Not
everything worth reading is hot off the press. In this section, we recommend "something old" that is still well worth
reading. "Something Old" can mean anything from a venerable and antique
classic to a good book first published four or more years ago.
“THE LADY OF THE LAKE” by Sir
Walter Scott (first published in 1810)
A
little under two years ago, early in 2017, we spent a week in Edinburgh as part
of a longer journey. Of course we visited most of the places that tourists
visit – the Castle, the Royal Mile, Holyrood House, the Burns memorial on the
hill, the Scottish National Gallery and the gallery of Modern Art, as well as
some fine whisky retailers, some excellent second-hand booksellers, a Christmas
Market, a literary pub crawl and a good jazz show. I think about half my
ancestry is Scots (a quarter Lowlander, a quarter Highlander, a quarter Irish
and a quarter English) so I enjoyed most of this, but at a certain point I
became a little melancholy. Old Edinburgh is basically a Georgian city,
specifically designed a little over two hundred years ago to assert English
dominance. The very names of the streets (Hanover, Princes etc.) tell you this;
and much of the pipes-and-tartans pageantry comes from a legacy of taming and
prettifying the Scots nation for English consumption and in the service of the
British Empire. Let’s not forget that nearly all the supposedly “traditional”
tartans were designed long after English dominance was assured.
My
melancholy was at its height when we visited the Scots National Portrait
Gallery. In the lobby there are what the curators presumably think of as Scotland’s
three most illustrious literary figures. On the left there is a bust of Robert
Louis Stevenson, in the middle there is a full-length statue of Robert Burns,
but on the right there is a bust of Sir Walter Scott. Oh dear! Walter Scott
(1771-1832), the man who did most to prettify Scottish history and customs for
English readers (see my blog posting Truthis Beauty). His full-length monument dominates part of Princes Street, Edinburgh’s
main drag.
As
I’ve noted once before on this blog (see the review of The Bride of Lammermoor), there was a time in my callow youth when
I thought Scott was a writer worth reading. But, feeling that I have the right
to make this judgment after wading through nine of his novels over the years, I
have come to the conclusion that he is an appalling writer with his pompous
Latinate vocabulary and stiff prose, which was unwieldy even in his own day.
His plots as raw plots are interesting, if very melodramatic, and hence have
sometimes made great source material for movies and operas. But his characters,
though vivid, are thin, his descriptions are pasteboard and his ideas limited.
So this is his legacy – a writer whose huge popularity across Europe in his own
time tells us something about Romantic nostalgia and the state of early
nineteenth century civilisation; and a writer who fired up opera librettists
more than anybody apart from Shakespeare and perhaps Victor Hugo (and in the
process inspired operas such as Lucia de
Lammermoor which are greater works of art than their literary sources). In
other words, he is now interesting mainly as part of cultural history.
But
it was that prettification-of-Scottish-history element that really got to me
after my brief Edinburgh visit. So I recently sat down and read Scott’s
book-length narrative poem The Lady of
the Lake, to see if I had misjudged him from reading his novels only. Bear
in mind that Scott first made his name as a poet and some of his shorter
lyrics, such as “Proud Maisie”, have rightly earned their place in anthologies;
although many of these lyrics originally appeared as part of his longer
narrative poems. When The Lady of the
Lake was first published in 1810, 25,000 copies were sold within the year.
It was more popular than Scott’s earlier narrative poems The Lay of the Last Minstrel and Marmion and his later one The
Lord of the Isles. It continued to be a big bestseller right throughout the
Victorian age until, by the earlier 20th century, it ceased to be to
anyone’s taste.
I
will not irritate you by synopsising it in detail. It is enough to say that it
is set early in the 16th century, in the reign of King James V of
Scotland, and its thematic focus is a contrast of wild highlanders and
organised lowland authority.
Its
six cantos cover six days. The highland chief Roderick Dhu, the lowland knight Sir
James Fitz-James and the gentle Malcolm Graeme all vie for the hand of the
“lady of the lake” Ellen Douglas, daughter of the clan chief The Douglas.
Ellen rescues Sir James
Fitz-James, when he has lost his way during a stag hunt in the highlands, by
taking him to her father’s island hideaway on Loch Katrine. He falls easily in
love with her, but departs soon after his rescue without ever meeting her
father. The Douglas is not yet sure whether he should pledge allegiance to the
king. At a highland clan gathering, Roderick Dhu and Malcolm Graeme quarrel
over Ellen. But the more important matter is the highland rising the fiery Roderick
Dhu is planning against the upstart lowlander King James V, who has declared
his intention to make the highlands his own domain and hunting ground. Roderick
Dhu finds it hard to gather allies for his uprising, but can rely on the support
of his own Clan Alpine. At some point in the story, there is a duel between Roderick
Dhu and Sir James Fitz-James. The highland uprising (it is reported to us only
in the song of a minstrel) is quashed. Roderick Dhu is killed. In the happy
denouement Ellen gets Malcolm Graeme, the man to whom he father had betrothed
her, and she discovers that the romantic knight James Fitz-James is in fact
King James V himself, to whom The Douglas has already sworn allegiance.
Highlands are now reconciled to lowlands.
As
with his novels, Scott’s narrative poems are really sustained by picturesque
set-pieces. They are begging to be incorporated into an opera (and indeed this
poem became the basis for Rossini’s opera La
Donna del Lago – the first of fully 25 Italian operas, by various composers,
to be drawn from the works of Scott). Think of how the following events in the
poem could be set to music as arias or choruses - the wild stag hunt and the
knight’s horse falling down dead of exhaustion in the opening canto. The romantic
meeting of the knight and the “lady of the lake” on the shores of Loch Katrine
before she takes him to the island. In Canto Two the old bard who reminds fair
Ellen of her family’s allegiances. In Canto Three the pagan hermit who speaks a
prophecy as he sacrifices a goat. Not to mention Roderick Dhu’s burning of a
fiery cross to summon the clans (sorry folks, but this really is where the Ku
Klux Klan got the idea to do the same thing) and the highlanders rising as one
man out of the heather. And the scene where the king reveals who he really is.
Etc. etc. etc. – all of them fitting
subjects for illustrations in de luxe Victorian editions of this poem.
Scott
also inserts songs and ballads into each canto – in Canto One “Soldier rest,
thy warfare o’er”; in Canto Two “Hail to the chief who in Triumph advances” The
famous dirge “Coronach” (“He is gone on
the mountain / He is lost to the forest”) in Canto Three, and later Ellen’s
hymn to the Virgin Mary; in Canto Six a very vigorous soldiers’ drinking song,
almost as good as Robbie Burns writing in the same boozy vein. It is in these
shorter self-contained lyrics that Scott’s poetry is at its best.
But
what of the octosyllabic rhyming couplets that make up the bulk of the
narrative? They do soon exhaust us with their jig-jog. Take the following
specimen, where the knight James Fitz-James is falling asleep on the island
refuge he has been given:
Then,—from my couch may heavenly might
Chase that worst phantom of the night!—
Again returned the scenes of youth,
Of confident, undoubting truth;
Again his soul he interchanged
With friends whose hearts were long estranged.
They come, in dim procession led,
The cold, the faithless, and the dead;
As warm each hand, each brow as gay,
As if they parted yesterday.
And doubt distracts him at the view,—
O were his senses false or true?
Dream’d he of death , or broken vow,
Or is it all a vision now? (Canto 1, Stanza XXXIII)
The rhythm and rhyme-scheme are simply wrong for lines
that are presumably meant to convery a sense of slightly melancholy reverie.
Such rhythm and rhyme-scheme are, however, quite appropriate to the scenes of
vigorous action.
I
read somewhere (sorry, but I cannot locate the source) that when the First
Canto, with its furious and galloping account of a wild stag hunt, was read to
some of Wellington’s soldiers in Spain, where they were fighting what is now
called the Peninsular War, they cheered lustily and declared it the best poetry
they had ever heard. They were the right audience for this sort of poetic
gallop. The swift movement of the verse also strikes me as appropriate to the
following account of Roderick Dhu’s warriors arriving across the water (though
we have to forgive Scott for his anachronistic reference to “tartans”) :
The point of Brianchoil they passed,
And, to the windward as they cast,
Against the sun they gave to shine
The bold Sir Roderick’s bannered Pine.
Nearer and nearer as they bear,
Spears, pikes, and axes flash in air.
Now might you see the tartans brave,
And plaids and plumage dance and wave:
Now see the bonnets sink and rise,
As his tough oar the rower plies;
See, flashing at each sturdy stroke,
The wave ascending into smoke;
See the proud pipers on the bow,
And mark the gaudy streamers flow
From their loud chanters down, and sweep
The furrowed bosom of the deep,
As, rushing through the lake amain,
They plied the ancient Highland strain. (Canto 2, Stanza XVI)
But
again, the poetic form is out of place in the following lines, where a minor
character (not mentioned in my synopsis) laments how he will probably be
separated from his beloved after battle:
The heath this night must be my bed,
The bracken curtain for my head,
My lullaby the warder’s tread,
Far, far, from love and thee, Mary;
Tomorrow eve, more stilly laid,
My couch may be my bloody plaid,
My vesper song thy wail, sweet maid!
It will not waken me, Mary! (Canto 3, Stanza XXIII)
And
as the last extract I shall quote, consider the following angry words of
Roderick Dhu when he has been taken prisoner by one of the king’s men and
asserts that he is merely protecting all that is left of a birthright that has
been stolen by “Saxons” (English and lowlanders). One could imagine this as a
forceful piece of rhetoric, a genuine nationalist rallying cry, if it did not
jig-jog along so:
The Gael beheld him grim the while,
And answered with disdainful smile:
‘Saxon, from yonder mountain high,
I marked thee send delighted eye
Far to the south and east, where lay,
Extended in succession gay,
Deep waving fields and pastures green,
With gentle slopes and groves between:—
These fertile plains, that softened vale,
Were once the birthright of the Gael;
The stranger came with iron hand,
And from our fathers reft the land.
Where dwell we now? See, rudely swell
Crag over crag, and fell o’er fell.
Ask we this savage hill we tread
For fattened steer or household bread,
Ask we for flocks these shingles dry,
And well the mountain might reply,—
“To you, as to your sires of yore,
Belong the target and claymore!
I give you shelter in my breast,
Your own good blades must win the rest.”
Pent in this fortress of the North,
Think’st thou we will not sally forth,
To spoil the spoiler as we may
And from the robber rend the prey?
Ay, by my soul!—While on yon plain
The Saxon rears one shock of grain,
While of ten thousand herds there strays
But one along yon river’s maze,—
The Gael, of plain and river heir,
Shall with strong hand redeem his share.
Where live the mountain Chiefs who hold
That plundering Lowland field and fold
Is aught but retribution true?
Seek other cause ‘gainst Roderick Dhu.’ (Canto 5, Stanza VII)
So
where are we left in assessing Scott’s “epic” verse? Let me not take one iota
away from the industry and diligence of Scott, who wrote so many novels in such
a short time and worked off great debts in doing so. A truly heroic feat. Let
me not presume to say that he had no imagination, because he did indeed create
memorable characters, even if they are mainly broad caricatures. Above all, let
me not deny that he wrote some good short lyrics. But I cannot help agreeing
most with William Hazlitt in his Lectures
on English [sic] Poets, where he
praises Scott’s best qualities but says that in the end his long narrative
poems are “masquerades” as far as history is concerned – pretty, picturesque,
but having little to do with real history. And, in a passage which (dammit!) I
cannot specifically source at the moment, Hazlitt also said that to read
Scott’s verse was like watching a troop of soldiers marching by – orderly,
regular, neat and somehow lacking the spark of real poetic inspiration. In the
end, much of his narrative verse is gifted doggerel.
Finally,
of course, I have to come back to that question about Scottish nationalism
which I raised in the earlier parts of this rant. Consider how The Lady of the Lake ends. Those wild,
brave, but uncouth highlanders submit to the lowland king. Yes, they are
picturesque and romantic, but they have served their turn, so now real
civilisation may come. We Anglophones are the bearers of real civilisation. So
let us look on those mountain Gaels as an interesting artefact of the past,
about whom we can write Romantic poems without bothering to consider how much
we have despoiled them of their land and culture. It is all rather in the way
that Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s Hiawatha
ends. Having featured as the hero of a long poem, at the end Hiawatha, with no
fuss or protest, conveniently shuffles off into the mists of time to make way
for the Paleface. And we don’t have to consider how we really took the land
from the tribes whom we have romanticised. Thus does Scott in The Lady of the Lake feed his English
fan base.
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