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<h2> To Dr LEWIS. </h2>
<p>I should be very ungrateful, dear Lewis, if I did not find myself disposed
to think and speak favourably of this people, among whom I have met with
more kindness, hospitality, and rational entertainment, in a few weeks,
than ever I received in any other country during the whole course of my
life.—Perhaps, the gratitude excited by these benefits may interfere
with the impartiality of my remarks; for a man is as apt to be
prepossessed by particular favours as to be prejudiced by private motives
of disgust. If I am partial, there is, at least, some merit in my
conversion from illiberal prejudices which had grown up with my
constitution.</p>
<p>The first impressions which an Englishman receives in this country, will
not contribute to the removal of his prejudices; because he refers every
thing he sees to a comparison with the same articles in his own country;
and this comparison is unfavourable to Scotland in all its exteriors, such
as the face of the country in respect to cultivation, the appearance of
the bulk of the people, and the language of conversation in general.—I
am not so far convinced by Mr Lismahago's arguments, but that I think the
Scots would do well, for their own sakes, to adopt the English idioms and
pronunciation; those of them especially, who are resolved to push their
fortunes in South-Britain—I know, by experience, how easily an
Englishman is influenced by the ear, and how apt he is to laugh, when he
hears his own language spoken with a foreign or provincial accent—I
have known a member of the house of commons speak with great energy and
precision, without being able to engage attention, because his
observations were made in the Scotch dialect, which (no offence to
lieutenant Lismahago) certainly gives a clownish air even to sentiments of
the greatest dignity and decorum.—I have declared my opinion on this
head to some of the most sensible men of this country, observing, at the
same time, that if they would employ a few natives of England to teach the
pronunciation of our vernacular tongue, in twenty years there would be no
difference, in point of dialect, between the youth of Edinburgh and of
London.</p>
<p>The civil regulations of this kingdom and metropolis are taken from very
different models from those of England, except in a few particular
establishments, the necessary consequences of the union.—Their
college of justice is a bench of great dignity, filled with judges of
character and ability.—I have heard some causes tried before this
venerable tribunal; and was very much pleased with the pleadings of their
advocates, who are by no means deficient either in argument or elocution.
The Scottish legislation is founded, in a great measure, on the civil law;
consequently, their proceedings vary from those of the English tribunals;
but, I think, they have the advantage of us in their method of examining
witnesses apart, and in the constitution of their jury, by which they
certainly avoid the evil which I mentioned in my last from Lismahago's
observation.</p>
<p>The university of Edinburgh is supplied with excellent professors in all
the sciences; and the medical school, in particular, is famous all over
Europe.—The students of this art have the best opportunity of
learning it to perfection, in all its branches, as there are different
courses for the theory of medicine and the practice of medicine; for
anatomy, chemistry, botany, and the materia medica, over and above those
of mathematics and experimental philosophy; and all these are given by men
of distinguished talents. What renders this part of education still more
complete, is the advantage of attending the infirmary, which is the best
instituted charitable foundation that I ever knew. Now we are talking of
charities, here are several hospitals, exceedingly well endowed, and
maintained under admirable regulations; and these are not only useful, but
ornamental to the city. Among these, I shall only mention the general
work-house, in which all the poor, not otherwise provided for, are
employed, according to their different abilities, with such judgment and
effect, that they nearly maintain themselves by their labour, and there is
not a beggar to be seen within the precincts of this metropolis. It was
Glasgow that set the example of this establishment, about thirty years
ago.—Even the kirk of Scotland, so long reproached with fanaticism
and canting, abounds at present with ministers celebrated for their
learning, and respectable for their moderation.—I have heard their
sermons with equal astonishment and pleasure.—The good people of
Edinburgh no longer think dirt and cobwebs essential to the house of God.—Some
of their churches have admitted such ornaments as would have excited
sedition, even in England, a little more than a century ago; and Psalmody
is here practised and taught by a professor from the cathedral of Durham:—I
should not be surprised, in a few years, to hear it accompanied with an
organ.</p>
<p>Edinburgh is a hot-bed of genius.—I have had the good fortune to be
made acquainted with many authors of the first distinction; such as the
two Humes, Robertson, Smith, Wallace, Blair, Ferguson, Wilkie, &c. and
I have found them all as agreeable in conversation as they are instructive
and entertaining in their writings. These acquaintances I owe to the
friendship of Dr Carlyle, who wants nothing but inclination to figure with
the rest upon paper. The magistracy of Edinburgh is changed every year by
election, and seems to be very well adapted both for state and authority.—The
lord provost is equal in dignity to the lord mayor of London; and the four
bailies are equivalent to the rank of aldermen.—There is a dean of
guild, who takes cognizance of mercantile affairs; a treasurer; a
town-clerk; and the council is composed of deacons, one of whom is
returned every year, in rotation, as representative of every company of
artificers or handicraftsmen. Though this city, from the nature of its
situation, can never be made either very convenient or very cleanly, it
has, nevertheless, an air of magnificence that commands respect.—The
castle is an instance of the sublime in scite and architecture.—Its
fortifications are kept in good order, and there is always in it a
garrison of regular soldiers, which is relieved every year; but it is
incapable of sustaining a siege carried on according to the modern
operations of war.—The castle hill, which extends from the outward
gate to the upper end of the high street, is used as a public walk for the
citizens, and commands a prospect, equally extensive and delightful, over
the county of Fife, on the other side of the Frith, and all along the
sea-coast, which is covered with a succession of towns that would seem to
indicate a considerable share of commerce; but, if the truth must be told,
these towns have been falling to decay ever since the union, by which the
Scots were in a great measure deprived of their trade with France.—The
palace of Holyrood-house is a jewel in architecture, thrust into a hollow
where it cannot be seen; a situation which was certainly not chosen by the
ingenious architect, who must have been confined to the site of the old
palace, which was a convent. Edinburgh is considerably extended on the
south side, where there are divers little elegant squares built in the
English manner; and the citizens have planned some improvements on the
north, which, when put in execution, will add greatly to the beauty and
convenience of this capital.</p>
<p>The sea-port is Leith, a flourishing town, about a mile from the city, in
the harbour of which I have seen above one hundred ships lying all
together. You must know, I had the curiosity to cross the Frith in a
passage boat, and stayed two days in Fife, which is remarkably fruitful in
corn, and exhibits a surprising number of fine seats, elegantly built, and
magnificently furnished. There is an incredible number of noble houses in
every part of Scotland that I have seen.—Dalkeith, Pinkie, Yester,
and lord Hopton's [Hopetoun's], all of them within four or five miles of
Edinburgh, are princely palaces, in every one of which a sovereign might
reside at his case.—I suppose the Scots affect these monuments of
grandeur.—If I may be allowed to mingle censure with my remarks upon
a people I revere, I must observe, that their weak side seems to be
vanity.—I am afraid that even their hospitality is not quite free of
ostentation. I think I have discovered among them uncommon pains taken to
display their fine linen, of which, indeed, they have great plenty, their
furniture, plate, housekeeping, and variety of wines, in which article, it
must be owned, they are profuse, if not prodigal—A burgher of
Edinburgh, not content to vie with a citizen of London, who has ten times
his fortune, must excel him in the expence as well as elegance of his
entertainments.</p>
<p>Though the villas of the Scotch nobility and gentry have generally an air
of grandeur and state, I think their gardens and parks are not comparable
to those of England; a circumstance the more remarkable, as I was told by
the ingenious Mr Phillip Miller of Chelsea, that almost all the gardeners
of South-Britain were natives of Scotland. The verdure of this country is
not equal to that of England.—The pleasure-grounds are, in my
opinion, not so well laid out according to the genius loci; nor are the
lawns, and walks, and hedges kept in such delicate order.—The trees
are planted in prudish rows, which have not such an agreeable natural
effect, as when they are thrown into irregular groupes, with intervening
glades; and firs, which they generally raise around their houses, look
dull and funereal in the summer season.—I must confess, indeed, that
they yield serviceable timber, and good shelter against the northern
blasts; that they grow and thrive in the most barren soil, and continually
perspire a fine balsam of turpentine, which must render the air very
salutary and sanative to lungs of a tender texture.</p>
<p>Tabby and I have been both frightened in our return by sea from the coast
of Fife—She was afraid of drowning, and I of catching cold, in
consequence of being drenched with sea-water; but my fears as well as
hers, have been happily disappointed. She is now in perfect health; I wish
I could say the same of Liddy—Something uncommon is the matter with
that poor girl; her colour fades, her appetite fails, and her spirits flag—She
is become moping and melancholy, and is often found in tears—Her
brother suspects internal uneasiness on account of Wilson, and denounces
vengeance against that adventurer.—She was, it seems, strongly
affected at the ball by the sudden appearance of one Mr Gordon, who
strongly resembles the said Wilson; but I am rather suspicious that she
caught cold by being overheated with dancing.—I have consulted Dr
Gregory, an eminent physician of an amiable character, who advises the
highland air, and the use of goat-milk whey, which, surely, cannot have a
bad effect upon a patient who was born and bred among the mountains of
Wales—The doctors opinion is the more agreeable, as we shall find
those remedies in the very place which I proposed as the utmost extent of
our expedition—I mean the borders of Argyle.</p>
<p>Mr Smollett, one of the judges of the commissary court, which is now
sitting, has very kindly insisted upon our lodging at his country-house,
on the banks of Lough-Lomond, about fourteen miles beyond Glasgow. For
this last city we shall set out in two days, and take Stirling in our way,
well provided with recommendations from our friends at Edinburgh, whom, I
protest, I shall leave with much regret. I am so far from thinking it any
hardship to live in this country, that, if I was obliged to lead a town
life, Edinburgh would certainly be the headquarters of</p>
<p>Yours always, MATT. BRAMBLE EDIN., August 8.</p>
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