I recently reaquainted myself with "A Scots Quair" by Lewis Grassic Gibbon (Leslie Mitchell). I first read these books more than fifty years ago. Sunset Song without doubt my favourite and a book worth delving into again and again. Having time now to really understand its nuances. Communities, particularly rural and farming communities are inextricably bound to nature which in days gone by sustained them by providing food from land, hill, sea and river. Both work and the season of farm life are used in Sunset Song as metaphors for the physical, emotional and spiritual growth of Chris Guthrie as a woman, as well as giving us insight into the harsh physical work each season entailed, and how the farmer had to work with nature and have the support of the community to survive.
The harsh nature of
living off the land, and the sense that close farming neighbours such as Long
Rob of the Mill, Chae Strachan, and even Munro were in the same boat created a
community of close neighbours who at times could judge each other harshly yet
would not hesitate to help one another in a crisis. Kinraddie itself was part
of the greater community at large but not so intimate as around Blawearie. The
fire at Peesies Knap brought out the best in this intimate community where you
would give aid to a neighbour. They were all dependant on each other for mutual
aid at times of hard work, especially at harvest, where if the weather was
favourable the work had to be done quickly and efficiently while the weather
held. This sense of community was based not on only on work but also trust and
closeness built on friendship for each other, despite the common failings of
folk and their tongues as portrayed in the book.
The standing stones are
a recurring theme in Sunset Song. The stones were probably Pictish of which
there are quite a few to be found in farming areas. Where there is more than
one stone, some say that you can measure the lunar cycle. The mystical tie between
ancient culture, nature and man is felt by Chris who uses the stones and the
loch as a sort of retreat and thinking place. Interestingly her father who
comes over in the novel as a strict Presbyterian, who threatened Will Guthrie
with violence for saying “Come over,
Jehovah (p.30) to Bess the horse after he groomed her, seemed to dislike
them, perhaps for what they represented? “And
he glanced with a louring eye at the Standing Stones and then Chris had thought
a foolish thing, that he kind of shivered, as though he were feared, him that
was feared of nothing dead or alive, gentry or common.”
Communities that are
close to the land or sea, can be identify and believe in more than one
spiritual concept. Christianity and superstition often blending into each
other. The ancient and modern Scots were/are no different, and perhaps this is
what Gibbon is getting at in the book. John Guthrie chooses his Calvinist blind
obedience over the mystical and timeless spirit and tie with nature and season
emanating from the stones. Perhaps his jealous god and the beating life gives
him in making a living make him resent the very nature with which he must work
in harmony. Ironic that he should dislike them as this was the people he
possibly came from. Perhaps as in Highland River, where Neil Gunn asked where the
Picts went? and suggests all we need is to look in a mirror and we will see.
Not all nature is
portrayed as harsh in Sunset Song though. “Below
and around where Chris Guthrie lay the June moor whispered and rustled and
shook their cloaks, yellow with broom and powdered faintly purple, that was the
heather but not the full passion of its colour yet.” Although times could
be harsh, each season has its beauty in nature, and you can smell summer in
this quote. Often the prose relating to nature and season were placed alongside
the growth both spiritually and sexually of Chris. Drilling has perhaps some of
the best prose in the book. Nature, its smells and whole evocative feeling of a
good autumn night during the “harvest madness” weaves around the awareness of
Chris that she is no longer a girl and has become a woman “growing up limber and sweet, not bonny, perhaps, her cheek bones were
over high and her nose over short for that, but her eyes clear and deep and
brown, deep and clear as the Denburn flow, and her hair was red and was brown
by turns, spun as fine as a spiders web, wild, wonderful hair”.
Later in the novel,
Kinraddie community life turns nasty when Long Rob decides he will not join the
army. Assumptions are made that he is a coward or a conscientious objector and
the community turns against him. Communities tolerate eccentricity up to point,
but only for some, failure to conform to the norm, or going against the
majority often turns the community from a benign social group into something
nasty as was the case for Long Rob. Rob is no coward but a man of conviction.
Both he and in particular Chris, struggle with identity. She is both Chris of
the Howe, and Chris of the books and learning. Caledonian Antisyzygy* There is
an undertone of the struggle between conforming to be part of the community,
and the individual who if they step out of the social norm will be excluded and
pulled to pieces by wagging tongues. Rob bowed to pressure from within himself.
At least he went to war on his terms.
The effect of the Great
War on small farming communities was devastating, and most never fully
recovered. The eulogy for the fallen by Robert Colquohoun in the Epilogue
describes this, and the tie with the land and nature. “And who knows at the last what memories of it were with them, the
springs and the winters of this land and all the sounds and scents of it that
had once been theirs, deep and a passion of their blood and spirit, those four
who died in France.” This illustrates the tie between land, nature and
community as for what else were they fighting other than what they perceived as
a threat (from government propaganda) to their families and community. “Chae looked
at young Ewan and said Ay, man! And
he told them “they’d brought out a fine
bit bairn between them, every man might yet have to fight for bairn and wife
ere this war was over;”
Even at the last Gibbon
emphasizes the feel and smell of nature and the pull of community. When Chae
spoke to Ewan on the morning of his execution for desertion he asks, “But why did you do it Ewan?”
Ewan replies. “It was that wind that came with the sun, I
minded Blawearie, I seemed to waken up smelling that smell. And I couldn’t
believe it was me that stood in the trench; it was just daft to be there. So I
turned and got out of it.”
And then Ewan said,
sudden like, it clean took Chae by surprise, “Mind the smell of the dung in the parks on an April morning, Chae? And
the pewits over the rigs? Bonny they’re flying this night in Kinraddie, and
Chris sleeping there, and all the Howe happed in mist.”
“and the standing stones up there night after night and day after day by the loch of Blawearie, how around them there gathered things that wept and laughed and lived again in the hours before dawn, till far below the cocks began to crow in Kinraddie and the day had come again”
In the end, despite all
life can throw her way, the indomitable Chris moves forward with her life but does not lose her sense of being bound to nature and the seasons. She accepts
the way of folk in a community but ploughs her own furrow through life.
*Caledonian Antisyzygy is basically the joining of opposites. Some have argued argued that this 'union of opposites' forms the basis of Scottish literature. Take Glencoe as a landsacape example. Glen of Weeping and dark gloom. Valley floor of green pastoral fields and clean sparkling water. Without the mountains mist and rain the fields would be barren.
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