have presented the provost and
bailies with cocked hats, which they wore only on Sundays and council
days. About 1760 a certain Deacon Young began to wear a hat, and the
country people crowding him, the Deacon used humorously to say, ‘What do
you see about me, sirs? Am I not a mortal man like yourselves?" The
broad blue bonnets I speak of long continued to be worn in the Highland
capital, and are still occasionally to be seen there, though generally
superseded by the Glengarry bonnet and ordinary hat. It is a minor
change, but a very decided one.
The changes which have
taken place, and which give rise to such "Reminiscences," are very
numerous, and meet us at every turn in society. Take, for example, the
case of our Highland chieftains. We may still retain the appellation,
and talk of the chiefs of Clanranald, of Glengarry, etc. But how
different is a chieftain of the present day, even from some of those of
whom Sir Walter Scott wrote as existing so late as 1715 or 1745! Dr
Gregory (of immortal mixture memory) used to tell a story of an
old Highland chieftain, intended to show how such Celtic potentates
were, even in his day, still inclined to hold themselves superior to all
the usual considerations which affected ordinary mortals. The doctor,
after due examination, had, in his usual decided and blunt manner,
pronounced the liver of a Highlander to be at fault, and to be the cause
of his ill-health. His patient, who could not but consider this as
taking a great liberty with a Highland chieftain, roared out: "And what
the devil is it to you whether I have a liver or not?" But there is the
case of dignity in Lowland Lairds as well as clanheadship in Highland
Chiefs. In proof of this, I need only point to a practice still
lingering amongst us of calling landed proprietors, not as Mr So-and-so,
but by the names of their estates. I recollect, in my early days, a
number of our proprietors were always so designated. Thus, it was not as
Mr Carnegie, Mr Douglas, Mr Irvine, etc., but as Craigo, Tillwhilly,
Drum, etc. An
amusing application of such a territorial denominative system to the
locality of London was narrated to me by a friend who witnessed it. A
Scottish gentleman, who had never been in the metropolis, arrived fresh
from the Highlands, and met a small party at the house of a London
friend. A person was present of most agreeable manners, who delighted
the Scotsman exceedingly. He heard the company frequently referring to
this gentleman’s residence in Piccadilly, to his house in Piccadilly,
and so on. When addressed by the gentleman, he commenced his reply,
anxious to pay him all due respect: "Indeed,. Piccadilly," etc. He
supposed Piccadilly must be his own territorial locality. Another
instance of mistake, arising out of Scottish ignorance of London ways,
was made by a North Briton on his first visit to the great city. He
arrived at a hotel in Fleet Street, where many of the country coaches
then put up. On the following morning he supposed that such a crowd as
he encountered could only proceed from some "occasion," and must pass
off in due time. Accordingly, a friend from Scotland found him standing
in a doorway, as if waiting for some one. His countryman asked him what
made him stand there. To which he answered: "Ou, I was just stan’ing
till the kirk had scaled." The ordinary appearance of his native borough
made the crowd of Fleet Street suggest to him the idea of a church crowd
passing out to their several homes, called in Scotland a "kirk scaling."
A London street object called forth a similar simple remark from a
Scotsman. He had come to London on his way to India, and for a few days
had time to amuse himself by sightseeing before his departure. He had
been much struck with the appearance of the mounted sentinels at the
Horse Guards, Whitehall, and bore them in remembrance during his Eastern
sojourn. On his return, after a period of thirty years, on passing the
Horse Guards, he looked up to one, and seeing him, as he thought,
unchanged as to horse, position, and accoutrements, he exclaimed: "Od,
freend, ye hae had a lang spell on’t sin’ I left," supposing him to be
the identical sentinel he had seen before he sailed.
It is interesting to
preserve national peculiarities which are thus passing away from us. One
great pleasure I have had in their collection, and that is the numerous
and sympathetic communications I have received from Scotsmen, I may
literally say from Scotsmen in all quarters of the world;
sometimes communicating very good examples of Scottish humour, and
always expressing their great pleasure in reading, when in distant lands
and foreign scenes, anecdotes which reminded them of Scotland, and of
their ain days of " auld lang syne."
There is no mistaking the
national attachment so strong in the Scottish character. Men return
after long absence, in this respect, unchanged, whilst absent, Scotsmen
never forget their Scottish home. In all varieties of lands and
climates their hearts ever turn towards the "land o’ cakes and brither
Scots." Scottish festivals are kept with Scottish feeling on
"Greenland’s icy mountains" or "India’s coral strand." I received an
amusing account of an ebullition of this patriotic feeling from my late
noble friend the Marquis of Lothian, who met with it when travelling in
India. He happened to arrive at a station upon the eve of St Andrew’s
Day, and received an invitation to join a Scottish dinner party in cornmemoration
of old Scotland. There was a great deal of Scottish enthusiasm. There
were seven sheep-heads (singed) down the table; and Lord Lothian
told me that after dinner he sang with great applause "The Laird o’
Cockpen."
Another anecdote arising out of Scotsmen
meeting in distant lands, is rather of a more serious character, and
used to be told with exquisite humour by the late lamented Dr Norman
Macleod. A settler in Australia, who for a long time had heard nothing
of his Scottish kith and kin, was delighted at the arrival of a
countryman direct from his own part of the country. When he met with
him, the following conversation took place between them :—Q. "Ye
ken my fouk, friend; can ye tell me gin my faather’s alive?" A.—"
Hout, na; he’s deed." Q.—" Deed! What did he dee o’? Was it
fever?" A.—" Na, it wasna fever." Q.—" Was it cholera?"
A.—" Na." The question being pressed, the stranger drily said,
"Sheep," and then he accompanied the ominous word by delicately and
significantly pointing to the jugular under his ear. The man had been
hanged for sheep-stealing!
It must always be amusing for Scotsmen to
meet in distant lands, and there to play off on each other the same dry,
quaint humour which delighted them in their native land, and in their
early days at home. An illustration of this remark has been communicated
by a kind correspondent at Glasgow. Mrs Hume, a true Scot, sends me the
following dialogue, accompanied by a very clever etching of the parties,
from the Melbourne Punch, August 17, 1871, headed "Too Poor—Night
of W’averley Concert."
Southron.—You here, Mac! you ought to have
been at the concert, you know. Aren’t you one of the ‘Scots wha hae?’
Mac.—Indeed
Indeed
no. I’m ane o’ the Scots wha hae na,
or I wadna be here the nicht.
He would not have stayed
at home if he had been one of the "Scots wha hae."
I am assured that the
genuineness of the following anecdote is unquestionable, as my informant
received it from the person to whom it occurred. A popular Anglican
Nonconformist minister was residing with a family in Glasgow while on a
visit to that city, whither he had gone on a deputation from the
Wesleyan Missionary Society. After dinner, in reply to an invitation to
partake of some fine fruit, he mentioned to the family a curious
circumstance concerning himself, viz., that he had never in his life
tasted an apple, pear, grape, or indeed any kind of green fruit. This
fact seemed to evoke considerable surprise from the company, but a
cautious Scotsman, of a practical, matter-of-fact turn of mind, who had
listened with much unconcern, drily remarked, "It’s a peety but ye had
been in Paradise, and there micht na hae been ony faa." I have spoken
elsewhere of the cool matter-of-fact manner in which the awful questions
connected with the funerals of friends are often approached by Scottish
people, without the least intention or purpose of being irreverent or
unfeeling. By the kindness of Mr Lyon, I am enabled to give an authentic
anecdote of a curious character, illustrative of this habit of mind, and
I cannot do better than give it in his own words:— "An old tenant of my
late father, George Lyon of Wester Ogil, many years ago, when on his
deathbed, and his end near at hand, his wife thus addressed him:
'Willie, Willie, as lang as ye can speak, tell us are ye ‘or your
burial-baps round or square?’ Willie having responded to this
inquiry, was next asked if the murners were to have glooes
(gloves) or mittens, the former being articles with fingers, the latter
having only a thumbpiece; and Willie, having also answered this
question, was allowed to depart in peace."
There could not be a
better example of this familiar handling, without meaning offence, than
one which has just been sent to me by a kind correspondent. I give her
own words. "Happening to call on a poor neighbour, I asked after the
children of a person who lived close by. She replied, "They’re no hame
yet; gaed awa to the English kirk to get a clap o’ the heid." It was the
day of confirmation for St Paul’s. This definition of the ‘outward and
visible sign’ would look rather odd in the catechism. But the poor woman
said it from no disrespect; it was merely her way of answering my
question." But remarks on serious subjects often go to deeper views of
religious matters than might be expected from the position of the
parties and the terms made use of.
Of the wise and shrewd
judgment of the Scottish character, as bearing upon religious
pretensions, I have an apt example from my friend Dr Norman Macleod.
During one of the late revivals in Scotland, a small farmer went about
preaching with much fluency and zeal the doctrine of a "full assurance"
of faith, and expressed his belief of it for himself in such extravagant
terms as few men would venture upon who were humble and cautious against
presumption. The "preacher," being personally rather remarkable as a man
of greedy and selfish views in life, excited some suspicion in the
breast of an old sagacious countryman, a neighbour of Dr Macleod, who
asked him what he thought of John as a preacher, and of his doctrine.
Scratching his head, as if in some doubt, he replied, "I’m no verra sure
o’ Jock. I never ken’t a man
sae sure o’ Heaven, and sae sweert to be gaing tae’t." He showed his sagacity, for John was
soon after in prison for theft.
Another story gives a
good idea of the Scottish matter-of-fact view of things being brought to
bear upon a religious question without meaning to be profane or
irreverent. Dr Macleod was on a Highland loch when a storm came on which
threatened serious consequences. The doctor, a large powerful man, was
accompanied by a clerical friend of diminutive size and small
appearance, who began to speak seriously to the boatmen of their danger,
and proposed that all present should join in prayer. "Na, na," said the
chief boatman; "let the little ane gang to pray, but first the
big ane maun tak an oar." Illustrative of the same spirit was the reply
of a Scotsman of the genuine old school, "Boatie" of Deeside, of whom I
have more to say, to a relative of mine. He had been nearly lost in a
squall, and saved after great exertion, and was told by my aunt that he
should be grateful to providence for his safety. The man, not meaning to
be at all ungrateful, but viewing his preservation in the purely hard
matter-of-fact light, quietly answered, "Weel, weel, Mrs Russell;
Providence here or Providence there, an I hadna worked sair mysell I had
been drouned."
Old Mr Downie, the parish
minister of Banchory, was noted, in my earliest days, for his quiet
pithy remarks on men and things, as they came before him. His reply to
his son, of whose social position he had no very exalted opinion, was of
this class. Young Downie had come to visit his father from the West
Indies, and told him that on his return he was to be married to a lady
whose high qualities and position he spoke of in extravagant terms. He
assured his father that she was "quite young, was very rich, and very
beautiful." "Aweel, Jemmy," said the old man, very quietly and very
slily, "I’m thinking there maun be some faut." Of the dry sarcasm
we have a good example in the quiet utterance of a good Scottish phrase
by an elder of a Free Kirk lately formed. The minister was an eloquent
man, and had attracted one of the town-council, who, it was known,
hardly ever entered the door of a church, and now came on motives of
curiosity. He wis talking very grand to some of the congregation: "Upon
my word, your minister is a very eloquent man. Indeed, he will quite
convert me." One of the elders, taking the word in a higher sense than
the speaker intended, quietly replied, "Indeed, Bailie, there’s
muckle need."
A kind correspondent
sends me an illustration of this quaint matter-of-fact view of a
question as affecting the sentiments or the feelings. He tells me he
knew an old lady who was a stout large woman, and who with this state of
body had many ailments, which she bore cheerfully and patiently. When
asked one day by a friend, "How she was keeping," she replied, "Ou, just
middlling; there’s ower muckle o’ me to be a’ weel at ae time."
No Engishwoman would have given such an answer. The same class of
character is very strongly marked in a story which was told by Mr Thomas
Constable, who has a keen appreciation of a good Scottish story, and
tells it inimitably. He used to visit an old lady who was much
attenuated by long illness, and on going upstairs one tremendously hot
afternoon, the daughter was driving away the flies, which were very
troublesome, and was saying, "Thae flies will eat up a’ that remains o’
my puir mither." The old lady opened her eyes, and the last words she
spoke were, "What’s left o’ me’s guid eneuch for them."
The spirit of caution and
wariness by which the Scottish character is supposed to be distinguished
has given rise to many of these national anecdotes.
Certainly this cautious
spirit thus pervaded the opinions of the Scottish architect who was
called upon to erect a building in England upon the long-lease system,
so common with Anglican proprietors, but quite new to our Scottish
friend. When he found the proposal was to build upon the tenure of 999
years, he quietly suggested, "Culd ye no mak it a thousand? 999
years'll be slippin’ awa’."
But of all the cautious
and careful answers we ever heard of was one given by a carpenter to an
old lady in Glasgow, for whom he was working, and the anecdote is well
authenticated. She had offered him a dram, and asked him whether he
would have it then or wait till his work was done: "Indeed, mem," he
said, "there’s been sic a power o’ sudden deaths lately that I’ll just
tak’ it now." He would guard against contingency and secure his dram.
The following is a good
specimen of the same humour:— A minister had been preaching against
covetousness and the love of money, and had frequently repeated how
"love of money was the root of all evil." Two old bodies walking home
from church - one said, "An’ wasna the minister strang upo’ the money?"
"Nae doubt," said the other, rather hesitatingly; and added, "ay, but
it’s grand to hae the wee bit siller in your haund when ye gang an
errand."
I have still another
specimen of this national, cool, and deliberative view of a question,
which seems characteristic of the temperament of our good countrymen.
Some time back, when it was not uncommon for challenges to be
given and accepted for insults, or supposed insults, an English
gentleman was entertaining a party at Inverness with an account of the
wonders he had seen and the deeds he had performed in India, from whence
he had lately arrived. He enlarged particularly upon the size of the
tigers he had met with at different times in his travels, and by way of
corroborating his statements, assured the company that he had shot one
himself considerably above forty feet long. A Scottish gentleman
present, who thought that these narratives rather exceeded a traveller’s
allowed privileges, coolly said that no doubt those were very remarkable
tigers; but that he could assure the gentleman there were in that
northern part of the country some wonderful animals, and, as an example,
he cited the existence of a skate-fish captured off Thurso, which
exceeded half-an-acre in extent. The Englishman saw this was intended as
a sarcasm against his own story, so he left the room in indignation, and
sent his friend, according to the old plan, to demand satisfaction or an
apology from the gentleman, who had, he thought, insulted him. The
narrator of the skate story coolly replied, "Weel, sir, gin yer freend
will tak’ a few feet aff the length o’ his tiger, we’ll see what can be
dune about the breadth o’ the skate." He was too cautious to commit
himself to a rash or decided course of conduct. When the tiger was
shortened, he would take into consideration a reduction of superficial
area in his skate.
A kind correspondent has
sent me about as good a specimen of dry Scottish quiet humour as I know.
A certain Aberdeenshire laird, who kept a very good poultry-yard, could
not command a fresh egg for his breakfast, and felt much aggrieved by
the want. One day, however, he met his grieve’s wife with a nice basket,
and very suspiciously going towards the market; on passing and speaking
a word, he was enabled to discover that her basket was full of beautiful
white eggs. Next time he talked with his grieve, he said to him, "James,
I like you very well, and I think you serve me faithfully, but I cannot
say I admire your wife." To which the cool reply was, "Oh, ‘deed, sir,
I’m no’ surprised at that, for I dinna muckle admire her mysel'."
An answer very much
resembling this, and as much to the point, was that of a gudewife on
Deeside, whose daughter had just been married and had left her for her
new home. A lady asked the mother very kindly about her daughter, and
said she hoped she liked her new home and new relations. "Ou, my lady,
she likes the parish weel eneuch, but she doesna think muckle o’ her
man!"
The natives of
Aberdeenshire are distinguished for the two qualities of being very
acute in their remarks and very peculiar in their language. Any one may
still gain a thorough knowledge of Aberdeen dialect and see capital
examples of Aberdeen humour. I have been supplied with a remarkable
example of this combination of Aberdeen shrewdness with Aberdeen
dialect. In the course of the week after the Sunday on which several
elders of an Aberdeen parish had been set apart for parochial offices, a
knot of the parishioners had assembled at what was in all parishes a
great place of resort for idle gossiping—the smiddy or blacksmith’s
workshop. The qualifications of the new elders were severely criticised.
One of the speakers emphatically laid down that the minister should not
have been satisfied, and had in fact made a most unfortunate choice. He
was thus answered by another parish oracle-perhaps the schoolmaster,
perhaps a weaver: "Fat better culd the man dee nir he’s dune? He bud tae
big’s dyke wi’ the feal at fit o’t." He meant there was no choice of
material—he could only take what offered.
By the kindness of Dr
Begg, I have a most amusing anecdote to illustrate how deeply long-tried
associations were mixed up with the habits of life in the older
generation. A junior minister having to assist at a church in a remote
part of Aberdeenshire, the parochial minister (one of the old school)
promised his young friend a good glass of whisky-toddy after all was
over, adding silly and very significantly, "and gude smuggled
whusky." His Southron guest thought it incumbent to say, "Ah, minister,
that’s wrong, is it not? You know it is contrary to Act of Parliament."
The old Aberdonian could not so easily give up his fine whisky to what
he considered an unjust interference; so he quietly said, "Oh, Acts o’
Parliament lose their breath before they get to Aberdeenshire."
There is something very
amusing in the idea of what may be called the "fitness of things," in
regard to snuff-taking, which occurred to an honest Highlander, a
genuine lover of sneeshin. At the door of the Blait-Athole Hotel he
observed standing a magnificent man in full tartans, and noticed with
much admiration the wide dimensions of his nostrils in a fine upturned
nose. He accosted him, and, as his most complimentary act, offered him
his mull for a pinch. The stranger drew up, and rather haughtily said:
"I never take snuff." "Oh," said the other, "that’s a peety, for there’s
grand acommodation! "
I don’t know a better
example of the sly sarcasm than the following answer of a Scottish
servant to the violent cornmand of his enraged master. A well-known
coarse and abusive Scottish law functionary, when driving out of his
grounds, was shaken by his carriage coming in contact with a large stone
at the gate. He was very angry, and ordered the gatekeeper to have it
removed before his return. On driving home, however, he encountered
another severe shock by the wheels coming in contact with the very same
stone, which remained in the very same place. Still more irritated than
before, in his usual coarse language he called the gatekeeper, and
roared out: "You rascal, if you don’t send that beastly stone to h—,
I’ll break your head." "Well," said the man quietly, and as if he had
received an order which he had to execute, and without meaning anything
irreverent, "aiblins gin it were sent to heevan it wad be mair out o''
your Lordship’s way."
I think about as cool a
Scottish "aside" as I know, was that of the old dealer who, when
exhorting his son to practise honesty in his dealings, on the ground of
its being the "best policy," quietly added,
"I hae tried baith."
In this work frequent
mention is made of a class of old ladies, generally residing in
small towns, who retained till within the memory of many now living the
special characteristics I have referred to. Owing to local connection, I
have brought forward those chiefly who lived in Montrose and the
neighbourhood. But the race is extinct; you might as well look for hoops
and farthingales in society as for such characters now. You can scarcely
imagine an old lady, however quaint, now making use of some of the
expressions recorded in the text, or saying, for the purpose of breaking
up a party of which she was tired, from holding bad cards," We’ll stop
now, bairns; I’m no enterteened;" or urging more haste in going to
church on the plea, "Come awa, or I’ll be ower late for the ‘wicked
man’"—her mode of expressing the commencement of the service.
Nothing could better
illustrate the quiet pawky style for which our countrymen have been
distinguished, than the old story of the piper and the wolves. A
Scottish piper was passing through a deep forest. In the evening he sat
down to take his supper. He had hardly begun, when a number of hungry
wolves, prowling about for food, collected round him. In self-defence,
the poor man began to throw pieces of his victuals to them, which they
greedily devoured. When he had disposed of all, in a fit of despair he
took his pipes and began to play. The unusual sound terrified the
wolves, which, one and all, took to their heels and scampered off in
every direction: on observing which, Sandy quietly remarked, "Od, an I’d
kenned ye liket the pipes sae weel, I’d a gien ye a spring afore
supper."
This imperturbable mode
of looking at the events of life is illustrated by perhaps the most
cautious answer on record, of the Scotsman who, being asked if he
could play the fiddle, warily answered, "He couldna say, for he had
never tried." But take other cases. For example: One tremendously hot
day, during the old stage-coach system, I was going down to Portobello,
when the coachman drew up to take in a gentleman who had hailed him on
the road. He was evidently an Englishman—a fat man, and in a perfect
state of "thaw and dissolution" from the heat and dust. He wiped
himself, and exclaimed, as a remark addressed to the company generally,
"D—d hot it is." No one. said anything for a time, till a man in the
corner slily remarked, "I dinna doubt, sir, but it may." The
cautiousness against committing himself unreservedly to any proposition,
however plausible, was quite delicious.
A more determined
objection to giving a categorical answer occurred, as I have been
assured, in regard to a more profound question. A party travelling on a
railway got into deep discussion on theological questions. Like Milton’s
spirits in Pandemonium, they had
"Reason’d high
Of providence, fore-knowledge, will, and fate—
Fix’d fate, free-will, fore-knowledge absolute;
And
found no end, in wand’ring mazes lost."
A plain Scotsman present
seemed much interested in these matters, and having expressed himself as
not satisfied with the explanations which had been elicited in the
course of discussion on a particular point regarding predestination, one
of the party said to him that he had observed a minister, whom they all
knew, in the adjoining compartment, and that when the train stopped at
the next station a few minutes, he could go and ask his opinion.
The good man accordingly availed himself of the opportunity to get hold
of the minister, and lay their difficulty before him. He returned in
time to resume his own place, and when they had started again, the
gentleman who had advised him, finding him not much disposed to
voluntary communication, asked if he had seen the minister.
"Oh ay, he said, he had seen him. And did
you propose the question to him?" "O ay." "And what did he say?" "Oh, he
just said he didna ken; and what was mair he didna care!"
I have received the four
following admirable anecdotes, illustrative of dry Scottish pawky
humour, from an esteemed minister of the Scottish Church, the Rev. W.
Mearns of Kinneff. I now record them nearly in the same words as his own
kind communication. The anecdotes are as follows :—An aged minister of
the old school, Mr Patrick Stewart, one Sunday took to the pulpit a
sermon without observing that the first leaf or two were so worn and
eaten away that he couldn’t decipher or announce the text. He was not a
man, however, to be embarrassed or taken aback by a matter of this sort,
but at once intimated the state of matters to the congregation: "My
brethren, I canna tell ye the text, for the mice hae eaten it; but we’ll
just begin whaur the mice left aff, and when I come to it I’ll let you
ken." In the year
1843, shortly after the Disruption, a parish minister had left the manse
and removed to about a mile’s distance. His pony got loose one day, and
galloped down the road in the direction of the old glebe. The minister’s
man in charge ran after the pony in a great fuss, and when passing a
large farmsteading on the way, cried out to the farmer, who was
sauntering about, but did not know what had taken place: "Oh, sir, did
ye see the minister’s shault?" "No, no," was the answer, "but
what’s happened?" "Ou, sir, fat do ye think? the minister’s shault’s
got lowse frae his tether, an’ I’m frichtened he’s ta’en the road
doun to the auld glebe." "Weel-a-wicht!" was the shrewd clever rejoinder
of the farmer, who was a keen, supporter of the old parish church, "I
wad na wonder at that. An’ I’se warrant, gin the minister
was gettin’ lowse frae his tether, he wad just tak’ the
same road."
An old clerical friend
upon Speyside, a confirmed bachelor, on going up to the pulpit one
Sunday to preach, found, after giving out the psalm, that he had
forgotten his sermon. I do not know what his objections were to his
leaving the pulpit, and going to the manse for his sermon, but he
preferred sending his old confidential housekeeper for it. He
accordingly stood up in the pulpit, stopped the singing which had
commenced, and thus accosted his faithful domestic: "Annie; I say,
Annie, we’ve committed a mistak’ the day. Ye maun just gang your
waa’s hame, and ye’ll get my sermon oot o' my breekpouch, an’
we’ll sing to the praise o’ the Lord till ye come back again." Annie, of
course, at once executed her important mission, and brought the sermon
out of "the breekpouch," and the service, so far as we heard, was
completed without further interruption.
My dear friend, the late
Rev. Dr John Hunter, told me an anecdote very characteristic of the
unimaginative matter-of-fact Scottish view of matters. One of the
ministers of Edinburgh, a man of dry humour, had a daughter who had for
some time passed the period of youth and of beauty. She had become an
Episcopalian, an event which the Doctor accepted with much good-nature,
and he was asking her one day if she did not intend to be confirmed.
"Well," she said, "I don’t know. I understand Mr Craig always kisses the
candidates whom he prepares, and I could not stand that." "Indeed,
Jeanie," said the Doctor slily, "gin Edward Craig were to gie ye
a kiss, I dinna think ye would be muckle the waur."
Many anecdotes
characteristic of the Scottish peasant often turn upon words and ideas
connected with Holy Scripture. This is not to be considered as in any
sense profane or irreverent; but it arises from the Bible being to the
peasantry of an older generation their library__their only book. We have
constant indications of this almost exclusive familiarity with Scripture
ideas. At the late ceremonial in the north, when the Archbishop of
Canterbury laid the foundation of a Bishop’s Church at Inverness, a
number of persons, amid the general interest and kindly feeling
displayed by the inhabitants, were viewing the procession from a hill as
it passed along. When the clergy, to the number of sixty, came on, an
old woman, who was watching the whole scene with some jealousy,
exclaimed, at sight of the surplices, "There they go, the whited
sepulchres! " I received another anecdote illustrative of the same
remark from an esteemed minister of the Free Church: I mean of the hold
which Scripture expressions have upon the minds of our Scottish
peasantry. One of his flock was a sick nervous woman, who hardly ever
left the house. But one fine afternoon, when she was left alone, she
fancied she would like to get a little air in the field adjoining the
house. Accordingly she put on a bonnet and wrapped herself in a huge red
shawl. Creeping along the dykeside, some cattle were attracted towards
her, and first one and then another gathered round, and she took shelter
in the ditch till she was relieved by some one coming up to her rescue.
She afterwards described her feelings to her minister in strong
language, adding, "And eh, sir! when I lay by the dyke, and the beasts
round a’ glowerin’ at me, I thocht what Dauvid maun hae felt when he
said—’ Many bulls have compassed me; strong bulls of Bashan have beset
me round.’"
With the plainness and
pungency of the old-fashioned Scottish language there was sometimes a
coarseness of expression, which, although commonly repeated in the
Scottish drawing-room of last century, could not now be tolerated. An
example of a very plain and downright address of a laird has been
recorded in the annals of "Forfarshire Lairdship." He had married one of
the Misses Guthrie, who had a strong feeling towards the Presbyterian
faith in which she had been brought up, although her husband was one of
the zealous old school of Episcopalians. The young wife had invited her
old friend, the parish minister, to tea, and had given him a splendid
"four hours."
Ere the table was cleared the laird
came in unexpectedly and thus expressed his indignation, not very
delicately, at what he considered an unwarrantable exercise of
hospitality at his cost: "Helen Guthrie, ye’ll no think to save, yer ain
saul at the expense of my meal-girnel!"
The answer of an
old woman under examination by the minister to the question from the
Shorter Catechism—"What are the decrees of God?" could not have
been surpassed by the General Assembly of the Kirk, or even the Synod of
Dort—" Indeed, sir, He kens that best Himsell." We have an answer
analagous to that, though not so pungent, in a catechumen of the late Dr
Johnston of Leith. She answered his own question, patting him on the
shoulder: "‘Deed, just tell it yersell, bonny
doctor (he was a very handsome man); naebody can tell it better."
To pass from the answers
of "persons come to years of discretion "—I have elsewhere given
examples of peculiar traits of character set forth in the answers of
mere children, and no doubt a most amusing collection might be
made of very juvenile "Scottish Reminiscences." One of these is now a
very old story, and has long been current amongst us :—A little boy who
attended a day-school in the neighbourhood, when he came home in the
evening was always asked how he stood in his own class. The invariable
answer made was, "I’m second dux," which means in Scottish academical
language second from the top of the class. As his habits of application
at home did not quite bear out the claim to so distinguished a position
at school, one of the family ventured to ask what was the number in the
class to which he was attached. After some hesitation he was obliged to
admit: "Ou, there’s jist me and anither lass." It was a very
practical answer of the little girl, when asked the meaning of
"darkness," as it occurred in Scripture reading: "Ou, just steek your
een." On the question, What was the "pestilence that walketh in
darkness"? being put to a class, a little boy answered, after
consideration: "Ou, it’s just bugs." I did not anticipate when in
a former edition I introduced this answer, which I received from my
nephew, Sir Alexander Ramsay, that it would call forth a comment so
interesting as one which I have received from Dr Barber of Ulverston. He
sends me an extract from Matthew’s Translation of the Bible,
which he received from Rev. L. R. Ayre, who possesses a copy of date
1553, from which it appears that Psalm xci. 5 was thus translated by
Matthew, who adopted his translation from Coverdale and Tyndale:— "So
that thou shalt not need to be afrayed for any bugge by nyght, nor for
the arrow that flyeth by day." Dr Barber ingeniously remarks: "Is it
possible the little boy’s mother had one of these old Bibles, or is it
merely a coincidence?"
The innocent and
unsophisticated answers of children on serious subjects are often very
amusing. Many examples are recorded, and one I have received seems much
to the point, and derives a good deal of its point from the Scottish
turn of the expressions. An elder of the kirk having found a little boy
and his sister playing marbles on Sunday, put his reproof in this form,
not a judicious one for a child: "Boy, do ye know where children go to
who play marbles on Sabbath-day?" "Ay," said the boy, "they gang doun to
the field by the water below the brig." "No," roared out the elder,
"they go to hell, and are burned." The little fellow, really shocked,
called to his sister, "Come awa’, Jeanie, here’s a man swearing
awfully."
A Scotch story like that
of the little boy, of which the humour consisted in the dry application
of the terms in a sense different from what was intended by the speaker,
was sent to me, but has got spoilt by passing through the press. It must
be Scotch, or at least, is composed of Scottish materials—The Shorter
Catechism and the bagpipes. A piper was plying his trade in the streets,
and a strict elder of the kirk, desirous to remind him that it was a
somewhat idle and profitless occupation, went up to him and proposed
solemnly the first question of the Shorter Catechism, "What is the chief
end of man?" The good piper, thinking only of his own business, and
supposing that the question had reference to some pipe melody,
innocently answered, "Na, I dinna ken the tune, but if ye’ll whistle it
I’ll try and play it for ye."
I have said before, and I
would repeat the remark again and again, that the object of this work is
not to string together mere funny stories, or to collect amusing
anecdotes. We have seen such collections, in which many of the anecdotes
are mere Joe Millers translated into Scotch. The purport of these pages
has been throughout to illustrate Scottish life and character, by
bringing forward those modes and forms of expression by which alone our
national peculiarities can be familiarly illustrated and explained.
Besides Scottish replies and expressions which are most
characteristic—and in fact unique for dry humour, for quaint and
exquisite wit—I have often referred to a consideration of dialect and
proverbs. There can be no doubt there is a force and beauty in our
Scottish phraseology, as well as a quaint humour, considered
merely as phraseology, peculiar to itself. I have spoken of the
phrase "Auld langsyne," and of other words, which may be compared in
their Anglican and Scottish form. Take the familiar term common to many
singing birds. The English word linnet does not, to my mind, convey so
much of simple beauty and of pastoral ideas as belong to our Scottish
word LINTIE.
I recollect hearing the
Rev. Dr Norman Macleod give a most interesting account of his visit to
Canada. In the course of his eloquent narrative he mentioned a
conversation he had with a Scottish emigrant, who in general terms spoke
favourably and gratefully of his position in his adopted country. But he
could not help making this exception when he thought of the "banks and
braes o’ bonny Doon "—" But oh, sir," he said, "there are nae linties
i’ the wuds." How touching the words in his own dialect! The North
American woods, although full of birds of beautiful plumage, it is well
known have no singing-birds.
A worthy Scottish
Episcopal minister one day met a townsman, a breeder and dealer in
singing-birds. The man told him he had just had a child born in his
family, and asked him if he would baptize it. He thought the minister
could not resist the offer of a bird. "Eh, Maister Shaw," he said, "if
ye’ll jist do it, I hae a fine lintie the noo, and if ye’ll do it, I’ll
gie ye the lintie." He quite thought that this would settle the matter!
By these remarks I mean
to express the feeling that the word lintie conveys to my mind
more of tenderness and endearment towards the little songster than
linnet. And this leads me to a remark (which I do not remember to have
met with) that Scottish dialects are peculiarly rich in such terms of
endearment, more so than the pure Anglican. Without at all pretending to
exhaust the subject, I may cite the following as examples of the class
of terms I speak of. Take the names for parents—" Daddie" and "Minnie";
names for children, "My wee bit lady" or "laddie," "My wee bit lamb"; of
a general nature, "My ain kind dearie." "Dawtie," especially used to
young people, described by Jamieson a darling or favourite, one who is
dawted, i.e., fondled or caressed. My "joe" expresses affection
with familiarity, evidently derived from joy, an easy
transition—as "My Joe, Janet"; "John Anderson, my joe, John." Of this
character is Burns’s address to a wife, "My winsome"—i.e.,
charming, engaging—"wee thing"; also to a wife, "My winsome marrow "—the
latter word signifying a dear companion, one of a pair closely allied to
each other; also the address of Rob the Ranter to Maggie Lauder, "My
bonnie bird." Now, we would remark, upon this abundant nomenclature of
kindly expressions in the Scottish dialect, that it assumes an
interesting position as taken in connection with the Scottish Life and
Character, and as a set-off against a frequent short and
grumpy manner. It indicates how often there must be a current of
tenderness and affection in the Scottish heart, which is so frequently
represented to be, like its climate, "stern and wild." There could not
be such terms were the feelings they express unknown. I believe
it often happens that in the Scottish character there is a vein of deep
and kindly feeling lying hid under a short, and hard and somewhat stern
manner. Hence has arisen the Scottish saying which is applicable to such
cases—" His girn’s waun than his bite": his disposition is of a softer
nature than his words and manner would often lead you to suppose.
There are two admirable
articles in Blackwood’s Magazine, in the numbers for November and
December 1870, upon this subject. The writer abundantly vindicates the
point and humour of the Scottish tongue. Who can resist, for example,
the epithet applied by Meg Merrilies to an unsuccessful probationer for
admission to the ministry :—"a sticket stibbler"? Take the sufficiency
of Holy Scripture as a pledge for any one’s salvation:—"There’s eneuch
between the brods o’ the Testament to save the biggest sinner i’ the
warld." I heard an old Scottish Episcopalian thus pithily describe the
hasty and irreverent manner of a young Englishman:—"He ribbled aff the
prayers like a man at the heid o’ a regiment." A large family of young
children has been termed "a great sma’ family." It was a delicious dry
rejoinder to the question— "Are you Mr So-and-so?" "It’s a’ that’s o’
me" (i.e., to be had for him). I have heard an old Scottish
gentleman direct his servant to mend the fire by saying, "I think,
Dauvid, we wadna be the waur o’ some coals."
There is a pure Scottish
term, which I have always thought more expressive than any English word
of ideas connected with manners in society—I mean the word to blether,
or blethering, or blethers. Jamieson defines it to "talk nonsense." But
it expresses far more—it expresses powerfully, to Scottish people, a
person at once shallow, chattering, conceited, tiresome, voluble.
There is a delicious
servantgirlism, often expressed in an answer given at the door to an
inquirer: "Is your master at home, or mistress?" as the case may be. The
problem is to save the direct falsehood, and some time ceased to be
cultivated with much ardour, yet evade the visit; so the answer is: "Ay,
he or she is at hame but he’s no in."
The transition from
Scottish expressions to Scottish Poetry is easy and natural. In
fact, the most interesting feature now belonging to Scottish life and
social habits is, to a certain extent, becoming with many a matter of
reminiscence of Poetry in the Scottish dialect, as being the most
permanent and the most familiar feature of Scottish characteristics. It
is becoming a matter of history, in so far as we find that it has for or
to attract much popularity. In fact, since the time of Burns, it has
been losing its hold on the public mind. It is a remarkable fact that
neither Scott nor Wilson, both admirers of Burns, both copious writers
of poetry themselves, both also so distinguished as writers of Scottish
prose, should have written any poetry strictly in the form of pure
Scottish dialect. "Jock o’ Hazeldean" I hardly admit to be an exception.
It is not Scottish. If, indeed, Sir Walter wrote the scrap of the
beautiful ballad in the "Antiquary"—
"Now haud your tongue,
baith wife and carle
And listen, great and sma’,
And I will sing of Glenallan’s Earl,
That fought at the red Harlaw"—
one cannot but regret
that he had not written more of the same. Campbell, a poet and a
Scotsman, has not attempted it. In short, we do not find poetry in the
Scottish dialect at all kept
up in Scotland. It is
every year becoming more a matter of research and reminiscence. Nothing
new is added to the old stock, and indeed it is surprising to see the
ignorance and want of interest displayed by many young persons in this
department of literature. How few read the works of Allan Ramsay, once
so popular, and still so full of pastoral imagery! There are
occasionally new editions of the Gentle Shepherd, but I suspect
for a limited class of readers. I am assured the boys of the High
School, Academy, etc., do not care even for Burns. As poetry in the
Scottish dialect is thus slipping away from the public Scottish mind, I
thought it very suitable to a work of this character to supply a list of
modern Scottish dialect writers. This I am able to provide by the
kindness of our distinguished antiquary, Mr David Laing—the fulness and
correctness of whose acquirements are only equalled by his readiness and
courtesy in communicating his information to others :—
SCOTTISH POETS OF THE
LAST CENTURY.
ALLAN RAMSAY. B. 1686. D. 1757. His
Gentle Shepherd, completed in 1725, and his Collected Poems
in 1721-1728.
It cannot be said there was any want of
successors, however obscure, following in the same track. Those chiefly
deserving of notice were:—
ALEXANDER Ross of Lochlee. B. 1700. D.
1783. The Fortunate Shepherdess.
ROBERT FERGUSSON.
B. 1750. D. 1774.
Leith Races, Caller Oysters,
etc.
Rev. JOHN
SKINNER. B. 1721. D. 1807.
Tullochgorum.
ROBERT BURNS.
B. 1759. D. 1796.
ALEXANDER, FOURTH DUKE OF GORDON.
B. D. 1827.
Cauld Kail in Aberdeen.
ALEXANDER WILSON of Paisley, who latterly
distinguished himself as an American ornithologist. B. 1766. D.1813 Watty
and Meg.
HECTOR MACNEILL.
B. 1746. D. 1818. Will and Jean.
ROBERT TANNAHILL. B. 1774. D. 1850.
Songs.
JAMES l-{OGG.
B. 1772. D. 1835.
ALLAN CUNNINGHAM.
B. 1784. D. 1842.
To this list we must add
the names of Lady Nairne and Lady Anne Lindsay. To the former we are
indebted for "The Land o’ the Leal," "The Laird o’ Cockpen," and "The
Auld Hoose"; to the latter for "Auld Robin Gray": and our wonder is, how
those who could write so charmingly should have written so little.
I have no intention of
discussing the general question of Scottish poetry—of defending or
eulogising, or of apologising for anything belonging to it. There are
songs in broad Scottish dialect of which the beauty and the power will
never be lost. Words of Burns, Allan Ramsay, and Lady Nairne, must ever
speak to hearts that are true to nature. I am desirous of bringing
before my readers at this time the name of a Scottish poet, which,
though in Mr Lang’s list, I fear is become rather a reminiscence. It is
fifty years since his poetical pieces were published in a collected
form. I am desirous. of giving a special notice of a true-hearted
Scotsman, and a genuine Scottish poet, under both characters. I look
with a tender regard to the memory of the Rev. JOHN SKINNER of Langside.
He has written little in quantity, but it is all charming. He was a good
Christian minister. He was a man of learning—a man of liberal and
generous feeling. In addition to all this, he has upon me the claim of
having been a Scottish Episcopalian divine, and I am always rejoiced to
see among learned men of our church sympathies with liberalism, besides
what is patristic and theological. John Skinner’s name and family are
much mixed up with our church. "Tullochgorum" was father of Primus John
Skinner, and grandfather of Primus W. Skinner and of the Rev. John
Skinner of Forfar. The youngest brother of Tullochgorum was James
Skinner, W.S., who died at ninety-one, and was grandfather of W.
Skinner, W.S., Edinburgh. The Rev. J. Skinner was born in Birse, a wild
part of Aberdeenshire, 1721. His father was parochial schoolmaster at
Gight for nearly fifty years. He worked hard under the care of his
father, who was a good Latin scholar. He gained a bursary at Aberdeen,
where he studied. When he left college he became schoolmaster at
Monymusk, where he wrote some pieces that attracted attention, and Sir
Archibald Grant took him into the house, and allowed him the full use of
a very line library. He made good use of this opportunity, and indeed
became a fair scholar and theologian. Skinner had been brought up a
Presbyterian, but at Monymusk found reasons for changing his views. In
June 1740 he became tutor to the only son of Mrs Sinclair in Shetland.
Returning to Aberdeenshire in 1741, he completed his studies for the
ministry, was ordained by Bishop Dunbar, and in 1742 became pastor of
Langside. He worked for this little congregation for nearly sixty-five
years, and they were happy and united under his pastoral charge. One
very interesting incident took place during his ministry, which bears
upon our general question of reminiscences and changes. John Skinner was
in his own person an example of that persecution for political opinion
referred to in Professor Macgregor’s account of the large prayer-book in
the library at Panmure. After the '45, Episcopalians were treated with
suspicion and severity. The severe laws passed against Jacobites were
put in force, and poor Skinner fined.
However, better and more
peaceful times came round, and all that John Skinner had undergone did
not sour his temper or make him severe or misanthropical. As a pastor he
seems to have had tact, as well as good temper, in the management of his
flock, if we may judge from the following anecdote:— Talking with an
obstinate self-confident farmer, when the conversation happened to turn
on the subject of the motion of the earth, the farmer would not be
convinced that the earth moved at all. "Hoot, minister," the man roared
out, "d’ye see the earth never gaes oot o’ the pairt, and it maun be
that the sun gaes round: we a’ ken he rises i’ the east and sets i’ the
west." Then, as if to silence all argument, he added triumphantly, "As
if the sun didna gae round the earth, when it is said in Scripture that
the Lord commanded the sun to stand still!" Mr Skinner, finding it was
no use to argue further, quietly answered, "Ay, it’s verra true; the sun
was commanded to stand still, and there he stands still, for Joshua
never tauld him to tak’ the road again." I have said John Skinner wrote
little Scottish poetry, but what he wrote was rarely good. His prose
works extended over three volumes when they were collected by his son,
the Bishop of Aberdeen, but we have no concern with them. His poetical
pieces, by which his name will never die in Scotland, are the "Reel of
Tullochgorum" and the "Ewie with the Crooked Horn," charming Scottish
songs—one the perfection of the lively, the other of the pathetic. It is
quite enough to say of "Tullochgorum" (by which the old man is now
always designated), what was said of it by Robert Burns, as the first of
songs," and as the best Scotch song Scotland ever saw.
I have brought in
the following anecdote, exactly as it appeared in the Scotsman of
October 4, 1859, because it introduces his
name.
"The late Rev. John
Skinner, author of ‘Annals of Scottish Episcopacy,’ was his grandson. He
was first appointed to a charge in Montrose, from whence he was removed
to Banff, and ultimately to Forfar. After he had left Montrose, it
reached his ears that an ill-natured insinuation was circulating there
that he had been induced to leave this town by the temptation of a
better income and of fat pork, which, it would appear, was plentiful in
the locality of his new incumbency. Indignant at such an aspersion, he
wrote a letter, directed to his maligners, vindicating himself sharply
from it, which he showed to his grandfather, John Skinner of Langside,
for his approval. The old gentleman objected to it as too lengthy, and
proposed the following pithy substitute:—
"‘Had Skinner been
of carnal mind,
As strangely ye suppose,
Or had he even been fond of swine,
He’d ne’er have left Montrose.’"
But
there is an anecdote of John Skinner which
should endear his memory to every generous and loving heart. On one
occasion he was passing a small dissenting place of worship at the time
when the congregation were engaged in singing: on passing the
door—old-fashioned Scottish Episcopalian as he was—he reverently took
off his hat. His companion said to him, "What! do you feel so much
sympathy with this Anti-Burgher congregation?" "No," said Mr Skinner,
"but I respect and love any of my fellow Christians who are engaged in
singing to the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ." Well done, old
Tullochgorum! thy name shall be loved and honoured by every true
liberal-minded Scotsman.
Yes! Mr Skinner’s
experience of the goodness of God and of the power of grace, had led him
to the conviction that the earnest song of praise, that comes from the
heart of the sincere believer in Christ, can go up to Heaven from the
humblest earthly house of prayer, and be received before the throne of
grace as acceptably as the high and solemn service of the lofty
cathedral,
"Where, from the long-drawn aisle
and fretted vault,
The pealing anthem swells the note of praise."
We must firmly believe
that, obsolete as the dialect of Scotland may become, and its words and
expressions a matter of tradition and of reminiscence with many,
still there are Scottish lines, and broad Scottish lines, which can
never cease to hold their place in the affections and the admiration of
innumerable hearts whom they have charmed. Can the choice and popular
Scottish verses, endeared to us by so many kindly associations of the
past, and by so many beauties and poetical graces of their own, ever
lose their attractions for a Scottish heart? The charm of such strains
can never die.
I think one subsidiary
pause for permanency in the popularity still belonging to particular
Scottish songs has proceeded from their association with Scottish
music. The melodies of Scotland can never die. In the best of
these compositions there is a pathos and a feeling which must preserve
them, however simple in their construction, from being vulgar or
commonplace. Mendelssohn did not disdain taking Scottish airs as themes
for the exercise of his profound science and his exquisite taste. It
must, I think, be admitted that singing of Scottish songs in the
perfection of their style -at once pathetic, graceful, and
characteristic— is not so often met with as to remove all apprehension
that ere long they may become matters only of reminiscence. Many
accomplished musicians often neglect entirely the cultivation of their
native melodies, under the idea of their being inconsistent with the
elegance and science of high-class music. They commit a mistake. When
judiciously and tastefully performed, it is a charming style of music,
and will always give pleasure to the intelligent hearer. I have heard
two young friends, who have attained great skill in scientific and
elaborate compositions, execute the simple song of "Low down in the
Broom," with an effect I shall not easily forget. Who that has heard the
Countess of Essex, when Miss Stephens, sing "Auld Robin Gray," can ever
lose the impression of her heart touching notes? In the case of "Auld
Robin Gray," the song composed by Lady Anne Lindsay, although very
beautiful in itself, has been, I think, a good deal indebted to the air
for its great and continued popularity. The history of that tender and
appropriate melody is somewhat curious, and not generally known. The
author was not a Scotsman. It was composed by the Rev. Mr Leves,
rector of Wrington in Somerset-shire, either early in this century or
just at the close of the last. Mr Leves was fond of music, and composed
several songs, but none ever gained any notice except his "Auld Robin
Gray," the popularity of which has been marvellous. I knew the family
when I lived in Somersetshire, and had met them in Bath. Mr Leves
composed the air for his daughter, Miss Bessy Leves, who was a pretty
girl and a pretty singer.
I cannot but deeply
regret to think that I should in these pages have any ground for
classing Scottish poetry and Scottish airs amongst "Reminiscences." It
is a department of literature where, of course, there must be
selection, but I am convinced it will repay a careful cultivation. I
would recommend, as a copious and judicious selection of Scottish
tunes, "The Scottish Minstrel." by R. A. Smith (Purdie, Edinburgh).
There are the words, also, of a vast number of Scottish songs,
but the account of their authorship is very defective. Then,
again, for the fine Scottish ballads of an older period, we have two
admirable collections— one by Mr R. Chambers, and one by the late
Professor Aytoun. For Scottish dialect songs of the more modern type, a
copious collection will be found (exclusive of Burns and Allan Ramsay)
in small volumes published by David Robertson, Glasgow, at intervals
from 1832 to 1853, under the title of
Whistlebinkie.
But there are more
than lines of Scottish poetry which may become matter of reminiscence,
and more than Scottish song melodies which may be forgotten. There are
strains of Scottish PSALMODY of which it would be more sad to think that
they possibly may have lost their charm and their hold with
Scottish people. That such psalmody, of a peculiar Scottish class and
character, has existed, no one can doubt who has knowledge or
recollection of past days. In glens and retired passes, where those who
fled from persecution met together—on the moors and heaths, where men
suffering for their faith took refuge—in the humble worship of the
cottar’s fireside—were airs of sacred Scottish melody, which were well
calculated to fan the heavenward flame which was kindled in lays of the
"sweet Psalmist of Israel." These psalm-tunes are in their way as
peculiar as the song-tunes we have referred to. Nothing can be more
touching than the description by Burns of the domestic psalmody of his
father’s cottage. Mr R. Chambers, in his Life
of Burns, informs us that the poet, during his
father’s infirmity and after his death, had himself sometimes conducted
family worship. Happy days,
ere he had encountered the temptations of a world in which he had too
often fallen before the solicitations of guilty passion! and then,
beautifully does he describe the characteristic features of this portion
of the cottar’s worship. How solemnly he enumerates the psalm-tunes
usually made use of on such occasions, and discriminates the character
of each :—
"They chant their artless
notes in simple guise;
They tune their hearts, by far the noblest aim:
Perhaps DUNDEE’S wild warbling measures rise
Or plaintive MARTYRS, worthy of the name,
Or noble ELGIN
beets the heavenward flame."
He was not, alas! always
disposed in after life to reverence these sacred melodies as he had done
in his youthful days. In his poem of "The Holy Fair," he less reverently
adduces mention of these sacred airs :—
"Now turn the Psalms
o’ David ower,
And lilt wi’ holy clangour.
O’ double verse come gie us four,
An' skirl up the Bangor."
These tunes seem to have
been strictly and exclusively national. In proof of such psalmody being
quite national, I have been told that many of these tunes were composed
by artisans, such as builders, joiners, blacksmiths, etc.
Several of the
psalm-tunes more peculiar to Scotland are no doubt of an early date. In
Ravenscroft’s Psalms, published with the music in four parts in
1621, he gives the names of seven as purely Scottish—King’s
Duke’s, Abbey, Dunfermline, Dundee, Glasgow, Martyrs. I was used to
hear such psalmody in my early days in the parish church of Fettercairn,
where we always attended during summer. It had all the simple
characteristics described by Burns, and there was a heartiness and
energy too in the congregation when, as he expresses it, they used to
"skin up the Bangor," of which the effects still hang in my
recollection. At that time there prevailed the curious custom, when some
of the psalms were sung, of reading out a single line, and when that was
sung another line was read, and so throughout. Thus, on singing the 50th
psalm, the first line sounded thus:—"Our
God shall come, and shall no more;" when that
was sung, there came the next startling announcement—"Be silent, but
speak out." A rather unfortunate juxtaposition was suggested
through this custom, which we are assured really happened in the church
of Irvine. The precentor, after having given out the first line, and
having observed some members of the family from the castle struggling to
get through the crowd on a sacramental occasion, cried out, "Let the
noble family of Eglinton pass," and then added the line which followed
the one he had just given out rather mal-apropos—-"Nor stand in
sinners’ way." One peculiarity I remember, which was, closing the
strain sometimes by an interval less than a semitone; instead of the
half-note preceding the close or key-note, they used to take the
quarter-note, the effect of which had a peculiar gurgling sound, but
I never heard it elsewhere. It may be said these Scottish tunes were
unscientific, and their performance rude. It may be so, but the effect
was striking, as I recall it through the vista of threescore years and
ten. Great advances, no doubt, have been made in Scotland in
congregational psalmody; organs have in
some instances been adopted; choirs have
been organised with great effort by choirmasters of musical taste and
skill. But I hope the spirit of PIETY, which in past times once
accompanied the old Scottish psalm, whether sung in the church or at
home, has not departed with the music. Its better emotions are not, I
hope, to become a "Reminiscence."
There was no doubt
sometimes a degree of noise in the psalmody more than was consistent
with good taste, but this often proceeded from the earnestness of those
who joined. I recollect at Banchory an honest fellow who sang so loud
that he annoyed his fellow-worshippers, and the minister even rebuked
him for "skirling" so loud. James was not quite patient under these
hints, and declared to some of his friends that he was resolved to sing
to the praise of God, as he said, "gin I should crack the waas o’ the
houss."
Going from sacred tunes
to sacred words, a good many changes have taken place in the little
history of our own psalmody and hymnology. When I first came to
Edinburgh, for psalms we made use of the mild and vapid new version of
Tate and Brady — for hymns, almost each congregation had its own
selection —and there were hymn-books of Dundee, Perth, Glasgow, etc. The
Established Church used the old rough psalter, with paraphrases by
Logan, etc., and a few hymns added by authority of the General Assembly.
There seems to be a pretty general tendency in the Episcopal Church to
adopt at present the extensive collection called "Hymns Ancient and
Modern," containing 386 pieces. Copies of the words alone are to be
procured for one penny, and the whole, with tunes attached, to be
procured for 1s. 6d. The Hymns Ancient and Modern are not set forth with
any Ecclesiastical sanction. It is supposed, however, that there will be
a Hymnal published by the Church of England on authority, and if so, our
Church will be likely to adopt it. The Established Church Hymnal
Committee have lately sanctioned a very interesting collection of 200
pieces. The compilation has been made with liberality of feeling as well
as with good taste. There are several of Neale’s translations from
medieaval hymns, several from John Keble, and the whole concludes with
the Te Deum taken literally from the Prayer-Book.
This mention of Scottish
Psalmody and Scottish Hymnology, whether for private or for public
worship, naturally brings us to a very important division of our
subject; I mean the general question of reminiscences of Scottish
religious feelings and observances; and first in regard to Scottish
clergy.
My esteemed friend, Lord
Neaves, who, it is well known, combines with his great legal knowledge
and high literary acquirements a keen sense of the humorous, has
sometimes pleasantly complained of my drawing so many of my specimens of
Scottish humour from sayings and doings of Scottish ministers. They were
a shrewd and observant race. They lived amongst their own people from
year to year, and understood the Scottish type of character. Their
retired habits and familiar intercourse with their parishioners gave
rise to many quaint and racy communications. They were excellent men,
well suited to their pastoral work, and did much good amongst their
congregations; for it should be always remembered that a national church
requires a sympathy and resemblance between the pastors and the flocks.
Both will be found to change together. Nothing could be further from my
mind in recording these stories, than the idea of casting ridicule upon
such an order of men. My own feelings as a Scotsman, with all their
ancestral associations, lead me to cherish their memory with pride and
deep interest. I may appeal also to the fact that many contributions to
this volume are voluntary offerings from distinguished clergymen of the
Church of Scotland, as well as of the Free Church and of other
Presbyterian communities. Indeed, no persons enjoy these stories more
than ministers themselves. I recollect many years ago travelling to
Perth in the old stage-coach days, and enjoying the society of a
Scottish clergyman, who was a most amusing companion, and full of
stories, the quaint humour of which accorded with his own disposition.
When we had come through Glen Farg, my companion pointed out that we
were in the parish of Dron. With much humour he introduced an anecdote
of a brother minister not of a brilliant order of mind, who had
terminated in this place a course of appointments in the Church, the
names of which, at least, were of an ominous character for a person of
unimaginative temperament. The worthy man had been brought up at the
school of Dunse; had been made assistant at Dull, a parish
near Aberfeldy, in the Presbytery of Weem; and here had ended his days
and his clerical career as minister of
Dron.
There can be no doubt that the older
school of national clergy supply many of our most amusing anecdotes; and
our pages would suffer deplorably were all the anecdotes taken away
which turn upon their peculiarities of dialect and demeanour. I think it
will be found, however, that upon no class of society has there been a
greater change during the last hundred years than on the Scottish clergy
as a body. This, indeed, might, from many circumstances, have been
expected. The improved facilities for locomotion have had effect upon
the retirement and isolation of distant country parishes, the more
liberal and extended course of study at Scottish colleges, the cheaper
and wider diffusion of books on general literature, of magazines,
newspapers, and reviews. Perhaps, too, we may add that candidates for
the ministry now more generally originate from the higher educated
classes of society. But honour to the memory of Scottish ministers of
the days that are gone!
The Scottish clergy, from
having mixed so little with life, were often, no doubt, men of simple
habits and of very childlike notions. The opinions and feelings which
they expressed were often of a cast, which amongst persons of more
experience, would appear to be not always quite consistent with the
clerical character. In them it arose from their having nothing
conventional about them. Thus I have heard of an old bachelor
clergyman whose landlady declared he used to express an opinion of his
dinner by the grace which he made to follow. When he had had a good
dinner which pleased him, and a good glass of beer with it, he poured
forth the grace, "For the riches of Thy bounty and its blessings we
offer our thanks." When he had had poor fare and poor beer, his grace
was, "The least of these Thy mercies."
Many examples of the dry,
quaint humour of the class occur in these pages, but there could not be
a finer specimen than the instance recorded in the "Annals of the
Parish" of the account given by the minister of his own ordination. The
ministers were all assembled for the occasion; prayers had been offered,
discourses delivered, and the time for the actual ordination had come.
The form is for the candidate to kneel down and receive his sacred
office by the imposition of hands, i.e., the laying on of hands
by the whole Presbytery. As the attendance of ministers was large, a
number of hands were stretched forth, more than could quite conveniently
come up to the candidate. An old minister, of the quiet jocose turn of
mind we speak of, finding himself thus kept at a little distance,
stretched out his walking staff and put it on the young man’s head, with
the quiet remark, "That will do! Timmer to timmer "—timber to timber.
Their style of preaching,
too, was no doubt often plain and homely. They had not the graces of
elocution or elegance of diction. But many were faithful in their
office, and preached Christ as the poor man’s friend and the Saviour of
the lowly and the suffering. I have known Scottish ministers of the old
school get into a careless indifferent state of ministration; I have
also known the hoary head of many a Scottish minister go down to the
grave a crown of glory, in his day and generation more honoured than
many which had been adorned by a mitre. |