THE portion of our subject which we proposed under the head
of "Reminiscences of Scottish Stories of Wit or Humour," yet remains to be
considered. This is closely connected with the questions of Scottish dialect
and expressions; indeed, on some points hardly separable, as the wit, to a
great extent, proceeds from the quaint and picturesque modes of expressing it.
But here we are met by a difficulty. On high authority it has been declared
that no such thing as wit exists amongst us. What has no existence can have no
change. We cannot be said to have lost a quality which we never possessed.
Many of my readers are no doubt familiar with what Sydney Smith declared on
this point, and certainly on the question of wit he must be considered an
authority. He used to say (I am almost ashamed to repeat it), "It requires a
surgical operation to get a joke well into a Scotch understanding. Their only
idea of wit, which prevails occasionally in the north, and which, under the
name of WUT, is so infinitely distressing to people of good taste, is laughing
immoderately at stated intervals." Strange language to use of a country which
has produced Smollet, Burns, Scott, Galt, and Wilson—all remarkable for the
humour diffused through their writings! Indeed, we may fairly ask, have they
equals in this respect amongst English writers? Charles Lamb had the same
notion, or, I should rather say, the same prejudice, about Scottish people not
being accessible to wit; and he tells a story of what happened to himself, in
corroboration of the opinion. He had been asked to a party, and one object of
the invitation had been to meet a son of Burns. When he arrived, Mr Burns had
not made his appearance, and in the course of conversation regarding the
family of the poet, Lamb, in his lackadaisical kind of manner, said, "I wish
it had been the father instead of the son"; upon which four Scotsmen present
with one voice exclaimed, "That’s impossible, for he’s dead."
[After all, the remark may not have been so absurd
then as it appears now. Burns had not been long dead, nor was he then so noted
a character as he is now. The Scotsmen might really have supposed a Southerner
inacquainted with the fact of the poet’s death.]
Now, there will be dull men and matter-of-fact men everywhere, who do
not take a joke, or enter into a jocular allusion; but surely, as a general
remark, this is far from being a natural quality of our country. Sydney Smith
and Charles Lamb say so. But, at the risk of being considered presumptuous, I
will say I think them entirely mistaken. I should say that there was, on the
contrary, a strong connection between the Scottish temperament and,
call it if you like, humour, if it is not wit. And what is the difference? My
readers need not be afraid that they are to be led through a labyrinth of
metaphysical distinctions between wit and humour. I have read Dr Campbell’s
dissertation on the difference, in his Philosophy of Rhetoric; I have read
Sydney Smith’s own two lectures; but I confess I am not much the wiser.
Professors of rhetoric, no doubt, must have such discussions; but when you
wish to be amused by the thing itself, it is somewhat disappointing to be
presented with metaphysical analysis. It is like instituting an examination of
the glass and cork of a champagne bottle, and a chemical testing of the wine.
In the very process the volatile and sparkling draught which was to delight
the palate has become like ditch water, vapid and dead. What I mean is, that,
call it wit or humour, or what you please, there is a school of Scottish
pleasantry, amusing and characteristic beyond all other. Don’t think of
analysing its nature, or the qualities of which it is composed; enjoy its
quaint and amusing flow of oddity and fun; as we may, for instance, suppose it
to have flowed on that eventful night so joyously described by Burns
:—
"The souter tauld his queerest
stories,
The landlord’s laugh was ready chorus."
Or we may think of the delight it gave the good Mr
Balwhidder, when he tells, in his Annals of the Parish, of some such story,
that it was a "jocosity that was just a kittle to hear." When I speak of
changes in such Scottish humour which have taken place, I refer to a
particular sort of humour, and I speak of the sort of feeling that belongs to
Scottish pleasantry—which is sly, and cheery, and pawky. It is undoubtedly a
humour that depends a good deal upon the vehicle in which the story is
conveyed. If, as we have said, our quaint dialect is passing away, and our
national eccentric points of character, we must expect to find much of the
peculiar humour allied with them to have passed away also. In other
departments of wit and repartee, and acute hits at men and things, Scotsmen
(whatever Sydney Smith may have said to the contrary) are equal to their
neighbours, and, so far as I know, may have gained rather than lost. But this
peculiar humour of which I now speak has not, in our day, the scope and
development which were permitted to it by the former
generation. Where the tendency exists, the exercise of it is kept down by the
usages and feelings of society. For examples of it (in its full force at any
rate) we must go back to a race who are departed. One remark, however, has
occurred to me in regard to the specimens we have of this kind of humour,
viz., that they do not always proceed from the personal wit or cleverness of
any of the individuals concerned in them. The amusement comes from the
circumstances, from the concurrence or combination of the ideas, and in many
cases from the mere expressions which describe the facts. The humour of the
narrative is unquestionable, and yet no one has tried to be humorous. In
short, it is the Scottishness that gives the zest. The same ideas
differently expounded might have no point at all. There is, for example,
something highly original in the notions of celestial mechanics entertained by
an honest Scottish Fife lass regarding the theory of comets. Having occasion
to go out after dark, and having observed the brilliant comet then visible
(1858), she ran in with breathless haste to the
house, calling on her fellow-servants to "Come oot and see a new star that
hasna got its tail cuttit aff yet!" Exquisite astronomical speculation! Stars,
like puppies, are born with tails, and in due time have them docked. Take an
example of a story where there is no display of any one’s wit or humour, and
yet it is a good story, and one can’t exactly say why:—An English traveller
had gone on a fine Highland road so long, without having seen an indication of
fellow-travellers, that he became astonished at the solitude of the country;
and no doubt before the Highlands were so much frequented as they are in our
time, the roads sometimes bore a very striking aspect of solitariness. Our
traveller, at last coming up to an old man breaking stones, asked him if there
was any traffic on this road—was it at all
frequented? "Ay," he said, coolly, "it’s no’ ill at that; there was a cadger
body yestreen, and there’s yoursell the day." No English version of the story
could have half such amusement, or have so quaint a character. An answer even
still more characteristic is recorded to have been given by a countryman to a
traveller. Being doubtful of his way, he inquired if he were on the right road
to Dunkeld. With some of his national inquisitiveness about strangers, the
countryman asked his inquirer where he came from. Offended at the liberty, as
he considered it, he sharply reminded the man that where he came from was
nothing to him; but all the answer he got was the quiet rejoinder, "Indeed,
it’s just as little to me whar ye’re gaen." A friend has told me of an answer
highly characteristic of this dry and unconcerned quality which he heard given
to a fellow-traveller. A gentleman sitting opposite to him in the stagecoach
at Berwick complained bitterly that the cushion on which he sat was quite wet.
On looking up to the roof he saw a hole through which the rain descended
copiously, and at once accounted for the mischief. He called for the coachman,
and in great wrath reproached him with the evil under which he suffered, and
pointed to the hole which was the cause of it. All the satisfaction, however,
that he got was the quiet unmoved reply, "Ay, mony a ane has complained o’
that hole." Another anecdote I heard from a gentleman who vouched for the
truth, which is just a case where the narrative has its humour not from the
wit which is displayed but from that, dry matter-of-fact view of things
peculiar to some of our countrymen. The friend of my informant was walking in
a street of Perth, when, to his horror, he saw a workman fall from a roof
where he was mending slates, right upon the pavement. By extraordinary good
fortune he was not killed, and on the gentleman going up to his assistance,
and exclaiming, with much excitement, "God bless me, are you much hurt?" all
the answer he got was the cool rejoinder, "On the contrary, sir." A similar
matter-of-fact answer was made by one of the old race of Montrose humorists.
He was coming out of church, and in the press of the kirk skailing, a
young man thoughtlessly trod on the old gentleman’s toe, which was tender with
corns. He hastened to apologise, saying, "I am very sorry, sir; I beg your
pardon." The only acknowledgment of which was the dry answer, "And ye’ve as
muckle need, sir." An old man marrying a very young wife, his friends rallied
him on the inequality of their ages. "She will be near me," he replied, "to
close my een." "Weel," remarked another of the party, "I’ve had twa wives, and
they opened my een."
One of the best specimens of cool Scottish matter-of-fact
view of things has been supplied by a kind correspondent, who narrates
it from his own personal recollection.
The back windows of the house where he was brought up
looked upon the Greyfriars Church that was burnt down. On the Sunday morning
in which that event took place, as they were all preparing to go to church,
the flames began to burst forth; the young people screamed from the back part
of the house, "A fire! A fire!" and all was in a state of confusion and alarm.
The housemaid was not at home, it being her turn for the Sunday "out." Kitty,
the cook, was taking her place, and performing her duties. The old woman was
always very particular on the subject of her responsibility on such occasions,
and came panting and hobbling upstairs from the lower regions, and exclaimed,
"Oh, what is’t, what is’t?" "O Kitty, look here, the Greyfriars Church is on
fire!" "Is that a’, Miss? What a fricht ye geed me! I thought ye said the
parlour fire was out."
In connection with the subject of Scottish
toasts I am supplied by a first-rate Highland
authority of one of the most graceful and crushing replies of a lady to what
was intended as a sarcastic compliment and smart saying at her expense.
About the beginning of the present century the then
Campbell of Combie, on Loch Awe side, in Argyleshire, was a man of
extraordinary character, and of great physical strength, and such swiftness of
foot that it is said he could "catch the best tup
on the hill." He also looked upon himself as a "pretty
man," though in this he was singular; also, it was more than whispered that
the laird was not remarkable for his principles of honesty. There also lived
in the same district a Miss MacNabb of Bar-a’-Chaistril, a lady who, before
she had passed the zenith of life, had never been remarkable for her
beauty—the contrary even had passed into a proverb, while she was in her
teens; but, to counterbalance this defect in external qualities, nature had
endowed her with great benevolence, while she was renowned for her probity.
One day the laird of Combie, who piqued himself on his bon-mots, was,
as frequently happened, a guest of Miss MacNabb’s, and after dinner several
toasts had gone round as usual, Combie rose with great solemnity and
addressing the lady of the house requested an especial bumper, insisting on
all the guests to fill to the brim. He then rose and said, addressing himself
to Miss MacNabb, "I propose the old Scottish toast of ‘Honest men and
bonnie lassies," and bowing to the hostess, he resumed his seat. the lady
returned his bow with her usual amiable smile, and taking up her glass,
replied, "Weel, Combie, I am sure we may drink that, for it will
neither apply to you nor me. An amusing example of a quiet cool
view of a pecuniary transaction happened to my father whilst doing the
business of the rent-day. He was receiving sums of money from the tenants in
succession. After looking over a bundle of notes which he had just received
from one of them, a well-known character, he said in banter, "James, the notes
are not correct." To which the farmer, who was much of a humorist, drily
answered, "I diana ken what they may be noo; but they were a’ richt
afore ye had your fingers in amang ‘em." An English farmer would hardly have
spoken thus to his landlord. The Duke of Buccleuch told me an answer very
quaintly Scotch, given to his grandmother by a farmer of the old school. A
dinner was given to some tenantry of the vast estates of the family, in the
time of Duke Henry. His Duchess (the last descendant of the Dukes of Montague)
always appeared at table on such occasions, and did the honours with that
mixture of dignity and of affable kindness for which she was so remarkable.
Abundant hospitality was shown to all the guests. The Duchess, having observed
one of the tenants supplied with boiled beef from a noble round, proposed that
he should add a supply of cabbage: on his declining, the Duchess
good-humouredly remarked, "Why, boiled beef and ‘greens’ seem so naturally to
go together, I wonder you don’t take it." To which the honest farmer objected,
"Ah, but your Grace maun alloo it’s a vary windy vegetable," in
delicate allusion to the flatulent quality of the esculent. Similar to this
was the naive answer of a farmer on the occasion of a rent-day. The lady of
the house asked him if he would take some "rhubarb-tart," to which he
innocently answered, "Thank ye, mem, I dinna need it."
A Highland minister, dining with the patroness of his
parish, ventured to say, "I’ll thank your leddyship for a little more of that
apple-tart"; "It’s not apple-tart, it’s rhubarb," replied the lady. "Rhubarb!"
repeated the other, with a look of surprise and alarm, and immediately called
out to the attendant, "Freend, I’ll thank you for a dram."
A characteristic table anecdote I can recall amongst
Deeside reminiscences. My aunt, Mrs Forbes, had entertained an honest Scotch
farmer at Banchory Lodge; a draught of ale had been offered to him, which he
had quickly despatched. My aunt observing that the glass had no head or
effervescence, observed, that she feared it had not been a good bottle, "Oh,
verra gude, ma’am, it’s just some strong o’ the aaple," an expression which
indicates the beer to be somewhat sharp or pungent. It turned out to have been
a bottle of vinegar decanted by mistake.
An amusing instance of an old Scottish farmer being
unacquainted with table refinements occurred at a tenant’s dinner in the
north. The servant had put down beside him a dessert spoon when he had been
helped to pudding. This seemed quite superfluous to the honest man, who
exclaimed, "Tak’ it awa’, my man; my mou’s as big for puddin’ as it is for
kail."
Amongst the lower orders in Scotland humour is found,
occasionally, very rich in mere children, and I recollect a remarkable
illustration of this early native humour occurring in a family in Forfarshire,
where I used in former days to be very intimate. A wretched woman, who used to
traverse the country as a beggar or tramp, left a poor, half-starved little
girl by the roadside, near the house of my friends. Always ready to assist the
unfortunate, they took charge of the child, and as she grew a little older
they began to give her some education, and taught her to read. She soon made
some progress in reading the Bible, and the native odd humour of which we
speak began soon to show itself. On reading the passage, which began, "Then
David rose," etc., the child stopped, and looked up knowingly, to say, "I ken
wha that was," and on being asked what she could mean, she confidently said,
"That’s David Rowse the pleuchman." And again, reading the passage where the
words occur, "He took Paul’s girdle," the child said, with much confidence, "I
ken what he took that for," and on being asked to explain, replied at once,
"To bake ‘s bannocks on"; "girdle" being in the north the name for the iron
plate hung over the fire for baking oatcakes or bannocks.
To a distinguished member of the Church of Scotland I am
indebted for an excellent story of quaint child humour, which he had from the
lips of an old woman who related the story of herself :—When a girl of eight
years of age she was taken by her grandmother to church. The parish minister
was not only a long preacher, but, as the custom was, delivered two sermons on
the Sabbath day without any interval, and thus saved the parishioners the two
journeys to church. Elizabeth was sufficiently wearied before the close of the
first discourse; but when, after singing and prayer, the good minister opened
the Bible, read a second text, and prepared to give a second sermon, the young
girl, being both tired and hungry, lost all patience, and cried out to her
grandmother, to the no small amusement of those who were so near as to hear
her, "Come awa’, granny, and gang hame; this is a lang grace, and nae meat."
A most amusing account of child humour used to be narrated
by an old Mr Campbell of Jura, who told the story of his own son. It seems the
boy was much spoilt by indulgence. In fact, the parents were scarce able to
refuse him anything he demanded. He was in the drawing-room on one occasion
when dinner was announced, and on being ordered up to the nursery he insisted
on going down to dinner with the company. His mother was for refusal, but the
child persevered, and kept saying, ‘if I dinna gang, I’ll tell thon." His
father then, for peace sake, let him go. So he went and sat at table by his
mother. When he found every one getting soup and himself omitted, he demanded
soup, and repeated, "If I dinna get it, I’ll tell thon." Well, soup was given,
and various other things yielded to his importunities, to which he always
added the usual threat of "telling thon." At last, when it came to wine, his
mother stood firm, and positively refused, as "a bad thing for little boys,"
and so on. He then became more vociferous than ever about "telling thon"; and
as still he was refused, he declared, "Now, I will tell thon," and at last
roared out, "Ma new breeks were made oot o’ the auld curtains !"
The Rev. Mr Agnew has kindly sent me an anecdote which
supplies in example of cleverness in a Scottish boy, and which rivals, as he
observes, the smartness of the London boy, termed by Punch the "Street
boy." It has also a touch of quiet, sly Scottish humour. A gentleman
editor of a Glasgow paper, well known as a bon-vivant and epicure, and by no
means a popular character, was returning one day from his office, and met near
his own house a boy carrying a splendid salmon. The gentleman looked at it
with longing eyes, and addressed the boy: "Where are you taking that salmon,
my boy?" Boy: "Do you ken gin ae Mr — (giving the
gentleman’s name) lives hereabout?" Mr —: "Yes, oh
yes; his house is here just by." Boy (looking sly): "Weel, it’s no’ for him."
Of this same Scottish boy cleverness, the Rev. Mr M’Lure of Marykirk
kindly supplies a capital specimen, in an instance which occurred at what is
called the market, at Fettercairn, where there is always a hiring of servants.
A boy was asked by a farmer if he wished to be engaged. "Ou ay," said the
youth. "Wha was your last maister?" was the next question. "Oh, yonder him,"
said the boy; and then agreeing to wait where he was standing with some other
servants till the inquirer should return from examination of the boy’s late
employer. The farmer returned and accosted the boy, "Weel, lathie, I’ve been
speerin’ about ye, an’ I’m tae tak’ ye." "Ou ay," was the prompt reply, "an’
I’ve been speerin’ about ye tae, an’ I’m nae gaen."
We could not have had a better specimen of the cool self-sufficiency of
these young domestics of the Scottish type than the following :—I heard of a
boy making a very cool and determined exit from the house into which he had
very lately been introduced. He had been told that he should be dismissed if
he broke any of the china that was under his charge. On the morning of a great
dinner-party he was entrusted (rather rashly) with a great load of plates,
which he was to carry upstairs from the kitchen to the dining-room, and which
were piled up, and rested upon his two hands. In going upstairs his foot
slipped, and the plates were broken to atoms. He at once went up to the
drawing-room, put his head in at the door, and shouted: "The plates are a’
smashed, and I’m awa’."
A facetious and acute friend, who rather leans to the Sydney Smith view of
Scottish wit, declares that all our humorous stories are about lairds, and
lairds that are drunk. Of such stories there are certainly not a few. The
following is one or the best belonging to my part of the country, and to many
persons I should perhaps apologise for introducing it at all. The story has
been told of various parties and localities, but no doubt the genuine laird
was a laird of Balnamoon (pronounced in the country Bonnymoon), and that the
locality was a wild tract of land, not far from his place, called Munrimmon
Moor. Balnamoon had been dining out in the neighbourhood, where, by mistake
they had put down to him after dinner, cherry brandy, instead of port wine,
his usual beverage. The rich flavour and strength so pleased him that, having
tasted it, he would have nothing else. On rising from table, therefore, the
laird would be more affected by his drink than if he had taken his ordinary
allowance of port. His servant Harry or Hairy was to drive him home in a gig,
or whisky as it was called, the usual open carriage of the time. On crossing
the moor, however, whether from greater exposure to the blast or from the
laird’s unsteadiness of head, his hat and wig came off and fell upon the
ground. Harry got out to pick them up and restore them to his master. The
laird was satisfied with the hat, but demurred at the wig. "It’s no’ my wig,
Hairy, lad; it’s no’ my wig," and refused to have anything to do with it.
Hairy lost his patience, and, anxious to get home, remonstrated with his
master, "Ye’d better tak’ it, sir, for there’s nae weale [Choice]
o’
wigs on Munrimmon Moor." The humour of the argument is exquisite, putting to
the laird in his unreasonable objection the sly insinuation that in such a
locality, if he did not take this wig, he was not likely to find
another. Then, what a rich expression, "waile o’ wigs." In English what is it?
"A choice of perukes"; which is nothing comparable to the "waile, o’ wigs." I ought
to mention also an
amusing sequel to the story, viz., in what happened after the affair of the
wig had been settled, and the laird had consented to return home. When the
whisky drove up to the door, Hairy, sitting in front, told the servant who
came "to tak’ out the laird." No laird was to be seen; and it appeared that he
had fallen out on the moor without Hairy observing it. Of course, they went
back, and, picking him up, brought him safe home. A neighbouring laird having
called a few days after, and having referred to the accident, Balnamoon
quietly added, "Indeed, I mann hae a lume [A vessel] that’ll haud in."
The laird of Balnamoon was a truly eccentric character. He
joined with his drinking propensities a great zeal for the Episcopal church,
the service of which he read to his own family with much solemnity and
earnestness of manner. Two gentlemen, one of them a stranger to the country,
having called pretty early one Sunday morning, Balnamoon invited them to
dinner, and as they accepted the invitation, they remained and joined in the
forenoon devotional exercises conducted by Balnamoon himself. The stranger was
much impressed with the laird’s performance of the service, and during a walk
which they took before dinner, mentioned to his friend how highly he esteemed
the religious deportment of their host. The gentleman said nothing, but smiled
to himself at the scene which he anticipated was to follow. After dinner,
Balnamoon set himself, according to the custom of old hospitable Scottish
hosts, to make his guests as drunk as possible. The result was, that the party
spent the evening in a riotous debauch, and were carried to bed by the
servants at a late hour. Next day, when they had taken leave and left the
house, the gentleman who had introduced his friend asked him what he thought
of their entertainer—" Why, really," he replied, with evident astonishment,
"sic a speat o’ praying, and sic a speat o’ drinking, I never knew in the
whole course o’ my life." Lady Dalhousie, mother, I mean, of
the late distinguished Marquis of Dalhousie, used to tell a characteristic
anecdote of her day. But here; on mention of the name Christian, Countess of
Dalhousie, may I pause a moment to recall the memory of one who was a very
remarkable person. She was for many years, to me and mine, a sincere; and true
and valuable friend. By an awful dispensation of God’s providence her death
happened instantaneously under my roof in 1839.
Lady Dalhousie was eminently distinguished for a fund of the most varied
knowledge, for a clear and powerful judgment, for acute observation, a kind
heart, a brilliant wit. Her story was thus :—A Scottish judge, somewhat in the
predicament of the Laird of Balnamoon, had dined at Coalstoun with her father
Charles Brown, an advocate, and son of George Brown, who sat in the Supreme
Court as a judge with the title of Lord Coalstoun. The party had been
convivial, as we know parties of the highest legal characters often were in
those days. When breaking up and going to the drawing-room, one of them, not
seeing his way very clearly, stepped out of the dining-room window, which was
open to the summer air. The ground at Coalstoun sloping off from the house
behind, the worthy judge got a great fall, and rolled down the bank. He
contrived, however, as tipsy men generally do, to regain his legs, and was
able to reach the drawing-room. The first remark he made was an innocent
remonstrance with his friend the host, "Od, Charlie Brown,. what gars ye hae
sic lang steps, to your front door?"
On Deeside, where many original stories had their origin, I
recollect hearing several of an excellent and worthy, but very simple-minded
man, the Laird of Craigmyle. On one occasion, when the beautiful and clever
Jane, Duchess of Gordon, was scouring through the country, intent upon some of
those electioneering schemes which often occupied her fertile imagination and
active energies, she came to call at Craigmyle, and having heard that the
laird was making bricks on the property, for the purpose of building a new
garden wall, with her usual tact she opened the subject, and kindly asked,
"Well, Mr Gordon, and how do your bricks come on?" Good Craigmyle’s thoughts
were much occupied with a new leather portion of his dress which had been
lately constructed, so, looking down on his nether garments, he said in pure
Aberdeen dialect, "Muckle obleeged to yer Grace, the breeks war sum ticht at
first, but they are deeing weel eneuch noo."
The last Laird of Macnab, before the clan finally broke up
and emigrated to Canada, was a well-known character in the country, and being
poor, used to ride about on a most wretched horse, which gave occasion to many
jibes at his expense. The laird was in the constant habit of riding up from
the country to attend the Musselburgh races. A young wit, by way of playing
him off on the racecourse, asked him, in a contemptuous tone, "Is that the
same horse you had last year, laird?" "Na," said the laird, brandishing his
whip in the interrogator’s face in so emphatic a manner as to preclude further
questioning, "na; but it’s the same whup." In those days, as might be
expected, people were not nice in expressions of their dislike of persons and
measures. If there be not more charity in society than of old, there is
certainly more courtesy. I have, from a friend, an anecdote illustrative of
this remark, in regard to feelings exercised towards an unpopular laird. In
the neighbourhood of Banff, in Forfarshire, the seat of a very ancient branch
of the Ramsays, lived a proprietor who bore the appellation of Corb, from the
name of his estate. This family has passed away, and its property merged in
Banff. The laird was intensely disliked in the neighbourhood. Sir George
Ramsay was, on the other hand, universally popular and respected. On one
occasion, Sir George, in passing a morass in his own neighbourhood, had missed
the road and fallen into a bog to an alarming depth. To his great relief, he
saw a passenger coming along the path, which was at no great distance. He
called loudly for his help, but the man took no notice. Poor Sir George felt
himself sinking, and redoubled his cries for assistance; all at once the
passenger rushed forward, carefully extricated him from his perilous position,
and politely apologised for his first neglect of his appeal, adding, as his
reason, "Indeed, Sir George, I thought it was Corb!" evidently meaning that
had it been Corb, he must have taken his chance for him.
In Lanarkshire there lived a sma’ sma’ laird named Hamilton, who was noted for
his eccentricity. On one occasion, a neighbour waited on him, and requested
his name as an accommodation to a "bit bill" for twenty pounds at three
months’ date, which led to the following characteristic and truly Scottish
colloquy :—" Na, na, I canna do that." "What for no,
laird? ye hae dune the same thing for ithers." "Ay, ay, Tammas, but there’s
wheels within wheels ye ken naething about; I canna do’t." "It’s a sma’ affair
to refuse me, laird." "Wed, ye see, Tanimas, if I was to pit my name till’t,
ye wad get the siller frae the bank, and when the time came round, ye wadna be
ready, and I wad hae to pay’t; sae then you and me wad quarrel; sae we may
just as weel quarrel the noo, as lang’s the siller’s in ma pouch." On
one occasion, Hamilton having business with the late Duke of Hamilton at
Hamilton Palace, the Duke politely asked him to lunch. A liveried servant
waited upon them, and was most assiduous in his attentions to the Duke and his
guest. At last our eccentric friend lost patience, and looking at the servant,
addressed him thus, "What the deil for are ye dance, dancing, about the room
that gait? can ye no’ draw in your chair and sit down? I’m sure there’s
plenty on the table for three."
As a specimen of the old-fashioned laird, now become a
Reminiscence, who adhered pertinaciously to old Scottish usages, and to the
old Scottish dialect, I cannot, I am sure, adduce a better specimen than Mr
Fergusson of Pitfour, to whose servant I have already referred. He was always
called Pitfour, from the name of his property in Aberdeenshire. He must have
died fifty years ago. He was for many years M.P. for the county of Aberdeen,
and I have reason to believe that he made the enlightened parliamentary
declaration which has been given to others: He said "he had often heard
speeches in the House, which had changed his opinion, but none that had
ever changed his vote." I recollect hearing of his dining in London sixty
years ago, at the house of a Scottish friend, where there was a swell party,
and Pitfour was introduced as a great northern proprietor, and county M.P. A
fashionable lady patronised him graciously, and took great charge of him, and
asked him about his estates. Pitfour was very dry and sparing in his
communications, as for example, "What does your home farm chiefly produce, Mr
Fergusson?" Answer, "Girss.’ "I beg your pardon, Mr Fergusson, what does your
home farm produce?" All she could extract was, "Girss."
Of another laird, whom I heard often spoken of in old times, an anecdote
was told strongly Scottish. Our friend had much difficulty (as many worthy
lairds have had) in meeting the claims of those two woeful periods of the year
called with us in Scotland the "tarmes." He had been employing for some time
as workman a stranger from the south on some house repairs, of the not
uncommon name in England of Christmas. His servant early one morning called
out at the laird’s door in great excitement that "Christmas had run away, and
nobody knew where he had gone." He coolly turned in his bed with the
ejaculation, "I only wish he had taken Whitsunday and Martinmas along with
him." I do not know a better illustration of quiet, shrewd, and acute Scottish
humour than the following little story, which an esteemed correspondent
mentions having heard from his father when a boy, relating to a former Duke of
Athole, who had no family of his
own, and whom he mentions as having remembered
very well:— He met one morning, one of his cottars or gardeners, whose wife he
knew to be in the hopeful way. Asking him
"how Marget was the day," the man replied that she had that morning given him
twins. Upon which the Duke said: "Weel, Donald; ye ken the Almighty never
sends bairns without the meat." "That may be; your Grace," said Donald; "but
whiles I think that Providence maks a mistak in thae matters, and sends the
bairns to ae hoose and the meat to anither!" The Duke took the hint, and sent
him a cow with calf in the following morning.
I have heard of an amusing scene between a laird, noted for
his meanness, and a wandering sort of Edie Ochiltree, a well-known itinerant
who lived by his wits and what he could pick up in his rounds amongst the
houses through the country. The laird, having seen the beggar sit down near
his gate to examine the contents of his pock or wallet, conjectured that he
had come from his house, and so drew near to see what he had carried off. As
the laird was keenly investigating the mendicant’s spoils, his quick eye
detected some bones on which there remained more meat than should have been
allowed to leave his kitchen. Accordingly he pounced upon the bones, declaring
he had been robbed, and insisted on the beggar returning to the house and
giving back the spoil. He was, however, prepared for the attack, and sturdily
defended his property, boldly asserting, "Na, na, laird, thae are no Tod-brae
banes; they are Inchbyre banes, and nane o’ your honour’s"—meaning that he had
received these bones at the house of a neighbour of a more liberal character.
The beggar’s professional discrimination between the merits of the bones of
the two mansions, and his pertinacious defence of his own property, would have
been most amusing to a bystander.
I have, however, a reverse story, in which the beggar is
quietly silenced by the proprietor. A noble lord, some generations back, well
known for his frugal habits, had just picked up a small copper coin in his own
avenue, and had been observed by one of the itinerating mendicant race, who,
grudging the transfer of the piece into the peer’s pocket, exclaimed, "O,
gie’t to me, my lord"; to which the quiet answer was, "Na, na; fin’ a fardin’
for yersell, puir body."
There are always pointed anecdotes against houses wanting
in a liberal and hospitable expenditure in Scotland. Thus, we have heard of a
master leaving such a mansion, and taxing his servant with being drunk, which
he had too often been after other country visits. On this occasion, however,
he was innocent of the charge, for he had not the opportunity to
transgress. So, when his master asserted, "Jemmy, you are drunk!" Jemmy very
quietly answered, "Indeed, sir, I wish I war." At another mansion, notorious
for scanty fare, a gentleman was inquiring of the gardener about a dog which
some time ago he had given to the laird. The gardener showed him a lank
greyhound, on which the gentleman said, "No, no; the dog I gave your master
was a mastiff, not a greyhound"; to which the gardener quietly answered,
"Indeed, ony dog micht sune become a greyhound by stopping here."
From a friend and relative, a minister of the Established
Church of Scotland, I used to hear many characteristic stories. He had a
curious vein of this sort of humour in himself, besides what he brought out
from others. One of his peculiarities was a mortal antipathy to the whole
French nation, whom he frequently abused in no measured terms. At the same
time he had great relish of a glass of claret, which he considered the prince
of all social beverages. So he usually finished off his anti-gallican tirades
with the reservation, "But the bodies brew the braw drink." He lived amongst
his own people, and knew well the habits and peculiarities of a race gone by.
He had many stories connected with the pastoral relation between minister and
people, and all such stories are curious, not merely for their amusement, but
from the illustration they afford us of that peculiar Scottish humour which we
are now describing. He had himself, when a very young boy, before he came up
to the Edinburgh High School, been at the parochial school where he resided,
and which, like many others, at that period, had a considerable reputation for
the skill and scholarship of the master. He used to describe school scenes
rather different, I suspect, from school scenes in our day. One boy, on coming
late, explained that the cause had been a regular pitched battle between his
parents, with the details of which he amused his school-fellows; and he
described the battle in vivid and Scottish Homeric terms: "And eh, as they
faucht, and they faucht," adding, however, with much complacency, "but my
minnie dang, she did tho’."
There was a style of conversation and quaint modes of
expression between ministers and their people at that time, which, I suppose,
would seem strange to the present generation; as for example, I recollect a
conversation between this relative and one of his parishioners of this
description—It had been a very wet and unpromising autumn. The minister met a
certain Janet of his flock, and accosted her very kindly. He remarked, "Bad
prospect for the har’st (harvest), Janet, this wet." Janet: "Indeed,
sir, I’ve seen as muckle as that there’ll be nae har’st the year."
Minister: "Na, Janet, deil as muckle as that ‘t ever you saw."
As I have said, he was a clergyman of the Established
Church, and had many stories about ministers and people, arising out of his
own pastoral experience, or the experience of friends and neighbours. He was
much delighted with the not very refined rebuke which one of his own farmers
had given to a young minister who had for some Sundays occupied his pulpit.
The young man had dined with the farmer in the afternoon when services were
over, and his appetite was so sharp, that he thought it necessary to apologise
to his host for eating so substantial a dinner. "You see," he said, "I am
always very hungry after preaching." The old gentleman, not much admiring the
youth’s pulpit ministrations, having heard this apology two or three times, at
last replied sarcastically, "Indeed, sir, I’m no’ surprised at it, considering
the trash that comes aff your stamach in the morning."
What I wish to keep in view is, to distinguish anecdotes
which are amusing on account merely of the expressions used, from those which
have real wit and humour combined, with the purely Scottish vehicle in
which they are conveyed.
Of this class I could not have a
better specimen to commence with than the defence of the liturgy of his
church, by John Skinner of Langside, of whom previous mention has been made.
It is witty and clever.
Being present at a party (I think at Lord Forbes’s), where
were also several ministers of the Establishment, the conversation over their
wine turned, among other things, on the Prayer Book. Skinner took no part in
it, till one minister remarked to him, "The great fau’t I hae’ to your prayer
book is that ye use the Lord’s Prayer sae aften—ye juist mak’ a dishclout o’t."
Skinner’s rejoinder was, "Verra true! Ay, man, we mak’ a dishclout o’t, an’ we
wring’t, an’ we wring’t, an’ we wring’t, an’ the bree [Juice] o’t washes a’
the lave o’ our prayers."
No one, I think, could deny the wit of the two following
rejoinders.
A ruling elder of a country parish in the west of Scotland
was well known in the district as a shrewd and ready-witted man. He received
many a visit from persons who liked a banter, or to hear a good joke. Three
young students gave him a call in order to have a little amusement at the
elder’s expense. On approaching him, one of them saluted him, "Well, Father
Abraham, how are you to-day?" "You are wrong," said the other, "this is old
Father Isaac." "Tuts," said the third, "you are both mistaken; this is old
Father Jacob." David looked at the young men, and in his own way replied, "I
am neither old Father Abraham, nor old Father Isaac, nor old Father Jacob; but
I am Saul the son of Kish, seeking his father’s asses, and lo! I’ve found
three o’ them."
For many years the Baptist community of Dunfermline was
presided over by brothers David Dewar and James Inglis, the latter of whom has
just recently gone to his reward. Brother David was a plain, honest,
straightforward man, who never hesitated to express his convictions, however
unpalatable they might be to others. Being elected a member of the Prison
Board, he was called upon to give his vote in the choice of a chaplain from
the licentiates of the Established Kirk. The party who had gained the
confidence of the Board had proved rather an indifferent preacher in a charge
to which he had previously been appointed; and on David being asked to signify
his assent to the choice of the Board, he said," Weel, I’ve no objections to
the man, for I understand he has preached a kirk toom (empty) already, and if
he be as successful in the jail, he’ll maybe preach it vawcant as weel."
From Mr Inglis, clerk of the Court of Session, I have the
following Scottish rejoinder:— "I recollect my
father relating a conversation between a Perthshire laird and one of his
tenants. The laird’s eldest son was rather a simpleton. Laird says, ‘I am
going to send the young laird abroad.’ ‘What for?’ asks the tenant; answered,
‘To see the world’; tenant replies, ‘But, lord-sake,
laird, will no’ the world see him?’"
An admirably humorous reply is recorded of a Scotch
officer, well known and esteemed in his day for mirth and humour. Captain
Innes of the Guards (usually called Jock Innes by his contemporaries) was with
others getting ready for Flushing or some of those expeditions of the
beginning of the great war. His commanding officer (Lord Huntly, my
correspondent thinks) remonstrated about the badness of his hat, and
recommended a new one. "Na, na! bide a wee," said Jock; "where we’re gain’
faith there’ll soon be mair hats nor beads."
I recollect being much amused with a Scottish reference of
this kind in the heart of London. Many years ago a Scotch party had dined at
Simpson’s famous beef-steak house in the Strand. On coming away some of the
party could not find their hats, and my uncle was jocularly asking the waiter,
whom he knew to be a Deeside man," Whar are our bonnets, Jeems?" To
which he replied, "Deed, I mind the day when I had neither hat nor bonnet."
There is an odd and original way of putting a matter
sometimes in Scotch people, which is irresistibly comic, although by the
persons nothing comic is intended; as for example, when in 1786 Edinburgh was
illuminated on account of the recovery of George III. from severe illness. In
a house where great preparation was going on for the occasion, by getting the
candles fixed in tin sconces, an old nurse of the family, looking on,
exclaimed, "Ay, it’s a braw time for the cannel-makers when the king is sick,
honest man!"
Scottish farmers of the old school were a shrewd and
humorous race, sometimes not indisposed to look with a little jealousy upon
their younger brethren, who, on their part, perhaps, showed their contempt for
the old-fashioned ways. I take the following example from the columns of the
Peterhead Sentinel, just as it appeared—June 14, 1861:—
"AN ANECDOTE FOR DEAN
RAMSAY.—The following characteristic and amusing anecdote was
communicated to us the other day by a gentleman who happened to be a party to
the conversation detailed below. This gentleman was passing along a road not a
hundred miles from Peterhead one day this week. Two different farms skirt the
separate sides of the turnpike, one of which is rented by a farmer who
cultivates his land according to the most advanced system of agriculture, and
the other of which is farmed by a gentleman of the old school. Our informant
met the latter worthy at the side of the turnpike opposite his neighbour’s
farm, and seeing a fine crop of wheat upon what appeared to be (and really
was) very thin and poor land, asked, ‘When was that wheat sown?’ ‘O I dinna
ken,’ replied the gentleman of the old school, with a sort of
half-indifference, half-contempt. ‘But isn’t it strange that such a fine crop
should be reared on such bad land?’ asked our informant. ‘O, na-—nae at a’—deevil
thank it; a gravesteen wad gie guid bree [Broth] gin ye gied it plenty o’
butter!’"
But perhaps the best anecdote illustrative of the keen
shrewdness of the Scottish farmer is related by Mr Boyd in one of his charming
series of papers, reprinted from Fraser’s Magazine. "A friend of mine,
a country parson, on first going to his parish, resolved to farm his glebe for
himself. A neighbouring farmer kindly offered the parson to plough one of his
fields. The farmer said that he would send his man John with a plough and a
pair of horses on a certain day ‘If ye’re goin’ about,’ said the farmer to the
clergyman, ‘John will be unco weel p!eased if you speak to him, and say it’s a
fine day, or the like o’ that; but dinna,’ said the farmer, with much
so!emnity, ‘dinna say onything to him about ploughin’ and sawin’; for John,’
he added, ‘is a stupid body, but he has been ploughin’ and sawin’ a’ his life,
and he’ll see in a minute that ye ken naething aboot p!oughin’ and sawin’. And
then,’ said the sagacious old farmer, with much earnestness, ‘if he comes to
think that ye ken naething aboot p!oughin’ and sawin’, he’ll think that ye ken
naething about onything!"
The following is rather an original commentary, by a
layman, upon clerical incomes:—A relative of mine going to church with a
Forfarshire farmer, one of the old school, asked him the amount of the
minister’s stipend. He said, "Od, it’s a gude ane—the maist part of £300 a
year." "Well," said my relative," many of these Scotch ministers are but
poorly off." "They’ve eneuch, sir, they’ve eneuch; if they’d mair, it wou!d
want a’ their time to the spendin’ o’t."
Scotch gamekeepers had often much dry quiet humour. I was
much amused by the answer of one of those under the following
circumstances:—An Ayrshire gentleman, who was from the first a very bad shot,
or rather no shot at all, when out on 1st of September, having failed, time
after time, in bringing down a single bird, had at last pointed out to him by
his attendant bag-carrier a large covey, thick and c!ose on the stubbles. "Noo,
Mr Jeems, let drive at them, just as they are!" Mr Jeems did let drive, as
advised, but not a feather remained to testify the shot. All flew off, safe
and sound. "Hech, sir" remarks his friend, "but ye’ve made thae yins shift
their quarters."
The two following anecdotes of rejoinders from Scottish
guidwives, and for which I am indebted, as for many other kind communications,
to the Rev. Mr Blair of Dunblane, appear to me as good examples of the
peculiar Scottish pithy phraseology which we refer to, as any that I have met
with.
An old lady from whom the "Great Unknown" had derived many
an ancient tale, was waited upon one day by the author of "Waverley." On his
endeavouring to give the authorship the go-by, the old dame protested, "D’ye
think, sir, I dinna ken my ain groats in ither folk's kail?
" [I believe the lady was Mrs Murray Keith of Ravelston, with whom Sir
Walter had in early life much intercourse.]
A conceited packman called at a farmhouse in the west of
Scotland, in order to dispose of some of his wares. The goodwife was offended
by his southern accent, and his high talk about York, London, and other big
places. "An’ whaur come ye frae yersell?" was the question of the guidwife. "Ou,
I am from the Border." "The Border—oh! I thocht that; for we aye think the
selvidge is the wakest bit o’ the wab!"
The following is a good specimen of ready Scotch humorous
reply, by a master to his discontented workman, and in which he turned the
tables upon him, in his reference to Scripture. In a town of one of the
central counties a Mr J—— carried on, about a century ago, a very extensive
business in the linen manufacture. Although strikes were then unknown
among the labouring classes, the spirit from which these take their rise has
no doubt at all times existed. Among Mr J——’s many workmen, one had given him
constant annoyance for years, from his discontented and argumentative spirit.
Insisting one day on getting something or other which his master thought most
unreasonable, and refused to give in to, he at last submitted, with a bad
grace, saying, "You’re nae better than Pharaoh, sir, forcin’ puir folk
to mak’ bricks without straw." "Well, Saunders," quietly rejoined his master,
"if I’m nae better than Pharaoh in one respect, I’ll be better in another, for
I’ll no’ hinder ye going to the wilderness whenever you choose."
Persons who are curious in Scottish stories of wit and
humour speak much of the sayings of a certain "Laird of Logan," who was a
well-known character in the West of Scotland. This same Laird of Logan was at
a meeting of the heritors of Cumnock, where a proposal was made to erect a new
churchyard wall. He met the proposition with the dry remark, "I never dig
dykes till the tenants complain." Calling one day for a gill of whisky
in a public-house, the laird was asked if he would take any water with the
spirit. "Na, na," replied he, "I would rather ye would tak’ the water out o’t."
The laird sold a horse to an Englishman, saying, "You buy
him as you see him; but he’s an honest beast." The purchaser took him
home. In a few days he stumbled and fell, to the damage of his own knees and
his rider’s head. On this the angry purchaser remonstrated with the laird,
whose reply was, "Well, sir, I told ye he was an honest beast; many a time has
he threatened to come down with me, and I kenned he would keep his word some
day." At the time of the threatened invasion, the laird had been taunted at a
meeting at Ayr with want of loyal spirit at Cumnock, as at that place no
volunteer corps had been raised to meet the coming danger; Cumnock, it should
be recollected, being on a high situation, and ten or twelve miles from the
coast. "What sort of people are you up at Cumnock?" said an Ayr gentleman;
"you have not a single volunteer!" "Never you heed," says Logan, very quietly;
"if the French land at Ayr, there will soon be plenty of volunteers up at
Cumnock."
A pendant to the story of candid admission on the part of
the minister, that the people might be weary after his sermon, has been
given on the authority of the narrator, a Fife gentleman, ninety years of age
when he told it. He had been to church at Elie, and listening to a young and
perhaps bombastic preacher, who happened to be officiating for the Rev. Dr
Milligan, who was in church. After service, meeting the Doctor in the passage,
he introduced the young clergyman who, on being asked by the old man how he
did, elevated his shirt collar, and complained of fatigue, and being very much
"tired." "Tired, did ye say, my man?" said the old satirist, who was
slightly deaf; "Lord, man I if you’re half as tired as lam, I pity ye!"
I have been much pleased with an offering from Carluke,
containing two very pithy anecdotes. Mr Rankin very kindly writes:—"Your
‘Reminiscences’ are most refreshing. I am very
little of a story collector, but I have recorded some of an old schoolmaster,
who was a story-teller. As a sort of payment for the amusement I have derived
from your book; I shall give one or two."
He sends the two following:-
"Shortly after Mr Kay had been inducted schoolmaster of
Carluke (1790), the bederal called at the school, verbally announcing,
proclamation-ways, that Mrs So-and-So’s funeral would be on Fuirsday. ‘At what
hour?‘ asked the dominie.’ Ou, ony time atween ten and twa.’ At two o’clock of
the day fixed, Mr Kay—quite a stranger to the customs of the district— arrived
at the place, and was astonished to find a crowd of men and lads, standing
here and there, some smoking, and all arglebargling, [Disputing or
bandying words backwards and forwards.] as if at the end of a fair. He
was instantly, but mysteriously, approached, and touched on the arm by a
red-faced bareheaded man, who seemed to be in authority, and was beckoned to
follow. On entering the barn, which was seated all round, he found numbers
sitting, each with the head bent down, and each with his hat between his
knees— all gravity and silence. Anon a voice was heard issuing from the far
end, and a long prayer was uttered. They had worked at this—what was called ‘a
service‘— during three previous hours, one
party succeeding another, and many taking advantage of every service, which
consisted of a prayer by way of grace, a glass of white wine, a glass
of red wine, a glass of rum, and a prayer by way of
thanksgiving. After the long invocation, bread and wine passed round. Silence
prevailed. Most partook of both rounds of wine, but when the rum came,
many nodded refusal, and by and by the nodding seemed to be universal, and the
trays passed on so much the more quickly. A sumphish weather-beaten man, with
a large flat blue bonnet on his knee, who had nodded unwittingly, and was
about to lose the last chance of a glass of rum, raised his head, saying, amid
the deep silence, ‘Od, I daursay I wull tak’ anither glass,’ and in a
sort of vengeful, yet apologetic tone, added, ‘The auld jaud yince cheated me
wi’ a cauve’ (calf)."
At a farmer’s funeral in the country, an undertaker was in
charge of the ceremonial, and directing how it was to proceed, when he noticed
a little man giving orders, and, as he thought, rather encroaching upon the
duties and privileges of his own office. He asked him, "And wha are ye, mi
man, that tak’ sae muckle on ye?" "Oh, dinna ye ken?" said the man, under a
strong sense of his own importance, "I’m the corp’s brither." [In Scotland the
remains of the deceased person is called the "corp".]
Curious scenes took place at funerals where there was, in
times gone by, an unfortunate tendency to join with such solemnities more
attention to festal entertainment than was becoming. A farmer, at the
interment of his second wife, exercised a liberal hospitality to his friends
at the inn near the church. On looking over the bill, the master defended the
charge as moderate. But he reminded him, "Ye forget, man, that it’s no’ ilka
ane that brings a second funeral to your house."
"Dr Scott, minister of Carluke (1770), was a fine graceful
kindly man, always stepping about in his bag-wig and cane in hand, with a kind
and ready word to every one. He was officiating at a bridal in his parish,
where there was a goodly company, had partaken of the good cheer, and waited
till the young people were fairly warmed in the dance. A dissenting body had
sprung up in the parish, which he tried to think was beneath him even to
notice, when he could help it, yet never seemed to feel at all keenly when the
dissenters were alluded to. One of the chief leaders of this body was at the
bridal, and felt it to be his bounden duty to call upon the minister for his
reasons for sanctioning by his presence so sinful an enjoyment. ‘Weel,
minister, what think ye o’ this dancin’?’ ‘Why, John,’ said the minister,
blithely, ‘I think it an excellent exercise for young people, and, I dare say,
so do you.’ ‘Ah, sir, I’m no sure about it; I see nae authority for’t in the
Scriptures.’ ‘Umph, indeed, John; you cannot forget David.’ ‘Ah, sir, Dauvid;
gif they were a’ to dance as Dauvid did, it would be a different thing
a’thegither.’ ‘Hoot-o-fie, hoot-o-fie, John; would you have the young folk’
strip to the sark?’"
Reference has been made to the eccentric Laird of Balnamoon,
his wig, and his "speats o’ drinking and praying." A story of this laird is
recorded, which I do think is well named, by a correspondent who communicates
it, as a "quintessential phasis of dry Scotch
humour," and the explanation of which would perhaps be thrown away upon any
one who needed the explanation. The story is this:—The laird riding
past a high steep bank, stopped opposite a hole in it, and said, "Hairy, I saw
a brock gang in there." "Did ye?" said Hairy; "wull ye haud my horse, sir?"
"Certainly," said the laird, and away rushed Hairy for a spade. After digging
for half-an-hour, he came back, quite done, to the laird, who had regarded him
musingly. "I canna find him, sir," said Hairy. "‘Deed," said the laird, very
coolly, "I wad ha wondered if ye had, for it’s ten years sin’ I saw him gang
in there."
Amongst many humorous colloquies between Balnamoon and his
servant, the following must have been very racy and very original. The laird,
accompanied by Hairy, after a dinner-party, was riding on his way home,
through a ford, when he fell off into the water. "Whae’s that fau’n?" he
inquired. "‘Deed," quoth Hairy, "I witna an it be na your honour."
There is a peculiarity connected with what we have
considered Scotch humour. It is more common for Scotsmen to associate their
own feelings with national events and national history than for
Englishmen. Take as illustrations the following, as being perhaps as good as
any:—The Rev. Robert Scott, a Scotsman who forgets not Scotland in his
southern vicarage, and whom I have named before as having sent me some good
reminiscences, tells me that, at Inveraray, some thirty years ago, he could
not help overhearing the conversation of some Lowland cattle-dealers in the
public room in which he was. The subject of the bravery of our navy being
started, one of the interlocutors expressed his surprise that Nelson should
have issued his signal at Trafalgar in the terms, "England expects,"
etc. He was met with the answer (which seemed highly satisfactory to the
rest), "Ah, Nelson only said ‘expects’ of the English; he said naething
of Scotland, for he kent the Scotch would do theirs."
I am assured the following manifestation of national
feeling against the memory of a Scottish character actually took place within
a few years:—Williamson (the Duke of Buccleuch’s huntsman) was one afternoon
riding home from hunting through Haddington; and as he passed the old Abbey,
he saw an ancient woman looking through the iron grating in front of the
burial-place of the Lauderdale family, holding by the. bars, and grinning and
dancing with rage. "Eh, gudewife," said Williamson, "what ails ye?" "It’s the
Duke of Lauderdale," cried she. "Eh, if I could win at him, I wud rax the
banes o’ him."
To this class belongs the following complacent Scottish
remark upon Bannockburn. A splenetic Englishman said to a Scottish countryman,
something of a wag, that no man of taste would think of remaining any time in
such a country as Scotland. To which the canny Scot replied," Tastes differ;
I’se tak ye to a place no’ far frae Stirling, whaur thretty thousand
o’ your countrymen ha’ been for five hunder years,
and they’ve nae thocht o’ leavin’ yet."
In a similar spirit, an honest Scotch farmer, who had sent
some sheep to compete at a great English agricultural cattle-show, and was
much disgusted at not getting a prize, consoled himself for the
disappointment, by insinuating that the judges could hardly act quite
impartially by a Scottish competitor, complacently remarking, "It’s aye been
the same since Bannockburn."
Then, again, take the story told in Lockhart’s Life of Sir
Walter Scott, of the blacksmith whom Sir Walter had formerly known as a
horse-doctor, and whom he found at a small country town south of the Border,
practising medicine with a reckless use of "laudamy and calomy," apologising
at the same time for the mischief he might do, by the assurance that it
"would be lang before it made up for Flodden."
How graphically it describes the interest felt by Scotch-men of his rank in
the incidents of their national history. A similar example has been recorded
in connection with Bannockburn. Two Englishmen visited the field of that great
battle, and a country blacksmith pointed out the positions of the two armies,
the stone on which was fixed the Bruce’s standard, etc. The gentlemen, pleased
with the intelligence of their guide, on leaving pressed his acceptance of a
crown-piece. "Na, na," replied the Scotsman, with much pride, "it has cost ye
eneuch already." Such an example of self-denial on the part of a Scottish
cicerone is, we fear, now rather a "reminiscence."
A north country drover had, however, a more tangible
opportunity of gratifying his national animosity against the Southron, and of
which he availed himself. Returning homewards, after a somewhat unsuccessful
journey, and not in very good humour with the Englishers, when passing through
Carlisle he saw a notice stuck up, offering a reward of £50 for any one who
would do a piece of service to the community, by officiating as executioner of
the law on a noted criminal then under sentence of death. Seeing a chance to
make up for his bad market, and comforted with the assurance that he was
unknown there, he undertook the office, executed the condemned, and got the
fee. When moving off with the money, he was twitted at as a "mean beggarly
Scot," doing for money what no Englishman would. With a grin and quiet
glee, he only replied, "I’ll hang ye a’ at the price."
Some Scotsmen, no doubt, have a very complacent feeling
regarding the superiority of their countrymen, and make no hesitation in
proclaiming their opinion, I have always admired the quaint expression of such
belief in a case which has recently been reported to me. A young Englishman
had taken a Scottish shooting-ground, and enjoyed his mountain sport so much
as to imbibe a strong partiality for his northern residence and all its
accompaniments. At a German watering-place he encountered, next year, an
original character, a Scotsman of the old school, very national, and somewhat
bigoted in his nationality: he determined to pass himself off to him as a
genuine Scottish native; and, accordingly, he talked of Scotland and haggis,
and sheep’s head, and whisky; he boasted of Bannockburn, and admired Queen
Mary; looked upon Scott and Burns as superior to all English writeys; and
staggered, although he did not convince; the old gentleman. On going away he
took leave of his Scottish friend, and said, "Well, sir, next time we meet, I
hope you will receive me as a real countryman." "Weel," he said, "I’m jest
thinkin’, my lad, ye’re nae Scotsman; but I’ll tell ye what ye are—ye’re juist
an impruived Englishman."
I am afraid we must allow that Scottish people have a
leetle national vanity, and may be too ready sometimes to press the claim
of their country to an extravagantly assumed pre-eminence in the annals of
genius and celebrities. An extreme case of such pretension I heard of lately,
which is amusing. A Scotsman, in reference to the distinction awarded to Sir
Walter Scott, on occasion of his centenary, had roundly asserted, "But all
who have been eminent men were Scotsmen." An Englishman, offended at such
assumption of national pre-eminence, asked indignantly, "What do you say to
Shakspeare?" To which the other quietly replied, "Weel, his tawlent wad
justifee the inference." This is rich, as an example of an à
priori argument in favour of a man being a Scotsman.
We find in the conversation of old, people frequent mention
of a class of beings well-known in country parishes, now either become
commonplace, like the rest of the world, or removed altogether, and shut up in
poorhouses or madhouses—I mean the individuals frequently called parochial
idiots; but who were rather of the order of naturals. They were eccentric,
or somewhat crazy, useless, idle creatures, who used to wander about from
house to house, and sometimes made very shrewd sarcastic remarks upon what was
going on in the parish. I heard such a person once described as one who was
"wanting in twopence of change for a shilling." They used to take great
liberty of speech regarding the conduct and disposition of those with whom
they came in contact, and many odd sayings which emanated from them were
traditionary in country localities. I have a kindly feeling towards these
imperfectly intelligent, but often perfectly cunning beings; partly, I
believe, from recollections of early associations in boyish days with some of
those Davy Gellatleys. I have therefore preserved several anecdotes with which
I have been favoured, where their odd sayings and indications of a degree of
mental activity have been recorded. These persons seem to have had a
partiality for getting near the pulpit in church, and their presence there was
accordingly sometimes annoying to the preacher and the congregation; as at
Maybole, when Dr Paul, now of St Cuthbert’s, was minister in
1823, John M’Lymont, an individual of this class, had been in the habit
of standing so close to the pulpit door as to overlook the Bible and pulpit
board. When required, however, by the clergyman to keep at a greater distance,
and not look in upon the minister, he got intensely angry and violent.
He threatened the minister: "Sir, baeby (maybe) I’ll come farther"; meaning to
intimate that perhaps he would, if much provoked, come into the pulpit
altogether. This, indeed, actually took place on another occasion, and the
tenure of the ministerial position was justified by an argument of a most
amusing nature. The circumstance, I am assured, happened in a parish in the
north. The clergyman, on coming into church, found the pulpit occupied by the
parish natural. The authorities had been unable to remove him without more
violence than was seemly, and therefore waited for the minister to dispossess
Tam of the place he had assumed. "Come down, sir, immediately!" was the
peremptory and indignant call; and on Tam being unmoved, it
was repeated with still greater energy. Tam, however, replied, looking
down confidentially from his elevation, "Na, na, minister! juist ye come up wi’
me. This is a perverse generation, and faith they need us baith." It is
curious to mark the sort of glimmering of sense, and even of discriminating
thought, displayed by persons of this class. As an example, take a
conversation held by this same John M’Lymont, with Dr Paul, whom he met some
time after. He seemed to have recovered his good humour; as he stopped him and
said, "Sir, I would like to speer a question at ye on a subject that’s
troubling me." "Well, Johnnie, what is the question?" To which he replied,
" Sir, is it lawful at ony time to tell a lee?" The
minister desired to know what Johnnie himself thought upon the point. "Weel,
sir," said he, "I’ll no’ say but in every case it’s wrang to tell a lee; but,"
added he, looking archly and giving a knowing wink, "I think there are waur
lees than ithers." "How, Johnnie?" and then he instantly replied, with all
the simplicity of a fool, "To keep down a din, for instance. I’ll no’
say but a man does wrang in telling a lee to keep down a din, but I’m sure he
does not do half sae muckle wrang as a man who tells a lee to kick up a
deevilment o’ a din." This opened a question not likely to occur to such a
mind. Mr Asher, minister of Inveraven, in Morayshire, narrated to Dr Paul a
curious example of want of intelligence combined with a power of cunning to
redress a fancied wrong, shown by a poor natural of the parish, who had been
seized with a violent inflammatory attack, and was in great danger. The
medical attendant saw it necessary to bleed him, but he resisted, and would
not submit to it. At last the case became so hopeless that they were obliged
to use force, and, holding his hands and feet, the doctor opened a vein and
drew blood, upon which the poor creature, struggling violently, bawled out, "O
doctor, doctor! you’ll kill me! you’ll kill me! and depend upon it the first
thing I’ll do when I get to the other world will be to report you to the
board of Supervision there, and get you dismissed." A most extraordinary
sensation was once produced on a congregation by Rab Hamilton, a
well-remembered crazy creature of the west country, on the occasion of his
attendance at the parish kirk of "Auld Ayr, wham ne’er a toun surpasses," the
minister of which, in the opinion of Rab’s own minister, Mr Peebles, had a
tendency to Socinian doctrines. Miss Kirkwood, Bothwell, relates the story
from the recollection of her aunt, who was present. Rab had put his head
between some iron rails, the first intimation of which to the congregation was
a stentorian voice crying out, "Murder! my heed’ll hae to be cuttit aff! Holy
minister! congregation! Oh, my heed maun be cuttit aff. It’s a judgment for
leaving my godlie Mr Peebles at the Newton." After he had been extricated and
quieted, when asked why he put his head there, he said, "It was juist to look
on Read from the same book] wi’ anither woman."
The following anecdote of this same Rab Hamilton from a
kind correspondent at Ayr sanctions the opinion that he must have occasionally
said such clever things as made some think him more rogue than fool. Dr Auld
often showed him kindness, but being once addressed by him when in a hurry and
out of humour, he said, "Get away, Rab; I have nothing for you to-day." "Whaw,
whew," cried Rab, in a half-howl, half-whining tone, "I dinna want onything
the day, Maister Auld; I wanted to tell you an awsome dream I hae had. I
dreamt I was deed." "Weel, what then?" said Dr Auld. "Ou, I was carried far,
far, and up, up, up, till I cam’ to heeven’s yett, where I chappit, and
chappit, and chappit, till at last an angel keekit out, and said ‘Wha are ye?’
‘A’m puir Rab Hamilton.’ ‘Whaur are ye frae?’ ‘Frae the wicked toun o’ Ayr.’
‘I dinna ken ony sic place,’ said the angel. ‘Oh, but A’m juist frae there.’
Weel, the angel sends for the Apostle Peter, and Peter comes wi’ his key and
opens the yett, and says to me, ‘Honest man, do you come frae the auld toun o’
Ayr?’ ‘‘Deed do I,’ says I. ‘Weel,’ says Peter, ‘I ken the place, but
naebody’s cam’ frae the toun o’Ayr, no’ since the year" so-and-so-—mentioning
the year when Dr Auld was inducted into the parish. Dr Auld could not resist
giving him his answer, and telling him to go about his business.
The pathetic complaint of one of this class, residing at a
farmhouse, has often been narrated, and forms a good illustration of idiot
life and feelings. He was living in the greatest comfort, and every want
provided. But, like the rest of mankind, he had his own trials, and his own
cause for anxiety and annoyance. In this poor fellow’s case it was the
great turkey-cock at the farm, of which he
stood so terribly in awe that he was afraid to come within a great distance of
his enemy. Some of his friends, coming to visit him, reminded him how
comfortable he was, and how grateful he ought to be for the great care taken
of him. He admitted the truth of the remark generally, but still, like others,
he had his unknown grief which sorely beset his path in life. There was a
secret grievance which embittered his lot; and to his friend he thus opened
his heart: "Ae, ae, but oh, I’m sair hadden doun wi’ the bubbly jock." [Sorely
kept under by the turkey-cock.]
I have received two anecdotes illustrative both of the
occasional acuteness of mind, and of the sensitiveness of feeling occasionally
indicated by persons thus situated. A well-known idiot, Jamie Fraser,
belonging to the parish of Lunan, in Forfarshire, quite surprised people
sometimes by his replies. The congregation of his parish church had for some
time distressed the minister by their habit of sleeping in church. He had
often endeavoured to impress them with a sense of the impropriety of such
conduct, and one day Jamie was sitting in the front gallery, wide awake, when
many were slumbering round him. The clergyman endeavoured to draw the
attention of his hearers to his discourse by stating the fact, saying, "You
see, even Jamie Fraser, the idiot, does not fall asleep, as so many of you are
doing." Jamie, not liking, perhaps, to be thus designated, coolly replied, "An
I hadna been an idiot, I micht ha’ been sleepin’ too." Another of these
imbeciles, belonging to Peebles, had been sitting at church for some time
listening attentively to a strong representation from the pulpit of the guilt
of deceit and falsehood in Christian characters. He was observed to turn red,
and grow very uneasy, until at last, as if wincing under the supposed attack
upon himself personally, he roared out, "Indeed, minister, there’s mair leears
in Peebles than me." As examples of this class of persons possessing much of
the dry humour of their more sane countrymen, and of their facility to utter
sly and ready-witted sayings, I have received the two following from Mr W.
Chambers:—Daft Jock Gray, the supposed original of David Gellatley, was one
day assailed by the minister of a south-country parish on the subject of his
idleness. "John," said the minister, rather pompously, "you are a very idle
fellow; you might surely herd a few cows." "Me hird!" replied Jock; "I dinna
ken corn frae gerss."
"There was a carrier named Davie Loch who was reputed to be
rather light of wits, but at the same time not without a sense of his worldly
interests. His mother, finding her end approaching, addressed her son in the
presence of a number of the neighbours. ‘The house will be Davie’s and the
furniture too.’ ‘Eh, hear her,’ quote Davie; ‘sensible to the last, sensible
to the last.’ ‘The lyin’ siller--- ‘Eh yes; how clear she is about
everything!’ ‘The lyin’ siller is to be divided between my twa dauchters.’
‘Steek the bed doors, steek the bed doors," interposed Davie; ‘she’s ravin’
now’; and the old dying woman was shut up accordingly."
In the Memorials of the Montgomeries, Earls of
Eglinton, vol. i., p. 134, occurs an anecdote
illustrative of the peculiar acuteness and quaint humour which occasionally
mark the sayings of persons considered as imbeciles. There was a certain "Daft
Will Speir," who was a privileged haunter of Eglinton Castle and grounds. He
was discovered by the Earl one day taking a near cut, and crossing a fence in
the demesne. The Earl called out, "Come back, sir, that’s not the road." "Do
you ken," said Will, "whaur I’m gain’?" " No,"
replied his lordship. "Weel, hoo the deil do ye ken whether this be the road
or no’?"
This same "Daft Will Speir" was passing the minister’s
glebe, where haymaking was in progress. The minister asked Will if he thought
the weather would keep up, as it looked rather like
rain. "Weel," said Will, "I canna be very sure, but I’ll be passin’ this way
the nicht, an’ I’ll ca’ in and tell ye." "Well, Will," said his master one day
to him, seeing that he had just finished his dinner, "have you had a good
dinner to-day?" (Will had been grumbling some time before.) "Ou, verra gude,"
answered Will; "but gin onybody asks if I got a dram after’t, what will I
say?" This poor creature had a high sense of duty. It appears he had been
given the charge of the coal-stores at the Earl of Eglinton’s. Having on one
occasion been reprimanded for allowing the supplies to run out before further
supplies were ordered, he was ever afterwards most careful to fulfil his duty.
In course of time poor Will became "sick into death." and the minister came to
see him. Thinking him in really a good frame of mind, the minister asked him,
in presence of the laird and others, if there were not one great
thought which was ever to him the highest consolation in his hour of trouble.
"Ou ay," gasped the sufferer, "Lord be thankit, a’ the bunkers are fu’!"
The following anecdote is told regarding the late Lord
Dundrennan:—A half-silly basket-woman passing down his avenue at Compstone one
day, he met her, and said, "My good woman, there’s no road this way." "Na,
sir," she said," I think ye’re wrang there; I think it’s a most beautifu’
road."
These poor creatures have invariably a great delight in
attending funerals. In many country places hardly a funeral ever took place
without the attendance of the parochial idiot. It seemed almost a necessary
association; and such attendance seemed to constitute the great delight of
those creatures. I have myself witnessed again and again the sort of funeral
scene portrayed by Sir Walter Scott, who no doubt took his description from
what was common in his day: "The funeral pomp set forth—saulies with their
batons and gumphions of tarnished white crape. Six starved horses, themselves
the very emblems of mortality, well cloaked and plumed, lugging along the
hearse with its dismal emblazonry, crept in slow pace towards the place of
interment, preceded by Jamie Duff, an idiot, who, with weepers and cravat made
of white paper, attended on every funeral,
and followed by six mourning coaches filled with the company."—Guy
Mannering.
The following anecdote, supplied by Mr Blair, is an amusing
illustration both of the funeral propensity, and of the working of a defective
brain, in a half-witted carle, who used to range the province of Gallo‘way
armed with a huge pike-staff, and who one day met a funeral procession a few
miles from Wigtown. A long train of carriages, and farmers riding on
horseback, suggested the propriety of his bestriding his staff, and following
after the funeral. The procession marched at a brisk pace, and on reaching the
kirk-yard stile, as each rider dismounted, "Daft Jock" descended from his
wooden steed, besmeared with mire and perspiration, exclaiming, "Hech, sirs,
had it no’ been for the fashion o’ the thing, I micht as
weel hae been on my ain feet."
The withdrawal of these characters from public view, and
the loss of importance which they once enjoyed in Scottish society, seem to me
inexplicable. Have they ceased. to exist, or are they removed from our sight
to different scenes? The fool was, in early times, a very important personage
in most Scottish households of any distinction. Indeed this had been so common
as to be a public nuisance.
It seemed that persons assumed the character, for we
find a Scottish Act of Parliament, dated 19th January 1449, with this title:—"Act
for the way-putting of Fenyent Fules," etc. (Thomson’s Acts of
Parliament of Scotland, vol. i.); and it enacts very
stringent measures against such persons. They seem to have formed. a link
between the helpless idiot and the boisterous madman, sharing the eccentricity
of the latter and the stupidity of the former, generally adding, however, a
good deal of the sharp-wittedness of the knave. Up to the middle of the
eighteenth century this appears to have been still an appendage to some
families. I have before me a little publication with the title, "The Life and
Death of Jamie Fleeman, the Laird of Udny’s Fool. Tenth edition. Aberdeen,
1810." With portrait. Also twenty-sixth edition, of 1829.
I should suppose this account of a family fool was a fair
representation of a good specimen of the class. He was evidently of defective
intellect, but at times showed the odd humour and quick conclusion which so
often mark the disordered brain. I can only now give two examples taken from
his history:— Having found a horse-shoe on the road,
he met Mr Craigie, the minister of St Fergus, and showed it
to him, asking, in pretended ignorance, what it was. "Why, Jamie," said
Mr Craigie, good humouredly, "anybody that was not a fool would know that
it is a horse-shoe." "Ah!" said Jamie, with affected
simplicity, "what it is to be wise—to ken it’s no’ a
meer’s shoe!"
On another occasion, when all the countryside were
hastening to the Perth races, Jamie had cut across the fields and reached a
bridge near the town, and sat down upon the parapet. He commenced munching
away at a large portion of a leg of mutton which he had somehow become
possessed of, and of which he was amazingly proud. The laird came riding past,
and seeing Jamie sitting on the bridge, accosted him:—
"Ay, Fleeman, are ye here already?" "Ou ay," quoth Fleeman, with an air
of assumed dignity and archness not easy to describe, while his eye glanced
significantly towards the mutton, "Ou ay, ye ken a body when he has
onything."
Of witty retorts by half-witted creatures of this class, I
do not know of one more pointed than what is recorded of such a character who
used to hang about the residence of a late Lord Fife. It would appear that
some parts of his lordship’s estates were barren, and in a very unproductive
condition. Under the improved system of agriculture and of draining, great
preparations had been made for securing a good crop in a certain field, where
Lord Fife, his factor, and others interested in the subject, were collected
together. There was much discussion, and some difference of opinion, as to the
crop with which the field had best be sown. The idiot retainer, who had been
listening unnoticed to all that was said, at last cried out, "Saw’t wi’
factors, ma lord; they are sure to thrive everywhere."
There was an idiot who lived long in Lauder, and seems to
have had a great resemblance to the jester of old times. He was a staunch
supporter of the Established Church. One day some one gave him a bad shilling.
On Sunday he went to the Seceders’ meeting-house, and when the ladle was taken
round he put in his bad shilling and took out elevenpence halfpenny.
Afterwards he went in high glee to the late Lord Lauderdale, calling out,
"I’ve cheated the Seceders the day, my lord; I’ve cheated the Seceders."
Jemmy had long harboured a dislike to the steward on the
property, which he made manifest in the following manner:—Lord Lauderdale and
Sir Anthony Maitland used to take him out shooting; and one day Lord Maitland
(he was then), on having to cross the Leader, said, "Now, Jemmy, you shall
carry me through the water," which Jemmy duly did. The steward, who was
shooting with them, expected the same service, and accordingly said, "Now,
Jemmy, you must carry me over." "Verra weel," said Jemmy. He took the
steward on his back, and when he had carefully carried him half-way across the
river he paid off his grudge by dropping him quietly into the water.
A daft individual used to frequent the same district, about
whom a variety of opinions were entertained, some people thinking him not so
foolish as he sometimes seemed. On one occasion a person, wishing to test
whether he knew the value of money, held out a sixpence and a penny, and
offered him his choice. "I’ll tak’ the wee ane," he said, giving as his modest
reason, "I’se no’ be greedy." At another time, a miller laughing at him for
his witlessness, he said, "Some things I ken, and some I dinna ken." On being
asked what he knew, he said, "I ken a miller has aye a gey fat sou." "An’ what
d’ye no’ ken?" said the miller. "Ou," he returned, "I dinna ken wha’s expense
she’s fed at."
A very amusing collision of one of those penurious lairds,
already referred to, a certain Mr Gordon of Rothie, with a half-daft beggar
wanderer of the name of Jock Muilton, has been recorded. The laird was very
shabby, as usual, and, meeting Jock, began to banter him on the subject of his
dress :—" Ye’re very grand, Jock. Thae’s fine claes
ye hae gotten; whaur did ye get that coat?" Jock told him who had given him
his coat, and then, looking slily at the laird, he inquired, as with great
simplicity, "And whaur did ye get yours, laird?"
For another admirable story of a rencontre between a
penurious laird and the parish natural I am indebted to the Scotsman,
June 16, 1871. Once on a time there was a Highland laird renowned for his
caution in money matters, and his precise keeping of books. His charities were
there; but that department of his bookkeeping was not believed to be heavy. On
examination, a sum of half-a-crown was unexpectedly discovered in it; but this
was accounted for in a manner creditable to his intentions, if not to his
success in executing them. It had been given in mistake instead of a coin of a
different denomination, to "the natural" of the parish for holding his shelty
while he transacted business at the bank. A gleam in the boy’s eye drew his
attention to a gleam of white as the metal dropped into his pocket. In vain
the laird assured him it was not a good bawbee—if he would give it up he would
get another—it was "guid eneuch" for the like of him. And when the laird in
his extremity swore a great oath that unless it was given up he would never
give another halfpenny, the answer was—" Ech, laird, it wad be lang or ye gied
me saxty."
Another example of shrewd and ready humour in one of that
class is the following:—In this case the idiot was musical, and earned a few
stray pence by playing Scottish airs on a flute. He resided at Stirling, and
used to hang about the doors of the inn to watch the arrival and departure of
travellers. A lady, who used to give him something occasionally, was just
starting, and said to Jarnie that she had only a fourpenny piece, and that he
must be content with that, for she could not stay to get more. Jamie was not
satisfied, and as the lady drove out, he expressed his feelings by playing
with all his might, "O wearie o’ the toom pouch." [Empty pocket]
The, spirit in Jamie Fraser before mentioned, and which had
kept him awake, shows itself in idiots occasionally by making them restless
and troublesome. One of this character had annoyed the clergyman where he
attended church by fidgeting, and by uncouth sounds which he uttered during
divine service. Accordingly, one day before church began, he was cautioned
against moving, or "making a whisht," under the penalty of being turned out.
The poor creature sat quite still and silent, till, in a very important part
of the sermon, he felt an inclination to cough. So he shouted out, "Minister,
may a puir body like me noo gie a hoast?" [A cough]
I have two anecdotes of two peers, who might be said to
come under the description of half-witted. In their case the same sort of dry
Scotch humour came out under the cloak of mental disease. The first is of a
Scottish nobleman of the last century who had been a soldier the greater part
of his life, but was obliged to come home on account of aberration of mind,
superinduced by hereditary propensity. Desirous of putting him under due
restraint, and at the same time of engaging his mind in his favourite pursuit,
his friends secured a Sergeant Briggs to be his companion, and, in fact
keeper. To render the sergeant acceptable as a companion they introduced him
to the old earl as Colonel Briggs. Being asked how he liked "the
colonel," the earl showed how acute he still was by his answer, "Oh, very
well; he is a sensible man, and a good soldier, but he smells damnably of
the halbert."
The second anecdote relates also to a Scottish nobleman
labouring under aberration of mind, and is, I believe, a traditionary one. In
Scotland, some hundred years ago, madhouses did not exist, or were on a very
limited scale; and there was often great difficulty in procuring suitable
accommodation for patients who required special treatment and seclusion from
the world. The gentleman in question had been consigned to the Canongate
prison, and his position there was far from comfortable. An old friend called
to see him, and asked how it had happened that he was placed in so unpleasant
a situation. His reply was, "Sir, it was more the kind interest and patronage
of my friends than my own merits that have placed me here." "But have you not
remonstrated or complained?" asked his visitor. "I told them" said his
lordship, "that they were a pack of infernal villains." "Did you?" said his
friend; "that was bold language; and what did they say to that?’? "Oh," said
the peer, "I took care not to tell them till they were fairly out of the
place, and weel up the Canontate."
In Peebles there was a crazy being of this kind called
"Daft Yedie." On one occasion he saw a gentleman, a stranger in the town, who
had a club foot. Yedie contemplated this phenomenon with some interest, and,
addressing the gentleman, said compassionately, "It’s a great pity—it spoils
the boot." There is a story of one of those half-witted creatures of a
different character from the humorous ones already recorded; I think it is
exceedingly affecting. The story is traditionary in a country district, and I
am not aware of its being ever printed.
A poor boy, of this class, who had evidently manifested a
tendency towards religious and devotional feelings, asked permission from the
clergyman to attend the Lord’s Table and partake of the holy communion with
the other members of the congregation (whether Episcopalian or Presbyterian I
do not know). The clergyman demurred for some time, under the impression of
his mind being incapable of a right and due understanding of the sacred
ordinance. But observing the extreme earnestness of the poor boy, he at last
gave consent, and he was allowed to come. He was much affected, and all the
way home was heard to exclaim, "Oh! I hae seen the pretty man." This referred
to his seeing the Lord Jesus whom he had approached in the sacrament. He kept
repeating the words, and went with them on his lips to rest for the night. Not
appearing at the usual hour for breakfast, when they went to his bedside they
found him dead! The excitement had been too much—mind and body had given
away—and the half-idiot of earth awoke to the glories and the bliss of his
Redeemer’s presence.
Analogous with the language of the
defective intellect is the language of the imperfectly formed
intellect, and I have often thought there was something very touching and very
fresh in the expression of feelings and notions by children. I have given
examples before, but the following is, to my taste, a charming specimen:—A
little boy had lived for some time with a very penurious uncle, who took good
care that the child’s health should not be injured by over-feeding. The uncle
was one day walking out, the child at his side, when a friend accosted him,
accompanied by a greyhound. While the elders were talking, the little fellow,
never having seen a dog so slim and slight of form, clasped the creature round
the neck with the impassioned cry, "Oh, doggie, doggie, and div ye live wi’
your uncle tae, that ye are so thin?"
In connection with funerals, I am indebted to the kindness
of Lord Kinloch for a characteristic anecdote of cautious Scottish character
in the west country. It was the old fashion, still practised in some
districts, to carry the coffin to the grave on long poles, or "spokes," as
they were commonly termed. There were usually two bearers abreast on each
side. On a certain occasion one of the two said to his companion, "I’m awfu’
tired wi’ carryin’." "Do you carry?" was the
interrogatory in reply. "Yes; what do you do?" "Oh," said the other,’" I aye
lean." His friend’s fatigue was at once accounted for.
I am strongly tempted to give an account of a parish functionary in the
words of a kind correspondent from Kilmarnock, although communicated in the
following very flattering terms:—"In common with every Scottish man worthy of
the name, I have been delighted with your book, and have the ambition to add a
pebble to the cairn, and accordingly send you a bellman story; it has,
at least, the merit of being unprinted and unedited."
The incumbent of Craigie parish, in this district of Ayrshire, had asked a
Mr Wood, tutor in the Cairnhill family, to officiate for him on a particular
Sunday. Mr Wood, however, between the time of being asked and the appointed
day, got intimation of the dangerous illness of his father; in the hurry of
setting out to see him, he forgot to arrange for the pulpit being filled. The
bellman of Craigie parish, by name Matthew Dinning, and at this time about
eighty years of age, was a very little "crined" [Shrivelled] old man, and
always wore a broad Scottish blue bonnet, with a red" bob" on the top. The
parish is a small rural one, so that Matthew knew every inhabitant in it, and
had seen most of them grow up. On this particular day, after the congregation
had waited for some time, Matthew was seen to walk very slowly up the middle
of the church, with the large Bible and psalm-book under his arm, to mount the
pulpit stair; and after taking his bonnet off, and smoothing down his forehead
with his "loof," thus addressed the audience:-
"My freens, there was ane Wuds tae hae preached here the
day, but he has nayther comed himsell, nor had the ceevility tae sen us the
scart o’ a pen. Ye’ll bide here for ten meenonts, and gin naebody comes forrit
in that time, ye can gang awa’ hame. Some say his feyther’s dead; as for that
I kenna."
The following is another illustration of the character of
the old Scottish betheral. One of those worthies, who was parochial
grave-digger, had been missing for two days or so, and the minister had in
vain sent to discover him at most likely places. He bethought, at last, to
make inquiry at a "public" at some distance from the village, and on entering
the door he met his man in the trance, quite fou’, staggering out, supporting
himself with a hand on each wa’. To the minister’s sharp rebuke and rising
wrath for his indecent and shameful behaviour, John, a wag in his way, and
emboldened by liquor, made answer, "‘Deed, sir, sin’ I ca’d at the manse, I
hae buried an auld wife, and I’ve just drucken her, hough an’ horn." Such was
his candid admission of the manner in which he had disposed of’ the church
fees paid for the interment.
An encounter of wits between a laird and an elder:—A
certain laird in Fife, well-known for his parsimonious habits, and who,
although his substance largely increased, did not increase his liberality in
his weekly contribution to the church collection, which never exceeded the sum
of one penny, one day by mistake dropped into the plate at the door
half-a-crown; but discovering his error before he was seated in his pew, he
hurried back, and was about to replace the coin by his customary penny, when
the elder in attendance cried out, "Stop, laird; ye may put in what ye like,
but ye maun tak naething oot!" The laird, finding his explanations went for
nothing, at last said, "Aweel, I suppose I’ll get credit for it in heaven."
"Na, na, laird," said the elder, sarcastically; "ye’ll only get credit for the
penny."
The following is not a bad specimen of sly piper
wit:— The Rev. Mr Johnstone of Monquhitter, a very grandiloquent pulpit orator
in his day, accosting a travelling piper, well known in the district, with the
question, "Well, John, how does the wind pay?" received from John, with a low
bow, the answer, "Your Reverence has the advantage of me." |