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50 EDINBURGH PAST AND PRESENT. never be really severed. It subsists after death. Even when all labour is done, it is known whether the city watches faithfully over her illustrious dead, or whether it is left to strangers to ‘keep his dust in Arqua, where he died.’ Our nineteenth century, which does so much to remove old landmarks, has done its best to weaken those bonds of citizenship. Our great towns are overgrown past all limits of acquaintance or sympathy, and of the lesser ones many, nay most, have changed their fashion. London is not now to any author what it was to Dr. Johnson, hardly to any artist what it was to Hogarth, or even to Turner. Paris is too much the playground of all nations, though Rome certainly is still the inheritance of the whole Christian world Venice is deserted, and Athens has changed her classic language for a dialect, and imports foreign princes, though the bees still hum about the slopes of Hymettus as in the days of Harmodius and Aristogiton. In Florence, stripped of her walls, they study war no more ; the haio of her artistic past still glorifies her, but the children that are growing up in the streets of the Gly-City are of all kindreds and tongues. They know nothing of Guelph or Ghibelline. Among modem capitals, Geneva is perhaps the most careful of her old prestige, and has lost the least of her old pretensions. Though the fortifications that withstood the famous escalade have been levelled, the Genevese are building new streets with the old d8n3, and under the names of ‘les Grands Philosophea’ Thus the traveller still seems to see in Geneva the shades of Calvin and of Rousseau, of Melanchthon and of Farel, and perhaps even the ghost of unorthodox Servetus Edinburgh keeps faith with the past, and still exercises an influence over the men who are reared in her schools. Of all the cities of the modem world this is perhaps the most beautiful. To-its beauty the strangest and the happiest geological accidents have contributed. On every side the architectural masses are relieved by natural forms which enhance them, and which are of even greater beauty. Behind the city are the noble outlines of Arthuis Seat and the exquisite profile of the Crags, while on her left hand are the bold seaward escarpments of -the Calton Hill. And of the Castle as a natural feature how is it possible to say too much! Thrust up between the dusky ridges of the Old Town and the long rectangular vistas of the New, it stands there, a citadel, a watch-tower and a landmark from’afar. It is true that as the victories of Edinburgh are now all peaceful ones, it no longer threatens or frowns ; for in Edinburgh, very markedly, q m s have given place to the lawyer’s robe ; and only a b u g l e 4 at intervals startles the ear as it rings out from the Maiden Castle that so often of old defied the invader.
Volume 11 Page 78
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EDINBURGH FROM WARRISTON CEMETERY. 5' What the capital of Scotland does lack is climate. That, no genius of Scott and no engineering skill can 'procure for her. Her streets are swept by cold north-east winds, and her skies are heavy with the rain-clouds that alternately roll in from the ocean, or drift down upon her from the neighbouring hills. Yet still, in the hundred changeful effects of light and shade, she has a beauty more effective and appropriate than if she stood out in the bold relief of perfect and unclouded sunshine, Far to the southward drenching showers are sweeping along, and they obliterate the half-circle of the Moorfoot Hills, but in the slant rays of the afternoon sun all the spires and towers catch a pale splendour, and round their feet the city's smoke drifts away with the light westerly wind. How striking from here, rising above all the hazy wreaths, is the crowned belfry of old St. Giles's 1 It takes us back to the Edinburgh of Queen Mary and of John Knox, and we seem to live again in that time of fierce theolo@cal strife. On the one side, we see ' the scarlet prelates' insolently maintaining ]he rights of tradition and the unity of a Church that they would fain keep as indivisible as was the seamless garment of Christ. On the other-side, are the black-robed preachers of the Geneva school, boldly claiming the liberty of the human conscience, and declaring the equality of priest and laic before the laws, and before Almighty God I These Reformers developed, through spiritual liberty, the progress of the Scottish nation: nor must it be forgotten that they helped to form the language of their country; what Calvin and Bonnivard did for the French language, Knox and Wishart and Henderson did for the vulgar tongue of Scotland. Through it they appealed to the heart of the people, and they used it as a weapon to combat tradition. Latin at that epoch was being exquisitely handled by George Buchanan, but the Reformers discarded it, and substituted for it the homely vernacular of their native land. Native eloquence, once planted, did not fail to grow, and the language, then first turned to noble uses, has since become history in the hands of Hume, philosophy in those of Dugald Stewart and of the elder Mill, criticism in those of Jeffrey, theology from the pulpits of Chalmers, MZeod, and Tulloch, and unequalled and undying fiction under the magic wand of Walter Scott. How close the great buildings seem to press on one another, as banks, colleges, hotels, churches, and galleries rise on either side of the valley of the old ' Nor' Loch ' 1 From the spot where we now stand, the horizontal l i e of the houses is Of how much does it not remind us I
Volume 11 Page 79
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