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The Nature of Scottish Nationalism

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Paul ScottPaul Scott recently gave a paper to a conference in Strathclyde University on the nationalism of three 18th century poets, Allan Ramsay, Robert Fergusson and Robert Burns, and on the nature of Scottish nationalism. These are the concluding paragraphs of the paper.

The influence on Ramsay, Fergusson and Burns of our early history, of our independence and the struggle to defend it are, of course, by no means all that these three Poets had in common. They all wrote in Scots, shared the same feelings for the language and for Scotland, hated the Union, and used the same themes and verse forms. It is perfectly appropriate that they have always been regarded as a coherent school, the poets of the vernacular revival.

It seems to me that the nationalism of these three poets involves two elements which are inter-related. The first is a strong belief in what we now call the right of self-determination, a conviction that the history and the distinctive character, of the Scots gives them a right and a need to run their own affairs, of which they were deprived by the Union and which they should recover. The second is a deep affection for the poetry, languages, music, traditions and habits of thought and behaviour of Scotland. It was once described by Maurice Lindsay in relation to his own feelings as a love affair, "the fervour, the obsession with Scottishness for its own sake, the strongly emotional response to whatever carried even the faintest Scottish overtone". (1) In the work of these poets, these feelings extend even to Scottish food, drink and dress.

In an essay where she discusses Fergusson, Janet Adam Smith asks if there is something narrow about such feelings as these, but she concludes that Fergusson’s "concern is really at a deeper level". He sees all of these things "as standing for Scotland’s separate identity; nationality is for him not just a matter of institutions or’ of ‘high culture’, but of all the elements that make up the texture of life". Later in the same essay she says that "Burns's pride and independence as a man, his pride in his country's struggle for independence, led him to value freedom everywhere. Scots must be inspired by their past to a concern for the freedom of others". (2)

This reference to "pride in his country’s struggle for independence" is reminiscent of a remark by the English historian, J A Froude: "No nation in Europe can look with more just pride on their past than the Scots, and no young Scot ought to grow up in ignorance of what that past has been". (3) For so small a country, Scotland has made a remarkable contribution in the arts and sciences to world civilisation; but Janet Adam Smith and J A Froude evidently agree with Ramsay, Fergusson and Burns that the greatest source of pride must be the long and heroic struggle for independence against very heavy odds. All nations and all nationalisms depend on their view of the past. The circumstances of our past have disposed us to value freedom, social justice and equality, the qualities which find powerful expression in the poetry of Robert Burns. Perhaps that is why he has been adopted as a spokesman for the nation to an extent which is not equalled. I think, in any other country or by any other poet.

Nationalism is a word which is easily misunderstood because it is used in two very different, or even entirely opposite, senses. It is often used pejoratively to mean aggressive chauvinism, a desire to dominate, expel or destroy other people, justified by an assumption of superiority. On the other hand, the word is also to mean opposition and resistance to these deplorable attitudes. In this sense it is a liberalising and constructive force, and it is in this sense that the word is used in Scotland and in many other small European countries.

I think that the remarks by Janet Adam Smith, which I have quoted, amount to a good definition of Scottish nationalism as it was expressed by these 18th century poets and as it has remained. It is a belief in the value of the Scottish approach to life and a conviction that it can only be adequately expressed and developed through self-government, towards which the present constitutional arrangements are a decisive step. It is not aggressive, exclusive or ethnic, but democratic, egalitarian and compassionate, open to ideas from other countries and sympathetic to similar struggles everywhere. As Janet Adam Smith concludes, "concern for Scottishness becomes a moral concern".

References:

(1) Maurlce Lindsay, By Yon Bonnie Banks. (London, 1961). p.220

(2) Janet Adam Smith, "Some Eighteenth Century Ideas of Scotland" in Scotland In the Age of Improvement. Edited. by N T Phillipson and Rosalind Mitchison. (Edinburgh, 1970). pp 118, 121, 122.

(3) J A Froude, Quoted by Gordon Donaldson in his Inaugural Lecture in the University of Edinburgh, 1964.