Old Mortality, Complete by Walter Scott (my reading book .txt) đ
- Author: Walter Scott
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Probably the best points made by Dr. McCrie are his proof that biblical names were not common among the Covenanteers and that Episcopal eloquence and Episcopal superstition were often as tardy and as dark as the eloquence and superstition of the Presbyterians. He carries the war into the opposite camp, with considerable success. His best answer to âOld Mortalityâ would have been a novel, as good and on the whole as fair, written from the Covenanting side. Hogg attempted this reply, not to Scottâs pleasure according to the Shepherd, in âThe Brownie of Bodsbeck.â The Shepherd says that when Scott remarked that the âBrownieâ gave an untrue description of the age, he replied, âItâs a devilish deal truer than yours!â Scott, in his defence, says that to please the friends of the Covenanters, âtheir portraits must be drawn without shadow, and the objects of their political antipathy be blackened, hooved, and horned ere they will acknowledge the likeness of either.â He gives examples of clemency, and even considerateness, in Dundee; for example, he did not bring with him a prisoner, âwho laboured under a disease rendering it painful to him to be on horseback.â He examines the story of John Brown, and disproves the blacker circumstances. Yet he appears to hold that Dundee should have resigned his commission rather than carry out the orders of Government? Burleyâs character for ruthlessness is defended by the evidence of the âScottish Worthies.â As Dr. McCrie objects to his âbuffoonery,â it is odd that he palliates the âstrong propensityâ of Knox âto indulge his vein of humour,â when describing, with ghoul-like mirth, the festive circumstances of the murder and burial of Cardinal Beaton. The odious part of his satire, Scott says, is confined to âthe fierce and unreasonable set of extra-Presbyterians,â Wodrowâs High Flyers. âWe have no delight to dwell either upon the atrocities or absurdities of a people whose ignorance and fanaticism were rendered frantic by persecution.â To sum up the controversy, we may say that Scott was unfair, if at all, in tone rather than in statement. He grants to the Covenanters dauntless resolution and fortitude; he admits their wrongs; we cannot see, on the evidence of their literature, that he exaggerates their grotesqueness, their superstition, their impossible attitude as of Israelites under a Theocracy, which only existed as an ideal, or their ruthlessness on certain occasions. The books of Wodrow, Kirkton, and Patrick Walker, the sermons, the ghost stories, the dying speeches, the direct testimony of their own historians, prove all that Scott says, a hundred times over. The facts are correct, the testimony to the presence of another, an angelic temper, remains immortal in the figure of Bessie McLure. But an unfairness of tone may be detected in the choice of such names as Kettledrummle and Poundtext: probably the âjog-trotâ friends of the Indulgence have more right to complain than the âhigh-flyingâ friends of the Covenant. Scott had Cavalier sympathies, as Macaulay had Covenanting sympathies. That Scott is more unjust to the Covenanters than Macaulay to Claverhouse historians will scarcely maintain. Neither history or fiction would be very delightful if they were warless. This must serve as an apology more needed by Macaulayâthan by Sir Walter. His reply to Dr. McCrie is marked by excellent temper, humour, and good humor. The âQuarterly Reviewâ ends with the well known reference to his brother Tomâs suspected authorship: âWe intended here to conclude this long article, when a strong report reached us of certain transatlantic confessions, which, if genuine (though of this we know nothing), assign a different author to those volumes than the party suspected by our Scottish correspondents. Yet a critic may be excused for seizing upon the nearest suspected person, or the principle happily expressed by Claverhouse in a letter to the Earl of Linlithgow. He had been, it seems, in search of a gifted weaver who used to hold forth at conventicles: âI sent for the webster, they brought in his brother for him: though he, maybe, cannot preach like his brother, I doubt not but he is as well principled as he, wherefore I thought it would be no great fault to give him the trouble to go to jail with the rest.ââ
Nobody who read this could doubt that Scott was, at least, âart and partâ in the review. His efforts to disguise himself as an Englishman, aided by a Scotch antiquary, are divertingly futile. He seized the chance of defending his earlier works from some criticisms on Scotch manners suggested by the ignorance of Gifford. Nor was it difficult to see that the author of the review was also the author of the novel. In later years Lady Louisa Stuart reminded Scott that âOld Mortality,â like the Iliad, had been ascribed by clever critics to several hands working together. On December 5, 1816, she wrote to him, âI found something you wot of upon my table; and as I dare not take it with me to a friendâs house, for fear of arousing curiosityââshe read it at once. She could not sleep afterwards, so much had she been excited. âManse and Cuddie forced me to laugh out aloud, which one seldom does when alone.â Many of the Scotch words âwere absolutely Hebrewâ to her. She not unjustly objected to Claverhouseâs use of the word âsentimentalâ as an anachronism. Sentiment, like nerves, had not been invented in Claverhouseâs day.
The pecuniary success of âOld Mortalityâ was less, perhaps, than might have been expected. The first edition was only of two thousand copies. Two editions of this number were sold in six weeks, and a third was printed. Constableâs gallant enterprise of ten thousand, in âRob Roy,â throws these figures into the shade.
âOld Mortalityâ is the first of Scottâs works in which he invades history beyond the range of what may be called living oral tradition. In âWaverley,â and even in âRob Roy,â he had the memories of Invernahyle, of Miss Nairne, of many persons of the last generation for his guides. In âOld Mortalityâ his fancy had to wander among the relics of another age, among the inscribed tombs of the Covenanters, which are common in the West Country, as in the churchyards of Balmaclellan and Dalry. There the dust of these enduring and courageous men, like that of Bessie Bell and Marion Gray in the ballad, âbeiks forenenst the sun,â which shines on them from beyond the hills of their wanderings, while the brown waters of the Ken murmur at their feet.
Here now in peace sweet rest we take,
Once murdered for religionâs sake,
says the epitaph on the flat table-stone, beneath the
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