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Essays
By Robert Louis Stevenson
Extract
from The Coast Of Fife.
The
Kingdom of Fife, that royal province, may be observed by the
curious on the map, occupying a tongue of land between the firths
of Forth and Tay. It may be continually seen from many parts
of Edinburgh (among the rest, from the windows of my father’s
house) dying away into the distance and the easterly HAAR with
one smoky seaside town beyond another, or in winter printing
on the gray heaven some glittering hill-tops. It has no beauty
to recommend it, being a low, sea-salted, wind-vexed promontory;
trees very rare, except, as common on the east coast, along
the dens of rivers; the fields well cultivated, I understand,
but not lovely to the eye. It is of the coast I speak: the interior
may be the garden of Eden. History broods over that part of
the world like the easterly HAAR. Even on the map, its long
row of Gaelic place-names bear testimony to an old and settled
race. Of these little towns, posted along the shore as close
as sedges, each with its bit of harbour, its old weather-beaten
church or public building, its flavour of decayed prosperity
and decaying fish, not one but has its legend, quaint or tragic:
Dunfermline, in whose royal towers the king may be still observed
(in the ballad) drinking the blood-red wine; somnolent Inverkeithing,
once the quarantine of Leith; Aberdour, hard by the monastic
islet of Inchcolm, hard by Donibristle where the “bonny
face was spoiled”; Burntisland where, when Paul Jones
was off the coast, the Reverend Mr. Shirra had a table carried
between tidemarks, and publicly prayed against the rover at
the pitch of his voice and his broad lowland dialect; Kinghorn,
where Alexander “brak’s neckbane” and left
Scotland to the English wars; Kirkcaldy, where the witches once
prevailed extremely and sank tall ships and honest mariners
in the North Sea; Dysart, famous — well famous at least
to me for the Dutch ships that lay in its harbour, painted like
toys and with pots of flowers and cages of song-birds in the
cabin windows, and for one particular Dutch skipper who would
sit all day in slippers on the break of the poop, smoking a
long German pipe; Wemyss (pronounce Weems) with its bat-haunted
caves, where the Chevalier Johnstone, on his flight from Culloden,
passed a night of superstitious terrors; Leven, a bald, quite
modern place, sacred to summer visitors, whence there has gone
but yesterday the tall figure and the white locks of the last
Englishman in Delhi, my uncle Dr. Balfour, who was still walking
his hospital rounds, while the troopers from Meerut clattered
and cried “Deen Deen” along the streets of the imperial
city, and Willoughby mustered his handful of heroes at the magazine,
and the nameless brave one in the telegraph office was perhaps
already fingering his last despatch; and just a little beyond
Leven, Largo Law and the smoke of Largo town mounting about
its feet, the town of Alexander Selkirk, better known under
the name of Robinson Crusoe. So on, the list might be pursued
(only for private reasons, which the reader will shortly have
an opportunity to guess) by St. Monance, and Pittenweem, and
the two Anstruthers, and Cellardyke, and Crail, where Primate
Sharpe was once a humble and innocent country minister: on to
the heel of the land, to Fife Ness, overlooked by a sea-wood
of matted elders and the quaint old mansion of Balcomie, itself
overlooking but the breach or the quiescence of the deep —
the Carr Rock beacon rising close in front, and as night draws
in, the star of the Inchcape reef springing up on the one hand,
and the star of the May Island on the other, and farther off
yet a third and a greater on the craggy foreland of St. Abb’s.
And but a little way round the corner of the land, imminent
itself above the sea, stands the gem of the province and the
light of mediaeval Scotland, St. Andrews, where the great Cardinal
Beaton held garrison against the world, and the second of the
name and title perished (as you may read in Knox’s jeering
narrative) under the knives of true-blue Protestants, and to
this day (after so many centuries) the current voice of the
professor is not hushed.
Here
it was that my first tour of inspection began, early on a bleak
easterly morning. There was a crashing run of sea upon the shore,
I recollect, and my father and the man of the harbour light
must sometimes raise their voices to be audible. Perhaps it
is from this circumstance, that I always imagine St. Andrews
to be an ineffectual seat of learning, and the sound of the
east wind and the bursting surf to linger in its drowsy classrooms
and confound the utterance of the professor, until teacher and
taught are alike drowned in oblivion, and only the sea-gull
beats on the windows and the draught of the sea-air rustles
in the pages of the open lecture. But upon all this, and the
romance of St. Andrews in general, the reader must consult the
works of Mr. Andrew Lang; who has written of it but the other
day in his dainty prose and with his incommunicable humour,
and long ago in one of his best poems, with grace, and local
truth, and a note of unaffected pathos. Mr. Lang knows all about
the romance, I say, and the educational advantages, but I doubt
if he had turned his attention to the harbour lights; and it
may be news even to him, that in the year 1863 their case was
pitiable. Hanging about with the east wind humming in my teeth,
and my hands (I make no doubt) in my pockets, I looked for the
first time upon that tragi-comedy of the visiting engineer which
I have seen so often re-enacted on a more important stage. Eighty
years ago, I find my grandfather writing: “It is the most
painful thing that can occur to me to have a correspondence
of this kind with any of the keepers, and when I come to the
Light House, instead of having the satisfaction to meet them
with approbation and welcome their Family, it is distressing
when one-is obliged to put on a most angry countenance and demeanour.”
This painful obligation has been hereditary in my race. I have
myself, on a perfectly amateur and unauthorised inspection of
Turnberry Point, bent my brows upon the keeper on the question
of storm-panes; and felt a keen pang of self-reproach, when
we went down stairs again and I found he was making a coffin
for his infant child; and then regained my equanimity with the
thought that I had done the man a service, and when the proper
inspector came, he would be readier with his panes. The human
race is perhaps credited with more duplicity than it deserves.
The visitation of a lighthouse at least is a business of the
most transparent nature. As soon as the boat grates on the shore,
and the keepers step forward in their uniformed coats, the very
slouch of the fellows’ shoulders tells their story, and
the engineer may begin at once to assume his “angry countenance.”
Certainly the brass of the handrail will be clouded; and if
the brass be not immaculate, certainly all will be to match
— the reflectors scratched, the spare lamp unready, the
storm-panes in the storehouse. If a light is not rather more
than middling good, it will be radically bad. Mediocrity (except
in literature) appears to be unattainable by man. But of course
the unfortunate of St. Andrews was only an amateur, he was not
in the Service, he had no uniform coat, he was (I believe) a
plumber by his trade and stood (in the mediaeval phrase) quite
out of the danger of my father; but he had a painful interview
for all that, and perspired extremely.
From
St. Andrews, we drove over Magus Muir. My father had announced
we were “to post,” and the phrase called up in my
hopeful mind visions of top-boots and the pictures in Rowlandson’s
DANCE OF DEATH; but it was only a jingling cab that came to
the inn door, such as I had driven in a thousand times at the
low price of one shilling on the streets of Edinburgh. Beyond
this disappointment, I remember nothing of that drive. It is
a road I have often travelled, and of not one of these journeys
do I remember any single trait. The fact has not been suffered
to encroach on the truth of the imagination. I still see Magus
Muir two hundred years ago; a desert place, quite uninclosed;
in the midst, the primate’s carriage fleeing at the gallop;
the assassins loose-reined in pursuit, Burley Balfour, pistol
in hand, among the first. No scene of history has ever written
itself so deeply on my mind; not because Balfour, that questionable
zealot, was an ancestral cousin of my own; not because of the
pleadings of the victim and his daughter; not even because of
the live bum-bee that flew out of Sharpe’s ‘bacco-box,
thus clearly indicating his complicity with Satan; nor merely
because, as it was after all a crime of a fine religious flavour,
it figured in Sunday books and afforded a grateful relief from
MINISTERING CHILDREN or the MEMOIRS OF MRS. KATHATINE WINSLOWE.
The figure that always fixed my attention is that of Hackston
of Rathillet, sitting in the saddle with his cloak about his
mouth, and through all that long, bungling, vociferous hurly-burly,
revolving privately a case of conscience. He would take no hand
in the deed, because he had a private spite against the victim,
and “that action” must be sullied with no suggestion
of a worldly motive; on the other hand, “that action,”
in itself, was highly justified, he had cast in his lot with
“the actors,” and he must stay there, inactive but
publicly sharing the responsibility. “You are a gentleman
— you will protect me!” cried the wounded old man,
crawling towards him. “I will never lay a hand on you,”
said Hackston, and put his cloak about his mouth. It is an old
temptation with me, to pluck away that cloak and see the face
— to open that bosom and to read the heart. With incomplete
romances about Hackston, the drawers of my youth were lumbered.
I read him up in every printed book that I could lay my hands
on. I even dug among the Wodrow manuscripts, sitting shame-faced
in the very room where my hero had been tortured two centuries
before, and keenly conscious of my youth in the midst of other
and (as I fondly thought) more gifted students. All was vain:
that he had passed a riotous nonage, that he was a zealot, that
he twice displayed (compared with his grotesque companions)
some tincture of soldierly resolution and even of military common
sense, and that he figured memorably in the scene on Magus Muir,
so much and no more could I make out. But whenever I cast my
eyes backward, it is to see him like a landmark on the plains
of history, sitting with his cloak about his mouth, inscrutable.
How small a thing creates an immortality! I do not think he
can have been a man entirely commonplace; but had he not thrown
his cloak about his mouth, or had the witnesses forgot to chronicle
the action, he would not thus have haunted the imagination of
my boyhood, and to-day he would scarce delay me for a paragraph.
An incident, at once romantic and dramatic, which at once awakes
the judgment and makes a picture for the eye, how little do
we realise its perdurable power! Perhaps no one does so but
the author, just as none but he appreciates the influence of
jingling words; so that he looks on upon life, with something
of a covert smile, seeing people led by what they fancy to be
thoughts and what are really the accustomed artifices of his
own trade, or roused by what they take to be principles and
are really picturesque effects. In a pleasant book about a school-class
club, Colonel Fergusson has recently told a little anecdote.
A “Philosophical Society” was formed by some Academy
boys — among them, Colonel Fergusson himself, Fleeming
Jenkin, and Andrew Wilson, the Christian Buddhist and author
of THE ABODE OF SNOW. Before these learned pundits, one member
laid the following ingenious problem: “What would be the
result of putting a pound of potassium in a pot of porter?”
“I should think there would be a number of interesting
bi-products,” said a smatterer at my elbow; but for me
the tale itself has a bi-product, and stands as a type of much
that is most human. For this inquirer who conceived himself
to burn with a zeal entirely chemical, was really immersed in
a design of a quite different nature; unconsciously to his own
recently breeched intelligence, he was engaged in literature.
Putting, pound, potassium, pot, porter; initial p, mediant t
— that was his idea, poor little boy! So with politics
and that which excites men in the present, so with history and
that which rouses them in the past: there lie at the root of
what appears, most serious unsuspected elements.
The
triple town of Anstruther Wester, Anstruther Easter, and Cellardyke,
all three Royal Burghs — or two Royal Burghs and a less
distinguished suburb, I forget which — lies continuously
along the seaside, and boasts of either two or three separate
parish churches, and either two or three separate harbours.
These ambiguities are painful; but the fact is (although it
argue me uncultured), I am but poorly posted upon Cellardyke.
My business lay in the two Anstruthers. A tricklet of a stream
divides them, spanned by a bridge; and over the bridge at the
time of my knowledge, the celebrated Shell House stood outpost
on the west. This had been the residence of an agreeable eccentric;
during his fond tenancy, he had illustrated the outer walls,
as high (if I remember rightly) as the roof, with elaborate
patterns and pictures, and snatches of verse in the vein of
EXEGI MONUMENTUM; shells and pebbles, artfully contrasted and
conjoined, had been his medium; and I like to think of him standing
back upon the bridge, when all was finished, drinking in the
general effect and (like Gibbon) already lamenting his employment.
The
same bridge saw another sight in the seventeenth century. Mr.
Thomson, the “curat” of Anstruther Easter, was a
man highly obnoxious to the devout: in the first place, because
he was a “curat”; in the second place, because he
was a person of irregular and scandalous life; and in the third
place, because he was generally suspected of dealings with the
Enemy of Man. These three disqualifications, in the popular
literature of the time, go hand in hand; but the end of Mr.
Thomson was a thing quite by itself, and in the proper phrase,
a manifest judgment. He had been at a friend’s house in
Anstruther Wester, where (and elsewhere, I suspect) he had partaken
of the bottle; indeed, to put the thing in our cold modern way,
the reverend gentleman was on the brink of DELIRIUM TREMENS.
It was a dark night, it seems; a little lassie came carrying
a lantern to fetch the curate home; and away they went down
the street of Anstruther Wester, the lantern swinging a bit
in the child’s hand, the barred lustre tossing up and
down along the front of slumbering houses, and Mr. Thomson not
altogether steady on his legs nor (to all appearance) easy in
his mind. The pair had reached the middle of the bridge when
(as I conceive the scene) the poor tippler started in some baseless
fear and looked behind him; the child, already shaken by the
minister’s strange behaviour, started also; in so doing,
she would jerk the lantern; and for the space of a moment the
lights and the shadows would be all confounded. Then it was
that to the unhinged toper and the twittering child, a huge
bulk of blackness seemed to sweep down, to pass them close by
as they stood upon the bridge, and to vanish on the farther
side in the general darkness of the night. “Plainly the
devil come for Mr. Thomson!” thought the child. What Mr.
Thomson thought himself, we have no ground of knowledge; but
he fell upon his knees in the midst of the bridge like a man
praying. On the rest of the journey to the manse, history is
silent; but when they came to the door, the poor caitiff, taking
the lantern from the child, looked upon her with so lost a countenance
that her little courage died within her, and she fled home screaming
to her parents. Not a soul would venture out; all that night,
the minister dwelt alone with his terrors in the manse; and
when the day dawned, and men made bold to go about the streets,
they found the devil had come indeed for Mr. Thomson.
This
manse of Anstruther Easter has another and a more cheerful association.
It was early in the morning, about a century before the days
of Mr. Thomson, that his predecessor was called out of bed to
welcome a Grandee of Spain, the Duke of Medina Sidonia, just
landed in the harbour underneath. But sure there was never seen
a more decayed grandee; sure there was never a duke welcomed
from a stranger place of exile. Half-way between Orkney and
Shetland, there lies a certain isle; on the one hand the Atlantic,
on the other the North Sea, bombard its pillared cliffs; sore-eyed,
short-living, inbred fishers and their families herd in its
few huts; in the graveyard pieces of wreck-wood stand for monuments;
there is nowhere a more inhospitable spot. BELLE-ISLE-EN-MER
— Fair-Isle-at-Sea — that is a name that has always
rung in my mind’s ear like music; but the only “Fair
Isle” on which I ever set my foot, was this unhomely,
rugged turret-top of submarine sierras. Here, when his ship
was broken, my lord Duke joyfully got ashore; here for long
months he and certain of his men were harboured; and it was
from this durance that he landed at last to be welcomed (as
well as such a papist deserved, no doubt) by the godly incumbent
of Anstruther Easter; and after the Fair Isle, what a fine city
must that have appeared! and after the island diet, what a hospitable
spot the minister’s table! And yet he must have lived
on friendly terms with his outlandish hosts. For to this day
there still survives a relic of the long winter evenings when
the sailors of the great Armada crouched about the hearths of
the Fair-Islanders, the planks of their own lost galleon perhaps
lighting up the scene, and the gale and the surf that beat about
the coast contributing their melancholy voices. All the folk
of the north isles are great artificers of knitting: the Fair-Islanders
alone dye their fabrics in the Spanish manner. To this day,
gloves and nightcaps, innocently decorated, may be seen for
sale in the Shetland warehouse at Edinburgh, or on the Fair
Isle itself in the catechist’s house; and to this day,
they tell the story of the Duke of Medina Sidonia’s adventure.
It
would seem as if the Fair Isle had some attraction for “persons
of quality.” When I landed there myself, an elderly gentleman,
unshaved, poorly attired, his shoulders wrapped in a plaid,
was seen walking to and fro, with a book in his hand, upon the
beach. He paid no heed to our arrival, which we thought a strange
thing in itself; but when one of the officers of the PHAROS,
passing narrowly by him, observed his book to be a Greek Testament,
our wonder and interest took a higher flight. The catechist
was cross-examined; he said the gentleman had been put across
some time before in Mr. Bruce of Sumburgh’s schooner,
the only link between the Fair Isle and the rest of the world;
and that he held services and was doing “good.”
So much came glibly enough; but when pressed a little farther,
the catechist displayed embarrassment. A singular diffidence
appeared upon his face: “They tell me,” said he,
in low tones, “that he’s a lord.” And a lord
he was; a peer of the realm pacing that inhospitable beach with
his Greek Testament, and his plaid about his shoulders, set
upon doing good, as he understood it, worthy man! And his grandson,
a good-looking little boy, much better dressed than the lordly
evangelist, and speaking with a silken English accent very foreign
to the scene, accompanied me for a while in my exploration of
the island. I suppose this little fellow is now my lord, and
wonder how much he remembers of the Fair Isle. Perhaps not much;
for he seemed to accept very quietly his savage situation; and
under such guidance, it is like that this was not his first
nor yet his last adventure.
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