[Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character by Edward Bannerman Ramsay]@TWC D-Link book
Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character

CHAPTER THE SEVENTH
133/196

In many persons, and in some who have not altogether lost their national partialities, there is a general tendency to merge Scottish usages and Scottish expressions into the English forms, as being more correct and genteel.

The facilities for moving, not merely from place to place in our own country, but from one country to another; the spread of knowledge and information by means of periodical publications and newspapers; and the incredibly low prices at which literary works are produced, must have great effects.

Then there is the improved taste in art, which, together with literature, has been taken up by young men who, fifty, sixty, seventy years ago, or more, would have known no such sources of interest, or indeed who would have looked upon them as unmanly and effeminate.

When first these pursuits were taken up by our Scottish young men, they excited in the north much amazement, and, I fear, contempt, as was evinced by a laird of the old school, who, the first time he saw a young man at the pianoforte, asked, with evident disgust, "Can the creature _sew_ ony ?" evidently putting the accomplishment of playing the pianoforte and the accomplishment of the needle in the same category.
The greater facility of producing books, prints, and other articles which tend to the comfort and embellishment of domestic life, must have considerable influence upon the habits and tastes of a people.

I have often thought how much effect might be traced to the single circumstance of the cheap production of pianofortes.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books