PASSING from these remarks on the Scottish of a past
day, I would treat the more extensive subject of RELIGIOUS FEELINGS and
RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCES generally with the caution and deference due to
such a question, and I would distinctly premise that there is in my mind
no intention of entering, in this volume, upon those great questions
which, are connected with certain church movements amongst us, or with
national peculiarities of faith and discipline. It is impossible,
however, to overlook entirely the fact of a gradual relaxation, which
has gone on for some years, of the sterner features of the Calvinistic
school of theology——-at any rate, of keeping its theoretic peculiarities
more in the background. What we have to notice in these pages are
changes in the feelings with regard to religion and religious
observances, which have appeared upon the exterior of society—the
changes which belong to outward habits rather than to internal feelings.
Of such changes many have taken place within my own experience. Scotland
has ever borne the character of a moral and religious country; and the
mass of the people are a more church-going race than the masses of
English population. I am not at all prepared to say that in the middle
and lower ranks of life our countrymen have undergone much change in
regard to religious observances. But there can be no question that
amongst the upper classes there are manifestations connected with
religion now, which some years ago were not thought of. The attendance
of men on public worship is of itself an example of the change we
speak of. I am afraid that when Walter Scott described Monkbarns as
being with difficulty "hounded out" to hear the sermons of good Mr
Blattergowl, he wrote from a knowledge of the habits of church-going
then generally prevalent among Scottish lairds. The late Bishop Sandford
told me that when he first came to Edinburgh—I suppose fifty years
ago—few gentlemen attended church—very few indeed were seen at the
communion—so much so that it was a matter of conversation when a male
communicant, not an aged man, was observed at the table for the first
time. Sydney Smith, when preaching in Edinburgh some forty years ago,
seeing how almost exclusively congregations were made up of ladies, took
for his text the verse from the Psalms, "Oh that men would therefore
praise the Lord!" and with that touch of the facetious which marked
everything he did, laid the emphasis on the word "men." Looking round
the congregation and saying, "Oh that men would therefore praise
the Lord!" implying that he used the word, not to describe the human
species generally, but the male individuals as distinguished from the
female portion. In regard to attendance by young men, both at church and
communion, a marked change has taken place in my own experience. In
fact, there is an attention excited towards church subjects, which,
thirty years ago, would have been hardly credited. Nor is it only in
connection with churches and church services that these changes have
been brought forth, but an interest has been raised on the subject from
Bible societies, missionary associations at home and abroad, schools and
reformatory institutions, most of which, as regard active operation,
have grown up during fifty years.
Nor should I omit to
mention, what I trust may be considered as a change belonging to
religious feeling, viz., that conversation is now conducted without that
accompaniment of those absurd and unmeaning oaths which were once
considered an essential embellishment of polite discourse. I distinctly
recollect an elderly gentleman, when describing the opinion of a refined
and polished female upon a particular point, putting into her mouth an
unmistakable round oath as the natural language in which people’s
sentiments and opinions would be ordinarily conveyed. This is a change
wrought in men’s feelings, which all must hail with great pleasure.
Putting out of sight for a moment the sin of such a practice, and the
bad influence it must have had upon all emotions of reverence for the
name and attributes of the Divine Being, and the natural effect of
profane swearing, to "harden a’ within," we might marvel at the utter
folly and incongruity of making swearing accompany every expression of
anger or surprise, or of using oaths as mere expletives in common
discourse. A quaint anecdote, descriptive of such senseless ebullition,
I have from a friend who mentioned the names of parties concerned: A
late Duke of Athole had invited a well-known character, a writer of
Perth, to come up and meet him at Dunkeld for the transaction of some
business. The Duke mentioned the day and hour when he should receive the
man of law, who accordingly came punctually at the appointed time and
place. But the Duke had forgotten the appointment, and gone to the hill,
from which he could not return for some hours. A Highlander present
described the Perth writer’s indignation, and his mode of showing it by
a most elaborate course of swearing. "But whom did he swear at?" was the
inquiry made of the narrator, who
replied, "Oh, he didna sweer at ony thing particular, but
juist stude in ta middle of ta road and swoor at lairge." I have from a
friend also an anecdote which shows how entirely at one period the
practice of swearing had become familiar even to female ears when mixed
up with the intercourse of social life. A sister had been speaking of
her brother as much addicted to this habit: "Oor John sweers awfie’, and
we try to correct him; but," she added in a candid and apologetic tone,
"nae doubt it is a
great set off to conversation." There was something of rather an
admiring character in the description of an outbreak of swearing by
a Deeside body. He had been before the meeting of Justices for some
offence against the excise laws, and had been promised some assistance
and countenance by my cousin, the laird of Finzean, who was
unfortunately addicted to the practice in question. The poor fellow had
not got off so well as he had expected, and on giving an account of what
took place to a friend, he was asked, "But did not Finzean speak for
you?" "Na," he replied, "he didna say muckle; but oh, he damned bonny!"
This is the place to
notice a change which has taken place in regard to some questions of
taste in the building and embellishing of Scottish places of worship.
Some years back there was a great jealousy of ornament in connection
with churches and church services, and, in fact, all such embellishments
were considered as marks of a departure from the simplicity of old
Scottish worship—they were distinctive of Episcopacy as opposed to the
severer modes of Presbyterianism. The late Sir William Forbes used to
give an account of a conversation, indicative of this feeling, which he
had overheard between an Edinburgh inhabitant and his friend from the
country.
They were passing St
John’s, which had just been finished, and the countryman asked, "Whatna
kirk was that?" "Oh," said the townsman, "that is an English chapel,"
meaning Episcopalian. "Ay," said his friend, "there’ll be a walth o’
images there." But, if unable to sympathise with architectural
church ornament and embellishment, how much less could they sympathise
with the performance of divine service, which included such musical
accompaniments as intoning, chanting, and anthems! On the first
introduction of Tractarianism into Scotland, the full choir service had
been established in an Episcopal church, where a noble family had
adopted those views, and carried them out regardless of expense. The
lady who had been instrumental in getting up these musical services was
very anxious that a favourite female servant of the family—a
Presbyterian of the old school—should have an opportunity of hearing
them; accordingly, she very kindly took her down to church in the
carriage, and on returning asked her what she thought of the music, etc.
"Ou, it’s verra bonny, verra bonny; but oh, my lady, it’s an awfu’ way
of spending the Sabbath." The good woman could only look upon the whole
thing as a musical performance. The organ was a great mark of
distinction between Episcopalian and Presbyterian places of worship. I
have heard of an old lady describing an Episcopalian clergyman, without
any idea of disrespect, in these terms:—"Oh, he is a whistle-kirk
minister." From an Australian correspondent I have an account of the
difference between an Episcopal minister and a Presbyterian minister, as
remarked by an old Scottish lady of his acquaintance. Being asked in
what the difference was supposed to consist, after some consideration
she replied, "Weel, ye see, the Presbyterian minister wears his sark
under his coat, the Episcopal minister wears his sark aboon his coat."
Of late years, however, a spirit of greater tolerance of such things has
been growing up amongst us—a greater tolerance, I suspect, even of
organs and liturgies. In fact, we may say a new era has begun in
Scotland as to church architecture and church ornaments. The use of
stained glass in churches—forming memorial windows for the departed,
[Distinguished examples of these are to be found in the Old Greyfriars’
Church, Edinburgh, and in the Cathedral of Glasgow; to say nothing of
the beautiful specimens in St John’sEpiscopal Church, Edinburgh.] a free
use of crosses as architectural ornaments, and restoration of ancient
edifices, indicate a revolution of feeling regarding this question.
Beautiful and expensive churches are rising everywhere, in connection
with various denominations. It is not long since the building or
repairing a new church, or the repairing and adapting an old church,
implied in Scotland simply a production of the greatest possible degree
of ugliness and bad taste at the least possible expense, and certainly
never included any notion of ornament in the details. Now, large sums
are expended on places of worship, without reference to creed.
First-rate architects are employed. Fine Gothic structures are produced.
The rebuilding of the Greyfriars’ Church, the restoration of South Leith
Church and of Glasgow Cathedral, the very bold experiment of adopting a
style little known amongst us, the pure Lombard, in a church for Dr W.
L. Alexander, on George IV. Bridge, Edinburgh; the really splendid Free
Churches, St Mary’s, in Albany Street, and the Barclay Church,
Bruntsfield, and many similar cases, mark the spirit of the times
regarding the application of what is beautiful in art to the service of
religion. One might hope that changes such as these in the feelings,
tastes, and associations, would have a beneficial effect in bringing the
worshippers themselves into a more genial spirit of forbearance with
each other. A friend of mine used to tell a story of an honest builder’s
views of church differences, which was very amusing, and quaintly
professional. An English gentleman, who had arrived in a Scottish
country town, was walking about to examine the various objects which
presented themselves, and observed two rather handsome places of worship
in course of erection nearly opposite to each other. He addressed a
person, who happened to be the contractor for the chapels, and asked,
"What was the difference between these two places of worship which were
springing up so close to each other?"—meaning, of course, the difference
of the theological tenets of the two congregations. The contractor, who
thought only of architectural differences, innocently replied, "There
may be a difference of sax feet in length, but there’s no aboon a few
inches in the breadth." Would that all our religious differences could
be brought within so narrow a compass!
The variety of churches
in a certain county of Scotland once called forth a sly remark upon our
national tendencies to religious division and theological disputation.
An English gentleman sitting on the box, and observing the great number
of places of worship in the aforesaid borough, remarked to the coachman
that there must be a great deal of religious feeling in a town which
produced so many houses of God. "Na," said the nun quietly, "it’s no’
religion, it’s Curliness," i.e., crabbedness, insinuating that
acerbity of temper, as well as zeal, was occasionally the cause of
congregations being multiplied.
It might be a curious
question to consider how far motives founded on mere taste or sentiment
may have operated in creating an interest towards religion, and in
making it a more prominent and popular question than it was in the early
portion of the present century. There are in this country two causes
which have combined in producing these effects :—First: The great
disruption which took place in the Church of Scotland no doubt called
forth an attention to the subject which stirred up the public, and made
religion at any rate a topic of deep interest for discussion and
partisanship. Men’s minds were not allowed to remain in the
torpid condition of a past generation. Second: The aesthetic
movement in religion, which some years since was made in England, has,
of course, had its influence in Scotland; and many who showed little
concern about religion, whilst it was merely a question of doctrines, of
precepts, and of worship, threw themselves keenly into the contest when
it became associated with ceremonial, and music, and high art. New
ecclesiastical associations have been presented to Scottish tastes and
feelings. With some minds, attachment to the church is attachment to her
Gregorian tones, jewelled chalices, lighted candles, embroidered
altar-cloths, silver crosses, processions, copes, albs, and chasubles.
But, from whatever cause it proceeds, a great change has taken place in
the general interest excited towards ecclesiastical questions. Religion
now has numerous associations with the ordinary current of human life.
In times past it was kept more as a thing apart. There was a false
delicacy which made people shrink from encountering appellations that
were usually bestowed upon those, who made a more prominent religious
profession than the world at large.
A great change has taken place in this
respect with persons of all shades of religious opinions. With an
increased attention to the externals of religion, we believe that
in many points the heart has been more exercised also. Take, as an
example, the practice of family prayer. Many excellent and pious
households of the former generation would not venture upon the
observance, I am afraid, because they were in dread of the sneer. There
was a foolish application of the terms "Methodist," "saints,"
"over-righteous," where the practice was observed. It was to take up a
rather decided position in the neighbourhood; and I can testify, that
less than fifty years ago a family would have been marked and talked of
for a usage of which now throughout the country the exception is
rather the unusual circumstance. A little anecdote from recollections in
my own family will furnish a good illustration of a state of feeling on
this point now happily unknown. In a northern town of the east coast,
where the earliest recollections of my life go back, there was usually a
detachment of a regiment, who were kindly received and welcomed to the
society, which in the winter months was very full and very gay. There
was the usual measure of dining, dancing, supping, card-playing, and
gossiping, which prevailed in country towns at the time. The officers
were of course an object of much interest to the natives, and their
habits were much discussed. A friend was staying in the family who
partook a good deal of the Athenian temperament, viz., delight in
hearing and telling some new thing. On one occasion she burst forth in
great excitement with the intelligence that "Sir Nathaniel Duckinfield,
the officer in command of the detachment, had family prayers every
morning!" A very near and dear relative of mine, knowing the
tendency of the lady to gossip, pulled her up with the exclamation: "How
can you repeat such things, Miss Ogilvy? Nothing in the world but the
ill-natured stories of Montrose!" The remark was made quite innocently,
and unconsciously of the bitter satire it conveyed upon the feeling of
the place. The "ill-nature" of these stories was true enough, because
ill-nature was the motive of those who raised them; not because it is an
ill-natured thing of itself to say of a family that they have household
worship, but the ill-nature consisted in their intending to throw out a
sneer and a sarcasm upon a subject where all such reflections are
unbecoming and indecorous. It is one of the best proofs of change of
habits and associations on this matter, that the anecdote, exquisite as
it is for our purpose, will hardly be understood by many of our young
friends, or, at least, happily has lost much of its force and pungency.
These remarks apply
perhaps more especially to the state of religious feeling amongst the
upper classes of society. Though I am not aware of so much change in the
religious habits of the Scottish peasantry, still the elders have
yielded much from the sternness of David Deans; and upon the whole view
of the question there have been many and great changes in the Scottish
people during the last sixty years. It could hardly be otherwise, when
we consider the increased facilities of communication between the two
countries— a facility which extends to the introduction of English books
upon religious subjects. The most popular and engaging works connected
with the Church of England. have now a free circulation in Scotland; and
it is impossible that such productions as the "Christian Year," for
example, and many others—whether for good or bad is not now the
question—should not produce their effects upon minds trained in the
strictest school of Calvinistic theology. I should be disposed to
extend the boundaries of this division, and to include under
"Religious Feelings and Religious Observances," many anecdotes which
belong perhaps rather indirectly than directly to the subject. There is
a very interesting reminiscence, and one of a sacred character also,
which I think will come very suitably under this head. When I joined the
Scottish Episcopal Church, nearly fifty years ago, it was quite
customary for members of our communion to ask for the blessing of their
Bishop, and to ask it especially on any remarkable event in their life,
as marriage, loss of friends, leaving home, returning home, etc.; and it
was the custom amongst the old Scottish Episcopalians to give the
blessing in a peculiar form, which had become venerable from its
traditionary application by our bishops. I have myself received it from
my bishop, the late good Bishop Walker, and have heard him pronounce it
on others. But whether the custom of asking the bishop’s blessing be
past or not, the form I speak of has become a reminiscence, and I feel
assured is not known even by some of our own bishops. I shall give it to
my readers as I received it from the family of the late Bishop Walker of
Edinburgh:-
"God Almighty bless thee with
his Holy Spirit;
Guard thee in thy going out and coming in;
Keep thee ever in His faith and fear;
Free from Sin, and safe from Danger."
I have been much pleased
with a remark of my friend, the Rev. W. Gillespie of the U.P. Church,
Edinburgh, upon this subject. He writes to me as follows:—"I read with
particular interest the paragraph on the subject of the Bishop’s
Blessing, for certainly there seems to be in these days a general disbelief
in the efficacy of blessings, and a neglect or disregard of the
practice. If the spirit of God is in good men, as He certainly is, then
who can doubt the value and the efficacy of the blessing which they
bestow? I remember being blessed by a very venerable minister, John
Dempster of Denny, while kneeling in his study, shortly before I left
this country to go to China, and his prayer over me then was surely the
effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man. Its effect upon me then and
ever since will never be forgotten."
I quite agree with Mr
Gillespie on the point, and think it not a good sign either of our
religious belief or religious feeling that such blessings should become
really a. matter of reminiscence; for if we are taught to pray for one
another, and, if we are taught that the "prayer of the righteous
availeth much," surely we ought to bless one another, and surely
the blessing of those who are venerable in the church from their
position, their age, and their piety, may be expected to avail as an aid
and incentive to piety in those who in God’s name are so blest. It has
struck me that on a subject closely allied with religious feelings a
great change has taken place in Scotland during a period of less than
fifty years—I mean the attention paid to cemeteries as depositories of
the mortal remains of those who have departed. In my early days I never
recollect seeing any efforts made for the embellishment and adornment of
our churchyards; if tolerably secured by fences, enough had been done.
The English and Welsh practices of planting flowers, keeping the turf
smooth and dressed over the graves of friends, were quite unknown.
Indeed, I suspect such attention fifty years ago would have been thought
by the sternest Presbyterians as somewhat savouring of superstition. The
account given by Sir W. Scott, in "Guy Mannering," of an Edinburgh
burial-place, was universally applicable to Scottish sepulchres. ["This
was a square enclosure in the Greyfriars’ Churchyard, guarded on
one side by a veteran angel without a nose, and having only one wing,
who had the merit of having maintained his post for a century, while his
comrade cherub, who had stood sentinel on the corresponding pedestal,
lay a broken trunk, among the hemlock, burdock, and nettles, which grew
in gigantic luxuriance around the walls of the mausoleum."] A very
different state of matters has grown up within the last few years.
Cemeteries and churchyards are now as carefully ornamented in Scotland
as in England. Shrubs, flowers, smooth turf, and neatly-kept gravel
walks, are a pleasing accompaniment to head-stones, crosses, and varied
forms of monumental memorials, in free-stone, marble, and granite. Nay,
more than these, not infrequently do we see an imitation of French
sentiment, in wreaths of "everlasting" placed over graves as emblems of
immortality; and in more than one of our Edinburgh cemeteries I have
seen these enclosed in glass cases to preserve them from the effects of
wind and rain.
In consequence of
neglect, the unprotected state of churchyards was evident from the
number of stories in circulation connected with the circumstance of
timid and excited passengers going amongst the tombs of the village. The
following, amongst others, has been communicated. The locale of
the story is unknown, but it is told of a weaver who, after enjoying his
potations, pursued his way home through the churchyard, his vision and
walking somewhat impaired. As he proceeded he diverged from the path,
and unexpectedly stumbled into a partially made grave. Stunned for a
while, he lay in wonder at his descent, and after some time he got out,
but he had not proceeded much farther when a similar calamity befell
him. At this second fall, he was heard, in a tone of wonder and
surprise, to utter the following exclamation, referring to what he
considered the untenanted graves: "Ay! ir ye a’ up an’ awa’?"
The kindly feelings and
interest of the pastoral relation always formed a very pleasing
intercourse between minister and people. I have received from an
anonymous correspondent an anecdote illustrative of this happy
connection, for which he vouches as authentic:-
John Brown, Burgher
minister at Whitburn (son of the commentator, and father of the late
Rev. Dr John Brown of Edinburgh, and grandfather of the present
accomplished M.D. of the same name, author of "Rab and his Friends,"
etc.), in the early part of the century was travelling on a small
sheltie [A Shetland pony] to attend the summer sacrament at Haddington.
Between Musselburgh and Tranent he overtook one of his own people. "What
are ye daein’ here, Janet, and whaur ye gaun in this warm weather?"
"‘Deed, sir," quo’ Janet, "I’m gaun to Haddington for the occasion,
[The Lord's Supper] an’ expeck to hear ye preach this efternoon." "Very
weel, Janet, but whaur ye gaun tae sleep?’ "I djnna ken, sir, but
Providence is aye kind, an’ll provide a bed." On Mr Brown jogged, but
kindly thought of his humble follower; accordingly, after service in the
afternoon, before pronouncing the blessing, he said from the pulpit, "Whaur’s
the auld wifie that followed me frae Whitburn?" "Here I’m, sir," uttered
a shrill voice from a back seat. "Aweel," said Mr Brown, "I have fand ye
a bed; ye’re to sleep wi’ Johnnie Fife’s lass."
There was at all times
amongst the older Scottish peasantry a bold assertion of their religious
opinions, and strong expression of their feelings. The spirit of the
Covenanters lingered, amongst the aged people whom I remember, but which
time has considerably softened down. We have some recent authentic
instances of this readiness in Scotsmen to bear testimony to their
principles:— A friend has informed me that the late Lord Rutherfurd
often told with much interest of a rebuke which he received from a
shepherd, near Bonaly, amongst the Pentlands. He had entered into
conversation with him, and was complaining bitterly of the weather,
which prevented him, enjoying his visit to the country, and said hastily
and unguardedly, "What a d---d mist!" and then expressed his wonder how
or for what purpose there should have been such a thing created as east
wind. The shepherd, a tall, grim figure, turned sharp round upon him.
"What ails ye at the mist, sir? It weets the sod, it slockens the yowes,
and"—adding with much solemnity—"it’s God’s wull"; and turned away with
lofty indignation. Lord Rutherfurd used to repeat this with much candour
as a fine specimen of a rebuke from a sincere and simple mind.
There was something very
striking in the homely, quaint, and severe expressions on religious
subjects which marked the old-fashioned piety of persons shadowed forth
in Sir Walter Scott’s Davie Deans. We may add to the rebuke of the
shepherd of Bonaly of Lord Rutherfurd’s remark about the east wind, his
answer to Lord Cockburn, the proprietor of Bonaly. He was sitting on the
hillside with the shepherd, and observing the sheep reposing in the
coldest situation, he observed to him, "John, if I were a sheep, I would
lie on the other side of the hill." The shepherd answered, "Ay, my lord,
but if ye had been a sheep ye would hae had mair sense."
Of such men as this
shepherd were formed the elders—a class of men who were marked by strong
features of character, and who, in former times, bore a distinguished
part in all church matters.
The old Scottish elder
was in fact quite as different a character from the modern elder, as the
old Scottish minister was from the modern pastor. These good men were
not disposed to hide their lights, and perhaps sometimes encroached a
little upon the office of the minister. A clergyman had been remarking
to one of his elders that he was unfortunately invited to two funerals
on one day, and that they were fixed for the same hour. "Weel, sir,"
answered the elder, "if ye’ll tak’ the tane I’ll tak’ the tither."
Some of the elders were
great humorists and originals in their way. An elder of the kirk at
Muthill used to manifest his humour and originality by his mode of
collecting the alms. As he went round with the ladle, he reminded such
members of the congregation as seemed backward in their duty, by giving
them a poke with the "brod," and making, in an audible whisper, such
remarks as these—"Wife at the braid mailin, mind the puir"; "Lass wi’
the braw plaid, mind the puir," etc., a mode of collecting which marks
rather a bygone state of things. But on no question was the old Scottish
disciplinarian, whether elder or not, more sure to raise his testimony
than on anything connected with a desecration of the Sabbath. In this
spirit was the rebuke given to an eminent geologist, when visiting in
the Highlands :—The professor was walking on the hills one Sunday
morning, and partly from the effect of habit, and partly from not
adverting to the very strict notions of Sabbath desecration entertained
in Ross-shire, had his pocket hammer in hand, and was thoughtlessly
breaking the specimens of minerals he picked up by the way. Under these
circumstances, he was met by an old man steadily pursuing his way to his
church. For some time the patriarch observed the movements of the
geologist, and at length, going up to him, quietly said, "Sir, ye’re
breaking something there forbye the stanes!"
The same feeling, under a
more fastidious form, was exhibited to a traveller by a Scottish peasant
:— An English artist travelling
professionally through Scotland, had occasion to remain over Sunday in a
small town in the north. To while away the time, he walked out a short
way in the environs, where the picturesque ruin of a castle met his eye.
He asked a countryman who was passing to be so good as tell him the name
of the castle. The reply was somewhat startling: "It’s no’ the day to be
speerin’ sic things!"
A manifestation of even
still greater strictness on the subject of Sabbath desecration, I have
received from a relative of the family in which it occurred. About fifty
years ago the Hon. Mrs Stewart lived in Heriot Row, who had a cook,
Jeannie by name, a paragon of excellence. One Sunday morning when her
daughter (afterwards Lady Elton) went into the kitchen, she was
surprised to find a new jack (recently ordered, and which was
constructed on the principle of going constantly without winding up)
wholly paralysed and useless. Miss Stewart naturally inquired what
accident had happened to the new jack, as it had stopped. The mystery
was soon solved by Jeannie indignantly exclaiming that "she was nae
gaeing to hae the fule thing clocking and rinning about in her
kitchen a’ the blessed Sabbath day."
There sometimes appears
to have been in our countrymen an undue preponderance of zeal for
Sabbath observance as compared with the importance attached to other
religious duties, and especially as compared with the virtue of
sobriety. The following dialogue between Mr Macnee of Glasgow, the
celebrated artist, and an old Highland acquaintance whom he had met with
unexpectedly, will illustrate the contrast between the severity of
judgment passed upon treating the Sabbath with levity and the lighter
censure attached to indulgence in whisky. Mr Macnee begins, "Donald,
what brought you here?" "Ou, weel, sir, it was a baad place yon; they
were baad folk—but they’re a God-fearin’ set o’ folk here!" "Well,
Donald," said Mr M., "I’m glad to hear it." "Ou ay, sir, ‘deed are they;
an’ I’ll gie ye an instance o’t. Last Sabbath, just as the kirk was
skailin’, there was a drover chield frae Dumfries comin’ along the road
whustlin’, an’ lookin’ as happy as if it was ta middle o’ ta
week; wee!, sir, oor laads is a God-fearin’ set o’ laads, an’ they were
just comin’ oot o’ the kirk—’od they yokit upon him, an’ a’most killed
him!" Mr M., to whom their zeal seemed scarcely sufficiently well
directed to merit his approbation, then asked Donald whether it had been
drunkenness that induced the depravity of his former neighbours? "Weel,
weel, sir," said Donald, with some hesitation, "may-be; I’ll no’
say but it micht." "Depend upon it," said Mr M., "it’s a bad thing
whisky." "Wee!, weel, sir," replied Donald, "I’ll no’ say but it
may"; adding in a very decided tone—" speeciallie baad whusky!"
I do not know any
anecdote which illustrates in a more striking and natural manner the
strong feeling which exists in the Scottish mind on this subject. At a
certain time, the hares in the neighbourhood of a Scottish burgh had,
from the inclemency of the season or from some other cause, become
emboldened more than usual to approach the dwelling-places of men; so
much so that on one Sunday morning a hare was seen skipping along the
street as the people were going to church. An old man, spying puss in
this unusual position, significantly remarked, "Ay, yon beast kens weel
it is the Sabbath-day"; taking it for granted that no one in the place
would be found audacious enough to hurt the animal on a Sunday.
Lady Macneil supplies an
excellent pendant to Miss Stewart’s story about the jack going on the
Sunday. Her henwife had got some Dorking fowls, and on Lady M. asking if
they were laying many eggs, she replied with great earnestness, "Indeed
my leddy, they lay every day, no’ excepting the blessed Sabbath."
There were, however, old
persons at that time who were not quite so orthodox on the point of
Sabbath observance; and of these a lady residing in Dumfries was known
often to employ her wet Sundays in arranging her wardrobe. "Preserve
us!" she said on one occasion, "anither gude Sunday! I dinna ken whan
I’ll get thae drawers redd up."
In connection with the
awful subject of death and all its concomitants, it has been often
remarked that the older generation of Scottish people used to view the
circumstances belonging to the decease of their nearest and dearest
friends with a coolness which does not at first sight seem consistent
with their deep and sincere religious impressions. Amongst the peasantry
this was sometimes manifested in an extraordinary and startling manner.
I do not believe that those persons had less affection for their friends
than a corresponding class in England, but they had less awe of the
Concomitants of death, and approached them with more familiarity. For
example, I remember long ago at Fasque, my sister-in-law visiting a
worthy and attached old couple, of whom the husband, Charles Duncan, who
had been gardener at Fasque for above thirty years, was evidently dying.
He was sitting on a common deal chair, and on my sister proposing to
send down for his use an old arm-chair which she recollected was laid up
in a garret, his wife exclaimed against such a needless trouble: "Hout,
my leddy, what would he be duin’ wi’ an arm-chair? He’s just deein’ fast
awa’." I have two anecdotes, illustrative of the same state of feeling,
from a lady of ancient Scottish family accustomed to visit her poor
dependants on the property, and to notice their ways. She was calling at
a decent cottage, and found the occupant busy carefully ironing out some
linens. The lady remarked, "Those are fine linens you have got there,
Janet." "Troth, mem," was the reply, "they’re just the gudeman’s deed
claes, and there are nane better i’ the parish." On another
occasion, when visiting an excellent woman, to condole with her on the
death of her nephew, with whom she had lived, and whose loss must have
been severely felt by her, she remarked, "What a nice white cap you have
got, Margaret." "Indeed, mem, ay, sae it is; for ye see the gude lad’s
winding sheet was ower lang, and I cut aff as muckle as made twa bonny
mutches" (caps).
There certainly was a
quaint and familiar manner in which sacred and solemn subjects were
referred to by the older Scottish race, who did not mean to be
irreverent, but who no doubt appeared so to a more refined but not
really a more religious generation.
It seems to me that this
plainness of speech arose in part from the sincerity of their
belief in all the circumstances of another condition of being. They
spoke of things hereafter as positive certainties, and viewed things.
invisible through the same medium as they viewed things present. The
following is illustrative of such a state of mind, and I am assured of
its perfect authenticity and literal correctness :—"Joe M’Pherson and
his wife lived in Inverness. They had two sons, who helped their father
in his trade of a smith. They were industrious and careful, but not
successful. The old man had bought a house, leaving a large part of the
price unpaid. It was the ambition of his life to pay off that debt, but
it was too much for him, and he died in the struggle. His sons kept on
the business with the old industry, and with better fortune. At last
their old mother fell sick, and told her sons she was dying, as in truth
she was. The elder son said to her ‘Mother, you’ll soon be with my
father; no doubt you’ll have much to tell him; but dinna forget this
mother, mind ye, tell him the house is freed. He’ll be glad to
hear that.’"
A similar feeling is
manifest in the following conversation, which, I am assured, is
authentic :—At Hawick the people used to wear wooden clogs, which make a
clanking noise on the pavement. A dying old woman had some
friends by her bed-side, who said to her, "Wee!, Jenny, ye are gaun to
heeven, an’ gin you should see oor folk, you can tell them that we’re a’
weel." To which Jenny replied, "Weel, gin I should see them I’se tell
them, but you manna expect that I am to gang clank clanking through
heevan looking for your folk."
But of all stories of
this class, I think the following deathbed conversation between a
Scottish husband and wife is about the richest specimen of a dry
Scottish matter-of-fact view of a very serious question :— An old
shoemaker in Glasgow was sitting by the bedside of his wife, who was
dying. She took him by the hand. "Weel, John, we’re gawin to part. I hae
been a gude wife to you, John." "Oh, just middling, just middling,
Jenny," said John, not disposed to commit himself. "John," says she, "ye
maun promise to bury me in the auld kirk-yard at Stra’von, beside my
mither. I couldna rest in peace among unco folk, in the dirt and smoke
o’ Glasgow." "Weel, weel, Jenny, my woman," said John soothingly, "we’ll
just pit you in the Gorbals first, and gin ye dinna lie quiet,
we’ll try you sine in Stra’von."
The same unimaginative
and matter-of-fact view of things connected with the other world
extended to a very youthful age, as in the case of a little boy who,
when told of heaven, put the question, "An’ will faather be there?" His
instructress answered, "of course, she hoped he would be there"; to
which he sturdily at once replied, "Then I’ll no’ gang."
We might apply these
remarks in some measure to the Scottish pulpit ministrations of an older
school, in which a minuteness of detail and a quaintness of expression
were quite common, but which could not now be tolerated. I have two
specimens of such antiquated language, supplied by correspondents, and I
am assured they are both genuine.
The first is from a St
Andrews professor, who is stated to be a great authority in such
narratives.
In one of our northern
counties, a rural district had its harvest operations affected by
continuous rains. The crops being much laid, wind was desired in order
to restore them to a condition fit for the sickle. A minister, in his
Sabbath services, expressed their want in prayer as follows :—" O Lord,
we pray Thee to send us wind; no’ a rantin’ tantin’ tearin’ wind, but a
noohin’ (noughin?) soughin’ winnin’ wind." More expressive words than
these could not be found in any language.
The other story relates
to a portion of the Presbyterian service on sacramental occasions,
called "fencing the tables," i.e., prohibiting the approach of
those who were unworthy to receive.
This fencing of the
tables was performed in the following effective manner by an old divine,
whose flock transgressed the third commandment, not in a gross and loose
manner, but in its minor details:— "I debar all those who use such
minced oaths as faith! troth! losh! gosh! and lovanendie!"
These men often showed a
quiet vein of humour in their prayers, as in the case of the old
minister of the Canongate, who always prayed, previous to the meeting of
the General Assembly, that the Assembly might be so guided as
"no’ to do ony harm."
A circumstance connected
with Scottish church discipline has undergone a great change in my time—
I mean the public censure from the pulpit, in the time of divine
service, of offenders previously convicted before the minister and his
kirk-session. This was performed by the guilty person standing up before
the congregation on a raised platform, called the
cutty stool,
and receiving a rebuke. I never saw it done,
but have heard in my part of the country of the discipline being
enforced occasionally. Indeed, I recollect an instance where the rebuke
was thus administered and received under circumstances of a touching
character, and which made it partake of the moral sublime. The daughter
of the minister had herself committed an offence against moral purity,
such as usually called forth this church censure. The minister
peremptorily refused to make her an exception to his ordinary practice.
His child stood up in the congregation, and received, from her agonised
father, a rebuke similar to that administered to other members of his
congregation for a like offence. The spirit of the age became
unfavourable in the practice. The rebuke on the cutty stool, like the
penance in a white sheet in England, went out of use, and the
circumstance is now a matter of "reminiscence." I have received some
communications on the subject, which beat upon this point; and I subjoin
the following remarks from a kind correspondent, a clergyman, to whom I
am largely indebted, as indicating the great change which has taken
place in this matter.
"Church discipline," he
writes, "was much more vigorously enforced in olden time than it is now.
A certain couple having been guilty of illicit intercourse, and also
within the forbidden degrees of consanguinity, appeared before the
Presbytery of Lanark, and made confession in sackcloth. They were
ordered to return to their own session, and to stand at the kirk-door,
barefoot and barelegged, from the second bell to the last, and
thereafter in the public place of repentance; and, at direction of the
session, thereafter to go through the whole kirks of the presbytery, and
to satisfy them in like manner. If such penance were now enforced for
like offences, I believe the registration books of many parishes in
Scotland would become more creditable in certain particulars than they
unfortunately are at the present time."
But there was a less
formidable ecclesiastical censure occasionally given by the minister
from the pulpit against lesser misdemeanours, which took place under his
own eye, such as levity of conduct or sleeping in church. A most amusing
specimen of such censure was once inflicted by the minister upon his own
wife for an offence not in our day visited with so heavy a penalty. The
clergyman had observed one of his flock asleep during his sermon. He
paused, and called him to order. " Jeems Robson, ye are sleepin’; I
insist on your wauking when God’s word is preached to ye." "Weel, sir,
you may look at your ain seat, and ye'll see a sleeper forbye me,"
answered Jeems, pointing to the clergyman’s lady in the minister’s pew.
"Then, Jeems," said the minister, "when ye see my wife asleep again,
haud up your hand." By and by the arm was stretched out, and sure enough
the fair lady was caught in the act. Her husband solemnly called upon
her to stand up and receive the censure due to her offence. He thus
addressed her: "Mrs B., a’body kens that when I got ye for my wife, I
got nae beauty; yer frien’s ken that I got nae siller; and if I dinna
get God’s grace, I shall hae a puir bargain indeed."
The quaint and original
humour of the old Scottish minister came out occasionally in the more
private services of his vocation as well as in church. As the whole
service, whether for baptisms or marriages, is supplied by the clergyman
officiating, there is more scope for scenes between the parties present
than at similar ministrations by a prescribed form. Thus, a late
minister of Caithness, when examining a member of his flock, who was a
butcher, in reference to the baptism of his child, found him so
deficient in what he considered the needful theological knowledge, that
he said to him, "Ah, Sandy, I doubt ye’re no’ fit to haud up the bairn."
Sandy, conceiving that reference was made not to spiritual but to
physical incapacity, answered indignantly, "Hout, minister, I could haud
him up an he were a twa-year-auld stirk." [Bullock] A late humorous old
minister, near Peebles, who had strong feelings on the subject of
matrimonial happiness, thus prefaced the ceremony by an address to the
parties who came to him :—" My friends, marriage is a blessing to a few,
a curse to many, and a great uncertainty to all. Do ye venture?" After a
pause, he repeated with great emphasis," Do ye venture?" No objection
being made to the venture, he then said, "Let’s proceed."
The old Scottish hearers
were very particular on the subject of their minister’s preaching old
sermons; and to repeat a discourse which they could recollect was always
made a subject of animadversion by those who heard it. A beadle, who was
a good deal of a wit in his way, gave a sly hit in his pretended defence
of his minister on the question. As they were proceeding from church,
the minister observed the beadle had been laughing as if he had
triumphed over some of the parishioners with whom he had been in
conversation. On asking the cause of this, he received for answer, "Dod,
sir, they were saying ye had preached an auld sermon to-day, but I
tackled them, for I tauld them it was no’ an auld sermon, for the
minister had preached it no’ sax months syne."
I remember the minister
of Banchory, Mr Gregory, availed himself of the feelings of his people
on this subject for the purpose of accomplishing a particular object.
During the building of the new church the service had to be performed in
a schoolroom, which did not nearly hold the congregation. The object was
to get part of the parish to attend in the morning, and part in the
afternoon. Mr Gregory prevented those who had attended in the morning
from returning in the afternoon by just giving them, as he said, "cauld
kail het again."
It is somewhat
remarkable, however, that notwithstanding this feeling in the matter of
a repetition of old sermons, there was amongst a large class of Scottish
preachers of a former day such a sameness of subject as really sometimes
made it difficult to distinguish the discourse of one Sunday from
amongst others. These were entirely doctrinal, and however they might
commence, after the opening or introduction hearers were certain to find
the preacher falling gradually into the old channel. The fall of man in
Adam, his restoration in Christ, justification by faith, and the terms
of the new covenant, formed the staple of each sermon, and without which
it was not in fact reckoned complete as an orthodox exposition of
Christian doctrine. Without omitting the essentials of Christian
instruction, preachers now take a wider view of illustrating and
explaining the gospel scheme of salvation and regeneration, without
constant recurrence to the elemental and fundamental principles of the
faith. From my friend, Dr Cook of Haddington, (who it is well known has
a copious stock of old Scotch traditionary anecdotes), I have an
admirable illustration of this state of things as regards pulpit
instruction.
"Much of the preaching of
the Scotch clergy," Dr Cook observes, "in the last century, was almost
exclusively doctrinal—the fall: the nature, the extent, and the
application of the remedy. In the hands of able men, no doubt, there
might be much variety of exposition, but with weaker or indolent men
preaching extempore, or without notes, it too often ended in a weekly
repetition of what had been already said. An old elder of mine, whose
recollection might reach back from sixty to seventy years, said to me
one day, ‘Now-a-days, people make a work if a minister preach the same
sermon over again in the course of two or three years. When I was a boy,
we would have wondered if old Mr W had preached anything else than what
we heard the Sunday before.’ My old friend used to tell of a clergyman
who had held forth on the broken covenant till his people longed for a
change. The elders waited on him to intimate their wish. They were
examined on their knowledge of the subject, found deficient, rebuked,
and dismissed, but after a little while they returned to the charge, and
the minister gave in. Next Lord’s Day he read a large portion of the
history of Joseph and his brethern, as the subject of a lecture. He
paraphrased it, greatly, no doubt, to the detriment of the original, but
much to the satisfaction of his people, for it was something new. He
finished the paraphrase, ‘and now,’ says he, ‘my friends, we shall
proceed to draw some lessons and inferences; and, first, you will
observe that the sacks of Joseph’s brethern were ripit, and in
them was found the cup; so your sacks will be ripit at the day of
judgment, and the first thing found in them will be the broken
covenant’; and having gained this advantage, the sermon went off into
the usual strain, and embodied the usual heads of elementary dogmatic
theology."
In connection with this
topic, I have a communication from a correspondent, who remarks :—The
story about the minister and his favourite theme, "the broken covenant,"
reminds me of one respecting another minister whose staple topics of
discourse were "Justification, Adoption, and Sanctification." Into every
sermon he preached, he managed, by hook or by crook, to force these
three heads, in that his general method of handling every text was not
so much expositio as impositio. He was preaching on these
words: "Is Ephraim my dear son? Is he a pleasant child?" and he soon
brought the question into the usual formula by adding, Ephraim was a
pleasant child— first, because he was a justified child; second, because
he was an adopted child; and third, because he was a sanctified child.
It should be remembered,
however, that the Scottish peasantry themselves—I mean those of the
older school—delighted in expositions of doctrinal subjects, and
in fact were extremely jealous of any minister who departed from their
high standard of orthodox divinity, by selecting subjects which involved
discussions of strictly moral or practical questions. It was
condemned under the epithet of legal preaching; in other words,
it was supposed to preach the law as independent of the gospel. A worthy
old clergyman having, upon the occasion of a communion Monday, taken a
text of such a character, was thus commented on by an ancient dame of
the congregation, who was previously acquainted with his style of
discourse: "If there’s an ill text in a’ the Bible, that creetur’s aye
sure to tak’ it."
The great change—the
great improvement, I would say—which has taken place during the last
half century in the feelings and practical relations of religion with
social life is, that it has become more diffused through all ranks and
all characters. Before that period many good sort of people were afraid
of making their religious views very prominent, and were always
separated from those who did. Persons who made a profession at all
beyond the low standard generally adopted in society were marked out as
objects of fear or of distrust. The anecdote on page 57 regarding the
practice of family prayer fully proves this. Now, religious people and
religion itself are not kept aloof from the ordinary current of men’s
thoughts and actions. There is no such marked line as used to be drawn
round persons who make a decided profession of religion. Christian men
and women have stepped over the line; and, without compromising their
Christian principle, are not necessarily either morose, uncharitable, or
exclusive. The effects of the old separation were injurious to men’s
minds. Religion was with many associated with puritanism, with cant, and
unfitness for the world. The difference is marked also in the style of
sermons prevalent at the two periods. There were sermons of two
descriptions, viz., sermons by "moderate" clergy, of a purely
moral or practical character; and sermons purely doctrinal, from those
who were known as "evangelical" ministers. Hence arose an impression,
and not unnaturally, on many minds, that an almost exclusive reference
to doctrinal subjects, and a dread of upholding the law, and of
enforcing its more minute details, were not favourable to the cause of
moral rectitude and practical holiness of life. This was hinted in a sly
way by a young member of the kirk to his father, a minister of the
severe and high Calvinistic school. Old Dr Lockhart of Glasgow was
lamenting one day, in the presence of his son John, the fate of a man
who had been found guilty of immoral practices, and the more so that he
was one of his own elders. "Well, father," remarked his son, "you see
what you’ve driven him to." In our best Scottish preaching at the
present day no such distinction is visible.
The same feeling came
forth with much point and humour on an occasion referred to in Carlyle’s
Memoirs. In a company where John Home and David Hume were present, much
wonder was expressed what could have induced a clerk belonging to
Sir William Forbes’ bank to abscond, and embezzle £900. "I know what it
was," said Home to the historian; "for when he was taken there was found
in his pocket a volume of your philosophical works and Boston’s
‘Fourfold State’ "—a hit, first, at the infidel, whose principles would
have undermined Christianity; and second, a hit at the Church, which he
was compelled to leave on account of his having written the tragedy of
Douglas.
I can myself recollect an
obsolete ecclesiastical custom, and which was always practised in the
church of Fettercairn during my boyish days, viz., that of the minister
bowing to the heritors in succession who occupied the front gallery
seats; and I am assured that this bowing from the pulpit to the
principal heritor or heritors after the blessing had been pronounced was
very common in rural parishes till about forty years ago, and perhaps
till a still later period.. And when heritors chanced to be pretty
equally matched, there was sometimes an unpleasant contest as to who was
entitled to the precedence in having the first bow. A case of
this kind once occurred in the parish of Lanark, which was carried so
far as to be laid before the Presbytery; but they, not considering
themselves "competent judges of the points of honour and precedency
among gentlemen, and to prevent all inconveniency in these matters in
the future, appointed the minister to forbear bowing to the lairds at
all from the pulpit for the time to come"; and they also appointed four
of their number "to wait upon the gentlemen, to deal with them, for
bringing them to condescend to submit hereunto, for the success of the
gospel and the peace of the parish."
In connection with this
subject, we may mention a ready and complimentary reply once made by the
late Reverend Dr Wightman of Kirkmahoe, on being rallied for his
neglecting this usual act of courtesy one Sabbath in his own church. The
heritor who was entitled to and always received this token of respect,
was Mr Miller, proprietor of Dalswinton. One Sabbath the Dalswinton pew
contained a bevy of ladies, but no gentleman, and the Doctor—perhaps
because he was a bachelor and felt a delicacy in the
circumstances—omitted the usual salaam in their direction. A few days
after, meeting Miss Miller, who was widely famed for her beauty, and who
afterwards became Countess of Mar, she rallied him, in presence of her
companions, for not bowing to her from the pulpit on the previous
Sunday, and requested an explanation; when the good Doctor immediately
replied, "I beg your pardon, Miss Miller, but you surely know that
angel-worship is not allowed in the Church of Scotland"; and lifting his
hat, he made a low bow, and passed on.
Scottish congregations,
in some parts of the country, contain an element in their composition
quite unknown in English churches. In pastoral parts of the country, it
was an established practice for each shepherd to bring his faithful
collie dog—at least it was so some years ago. In a district of
Sutherland, where the population is very scanty, the congregations are
made up one-half of dogs, each human member having his canine companion.
These dogs sit out the Gaelic services and sermon with commendable
patience, till towards the end of the last psalm, when there is a
universal stretching and yawning, and all are prepared to scamper out,
barking in a most excited manner whenever the blessing is commenced. The
congregation of one of these churches determined that the service should
close in a more decorous manner, and steps were taken to attain this
object. Accordingly, when a stranger clergyman was officiating, he found
the people all sitting when he was about to pronounce the blessing. He
hesitated, and paused, expecting them to rise, till an old shepherd,
looking up to the pulpit, said, "Say awa’, sir; we’re a’ sittin’ to
cheat the dowgs."
There must have been some
curious specimens of Scottish humour brought out at the examinations or
catechisings by ministers of the flock before the administrations of the
communion. Thus, with reference to human nature before the fall, a man
was asked, "What kind of man was Adam?" "Ou, just like ither fouk." The
minister insisted on having a more special description of the first man,
and pressed for more explanation. ‘" Weel," said the catechumen, "he was
just like Joe Simson the horse-couper." "How so?" asked the minister. "Weel,
naebody got onything by him, and mony lost."
A lad had come for
examination previous to his receiving his first communion. The pastor,
knowing that his young friend was not very profound in his theology, and
not wishing to discourage him, or keep him from the table unless
compelled to do so, began by asking what he thought a safe question, and
what would give him confidence. So he took the Old Testament, and asked
him, in reference to the Mosaic law, how many commandments there were.
After a little thought, he put his answer in the modest form of a
supposition, and replied, cautiously, "Aiblins [Perhaps] a hunner."
The clergyman was vexed, and told him such ignorance was intolerable,
that he could not proceed in examination, and that the youth must wait
and learn more; so he went away. On returning home he met a friend on
his way to the manse, and on learning that he too was going to the
minister for examination, shrewdly asked him, "Weel, what will ye say
noo if the minister speers hoo mony commandments there are?" "Say! why,
I shall say ten to be sure." To which the other rejoined, with great
triumph, "Ten! Try ye him wi’ ten! I tried him wi’ a hunner, and he
wasna satisfeed." Another answer from a little girl was shrewd and
reflective. The question was, "Why did the Israelites make a golden
calf?" "They hadna as muckle siller as wad mak’ a coo."
A kind correspondent has
sent me, from personal knowledge, an admirable pendant to stories of
Scottish child acuteness and shrewd observation. A young lady friend of
his, resident in a part of Ayrshire rather remote from any very
satisfactory administration of the gospel, is in the habit of collecting
the children of the neighbourhood on Sundays at the "big hoose," for
religious instruction. On one occasion the. class had repeated the
paraphrase of the Lord’s Prayer, which contains these lines—
"Give us this day
our daily bread,
And raiment fit provide."
There being no question
as to what "daily bread" was, the teacher proceeded to ask: "What do you
understand by "raiment fit,’ or as we might say, ‘fit raiment?" For a
short time the class remained puzzled at the question; but at last one
little girl sang out ‘stockings and shune." The child knew that "fit,"
was Scotch for feet, so her natural explanation of the phrase was
equivalent to "feet raiment," or "stockings and shune," as she termed
it.
On the point of changes
in religious feelings there comes within the scope of these
Reminiscences a character in Aberdeenshire, which has now gone out—I
mean the popular and universally well-received Roman Catholic priest.
Although we cannot say that Scotland is a more PROTESTANT nation than it
was in past days, still religious differences, and strong prejudices,
seem at the present time to draw a more decided line of separation
between the priest and his Protestant countryman. As examples of what is
past, I would refer to the case of a genial Romish bishop in Ross-shire.
It is well known that private stills were prevalent in the Highlands
fifty or sixty years ago, and no one thought there was any harm in them.
This good bishop, whose name I forget, was (as I heard the late W.
Mackenzie of Muirton assure a party at Dunrobin Castle) several years
previously a famous hand at brewing a good glass of whisky, and that he
distributed his mountain-dew with a liberal and impartial hand alike to
Catholic and to Protestant friends. Of this class, I recollect,
certainly forty-five years ago, Priest Gordon, a genuine Aberdonian, and
a man beloved by all, rich and poor. He was a sort of chaplain to
Menzies of Pitfodels, and visited in all the country families round
Aberdeen. I remember once his being at Banchory Lodge, and thus
apologising to my aunt for going out of the room :—"I beg your pardon,
Mrs Forbes, for leaving you, but I maun just gae doun to the garden and
say my bit wordies"—these "bit wordies" being in fact the portion of the
Breviary which he was bound to recite. So easily and pleasantly were
those matters then referred to.
The following, however,
is a still richer illustration, and I am assured it is genuine
:—"Towards the end of the last century, a worthy Roman Catholic
clergyman, well known as ’Priest Matheson,’ and universally respected in
the district, had charge of a Mission in Aberdeenshire, and for a long
time made his journeys on a piebald pony, the priest and his ‘pyet
shelty’ sharing an affectionate recognition wherever they came. On one
occasion, however, he made his appearance on a steed of a different
description, and passing near a Seceding meeting-house, he forgathered
with the minister, who, after the usual kindly greetings, missing the
familiar pony, said, ‘Ou, Priest! fat’s come o’ the auld Pyet?’ ‘He’s
deid, minister.’ ‘Weel, he was an auld faithfu’ servant, and ye wad nae
doot gie him the offices o’ the Church?’ ‘Na, minister,’ said his
friend, not quite liking this allusion to his priestly offices, ‘I didna
dee that, for ye see he turned Seceder afore he dee’d, an’ I buried
him like a beast.’ He then rode quietly away. This worthy man,
however, could, when occasion required, rebuke with seriousness as well
as point. Always a welcome guest at the houses of both clergy and
gentry, he is said on one occasion to have met with a laird whose
hospitality he had thought it proper to decline, and on being asked the
reason for the interruption of his visits, answered, ‘Ye ken, an’ I ken;
but, laird, God kens!"
One question connected
with religious feeling, and the manifestation of religious
feeling, has become a more settled point amongst us, since fifty years
have expired. I mean the question of attendance by clergymen on
theatrical representations. Dr Carlyle had been prosecuted before the
General Assembly in 1757 for being present at the performance of the
tragedy of Douglas, written by his friend John Home. He was acquitted,
however, and writes thus on the subject in his Memoirs :— Although the
clergy in Edinburgh and its neighbourhood had abstained from the theatre
because it gave offence, yet the more remote clergymen, when
occasionally in town, had almost universally attended the play-house. It
is remarkabIe that in the year 1784, when the great actress Mrs Siddons
first appeared in Edinburgh, during the sitting of the General Assembly,
that court was obliged to fix all its important business for the
alternate days when she did not act, as all the younger members, clergy
as well as laity, took their stations in the theatre on those days by
three in the afternoon."
Drs Robertson and Blair,
although they cultivated the acquaintance of Mrs Siddons in private,
were amongst those clergymen, referred to by Dr Carlyle, who abstained
from attendance in the theatre; but Dr Carlyle states that they
regretted not taking the opportunity of witnessing a display of her
talent, and of giving their sanction to the theatre as a place of
recreation. Dr Carlyle evidently considered it a narrow-minded
intolerance and bigoted fanaticism that clergymen should be excluded
from that amusement. At a period far later than 1784, the same opinion
prevailed in some quarters. I recollect when such indulgence on the part
of clergymen was treated with much leniency, especially for Episcopalian
clergy. I do not mean to say that there was anything like a general
feeling in favour of clerical theatrical attendance; but there can be no
question of a feeling far less strict than what exists in our own time.
As I have said, thirty-six years ago some clergymen went to the theatre;
and a few years before that, when my brothers and I were passing through
Edinburgh, in going backwards and forwards to school, at Durham, with
our tutor, a licentiate of the Established Church of Scotland, and who
afterwards attained considerable eminence in the Free Church, we
certainly went with him to the theatre there, and at Durham very
frequently. I feel quite assured, however, that no clergyman could
expect to retain the respect of his people or of the public, to whom it
was known that he frequently or habitually attended theatrical
representations. It is so understood. I had opportunities of conversing
with the late Mr Murray of the Theatre Royal, Edinburgh, and with Mr
Charles Kean, on the subject. Both admitted the fact, and certainly if
any men of the profession could have removed the feeling from the
public mind, these were the men to have done it.
There is a phase of
religious observances which has undergone a great change amongst us
within fifty years—I mean the services and circumstances connected with
the administration of the Holy Communion. When these occurred in a
parish they were called "occasions," and the great interest excited by
these sacramental solemnities may be gathered from "Peter’s Letters,"
"The Annals of the Parish," and Burns’ "Holy Fair." Such ceremonials are
now conducted, I believe, just as the ordinary church services. Some
years back they were considered a sort of preaching matches. Ministers
vied with each other in order to bear away the bell in popularity, and
hearers embraced the opportunity of exhibiting to one another their
powers of criticism on what they heard and saw. In the parish of Urr in
Galloway, on one sacramental occasion, some of the assistants invited
were eminent ministers in Edinburgh; Dr Scot of St Michael’s, Dumfries,
was the only local one who was asked, and he was, in his own sphere,
very popular as a preacher. A brother clergyman, complimenting him upon
the honour of being so invited, the old bald-headed divine modestly
replied, "Gude bless you, man, what can I do? They are a’ han’ wailed
[Carefully selected] this time; I need never show face among them." "Ye’re
quite mista’en," was the soothing encouragement; "tak’ your Resurrection
(a well-known sermon used for such occasions by him), an I’ll lay my
lug ye’ll beat every clute o’ them." The Doctor did as suggested, and
exerted himself to the utmost, and it appears he did not exert himself
in vain. A batch of old women, on their way home after the conclusion of
the services, were overheard discussing the merits of the several
preachers who had that day addressed them from the tent. "Leeze me abune
them a’," said one of the company, who had waxed warm in the discussion,
"for yon auld clear-headed (bald) man, that said, ‘Raphael sings an’
Gabriel strikes his goolden harp, an’ a’ the angels clap their wings wi’
joy.’ O but it was gran’, it just put me in min’ o’ our geese at Dunjarg
when they turn their nebs to the south an’ clap their wings when they
see the rain’s comin’ after lang drooth."
There is a subject
closely allied with the religious feelings of a people, and that is the
subject of their superstitions. To enter upon that question, in a
general view, especially in reference to the Highlands, would not be
consistent with our present purpose, but I am induced to mention the
existence of a singular superstition regarding swine which existed some
years ago among the lower orders of the east coast of Fife. I can
observe, in my own experience, a great change to have taken place
amongst Scotch people generally on this subject. The old aversion to the
"unclean animal" still lingers in the Highlands, but seems in the
Lowland districts to have yielded to a sense of its thrift and
usefulness. [I recollect an old
Scottish gentleman, who shared this horror, asking very gravely, "Were
not swine forbidden under the law and cursed under the gospel?"]. The account given by my
correspondent of the Fife swinophobia is as follows:—
Among the many
superstitious notions and customs prevalent among the lower orders of
the fishing towns on the east coast of Fife, till very recently, that
class entertained a great horror of swine, and even at the very mention
of the word. If that animal crossed their path when about to set out on
a sea voyage, they considered it so unlucky an omen that they would not
venture off. A clergyman of one of these fishing villages having
mentioned the superstition to a clerical friend, and finding that he was
rather incredulous on the subject, in order to convince him told him he
would allow him an opportunity of testing the truth of it by allowing
him to preach for him the following day. It was arranged that his friend
was to read the chapter relating to the herd of swine into which the
evil spirits were cast. Accordingly, when the first verse was read, in
which the unclean beast was mentioned, a slight commotion was observable
among the audience, each one of them putting his or her hand on any near
piece of iron—a nail on the seat or book-board, or to the nails on their
shoes. At the repetition of the word again and again, more commotion was
visible, and the words "cauld airn" (cold iron), the antidote to this
baneful spell, were heard issuing from various corners of the church.
And finally, on his coming over the hated word again, when the whole
herd ran violently down the bank into the sea, the alarmed parishioners,
irritated beyond bounds, rose and all left the church in a body.
It is some time now,
however, since the Highlanders have begun to appreciate the thrift and
comfort of swine-keeping and swine-killing. A Scottish minister had been
persuaded by the laird to keep a pig, and the gudewife had been duly
instructed in the mysteries of black puddings, pork chops, and pig’s
head. "Oh!" said the minister, "nae doubt there’s a hantle o’
miscellawneous eating aboot a pig."
Amongst a people so
deeply impressed with the great truths of religion, and so earnest in
their religious profession, any persons whose principles were known to
be of an infidel character would naturally be looked on with
abhorrence and suspicion. There is a story traditionary in Edinburgh
regarding David Flume, which illustrates this feeling in a very amusing
manner, and which, I have heard it said, Hume himself often narrated.
The philosopher had fallen from the path into the swamp at the back of
the Castle, the existence of which I recollect hearing of from old
persons forty years ago. He fairly stuck fast, and called to a woman who
was passing, and begged her assistance. She passed on apparently without
attending to the request; at his earnest entreaty, however, she came
where he was, and asked him, "Are na ye Hume the Atheist?" "Well, well,
no matter," said Hume; "Christian charity commands you to do good to
every one." "Christian charity here, or Christian charity there,"
replied the woman, "I’ll do naething for you till ye turn a Christian
yoursel’—ye maun repeat the Lord’s Prayer and the Creed, or faith I’ll
let ye grafel [Lie in a grovelling attitude] there as I fand ye." The
historian, really afraid for his life, rehearsed the required formulas.
Notwithstanding the high
character borne for so many years by our countrymen as a people, and as
specially attentive to all religious observances, still there can be no
doubt that there has sprung up amongst the inhabitants of our crowded
cities, wynds, and closes, a class of persons quite unknown in the old
Scottish times. It is a great difficulty to get them to attend divine
worship at all, and their circumstances combine to break off all
associations with public services. Their going to church becomes a
matter of persuasion and of missionary labour.
A lady, who is most
active in visiting the houses of these outcasts from the means of grace,
gives me an amusing instance of self-complacency arising from
performance of the duty. She was visiting in the West Port, not far from
the church established by my illustrious friend the late Dr Chalmers.
Having asked a poor woman if she ever attended there for divine
service—"Ou ay," she replied; "there’s a man ca’d Chalmers preaches
there, and I whiles gang in and hear him, just to encourage him, puir
body!"
From the religious
opinions of a people, the transition is natural to their political
partialities. One great political change has passed over Scotland, which
none now living can be said to have actually witnessed; but they
remember those who were contemporaries of the anxious scenes of ‘45, and
many of us have known determined and thorough Jacobites. The poetry of
that political period still remains, but we hear only as pleasant songs
those words and melodies which stirred the hearts and excited the deep
enthusiasm of a past generation. Jacobite anecdotes also are fading from
our knowledge. To many young persons they are unknown. Of those stories
illustrative of Jacobite feelings and enthusiasm, many are of a
character not fit for me to record. The good old ladies who were violent
partisans of the Stuarts had little hesitation in referring without
reserve to the future and eternal destiny of William of Orange. One
anecdote which I had from a near relative of the family may be adduced
in illustration of the powerful hold which the cause had upon the views
and consciences of Jacobites.
A former Mr Stirling of
Keir had favoured the Stuart cause, and had, in fact attended a muster
of forces at the Brig of Turk previous to the ‘15. This symptom of a
rising against the Government occasioned some uneasiness, and the
authorities were very active in their endeavours to discover who were
the leaders of the movement. Keir was suspected. The miller of Keir was
brought forward as a witness, and swore positively that the laird was
not present. Now, as it was well known that he was there, and that
the miller knew it, a neighbour asked him privately, when he came out of
the witness-box, how he could on oath assert such a falsehood. The
miller replied, quite undaunted, and with a feeling of confidence in the
righteousness of his cause approaching the sublime: "I would rather
trust my soul in God’s mercy than Keir’s head into their hands."
A correspondent has sent
me an account of a curious ebullition of Jacobite feeling and
enthusiasm, now I suppose quite extinct. My correspondent received it
himself from Alexander, fourth Duke of Gordon, and he had entered it in
a commonplace book when he heard it, in
1826.
"David Tulloch, tenant in
Drumbenan, under the second and third Dukes of Gordon, had been ‘out’
in the ‘45—or the fufteen, or both—and was a great favourite
of his respective landlords. One day, having attended the young Lady
Susan Gordon (afterwards Duchess of Manchester) to the ‘Chapel’ at
Huntly, David, perceiving that her ladyship had neither hassock nor
carpet to protect her garments from the earthen floor, respectfully
spread his plaid for the young lady to kneel upon, and the service
proceeded; but when the prayer for the King and Royal Family was
commenced, David, sans cérémonie, drew, or rather ‘twitched,’ the
plaid from under the knees of the astonished young lady, exclaiming,
not sotto voce, ‘The deil a ane shall pray for them on my
plaid!’"
I have a still more
pungent demonstration against praying for the king, which a friend in
Aberdeen assures me he received from the son of the gentleman who
heard the protest. In the Episcopal Chapel in Aberdeen, of which
Primus John Skinner was incumbent, they commenced praying in the
service for George III. immediately on the death of Prince Charles
Edward. On the first Sunday of the prayer being used, this gentleman’s
father, walking home with a friend whom he knew to be an old and
determined Jacobite, said to him, "What do you think of that, Mr ?" The
reply, was, "Indeed, the less we say aboot that prayer the better." But
he was pushed for "further answer as to his own views and his own ideas
on the matter," so he came out with the declaration, "Weel, then, I say
this—they may pray the kenees [So
pronounced in Aberdeen.] aff their breeks afore I join in that prayer."
The following is a
characteristic Jacobite story. It must have happened shortly after 1745,
when all manner of devices were fallen upon to display Jacobitism,
without committing the safety of the Jacobite, such as having white
knots on gowns; drinking, "The king, ye ken wha I mean"; uttering the
toast "The king," with much apparent loyalty, and passing the glass over
the water-jug, indicating the esoteric meaning of majesty beyond
the sea, etc., etc.; and various toasts, which were most important
matters in those times, and were often given as tests of loyalty, or the
reverse, according to the company in which they were given. Miss Carnegy
of Craigo, well-known and still remembered amongst the old Montrose
ladies as an uncompromising Jacobite, had been vowing that she would
drink King James and his son in a company of staunch Brunswickers, and
being strongly dissuaded from any
such foolish and dangerous attempt by some of her friends present, she
answered them with a text of Scripture, "The tongue no man can
tame—James Third and Aucht," and drank off her glass!
[Implying that there was a James Third of England, Eighth of Scotland]. |