Glencairn, to
appease her
gathering wrath and holy
indignation, said
facetiously, "Na, na, Mrs. Glibbans, ye forget, there was nae
changing of money there. The man took the whole guineas. But not
to make a
controversy on the subject, Mr. Snodgrass will now let us
hear what Andrew Pringle, 'my son,' has said to him":- And the
reverend gentleman read the following letter with due
circumspection, and in his best manner:-
LETTER X
Andrew Pringle, Esq., to the Reverend Charles Snodgrass
My Dear Friend--I have heard it alleged, as the
observation of a
great traveller, that the manners of the higher classes of society
throughout Christendom are so much alike, that national
peculiarities among them are scarcely
perceptible. This is not
correct; the differences between those of London and Edinburgh are
to me very
striking. It is not that they talk and perform the
little etiquettes of social
intercoursedifferently; for, in these
respects, they are
apparently as similar as it is possible for
imitation to make them; but the difference to which I refer is an
indescribable something, which can only be compared to peculiarities
of
accent. They both speak the same language; perhaps in classical
purity of phraseology the
fashionable Scotchman is even superior to
the Englishman; but there is a flatness of tone in his
accent--a
lack of what the musicians call expression, which gives a local and
provincial effect to his conversation, however, in other respects,
learned and
intelligent. It is so with his manners; he conducts
himself with equal ease, self-possession, and discernment, but the
flavour of the
metropolitan style is wanting.
I have been led to make these remarks by what I noticed in the
guests whom I met on Friday at young Argent's. It was a small
party, only five strangers; but they seemed to be all particular
friends of our host, and yet none of them appeared to be on any
terms of
intimacy with each other. In Edinburgh, such a party would
have been at first a little cold; each of the guests would there
have paused to
estimate the
characters of the several strangers
before committing himself with any topic of conversation. But here,
the circumstance of being brought together by a
mutual friend,
produced at once the purest gentlemanly confidence; each, as it
were, took it for granted, that the persons whom he had come among
were men of education and good-breeding, and, without deeming it at
all necessary that he should know something of their respective
political and
philosophical principles, before venturing to speak on
such subjects, discussed
frankly, and as things unconnected with
party feelings,
incidental occurrences which, in Edinburgh, would
have been avoided as calculated to
awaken animosities.
But the most
remarkable feature of the company, small as it was,
consisted of the difference in the condition and
character of the
guests. In Edinburgh the
landlord, with the scrupulous care of a
herald or genealogist, would, for a party,
previously unacquainted
with each other, have chosen his guests as nearly as possible from
the same rank of life; the London host had paid no respect to any
such consideration--all the strangers were as dissimilar in fortune,
profession, connections, and
politics, as any four men in the class
of gentlemen could well be. I never spent a more delightful
evening.
The ablest, the most
eloquent, and the most
elegant man present,
without question, was the son of a saddler. No expense had been
spared on his education. His father, proud of his talents, had
intended him for a seat in Parliament; but Mr. T- himself prefers
the easy enjoyments of private life, and has kept himself aloof from
politics and parties. Were I to form an
estimate of his
qualifications to excel in public
speaking, by the
clearness and
beautiful
propriety of his colloquial language, I should conclude
that he was still destined to perform a
distinguished part. But he
is content with the liberty of a private station, as a spectator
only, and, perhaps, in that he shows his
wisdom; for undoubtedly
such men are not
cordially received among
hereditary statesmen,
unless they evince a certain suppleness of principle, such as we
have seen in the conduct of more than one political adventurer.
The next in point of effect was young C- G-. He
evidently
languished under the influence of indisposition, which, while it
added to the natural
gentleness of his manners, diminished the
impression his accomplishments would
otherwise have made. I was
greatly struck with the
modesty with which he offered his o
pinions,
and could scarcely credit that he was the same individual whose
eloquence in Parliament is by many compared even to Mr. Canning's,
and whose
firmness of principle is so
universally acknowledged, that
no one ever
suspects him of being
liable to change. You may have
heard of his poem "On the Restoration of Learning in the East," the
most
magnificent prize essay that the English Universities have
produced for many years. The passage in which he describes the
talents, the researches, and
learning of Sir William Jones, is
worthy of the
imagination of Burke; and yet, with all this oriental
splendour of fancy, he has the
reputation of being a patient and
methodical man of business. He looks, however, much more like a
poet or a student, than an
orator and a
statesman; and were
statesmen the sort of personages which the spirit of the age
attempts to represent them, I, for one, should
lament that a young
man, possessed of so many
amiable qualities, all so tinted with the
bright lights of a fine
enthusiasm, should ever have been removed
from the moon-lighted groves and
peaceful cloisters of Magdalen
College, to the lamp-smelling passages and factious debates of St.
Stephen's Chapel. Mr. G- certainly belongs to that high class of
gifted men who, to the honour of the age, have redeemed the
literarycharacter from the
charge of unfitness for the concerns of public
business; and he has shown that talents for affairs of state,
connected with
literary predilections, are not
limited to mere
reviewers, as some of your old class-fellows would have the world to
believe. When I
contrast the quiet unobtrusive development of Mr.
G-'s
character with that bustling and obstreperous elbowing into
notice of some of those to whom the Edinburgh Review owes half its
fame, and compare the pure and steady lustre of his
elevation, to
the rocket-like aberrations and perturbed blaze of their still
uncertain course, I cannot but think that we have overrated, if not
their
ability, at least their
wisdom in the
management of public
affairs.
The third of the party was a little Yorkshire baronet. He was
formerly in Parliament, but left it, as he says, on
account of its
irregularities, and the bad hours it kept. He is a Whig, I
understand, in
politics, and indeed one might guess as much by
looking at him; for I have always remarked, that your Whigs have
something odd and particular about them. On making the same sort of
remark to Argent, who, by the way, is a high ministerial man, he
observed, the thing was not to be wondered at,
considering that the
Whigs are exceptions to the generality of mankind, which naturally
accounts for their being always in the
minority. Mr. T-, the
saddler's son, who overheard us, said slyly, "That it might be so;
but if it be true that the wise are few compared to the
multitude of
the foolish, things would be better managed by the
minority than as
they are at present."
The fourth guest was a stock-broker, a
shrewdcompound, with all
charity be it
spoken, of knavery and
humour. He is by
profession an
epicure, but I
suspect his accomplishments in that
capacity are not
very well founded; I would almost say, judging by the
evident traces
of craft and dissimulation in his physiognomy, that they have been
assumed as part of the means of getting into good company, to drive
the more
earnest trade of money-making. Argent
evidently understood
his true
character, though he treated him with jocular familiarity.
I thought it a fine example of the
intellectual tact and superiority
of T-, that he seemed to view him with
dislike and
contempt. But I
must not give you my reasons for so thinking, as you set no value on
my own particular
philosophy; besides, my paper tells me, that I
have only room left to say, that it would be difficult in Edinburgh
to bring such a party together; and yet they
affect there to have a
metropolitancharacter. In
saying this, I mean only with reference
to manners; the methods of behaviour in each of the company were
precisely similar--there was no eccentricity, but only that distinct
and
decidedindividuality which nature gives, and which no acquired
habits can change. Each, however, was the representative of a