Common to the early
inhabitants of every country dancing was among the ancient Scots a favourite
pastime. In evident allusion to the exercise Sir William Wallace, after
arranging the position of his troops oil the field of Falkirk, called out,
"I have brocht ye to the ring; dance gif ye can." And in the opening lines
of his poem of "Chrystis Kirk," James I. refers to dancing as a prevailing
recreation. He writes:
"Was nevir in Scotland heard
nor sene,
Sic dancing nor deray,
Nouthir at Falkland on the Grene,
Nor Peebles at the Play."
In the ballad of "Colkelbie
Sow," written before the age of Dunbar, are named upwards of twenty native
dances, while a further catalogue of dances popular in the middle of the
sixteenth century is presented in the Complaynt of Scotland. ["Select
Remains of Ancient Popular Poetry in Scotland." edited by David Laing, 1822,
4to, part first, 11. 296-376; "The Complaynt of Scotland," edited by J. A.
R. Murray, 1872, p. 66.]
Moorish or Morris dances were
common at the court of James IV., the performers being usually Spaniards.
But at Epiphany 1494, native Morris dancers, clad in a special livery,
performed in the royal presence. Each Morris dancer bore upon his dress a
number of small bells, which played chimes during his evolutions. By the
Glover Incorporation of Perth a Norris dancer's costume has been preserved.
The following account of it forms the subject of a note appended by Sir
Walter Scott to his "Fair Maid of Perth":-
"This curious vestment is made of fawn-coloured
silk, in the form of a tunic, with trappings of green and red satin. There
accompany it two hundred and fifty-two small circular bells formed into
twenty-one sets of twelve bells each, upon pieces of leather, made to fasten
to various parts of the body. What is most remarkable about these bells is
the perfect intonation of each set, and the regular musical intervals
between the tone of each. The twelve bells on each piece of leather are of
various sizes, yet all combine to form one perfect intonation in concord
with the leading note in the set. These concords are maintained, not only in
each set, but also in the intervals between the various pieces. The
performer could thus produce, if not a tune, at least a pleas. lug and
musical chime, according as lie regulated with skill the movements of his
body." Queen Mary
introduced dances from France, of which, according to contemporary writers,
the practice was not quite seemly. In dancing she incautiously indulged,
while her people were disposed to weep; on the day when in March 1562
tidings of the massacre of the Protestants at Vassy reached Edinburgh, she
continued a ball at Holyrood. John Knox denounced her conduct on the
following Sunday, and when called upon to answer for his language he was
bold enough to say that her Majesty "was dancing like the Philistines for
the pleasure taken in the destruction of God's people."
Mainly on account of the inopportune (Minces of
Queen Mary's Court, and the levities with which these were accompanied, the
Scottish Reformers regarded "promiscuous dancing" as a moral lesion or
violation of order. They accordingly punished by fine or exposure on the
pillory, those who danced at feasts or on public occasions. Even in our own
times dancers at private assemblies, have in isolated districts been in the
ecclesiastical courts exposed to censure. For in 1863, a farmer at North
Knapdale was by his pastor, a clergyman of the Free Church, refused Church
membership, since by an act of dancing, he was held to have been chargeable
with "scandal, flagrant inconsistency, and bitter provocation against the
Lord." Opposition to
dancing by the Presbyterian clergy somewhat restrained the practice, but did
not wholly subdue it. In the games declared "lawful to he observed," set
forth in King James's "Book of Sports" issued in 1618, dancing is named.
About a century later, that is in 17 23, a weekly dancing assembly was
established at Edinburgh, and was largely patronized. In 1728, the Town
Council of Glasgow appointed a dancing-master, with a salary of £20, to
familiarize the inhabitants with the art.
Killie-kallum, or the sword-dance, has long been
practised in the Highlands. According to Olaus Magnus, it was common among
the Norwegians; they derived it, he remarks, from the inhabitants of Orkney
and Shetland.
Stage-playing may be traced to an early date. In the Exchequer Accounts
rendered at Scone in 1264, there is a payment of £16, 2s. 9d. for "the
king's charges in play." On the 11th December 1366, Gilbert Armstrong,
steward of the king's household, made payment of ten pounds to "the
stage-players at Inchmurdoch." And on the 8th May 1399, in order to the
amusement of the lords auditors, the Chamberlain paid 10s. to a minstrel,
and 20s. to other players."
Famous as a musician and a promoter of sports
and manly exercises, James I. warmly encouraged the histrionic art. In an
account to the Exchequer rendered at Linlithgow on the 5th June 1434, there
is a payment of £5, 1s. 6d. to the king's stage-players in terms of his
"written mandate." And in an Exchequer account produced at Edinburgh on the
5th September 1436, the sum of £18 is assigned as the expenses of John
Turing, burgess of Edinburgh, for conducting three stage-players from Bruges
to Scotland. Turing received a further sum of £32 for bringing into the
country four other players for the king's service, the account being under
his seal vouched by Martin Vanartyne, one of the players. In the same
account is included a charge against the king of £33, 6s. for vestments to
the stage-players with their silver decorations, also for two mantles of
sable fur which had been imported.
In promoting theatricals James II. was equally
ardent with his royal father. For performing at his coronation Martin the
player was on the 14th July 1438 paid £8, 10s. Robert Mackye and Adam Rede,
the royal stage-players, were, on the 13th July 1442, paid the sum of 10,
15s. 6d. in pence and penny worths Out of the custom of Perth, on the
3d July 1447, James II. granted to Robert Mackgye, Mark Trumpats, and Adam
Rede, his servitors and jesters, an allowance of £20; the payment was
continued yearly. By the chamberlain was paid on the 5th July 1447 the sum
of £7, 13s. 8d. for white woollen cloth used in dresses to the players, who
had at the feast of Christmas performed before the king at Stirling. On the
16th September of the following year the account for the royal revels of the
preceding Christmas was discharged; it included £4, 17s. for musical
instruments, and £11, 17s. 1d. for the fancy woollen dresses of the players,
and for dyeing them in various colours. In the reign of James III. Adam Rede
was on the 27th July 1462 paid £3, 6s. 8d., being his half-year's fee as the
king's player. Among
the sports which he vigorously promoted James IV. included stage plays. In
1488, the year of his succession, there occurs in the Treasurer's accounts
the following entry: "To the king himself to play in Perth xxth lib. vij s."
In the following year Patrick Johnson and his fellows, who played to the
king at Linlithgow, also to the Spanish ambassador, were recompensed, as
were certain Frenchmen who played before the king at Dundee. In August 1503,
subsequent to his marriage, James IV. entertained his court by the
performances of certain English comedians. To James IV. Sir David Lyndsay
was in his youth a master of revels; he received on the 12th October 1500
the sum of £3, 4s. for "blue and yellow taffeties," to furnish him with a
coat wherein lie might "play" at Holyrood for the gratification of the
Court. Prior to the
reign of James V. stage-playing was simply pantomimic. And the diversions
enacted in June 1538 in honour of the king's marriage to Mary of Guise were
of a like character. The first performance of the articulate drama took
place on the 6th January 1539-60, when Sir David Lyndsay produced at
Linlithgow his "Satyre of the Three Estates." In representing this dramatic
satire (which was reproduced at Edinburgh and Cupar-Fife), Lyndsay provided
"interludes," or a pantomimic display for the common people during the
intervals between the acts, when the usual audiences withdrew.
In adopting the stage as an arena on which to
expose to popular contempt the corrupt manners and oppressive acts of the
Romish priesthood, Sir David Lyndsay used against them a weapon fabricated
by their order. The drama was originated by the Church. During the sixth
century was founded in Italy the brotherhood of Gonfalone, which in silent
processions represented the sufferings of the Redeemer. Miracle Plays were
first performed in the fourteenth century when a company of pilgrims from
Palestine were in Paris incorporated as the "Fraternity of the Passion."
What prevailed in one Catholic centre was imitated in another. Holy Plays or
Mysteries were in Scottish Churches performed during the hours of worship,
while as performers were represented such allegorical characters as "sin,"
"faith," "penance," "charity," and "death." The performers were usually
strolling players, who in practising religious rites wore the same habits
which they displayed in their secular merry-making. Moralities were latterly
performed only on the high festivals, which consequently were named
play-days, while the proceedings, utterly dissociated from religion,
resembled those of the ancient Saturnalia or modern Carnival. An Abbot of
Unreason was annually elected by every community, who under a penalty was
bound to accept office. To this functionary was latterly given the name of
Robin Hood, as his acts were supposed to resemble those of the popular
bandit of Sherwood. On the 24th April 1537 the Town Council of Haddington
issued the following edict:-
"The quhilk day the Sys delyueris that George
Rychartson sall pa to the tressaurer 20s at Whitsonday next heir aftir, and
othyr 20s at zoull next thair aftir, quhilk 40s George wes awand the town
becaus he would not be Abbot of Unreason."
On the 8th April 1539 the same Town Council
deliberated as to whether "thai thocht expedient till haif ane Abbot of
Unreason this yeir or not." A division ensued, much ardour being evinced on
both sides. By a majority it was resolved to have an abbot, while any
burgess chosen to the office, and who refused acceptance, was to be amerced
in forty shillings. Thomas Ponton was chosen, but it is afterwards recorded
that both he and another townsman who had been appointed substitute had "forsakyn
the abbot-chyp," and had each paid his penalty. When on the 6th -May 1555
Robert Marro was "creat burges" of Peebles, he "mad his aith as in vse is
and find his hand and his land . . . to pay his burges silver to in lord
Robine Hude." At length the leaders of the popular sports became openly
inimical both to the doctrines of the Church and the persons of the clergy.
In 1547 Cardinal Beaton, having excommunicated for contumacy the Lord
Borthwick, despatched to the curate of that parish an apparitor or macer
with the injunction that forthwith in his place of worship the
archiepiscopal anathema should be made public. As the apparitor entered the
church he was followed by the Abbot of Unreason, who, forcibly ejecting him
from the structure, dragged him to a mill-pond and there plunged him in the
water. Conducted back to church the archbishop's missive was in his presence
torn to pieces, and the contents cast into a bowl of wine he was compelled
to swallow. Through such acts of violence the existence of an Abbot of
Unreason became a public scandal, and accordingly in 1555 a statute was
passed in these words:—
"It is statute and ordanit that in all tymes
cumming no maner of persoune be chosen Robert Hude nor Lytell Johne, Abbot
of Vnressoun Quenis of Maij, nor vtherwyse, nouther in burgh nor to landwart
in ony tyme to cum. And gif ony Prouest, Baillies, counsell, and communitie
chesis sic ane Personage . . . . Within burgh, the chesaris of sic sall tyne
thair fredome for the space of fyue yeiris, and vtherwyse salbe punist at
the Quenis grace will, and the acceptar of sic lyke office, salbe banist
furth of the Realme. And gif ony sic persounes .... bin chosen outwith Burgh
and vthers landwart townis, the chesaris sail pay to our Soverain Lady x
pundis and thair personnes put in waird, thair to remain during the Quenis
grace plesoure."
Robin Hood plays, as the annual revels of the
Abbot of Unreason came to be designated, were prohibited by the Reformers.
On the 21st June 1567, the Lord Provost and Magistrates of Edinburgh
subjected James Gillian to trial for playing Robin Hood, with the result
that he was condemned to execution. Dreading a popular outbreak, the deacons
of the trades entreated the magistrates, also John Knox, as minister of the
parish, to stay the proceedings. As these declined to interfere, the
craftsmen arose in insurrection, broke down the gibbet, shut up the
magistrates in a lawyer's office, and breaking open the tolbooth, rescued
Gillian and the other prisoners. Having attained their liberty, the
magistrates assailed the mob, who with firearms violently resisted. At
length the constable of the castle reconciled the belligerents, the
magistrates consenting to allow those who had engaged in the disturbance to
return to their employments. Knox, who details the circumstances, remarks
that many persons were, for sharing in the tumult, exposed to censure and
discipline.
The festival of Corpus Christi, on the second
Thursday after Whitsunday, continued to be observed at Perth long after the
Reformation. In the Kirk-session Records, under July 1577, we are informed
that
"Mr John Row, minister, and the elders of the
Church at Perth, regretted heavily that certain inhabitants of the town had
played Corpus Christi play upon Thursday, the sixth day of June, which was
-wont to be called Corpus Christi day; that this has been done contrary to
the command of the civil magistrate, and also contrary to the minister's
command, which he had intimated from the pulpit; that thereby the whole town
had been dishonoured, and great offence given to the Church of God, for that
the said play was idolatrous and superstitious."
The Kirksession further issued a declaration as
to the doctrinal errors implied in the observance.
The Play of St Obert, patron of the batters or
bakers, was at Perth yearly celebrated on the 10th of December in a
procession attended with torches and by a band of musicians. One of the
performers impersonated the Devil, and all wore masquerade dresses. A horse
was led in the procession, with its hoofs enclosed in men's shoes. By
imprisoning the promoters the Kirksession succeeded in checking the
observance.
Uncompromising in their efforts to prevent
processions and arrest pantomimic or other performances which tended to
perpetuate Romish error, the reformed clergy, conscious that the popular
acceptance of the Protestant faith was largely due to that formidable satire
with which Sir David Lyndsay had in his plays attacked the elder system,
were willing to tolerate other dramatic representations. On the 21st July
1574 the Kirksession of St Andrews granted license to Mr Patrick Auchinleck,
minister at Balmerino to play the comedy -mentioned in St Luke's Evangel of
the Forlorn Son upon Sunday the first day of August next to come. But the
Session desired, first, the play to be revised by my Lord Rector, Minister,
Mr John Rutherford, provost of St Salvator's College, and Mr James Wilkie,
principal of St Leonard's College, and if they find no fault therewith, the
same to be played upon the said Sunday the 1st of August, so that playing
thereof be no occasion to withdraw the people from hearing of the preaching
at the hour appointed, as well after noon as before noon."
In March 1574-5 the General Assembly prohibited
"clerk plays " and "comedies and tragedies made of the canonical scriptures
both on Sabbath and other days," but permitted "comedies, tragedies, and
other profane plays not made upon authentic parts of scripture" on condition
that these were submitted for revision and performed on workdays only. In
terms of this deliverance the Kirksession of Perth in June 1589 granted
leave to a strolling company to represent a comedy in the city on condition
that "no swearing, banning, nor use scurrility shall be spoken;" and
further, that "nothing shall be added to what is in the register of the play
itself." Ere the close of the century dramas, both secular and religious,
were by the Church wholly disallowed.
By their determination to totally suppress the
drama, the clergy found themselves in strong collision with the royal
authority. In October 1599 a body of players, known as Fletcher and Martin's
company of London, visited Edinburgh, and at once secured the royal license
to conduct their performances, also a warrant directing the magistrates to
forthwith provide them with suitable accommodation. Informed of the
contemplated procedure, the four Kirksessions of the city parishes issued a
joint ordinance denouncing " the unruly and immodest behaviour of the
stage-players," and menacing with censure all who should witness their
performances. On this resolution being published from the several pulpits,
the Privy Council meet at Holyroodhouse, and gave injunction "be oppin
proclamation at the mercate croce," that "within thrie houris," and "under
pane of rebellion," the several kirksessions should recall their decree. A
compromise was arranged, for at a meeting of the Privy Council, held on the
10th November, it was found that the "foure Sessions" had been deceived by
"some sinister and wrongous reports," and that being "bettir acivisit," they
had "cassit, annullit, and dischargit thair former act," and allowed "their
flocks to fairly injoy the benefits of his Majesteis libertie." It has been
held, but on insufficient authority, that Shakespeare was one of the
performers whom the Kirksessions had prohibited.
From the departure of James VI. to London in
1603 till the Restoration, Scottish theatrical entertainments were conducted
only by the young and in the public schools. But in 1673 two Englishmen,
Edward and James Fountain, obtained a patent as Masters of Revels, and
which, they maintained, gave them authority to legally pursue all persons
who conducted public recreations apart from their sanction. In a memorial to
the Privy Council, presented on the 24th July 1679, they refer to "the
playhouse," which they had been "at great charge in erecting." For a time
the Privy Council favoured their claims, but when they proceeded to lay
impost of every bowling-green and place of dancing, and of public recreation
throughout the kingdom, their pretensions were clisallowed. In 1680 the Duke
and Duchess of York brought to Holy-roodhouse a company of players from
London. They performed in the Tennis Court, the Duke and his court giving
frequent attendance. When after an interval of thirty-five years dramatic
entertainments in the Tennis Court were renewed, the proceeding was
denounced by the Presbytery. But the censure failed. To two plays, "The
Orphan" and "Cheats of Scapin," produced at Edinburgh in 1719, Allan Ramsay
composed a prologue. Not long afterwards Signora Violante, an Italian lady,
performed in the city with marked success. She was in 1726 followed by
Anthony Aston, a noted comedian, who, favoured by Allan Ramsay, obtained the
patronage of the Lords of Session and of other leading citizens. Owing to
certain irregularities, Aston was afterwards opposed by the Presbytery and
by the Society of High Constables, while the magistrates prohibited his
longer performing within the city. Withdrawing to Glasgow in 1728, he there
encountered such formidable hostilities as to induce his retirement.
At Edinburgh, in 1733, a body of players, called
"the Edinburgh Company," acted successfully at the Tailors' Hall in the
Cowgate; they afterwards performed at Dundee, Montrose, and Aberdeen.
A zealous promoter of the drama, Allan Ramsay
constructed in 1736 a theatre at Carrubber's Close, investing in the concern
the bulk of his savings. Opened on the 8th November, Ramsay's Theatre was by
a portion of the citizens warmly patronized, but at the close of the season
was passed an Act (10 Geo. II. chap. 28) whereby play-acting without the
sanction of the Sovereign or of the Lord Chamberlain was strictly
prohibited. The good-natured but nearly impoverished poet, in a rhyming
epistle to the Lord President Forbes, made complaint, but was nevertheless
allowed without assistance to sustain his loss.
In 1746-7 was erected in St John's Street,
Canon-gate, a new place of amusement. Intended for dramatic performances,
the statutory provision respecting a license was avoided by the announcement
that the entertainments were "concerts of musick, with a play between the
acts." Among the performers were Digges and Mrs Bellamy, whose remarkable
dramatic talents served to arrest and sustain the public interest. In the
Canongate 'Theatre was, on the 14th December 1756, produced the tragedy of
"Douglas," an event which, while advancing the credit of the Edinburgh
stage, proved in the ecclesiastical atmosphere as a thunder cloud. The
author, John Home, minister of Athelstaneford, was as one guilty of
unclerical conduct cited to appear before the Presbytery of Haddington, and
to avoid high censure met the summons by resignation. Yet the play of
"Douglas" was elevating in tone and in sentiment innocuous.
The Canon ;ate Theatre was accidentally burned.
On its :._ to a new structure with a license was on the 9th December 1767
publicly opened, the prologue spoken on the occasion being composed by the
celebrated James Boswell. In 17 69 was founded the Theatre Royal, on the
site of the present General Post-Office. 'There, on Saturday the 22d May
1784, Mrs Siddons in the part of Belvidere, first appeared before a Scottish
audience. The General Assembly was in sitting, and many of the members gave
their attendance. The great actress played ten evenings, deriving the sum of
£967, 7s. 7d. in recompense of her art. ["History of the Scottish Stage," by
John Jackson, Edin., 1783, 8vo, p. 129.]
Land Meer Processions, or Riding of the Marches,
took origin at a period when the boundaries of lands and commons were
determined by boulders and other moveable fences, the exact position of
which it was important to mark recurrently. A proceeding, which arose from
necessity, continued in sport. At the commencement of the present century
nearly all the minor burghs held an annual march-riding. At Dumfries the
riding was enacted on the 1st of October, when the Magistrates, the Town
Council, and Incorporated Trades assembled at the Cross and therefrom
proceeded with banners and music along the line of the burgh estate. At a
particular point the cavalcade paused, when a scramble by the young for
apples and sweetmeats intensified the diversion. At the close of the riding
the Corporation retired to their offices to fine absentees. At Haddington
the Magistrates and Town Council remarked impediments and ordered their
removal. They were afterwards refreshed by a dish of cockle pie. In the
march rides of Hawick a standard was carried by the senior bailie. In
certain burghs march stones were placed, and young boys were tied to them
and birdied so that in after life they might better remember the landmarks.
When on the last Wednesday of May the riding of the marches was practised at
Lanark there was a morning procession of boys bearing tree branches. The
procession stopped at the clucking hole, where those who had joined for the
first time were compelled to wade in and touch a stone in the centre, when
they were turned over and drenched.
At Culross on the 1st of July the memory of St
Serf, the tutelary saint of the place, is commemorated by a juvenile
procession. A procession of College students is held at St Andrews. By
Bishop James Kennedy was in 1456 erected St Salvator's College, when lie
placed in the steeple a bell dedicated to St Catherine. On being recast in
1681 a procession attended the suspension, while the bell was named in
Honour of the bishop and the saint. At each celebration a personage, styled
Kate Kennedy, is mounted on Horseback attended by an escort. Each one
concerned in the procession impersonates a character; there are Greek
philosophers, Roman senators, and eminent Scottish ecclesiastics and poets.
The proceedings are enhanced by music and closed by a banquet.
In allusion to the holiday processions of
Ayrshire, Professor Walker, in his MS. "Life of a Manse Household in 1780,"
writes:
Twice a year we (the children of Dundonald
Manse) were all huddled into a crazy cart and conducted to a fair at Irvine
to see a procession of tailors and weavers or an equestrian parade of coal
carters, and a race run by their lumpish scarecrow horses. Long before the
day of their magnificence arrived our imaginations were dwelling on its
expected delights, and on the important morning we used to shift on each
other, while yet in bed, the task of seeing if the sun shone through the
chinks of the window shutters, none choosing to be the announcer of a
heart-breaking disappointment by reporting rain, which must, as we well
knew, involve our absence from the anticipated festival. On the spectacle
itself we gazed with a transport as genuine as that of any Greek at the
Olympic games, or of any Roman who viewed the triumph of a Seipio or an
Ĉmilius."
The first of January, though the festival of the
circumcision in the Roman Church, was not in pre-Reformation times
associated with any special rites. Hence Scottish Reformers, while
subjecting to discipline those who observed Christmas, were willing that New
Year's Day should he appropriated to social pleasures. Towards the closing
hour of the 31st December each family prepared a hot pint or wassail bowl of
which all the members might drink to each other's prosperity as the new year
began. Hot pint usually consisted of a mixture of spiced and sweetened ale
with an infusion of whisky. Along with the drinking of the hot pint was
associated the practice of first foot, or a neighbourly greeting. After the
year had commenced each one hastened to his neighbour's house bearing a
small gift; it was deemed "unlucky" to enter a dwelling "empty-handed."
Gift-bestowing on the morning of New Year's Day
obtained generally. On the first of January 1489 the Treasurer presented to
James IV. a personal "offerrande"; he also handed to the king, while still
in bed, ten angellis, that is £12, that he might therewith make gifts to his
royal household. The existence of a custom resembling first-foot is, in the
Treasurer's Account, denoted by the following entry:-
"The x. of Januare [1496] giffin to Sandi Ellem,
Patrick Homes man, that brocht the tithingis to the King of the first
bargane in the new yore, five Scottis crovnis, ane vnicorne and half a
ridare; summa £4, 16s. 2d.
With New Year's Day were, in some portions of
the Highlands, associated peculiar rites. At Strathdown the junior anointed
in bed the elder members of the household with water, which the evening
before had been silently drawn from "the dead and living ford." Thereafter
they kindled in each room, after closing the chimneys, Lunches of juniper.
These rites, the latter attended with much discomfort, were held to ward off
pestilence and sorcery.
The direction of the wind on New Year's Day Eve
was supposed to rule the weather during the approaching year. Hence the
rhyme:—
If New Year's Eve night-wind blow south;
It betokeneth warmth and growth;
If west, much milk and fish in the sea;
If north, much cold and storms there:
Will be If east, the trees will bear much fruit;
If north-east, flee it man and brute.
The first Monday of the year, old style, known
as Handsel Monday is, in respect of a rural holiday, the equivalent of the
English Christmas. Farm labourers, relieved from their labours, are made
free to join in the family gatherings, usual on that day, in their paternal
homes. On Handsel Monday are bestowed the annual largesses to porters and
parcel deliverers, and to all who have ministered to household convenience.
Candlemas, the 2d of February, held sacred by
members of the Roman Church as the Purification of the Virgin, is in its
ritual, derived from practices which obtained in Druidic worship. By the
Church of Rome, on occasion of the festival, candles, blessed by the clergy,
were carried burning in a procession. For offerings at Candlemas 1473, James
III. and his queen received from the Treasurer "two crownis." For the
same purpose, two crowns were at Candlemas 1489, 1494 and 1495 handed to
James IV.
During the eighteenth century Candlemas, old
style, that is, the 13th of February, was a gala-day among the young. In
every parish school was held a celebration. r11he children proceeded to the
schoolroom in their holiday attire, while the schoolmaster, seated in his
desk, welcomed their approach with kindly words. Each in turn tendered a
monetary offering, commonly sixpence, the children of the opulent bestowing
half-crowns. The boy and girl who contributed the largest gifts became king
and queen, and as such were, on a dais in the upper part of the schoolroom,
ceremoniously crowned. A procession was enacted, when the mimic sovereigns
were borne on a throne formed by crossed hands. A fire of furze and loose
timber kindled in the evening was styled the Candlemas bleeze. In
certain schools the king and queen held an evening reception, the
schoolmaster, as master of ceremonies, presenting to the mimic sovereigns
his more meritorious pupils. At Dumfries on occasion of the Candlemas
celebration, those at the grammar-school studying Latin were expected to
talk in that language only.
Associated with Candlemas is the popular rhyme:
If Candlemas day be dry and fair,
The half o' winter's to come and mair
If Candlemas day be wet and foul,
The half o' winter's gane at Yule."
Shrove Tuesday is so called from being anciently
associated with priestly absolution. As the clay immediately precedes the
commencement of Lent, it was in Scotland only known as Fastern's E'en, that
is, Fasting Eve. The modes of observance varied. At Stirling young persons
procured eggs, which in the morning they discoloured with various devices
and in the evening boiled and ate in the fields. The inhabitants of the
Border towns devoted the day to the sport of hand-ball To games of foot-ball
on Fastern's E'en the married women of East Lothian challenged the spinsters
of their neighbourhood. The burgesses of Kilmarnock observed the festival by
dragging their fire-engines to the cross, and after filling them with water,
casting it about so as to drench the unwary.
On Shrove Tuesday was indulged the practice of
cock-fighting. This most inhuman and barbarous sport was in 1681 brought
into Scotland by the Duke of York. In 1683 a cockpit was erected at Leith,
and there did the sport become so popular that in 1704 it was prohibited by
the Town Council of Edinburgh as an impediment to business. The Leith
cock-fight was at length restricted to one day yearly. From an early period
of the eighteenth century till its close, cock-fighting on Fastern's E'en
was an ordinary pastime. To the village schoolroom every youth bore a cock
reared for his special use. At the conflict the schoolmaster presided, the
craven birds or "fugies" which would not fight, also those that fell, being
assigned to him as perquisites. Schoolroom dues were also payable to him.
Betting was allowed, but while few profited, the spectators were rendered
coarse in feeling and the young hardened to suffering. John Grub,
schoolmaster of Wemyss in Fife, was the first of his order to condemn the
practices of the cockpit. He composed a disputation which he caused his
pupils to repeat in presence of their parents, in which the arguments for
and against the sport were fairly stated. He showed in conclusion that
parents unfettered by custom would pay as generously for a lettered
coin-petition among their sons as for obtaining their distinction in the
cockpit. The schoolmaster of Wemyss flourished in 1748, but cock-fighting
continued about eighty years later. Early in the century it prevailed among
the gentry of eastern Fifeshire. About the year 1810 Captain Mason of
Brighton boarded his fighting-cocks with the clergy and farmers. About the
same period Professor John Wilson, afterwards of Edinburgh, then in Oxford,
entered with ardour into the practice of a sport, which in his maturer years
he must have strongly condemned. For birds to be used in the cockpit at
Elleray he paid five and six pounds.
In the northern Highlands on Fastern's E'en was
supped a species of prose made of the skimmings of broth, oatmeal, and eggs.
And during night young persons had placed under their pillows a cake styled
Bannich Bruader; it was discoloured by soot, and baked with a portion of the
first egg laid by a fowl.
On St Valentine's Eve the young assembled in the
several villages. The names of the blooming maidens of the neighbourhood
were inscribed on portions of paper, and being placed in a bag were by the
young men eagerly drawn for. A similar proceeding was enacted with the names
of the young men, which the lassies drew. The practice of despatching
missives on St Valentine's Eve is comparatively modern.
On the Sunday preceding Easter or Palm Sunday
the clergy of the Roman Church handed to the people tree branches to be
borne in procession. Towards the cost of these processions were offerings
rendered by the opulent. When James IV. was at Holy rood House in April 1489
he received from the Treasurer a demy, or fourteen shillings, for an
offering on Palm Sunday; the following year his offering was eighteen
shillings.
On the Saturday preceding Palm Sunday the boys
of Lanark paraded the streets, bearing a large willow tree decorated with
daffodils, box, and other evergreens. The three last days of March were
styled the borrowing clays. When these were tempestuous a favourable summer
was augured; if fine, an inclement season was anticipated. On All Fools'
Day, the 1st of April, were practised those innocent impostures common on
this day in nearly every European country.
Some of the rites of Beltane or May-day have
been described. Latterly lowland cowherds assembled in the fields, and there
prepared a refection of milk and eggs ; their feasting concluded, they
carried burning faggots from house to house. In the uplands shepherds cut in
the heath a small trench, in which, kindling a fire of wood, they dressed a
candle of eggs, butter, oatmeal, and milk. As a libation a portion was spilt
upon the ground. The party now individually took up a. cake of oatmeal,
covered with nine square knobs, which were severally taken off and cast into
the fire, the names of the enemies of the flock, such as the eagle and the
fox, being named in connection with each. The long subsisting practice of
moistening the face with dew on the morning of May-day has all but ceased.
To the practice of frequenting wells dedicated
to saints on the several Sundays of May with a view to miraculous healing
has allusion been made. The supposed Dealing qualities of Christ's Well in
Menteith on May-day had attracted such crowds that in 1624 the Privy Council
appointed certain commissioners to wait in its vicinity, and to forthwith
imprison in the castle of Doune all who might assemble.
A day of Druidic observances in honour of the
fruits, the 1st of August was, under the name of Lammas, adopted by the
Roman Church as a Christian festival. The ancient origin was in their
practices formerly symbolized by the herds of Haddingtonshire. About a month
prior to the celebration the herds of a district built in a convenient
centre a tower of sods. The tower was usually four feet in diameter at base,
tapering towards the top, which rose to a height of about eight feet,
terminating in a point containing a hole for a flagstaff. From the time when
the tower begin to assume form and prominence it was watched nightly to
prevent the attacks of neighbouring communities. The watchers were each
provided with a tooting horn wherewith in an emergency they might summon
their companions. On Lammas morning each community chose a captain, who
received a large towel adorned with ribbons, which he bore in symbol of
office. The community then breakfasted together on bread and cheese,
drinking copiously from a spring well, near which uniformly they encamped.
Scouts were on every side sent out to discover whether adversaries were
approaching, of whom the presence was notified by horns. When hostilities
were attempted the more powerful party commonly yielded to the weaker
without a struggle, and in token of subjection laid down their colours.
Occasionally fierce struggles occurred, and at one of these four of the
combatants were killed. So many as one hundred herds had been known to
contend on each side. This Lammas practice continued till after the middle
of the eighteenth century.
The feast of the harvest-home, in early Celtic
times celebrated at cairns, is popularly known as the kirn or cairn. A
special practice called "crying the kirn" was on the last day of harvest
observed on the principal farms. When the last handful of gain was secured,
the reapers proceeded to the nearest eminence, and with vociferous
demonstrations proclaimed that harvest was concluded. A bandster now
collected the reaping-hooks, and taking them by the points, threw them
upward; the direction of the falling hook was supposed to indicate the
direction in which the reaper to whom it belonged was to be employed next
harvest. If a hook broke in falling, the early death of its owner was
predicted. When the point of a hook sank into the soil, the owner received
an augury of marriage.
The harvest-home was in Fifeshire known as the
maiden, a derivation due not to the employment of young women in the
Harvest-field, but to the elevated spot or mod-dun where the close of
reaping was announced.
The sports and drolleries of the 31st October
rest upon the usages of an earlier faith. Adopted as a Christian festival,
the celebration was, as preceding the Feast of All Saints, styled All-Hallow
Eve—in Scottish phrase, Hallowe'en. It was the feast of in gathering; fence
in the observances are used both fruits and vegetables. With these was the
unseen invoked—the future anticipated. To the young the rites were of
especial interest, for the belief prevailed that with the charms of Hallow
Eve were destinies associated. When two nuts placed together on the
fire-grate remained in concert, those named to them were believed to possess
in each other a real or a romantic interest. When nuts rested quietly, the
course of affection was to prove smooth and lasting; but when one nut
started up from the other, a quarrel was foreshadowed. In reference to the
trial by nuts, Burns writes humorously:—
The auld gudewife's well-hoardit nits
Are round and round divided,
And moray lads' and Iassies' fates
Are there that night decided;
Some kindle couthie side by side,
And burn thegither trimly;
Some start awv wi' saucy pride;
And jump out-oure the chimly
Fu' high that night.
Jean slips in twa wi' tentie e'e,
Wha 'twas she wadna tell;
But this is Jock, and this is me,
She says in to hersel';
He bleezed owre her, and she owre him,
As they wad never mair part,
Till, fuff! he started up the lum,
And Jean had e'en a sair heart
To see 't that night."
For charming, apples were much used. From the
ceiling was suspended a small stick with an apple on the one end and a
candle on the other. When the stick was twirled, those practising the
drolleries endeavoured to seize the apple with their teeth, but more
frequently came in contact with the candle, which scorched or greased them.
Apples were set afloat in a tub of water, into which the merry-makers dipped
their heads in order to catch one with the teeth. But the accomplishment was
difficult, and the ardour with which it was prosecuted, usually led to a
ridiculous immersion. Eating an apple before a. mirror was a potent charm.
A. portion of the apple being reserved, was on the point of a fork, extended
over the left shoulder. When the charm was thrice repeated, the future
spouse was expected to be seen in the mirror, with extended hand.
A common Hallowe'en sport was the stepping out
hand-in-hand into the cabbage garden, and there each with the eyes closed,
pulling up the first root which met the hand. Borne to the hearth, each stem
was examined. According as it was long or short, thick or slender, straight
or crooked, so would be the aspect of the future helpmate. The quantity of
earth adhering to the root betokened the amount of substance or dower. The
taste of the stein further determined whether the spouse's temper would be
sweet or acrid. The steins were now placed over the door, one after another,
when the Christian names of those entering the house thereafter were held to
indicate those of the persons with whom the merrymakers would be wedded.
Certain rites were deemed especially solemn.
When a shirt-sleeve was dipped in water, and the garment thereafter hung up
to dry, the future spouse was supposed to enter the apartment and turn the
sleeve. A person stole out unperceived to the peat-stack, and sowing a
handful of hemp-seed, called out:
"Hemp-seed I sow thee,
hemp-seed I sow thee,
And he who is my true love
Come after me and pu' me."
Then from behind the left shoulder, was supposed
to stand forth the apparition of the future spouse in the attitude of
pulling the hemp. A sieve "full of nothing" thrown up in a dark barn, was
held to invoke the appearance of the future lover. When the white of an egg,
or melted lead was dropped into water, the appearances were held to indicate
the future dwelling. If a landscape appeared, the operator was to reside in
the country ; if prominences met the eye, a town was to be his place of
dwelling. There were further charms. To the nearest kiln a journey was
performed solitarily and at night. The adventurer cast into the kiln-pit a
clue of blue yarn. The clue was now wound up, and towards the end some one
was supposed to hold the thread. To the question "who holds?" an answer was
expected from the kiln pit giving the name of the future spouse. The
domestic drolleries of Hallowe'en have almost ceased, but in the bon-fires
which at each anniversary blaze upon the northern hills the festival is
perpetuated.
On the 25th December, in celebration of the
upward coui6e of the sun after the winter solstice, the Druids held a great
anniversary. During the fourth century the day was associated with the event
of the Nativity, and in this connection it has been observed not only by the
unreformed, but by many of the reformed Churches.
At the Scottish Court in the fifteenth century
Christmas was observed with much festivity and spIendour. At Christmas 1489
James IV. wore a crimson satin "syd" gown, and a long robe of velvet, each
lined with fur, also a short gown of velvet lined with damask, and two
doublets of black satin, and one of crimson. Preceded by heralds and
pursuivants he in the morning walked to high mass. Having at the altar
bestowed a donation of fourteen shillings, he at noon handed largesses to
his officers at arms. Thereafter he had with his court recourse to games and
pastimes. There were cards and dice, and "tables" or backgammon. When in
1497 James IV. observed Christmas at Aberdeen, lie received from the
Treasurer £156 to meet the costs of the card-tables. Among the out-door
sports were "each," a species of tennis, also "kiles," and langbowlis, each
a form of skittles.
The diversions of the 2th December were at court
continued till Epiphany, or Twelfth Day ; nor did they wholly terminate till
Candlemas. At court, also in the great houses, the revels were conducted
under a Lord of Misrule, or Abbot of Unreason. On Hogmanay, that is the 31st
December, this functionary, arrayed in a livery of green, and attended by a
suite, perambulated the district, performing his escapades at the cost of
private householders. In 1496 the 'Treasurer, on a royal precept, made to
Gilbert Reade, at Stirling, a, payment of ten pounds "for spilling of his
hour be the Abbot of Unresoun". On Hogmanay masquerading has prevailed up to
our own times. Wile on a visit to Sir Walter Scott at Abbotsford, Captain
Basil Hall makes in his journal, under the 1st January 1825, the following
entry:--
"Yesterday being Hogmanay, there was a constant
succession of Guisards—that is, boys dressed up in fantastic caps, with
their shirts over their jackets, and with wooden swords in their hands.
These players acted a sort of scene before us, of which the hero was one
Goloshin, who gets killed in a `battle for love,' but is presently brought
to life again by a doctor of the party. As may be imagined the taste of our
host is to keep up these old ceremonies. Thus, in the morning, yesterday, I
observed crowds of boys and girls coming to the back door, when each one got
a penny and an oaten-cake. No less than seventy pennies were thus
distributed —and very happy the little bodies looked, with their well-stored
bags."
In connection with Hogmanay, Dr Samuel Johnson,
in his "Journey," describes a practice which obtained in the Hebrides. A man
dressed himself in a cow's hide, upon which other men beat with sticks. As
lie ran round the house with his followers, the inmates, in counterfeited
fright, refused him admission. Nor was he allowed to enter till he repeated
on the threshold some lines of poetry.
At Deerness in Orkney, on the evening of
Hogmanay, minstrel bands proceed from house to house, begging, as messengers
of the Virgin, for bread and cheese and ale. Their presence is welcomed, and
any householder who is overlooked regards the omission as a personal slight.
Till lately, on Hogmanay the children of the peasantry, clad in white
garments, entered the dwellings of the opulent, and importuned for alms in
strings of verse.
In the court celebration of Twelfth Day, 1563,
Queen Mary enacted at Holyrood the French pastime of King of the Bean. In
her mirthfulness she arrayed Mary Fleming, one of her maids of honour, in
her own robes and jewels. Randolph, the English ambassador, who was present,
describes the scene in animated language.
Christmas was formerly known as Yule, from the
Saxon hiol, or wheel, a word primarily referring to the form of the Druidic
temple, latterly signifying a feast. Scottish Reformers denounced the
observance of Yule as a sacred festival, and sternly refused to tolerate Its
festivities.
There were Christmas observances peculiar to
localities. On Christmas morning, in Aberdeenshire, each member of a family
was, in bed, served with Lagan le vrich, a species of sowens, while the
supper dish consisted of crappit-heads, or the heads of haddocks stuffed
with oatmeal and onions. Wad, or target-shooting, also the game of football,
were favourite Christmas pastimes in the northern counties.
Distaff Day, held in England on the 7th of
January, had its Scottish counterpart in the rocking. The poet Burns names
the rocking in connection with Fastern's Eve. On the day of its observance,
the wives of neighbouring cottagers assembled in some central dwelling,
where each worked at the distaff till the evening, when they were in the
succeeding festivities joined by their husbands.
For the young there were some peculiar
diversions. Hurly hawky was practised at Stirling in the sixteenth century.
One boy dragged another along the sloping side of a hill; hurly being the
whirler, hawky the person whined. On the sloping hillocks adjoining Stirling
Castle the pastime was indulged by the youthful James VI., when under the
tutorage of Buchanan.
The Jingo Ring, a game played by girls, is
derived from the practice of Romish rites. Joining hands, the players move
slowly round one of their number, who with a handkerchief touches each of
them in turn. In their gyrations they sing:
"Here we go by jingo-ring,
By jingo-ring, by jingo-ring,
Here we go by jingo-ring,
And round about Mary matin's say."
As the players repeat the words "Mary matin's
say," they each bend down, and on rising resume the song and movement
without variation.
The juvenile diversion of smuggling the geg,
founded on practices associated with the contraband trade, obtained in
south-western counties. Two parties were chosen by lot; they were of equal
numbers, one being called outs, the other ins. The outs went out from the
goal, the ins remained. The outs deposited something, such as a penknife,
and then concealed themselves, calling out "Smugglers." The ins gave
pursuit, and if the holder of the geg or deposit was captured, the parties
exchanged places.
A youth who broke the rules of a game was
formerly punished by hecklebirnie. His companions drew up in two
files standing face to face, while he was made to pass between them in a
stooping posture. In his progress he, on his back, received buffets smartly
applied by the bonnets of the assembly. He passed, as it were, between the
fires of Baal.
During the last half century the recreations of
the two countries have much assimilated, while local and quaint observances
have all but ceased. Card-playing, long an all-absorbing domestic pastime,
is varied by others considerably more elevating. Holidays formerly wasted in
frivolity, or abused by excess, are attended by the scientific exploration
of rural scenes, or by other recreations which severally tend to invigorate
the understanding, inform the judgment, and refresh the heart. |