“This is no my ain house;
I ken by the biggin’
o’t.”
Two recent books one by Mr. Grant
White on England, one on France by the diabolically
clever Mr. Hillebrand, may well have set people thinking
on the divisions of races and nations. Such thoughts
should arise with particular congruity and force to
inhabitants of that United Kingdom, peopled from so
many different stocks, babbling so many different
dialects, and offering in its extent such singular
contrasts, from the busiest over-population to the
unkindliest desert, from the Black Country to the
Moor of Rannoch. It is not only when we cross
the seas that we go abroad; there are foreign parts
of England; and the race that has conquered so wide
an empire has not yet managed to assimilate the islands
whence she sprang. Ireland, Wales, and the Scottish
mountains still cling, in part, to their old Gaelic
speech. It was but the other day that English
triumphed in Cornwall, and they still show in Mousehole,
on St. Michael’s Bay, the house of the last
Cornish-speaking woman. English itself, which
will now frank the traveller through the most of North
America, through the greater South Sea Islands, in
India, along much of the coast of Africa, and in the
ports of China and Japan, is still to be heard, in
its home country, in half a hundred varying stages
of transition. You may go all over the States,
and setting aside the actual intrusion
and influence of foreigners, negro, French, or Chinese you shall scarce meet
with so marked a difference of accent as in the forty miles between Edinburgh
and Glasgow, or of dialect as in the hundred miles between Edinburgh and
Aberdeen. Book English has gone round the world, but at home we still
preserve the racy idioms of our fathers, and every county, in some parts every
dale, has its own quality of speech, vocal or verbal. In like manner,
local custom and prejudice, even local religion and local law, linger on into
the latter end of the nineteenth century imperia
in imperio, foreign things at home.
In spite of these promptings to reflection,
ignorance of his neighbours is the character of the
typical John Bull. His is a domineering nature,
steady in fight, imperious to command, but neither
curious nor quick about the life of others.
In French colonies, and still more in the Dutch, I
have read that there is an immediate and lively contact
between the dominant and the dominated race, that
a certain sympathy is begotten, or at the least a
transfusion of prejudices, making life easier for both.
But the Englishman sits apart, bursting with pride
and ignorance. He figures among his vassals
in the hour of peace with the same disdainful air
that led him on to victory. A passing enthusiasm
for some foreign art or fashion may deceive the world,
it cannot impose upon his intimates. He may
be amused by a foreigner as by a monkey, but he will
never condescend to study him with any patience.
Miss Bird, an authoress with whom I profess myself
in love, declares all the viands of Japan to be uneatable a
staggering pretension. So, when the Prince of
Wales’s marriage was celebrated at Mentone by
a dinner to the Mentonese, it was proposed to give
them solid English fare roast beef and plum
pudding, and no tomfoolery. Here we have either
pole of the Britannic folly. We will not eat
the food of any foreigner; nor, when we have the chance,
will we suffer him to eat of it himself. The
same spirit inspired Miss Bird’s American missionaries,
who had come thousands of miles to change the faith
of Japan, and openly professed their ignorance of the
religions they were trying to supplant.
I quote an American in this connection
without scruple. Uncle Sam is better than John
Bull, but he is tarred with the English stick.
For Mr. Grant White the States are the New England
States and nothing more. He wonders at the amount
of drinking in London; let him try San Francisco.
He wittily reproves English ignorance as to the status
of women in America; but has he not himself forgotten
Wyoming? The name Yankee, of which he is so
tenacious, is used over the most of the great Union
as a term of reproach. The Yankee States, of
which he is so staunch a subject, are but a drop in
the bucket. And we find in his book a vast virgin
ignorance of the life and prospects of America; every
view partial, parochial, not raised to the horizon;
the moral feeling proper, at the largest, to a clique
of states; and the whole scope and atmosphere not
American, but merely Yankee. I will go far beyond
him in reprobating the assumption and the incivility
of my countryfolk to their cousins from beyond the
sea; I grill in my blood over the silly rudeness of
our newspaper articles; and I do not know where to
look when I find myself in company with an American
and see my countrymen unbending to him as to a performing
dog. But in the case of Mr. Grant White example
were better than precept. Wyoming is, after
all, more readily accessible to Mr. White than Boston
to the English, and the New England self-sufficiency
no better justified than the Britannic.
It is so, perhaps, in all countries;
perhaps in all, men are most ignorant of the foreigners
at home. John Bull is ignorant of the States;
he is probably ignorant of India; but considering his
opportunities, he is far more ignorant of countries
nearer his own door. There is one country, for
instance its frontier not so far from London,
its people closely akin, its language the same in
all essentials with the English of which
I will go bail he knows nothing. His ignorance
of the sister kingdom cannot be described; it can
only be illustrated by anecdote. I once travelled
with a man of plausible manners and good intelligence a
University man, as the phrase goes a man,
besides, who had taken his degree in life and knew
a thing or two about the age we live in. We
were deep in talk, whirling between Peterborough and
London; among other things, he began to describe some
piece of legal injustice he had recently encountered,
and I observed in my innocence that things were not
so in Scotland. “I beg your pardon,”
said he, “this is a matter of law.”
He had never heard of the Scots law; nor did he choose
to be informed. The law was the same for the
whole country, he told me roundly; every child knew
that. At last, to settle matters, I explained
to him that I was a member of a Scottish legal body,
and had stood the brunt of an examination in the very
law in question. Thereupon he looked me for
a moment full in the face and dropped the conversation.
This is a monstrous instance, if you like, but it
does not stand alone in the experience of Scots.
England and Scotland differ, indeed,
in law, in history, in religion, in education, and
in the very look of nature and men’s faces, not
always widely, but always trenchantly. Many
particulars that struck Mr. Grant White, a Yankee,
struck me, a Scot, no less forcibly; he and I felt
ourselves foreigners on many common provocations.
A Scotchman may tramp the better part of Europe and
the United States, and never again receive so vivid
an impression of foreign travel and strange lands and
manners as on his first excursion into England.
The change from a hilly to a level country strikes
him with delighted wonder. Along the flat horizon
there arise the frequent venerable towers of churches.
He sees at the end of airy vistas the revolution
of the windmill sails. He may go where he pleases
in the future; he may see Alps, and Pyramids, and lions;
but it will be hard to beat the pleasure of that moment.
There are, indeed, few merrier spectacles than that
of many windmills bickering together in a fresh breeze
over a woody country; their halting alacrity of movement,
their pleasant business, making bread all day with
uncouth gesticulations, their air, gigantically human,
as of a creature half alive, put a spirit of romance
into the tamest landscape. When the Scotch child
sees them first he falls immediately in love; and from
that time forward windmills keep turning in his dreams.
And so, in their degree, with every feature of the
life and landscape. The warm, habitable age
of towns and hamlets, the green, settled, ancient look
of the country; the lush hedgerows, stiles, and privy
path-ways in the fields; the sluggish, brimming rivers;
chalk and smock-frocks; chimes of bells and the rapid,
pertly-sounding English speech they are
all new to the curiosity; they are all set to English
airs in the child’s story that he tells himself
at night. The sharp edge of novelty wears off;
the feeling is scotched, but I doubt whether it is
ever killed. Rather it keeps returning, ever
the more rarely and strangely, and even in scenes
to which you have been long accustomed suddenly awakes
and gives a relish to enjoyment or heightens the sense
of isolation.
One thing especially continues unfamiliar
to the Scotchman’s eye the domestic
architecture, the look of streets and buildings; the
quaint, venerable age of many, and the thin walls
and warm colouring of all. We have, in Scotland,
far fewer ancient buildings, above all in country
places; and those that we have are all of hewn or harled
masonry. Wood has been sparingly used in their
construction; the window-frames are sunken in the
wall, not flat to the front, as in England; the roofs
are steeper-pitched; even a hill farm will have a
massy, square, cold and permanent appearance.
English houses, in comparison, have the look of cardboard
toys, such as a puff might shatter. And to this
the Scotchman never becomes used. His eye can
never rest consciously on one of these brick houses rickles
of brick, as he might call them or on one
of these flat-chested streets, but he is instantly
reminded where he is, and instantly travels back in
fancy to his home. “This is no my ain house;
I ken by the biggin’ o’t.”
And yet perhaps it is his own, bought with his own
money, the key of it long polished in his pocket; but
it has not yet, and never will be, thoroughly adopted
by his imagination; nor does he cease to remember
that, in the whole length and breadth of his native
country, there was no building even distantly resembling
it.
But it is not alone in scenery and
architecture that we count England foreign.
The constitution of society, the very pillars of the
empire, surprise and even pain us. The dull,
neglected peasant, sunk in matter, insolent, gross
and servile, makes a startling contrast with our own
long-legged, long-headed, thoughtful, Bible-quoting
ploughman. A week or two in such a place as
Suffolk leaves the Scotchman gasping. It seems
incredible that within the boundaries of his own island
a class should have been thus forgotten. Even
the educated and intelligent, who hold our own opinions
and speak in our own words, yet seem to hold them with
a difference or, from another reason, and to speak
on all things with less interest and conviction.
The first shock of English society is like a cold
plunge. It is possible that the Scot comes looking
for too much, and to be sure his first experiment
will be in the wrong direction. Yet surely his
complaint is grounded; surely the speech of Englishmen
is too often lacking in generous ardour, the better
part of the man too often withheld from the social
commerce, and the contact of mind with mind evaded
as with terror. A Scotch peasant will talk more
liberally out of his own experience. He will
not put you by with conversational counters and small
jests; he will give you the best of himself, like one
interested in life and man’s chief end.
A Scotchman is vain, interested in himself and others,
eager for sympathy, setting forth his thoughts and
experience in the best light. The egoism of the
Englishman is self-contained. He does not seek
to proselytise. He takes no interest in Scotland
or the Scotch, and, what is the unkindest cut of all,
he does not care to justify his indifference.
Give him the wages of going on and being an Englishman,
that is all he asks; and in the meantime, while you
continue to associate, he would rather not be reminded
of your baser origin. Compared with the grand,
tree-like self-sufficiency of his demeanour, the vanity
and curiosity of the Scot seem uneasy, vulgar, and
immodest. That you should continually try to
establish human and serious relations, that you should
actually feel an interest in John Bull, and desire
and invite a return of interest from him, may argue
something more awake and lively in your mind, but
it still puts you in the attitude of a suitor and
a poor relation. Thus even the lowest class of
the educated English towers over a Scotchman by the
head and shoulders.
Different indeed is the atmosphere
in which Scotch and English youth begin to look about
them, come to themselves in life, and gather up those
first apprehensions which are the material of future
thought and, to a great extent, the rule of future
conduct. I have been to school in both countries,
and I found, in the boys of the North, something at
once rougher and more tender, at once more reserve
and more expansion, a greater habitual distance chequered
by glimpses of a nearer intimacy, and on the whole
wider extremes of temperament and sensibility.
The boy of the South seems more wholesome, but less
thoughtful; he gives himself to games as to a business,
striving to excel, but is not readily transported
by imagination; the type remains with me as cleaner
in mind and body, more active, fonder of eating, endowed
with a lesser and a less romantic sense of life and
of the future, and more immersed in present circumstances.
And certainly, for one thing, English boys are younger
for their age. Sabbath observance makes a series
of grim, and perhaps serviceable, pauses in the tenor
of Scotch boyhood days of great stillness
and solitude for the rebellious mind, when in the dearth
of books and play, and in the intervals of studying
the Shorter Catechism, the intellect and senses prey
upon and test each other. The typical English
Sunday, with the huge midday dinner and the plethoric
afternoon, leads perhaps to different results.
About the very cradle of the Scot there goes a hum
of metaphysical divinity; and the whole of two divergent
systems is summed up, not merely speciously, in the
two first questions of the rival catechisms, the English
tritely inquiring, “What is your name?”
the Scottish striking at the very roots of life with,
“What is the chief end of man?” and answering
nobly, if obscurely, “To glorify God and to
enjoy Him for ever.” I do not wish to make
an idol of the Shorter Catechism; but the fact of
such a question being asked opens to us Scotch a great
field of speculation; and the fact that it is asked
of all of us, from the peer to the ploughboy, binds
us more nearly together. No Englishman of Byron’s
age, character, and history would have had patience
for long theological discussions on the way to fight
for Greece; but the daft Gordon blood and the Aberdonian
school-days kept their influence to the end.
We have spoken of the material conditions; nor need
much more be said of these: of the land lying
everywhere more exposed, of the wind always louder
and bleaker, of the black, roaring winters, of the
gloom of high-lying, old stone cities, imminent on
the windy seaboard; compared with the level streets,
the warm colouring of the brick, the domestic quaintness
of the architecture, among which English children begin
to grow up and come to themselves in life. As
the stage of the University approaches, the contrast
becomes more express. The English lad goes to
Oxford or Cambridge; there, in an ideal world of gardens,
to lead a semi-scenic life, costumed, disciplined
and drilled by proctors. Nor is this to be regarded
merely as a stage of education; it is a piece of privilege
besides, and a step that separates him further from
the bulk of his compatriots. At an earlier age
the Scottish lad begins his greatly different experience
of crowded class-rooms, of a gaunt quadrangle, of a
bell hourly booming over the traffic of the city to
recall him from the public-house where he has been
lunching, or the streets where he has been wandering
fancy-free. His college life has little of restraint,
and nothing of necessary gentility. He will
find no quiet clique of the exclusive, studious and
cultured; no rotten borough of the arts. All
classes rub shoulders on the greasy benches.
The raffish young gentleman in gloves must measure
his scholarship with the plain, clownish laddie from
the parish school. They separate, at the session’s
end, one to smoke cigars about a watering-place, the
other to resume the labours of the field beside his
peasant family. The first muster of a college
class in Scotland is a scene of curious and painful
interest; so many lads, fresh from the heather, hang
round the stove in cloddish embarrassment, ruffled
by the presence of their smarter comrades, and afraid
of the sound of their own rustic voices. It
was in these early days, I think, that Professor Blackie
won the affection of his pupils, putting these uncouth,
umbrageous students at their ease with ready human
geniality. Thus, at least, we have a healthy
democratic atmosphere to breathe in while at work;
even when there is no cordiality there is always a
juxtaposition of the different classes, and in the
competition of study the intellectual power of each
is plainly demonstrated to the other. Our tasks
ended, we of the North go forth as freemen into the
humming, lamplit city. At five o’clock
you may see the last of us hiving from the college
gates, in the glare of the shop windows, under the
green glimmer of the winter sunset. The frost
tingles in our blood; no proctor lies in wait to intercept
us; till the bell sounds again, we are the masters
of the world; and some portion of our lives is always
Saturday, la trêve de Dieu.
Nor must we omit the sense of the
nature of his country and his country’s history
gradually growing in the child’s mind from story
and from observation. A Scottish child hears
much of shipwreck, outlying iron skerries, pitiless
breakers, and great sea-lights; much of heathery mountains,
wild clans, and hunted Covenanters. Breaths come
to him in song of the distant Cheviots and the ring
of foraying hoofs. He glories in his hard-fisted
forefathers, of the iron girdle and the handful of
oat-meal, who rode so swiftly and lived so sparely
on their raids. Poverty, ill-luck, enterprise,
and constant resolution are the fibres of the legend
of his country’s history. The heroes and
kings of Scotland have been tragically fated; the
most marking incidents in Scottish history Flodden,
Darien, or the Forty-five were still either
failures or defeats; and the fall of Wallace and the
repeated reverses of the Bruce combine with the very
smallness of the country to teach rather a moral than
a material criterion for life. Britain is altogether
small, the mere taproot of her extended empire:
Scotland, again, which alone the Scottish boy adopts
in his imagination, is but a little part of that, and
avowedly cold, sterile and unpopulous. It is
not so for nothing. I once seemed to have perceived
in an American boy a greater readiness of sympathy
for lands that are great, and rich, and growing, like
his own. It proved to be quite otherwise:
a mere dumb piece of boyish romance, that I had lacked
penetration to divine. But the error serves the
purpose of my argument; for I am sure, at least, that
the heart of young Scotland will be always touched
more nearly by paucity of number and Spartan poverty
of life.
So we may argue, and yet the difference
is not explained. That Shorter Catechism which
I took as being so typical of Scotland, was yet composed
in the city of Westminster. The division of races
is more sharply marked within the borders of Scotland
itself than between the countries. Galloway and
Buchan, Lothian and Lochaber, are like foreign parts;
yet you may choose a man from any of them, and, ten
to one, he shall prove to have the headmark of a Scot.
A century and a half ago the Highlander wore a different
costume, spoke a different language, worshipped in
another church, held different morals, and obeyed a
different social constitution from his fellow-countrymen
either of the south or north. Even the English,
it is recorded, did not loathe the Highlander and the
Highland costume as they were loathed by the remainder
of the Scotch. Yet the Highlander felt himself
a Scot. He would willingly raid into the Scotch
lowlands; but his courage failed him at the border,
and he regarded England as a perilous, unhomely land.
When the Black Watch, after years of foreign service,
returned to Scotland, veterans leaped out and kissed
the earth at Port Patrick. They had been in Ireland,
stationed among men of their own race and language,
where they were well liked and treated with affection;
but it was the soil of Galloway that they kissed at
the extreme end of the hostile lowlands, among a people
who did not understand their speech, and who had hated,
harried, and hanged them since the dawn of history.
Last, and perhaps most curious, the sons of chieftains
were often educated on the continent of Europe.
They went abroad speaking Gaelic; they returned speaking,
not English, but the broad dialect of Scotland.
Now, what idea had they in their minds when they
thus, in thought, identified themselves with their
ancestral enemies? What was the sense in which
they were Scotch and not English, or Scotch and not
Irish? Can a bare name be thus influential on
the minds and affections of men, and a political aggregation
blind them to the nature of facts? The story
of the Austrian Empire would seem to answer, NO; the
far more galling business of Ireland clenches the
negative from nearer home. Is it common education,
common morals, a common language or a common faith,
that join men into nations? There were practically
none of these in the case we are considering.
The fact remains: in spite of
the difference of blood and language, the Lowlander
feels himself the sentimental countryman of the Highlander.
When they meet abroad, they fall upon each other’s
necks in spirit; even at home there is a kind of clannish
intimacy in their talk. But from his compatriot
in the south the Lowlander stands consciously apart.
He has had a different training; he obeys different
laws; he makes his will in other terms, is otherwise
divorced and married; his eyes are not at home in
an English landscape or with English houses; his ear
continues to remark the English speech; and even though
his tongue acquire the Southern knack, he will still
have a strong Scotch accent of the mind.