Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
Sir Walter Scott to Charles Scott, 14 November 1820
“Edinburgh, 14th Nov. 1820.
“Your letters made us all very happy, and I trust you
are now comfortably settled and plying your task hard. Mr Williams will probably ground you more
34 | LIFE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. | |
perfectly in the grammar of the classical languages than
has hitherto been done, and this you will at first find but dry work. But there
are many indispensable reasons why you must bestow the utmost attention upon
it. A perfect knowledge of the classical languages has been fixed upon, and not
without good reason, as the mark of a well-educated young man; and though
people may have scrambled into distinction without it, it is always with the
greatest difficulty, just like climbing over a wall, instead of giving your
ticket at the door. Perhaps you may think another proof of a youth’s
talents might have been adopted; but what good will arise from your thinking
so, if the general practice of society has fixed on this particular branch of
knowledge as the criterion? Wheat or barley were as good grain, I suppose, as
sesamum; but it was only to sesamum that the talisman gave way, and the rock opened; and it is
equally certain that, if you are not a well-founded grammatical scholar in
Greek and Latin, you will in vain present other qualifications to distinction.
Besides, the study of grammar, from its very asperities, is calculated to teach
youth that patient labour which is necessary to the useful exertion of the
understanding upon every other branch of knowledge; and your great deficiency
is want of steadiness and of resolute application to the dry as well as the
interesting parts of your learning. But exerting yourself, as I have no doubt
you will do, under the direction of so learned a man, and so excellent a
teacher as Mr Williams, and being without the temptations
to idleness which occurred at home, I have every reason to believe that, to
your natural quickness you will presently add such a habit of application and steadiness, as will make you a respected
member of society, perhaps a distinguished one. It is very probable that the
whole success of your future life may depend on the manner in | LETTER TO CHARLES SCOTT. | 35 |
which you employ the next
two years; and I am therefore most anxious you should fully avail
yourself of the opportunities now afforded you.
“You must not be too much disconcerted with the
apparent dryness of your immediate studies. Language is the great mark by which
man is distinguished from the beasts, and a strict acquaintance with the manner
in which it is composed, becomes, as you follow it a little way, one of the
most curious and interesting exercises of the intellect.
“We had our grand hunt on Wednesday last, a fine day,
and plenty of sport. We hunted all over Huntly wood, and so on to Halidon and
Prieston—saw twelve hares, and killed six, having very hard runs, and turning
three packs of grouse completely. In absence of Walter and you, Stenhouse the horse-couper
led the field, and rode as if he had been a piece of his horse, sweltering like
a wild-drake all through Marriage-Moss at a motion betwixt swimming and riding.
One unlucky accident befell. Queen Mab, who was
bestrode by Captain Adam, lifted up her
heels against Mr Craig of Galashiels,*
whose leg she greeted with a thump like a pistol-shot, while by the same
movement she very nearly sent the noble Captain over her ears. Mr
Craig was helped from horse, but would not permit his boot to be
drawn off, protesting he would faint if he saw the bone of his leg sticking
through the stocking. Some thought he was reluctant to exhibit his legs in
their primitive and unclothed simplicity, in respect they have an unhappy
resemblance to a pair of tongs. As for the Captain, he declared that if the
accident had happened in action, the surgeon and
drum-boys would have had off, not his boot
* Mr George
Craig, factor to the laird of Gala, and manager of a
little branch bank at Galashiels. This worthy man was one of the
regular members of the Abbotsford hunt. |
36 | LIFE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. | |
only, but his leg to boot, before he
could have uttered a remonstrance. At length Gala and I prevailed to have the
boot drawn, and to my great joy I found the damage was not serious, though the
pain must have been severe.
“On Saturday we left Abbotsford, and dined and spent
Sunday at Arniston, where we had many enquiries after you from Robert Dundas, who was so kind to you last
year.
“I must conclude for the present, requesting your
earnest pursuit of such branches of study as Mr
Williams recommends. In a short time, as you begin to comprehend
the subjects you are learning, you will find the path turn smoother, and that
which at present seems wrapped up in an inextricable labyrinth of thorns and
briers, will at once become easy and attractive.—Always, dear Charlie, your affectionate father,
W. S.”
George Craig (1784-1843)
Legal writer in Galashiels where he was an agent for the Leith Bank; he was an
acquaintance of Sir Walter Scott.
Sir Adam Ferguson (1771-1855)
Son of the philosopher and classmate and friend of Sir Walter Scott; he served in the
Peninsular Campaign under Wellington, afterwards living on his estate in
Dumfriesshire.
Charles Scott (1805-1841)
The younger son of Sir Walter Scott; educated at Oxford, he pursued a career in diplomacy
and died in Tehran.
Sir Walter Scott, second baronet (1801-1847)
The elder son and heir of Sir Walter Scott; he was cornet in the 18th Hussars (1816),
captain (1825), lieut.-col. (1839). In the words of Maria Edgeworth, he was
“excessively shy, very handsome, not at all literary.”
John Williams (1792-1858)
Classical scholar educated at Balliol College, Oxford; he was a classmate of John Gibson
Lockhart and friend of Sir Walter Scott, whose son he tutored, and rector of the Edinburgh
Academy (1824-27, 1829-47).