[Edinburgh by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link book
Edinburgh

CHAPTER IX
8/14

It is New-year's weather.
New-year's Day, the great national festival, is a time of family expansions and of deep carousal.

Sometimes, by a sore stoke of fate for this Calvinistic people, the year's anniversary fails upon a Sunday, when the public-houses are inexorably closed, when singing and even whistling is banished from our homes and highways, and the oldest toper feels called upon to go to church.

Thus pulled about, as if between two loyalties, the Scotch have to decide many nice cases of conscience, and ride the marches narrowly between the weekly and the annual observance.
A party of convivial musicians, next door to a friend of mine, hung suspended in this manner on the brink of their diversions.

From ten o'clock on Sunday night, my friend heard them tuning their instruments: and as the hour of liberty drew near, each must have had his music open, his bow in readiness across the fiddle, his foot already raised to mark the time, and his nerves braced for execution; for hardly had the twelfth stroke sounded from the earliest steeple, before they had launced forth into a secular bravura.
Currant-loaf is now popular eating in all house-holds.

For weeks before the great morning, confectioners display stacks of Scotch bun--a dense, black substance, inimical to life--and full moons of shortbread adorned with mottoes of peel or sugar-plum, in honour of the season and the family affections.


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