From croft to campus: extra-marital pregnancy and the Scottish literary renaissance.
Fairlie, Charlotte
[1] Teaching in rural Ohio, I have been surprised by the number of
students who become pregnant, defying the current trend towards delaying
motherhood. It is easy for those of us educating these students to shake
our heads sadly, reflecting on the premature responsibilities and lost
opportunities we imagine they will experience. Yet I am also impressed
by how many of them, with or without the support of the father, choose
to have their babies, return to the classroom within days, and graduate
on time, posing for photographs with the baby nestled in one arm and the
diploma tucked under the other. Relying on a supportive family network,
they scarcely seem to skip a beat. Scotland in the 1920s and '30s
may seem to be worlds away from southwest Ohio, but an examination of
the literary treatment of single motherhood by avant garde writers of
the Scottish Renaissance provides an alternate way to understand the
choices and experiences of these young women. Nan Shepherd, Lewis
Grassic Gibbon, and Neil Gunn portray unmarried mothers unsentimentally but sympathetically, denouncing the cruelty of an institutionally
imposed moral stigma.
[2] Early twentieth-century Scottish attitudes towards unmarried
mothers developed over centuries. According to Leah Leneman and Rosalind
Mitchison, the disciplinary arm of the Church of Scotland, the Kirk
Sessions, used both civil and church laws during the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries to punish "sexual irregularities," such
as illegitimacy (41). Until dissent and a more mobile population
undermined its authority, the Kirk was a "more or less monolithic
structure," and a reduced illegitimacy rate in the 1780s suggests
that it "was able to contain sexual expression" (45, 49).
Following the Act of Union in 1707, Scottish women were also subject to
the 1624 "Act to Prevent the Destroying and Murthering of Bastard
Children," which presumed that a mother who concealed the death of
an illegitimate child must have murdered it. Josephine McDonagh writes
that by the late eighteenth century, the law was increasingly considered
ineffective and inhumane, but it had shaped attitudes: concealing not
only a death but the pregnancy itself was now seen as "evidence of
an intention to murder the child" (3). The repeal of the law in
1803 was followed by a series of acts ameliorating the legal
vulnerability of single mothers. However, the prevailing moral code,
administered from the pulpit, still left women with few choices.
Concealed or not, pregnancy before marriage led to shame, scorn, and
suspicion.
[3] In 1858, the Registrar General released the results of a study
measuring illegitimacy rates in Scotland. According to Andrew Blaikie,
two aspects of the "regional bastardy indices" jolted
bourgeois complacency. Firstly, the revelation that Scotland's rate
exceeded England's suggested that Scottish morality was not as
unimpeachable as previously thought. Secondly, the indices showed that
"bastardy was predominantly a rural phenomenon," shaking the
comfortable belief in urban immorality and rural rectitude (11).
Nineteenth-century Scots reacted with typical Victorian vigor. Their
"impulse to measure," to understand the nature of rapidly
changing social conditions, combined with an "infusion of moral
judgement" to make illegitimacy a central concern (10). A solution
to the perceived moral decay had to be found, and the Kirk was again
willing to assume the task. Blaikie argues, however, that in encouraging
a "traditional family, a well-constructed myth of a past that never
existed ... their social policies [were] subsequently doomed"
(61-62). While urban rates of children born to unmarried mothers fell,
rural illegitimacy continued to rise into the twentieth century,
resulting in only a slow overall decline (16).
[4] What bourgeois Scotland saw as a problem may not have been seen
as such within rural communities. While the middle class made a public
ritual of courtship, delaying or hiding sexual activity and
illegitimacy, the rural working class did the opposite (Blaikie 41).
Middle class lovers walked out together; country lovers took to their
beds. As a result, pregnant brides were "the norm" (Blaikie
213). Even when mothers remained unmarried, farmers and crofters
considered children an economic asset and so accepted their pregnant
daughters back into the home. Mothers and children, therefore, were not
necessarily outcasts and victims (25, 215). Such behavior did not
"conform to the respectable stereotype," and, as Blaikie
points out, the high illegitimacy rates that so shocked the church may
have resulted from "country courtship patterns, " a value
system that accepted unmarried parenthood as a positive way to form a
family (35, 219).
[5] Published in 1993, Blaikie's research supports arguments
Willa Muir posits in her 1936 essay, Mrs Grundy in Scotland. Muir
defines Mrs Grundy as an English symbol of "social forces"
that act as a "valiant guardian of the status quo" (7, 13).
Transplanted to Scotland, she has pooled her energy with the Kirk's
and evolved into "Mrs MacGrundy" (24). Mrs MacGrundy
discourages creativity as well as independent and radical thinking. She
personifies bourgeois respectability and comes to life as the church
social workers who, Blaikie claims, misunderstood the realities of rural
sexuality and community standards. In order to illustrate Mrs
MacGrundy's destructive power, Muir describes the same traditional
features of rural courtship as Blaikie: bridal pregnancy, economic value
of children, and lack of stigma attached to illegitimacy (117-119).
"Must we keep Mrs MacGrundy?" Muir asks, concluding with a
call to action, "a reevaluation of the function of women in the
world." If Mrs MacGrundy is not deposed as the moral arbiter of
Scottish thought and behavior, she "may persuade people that she is
the national spirit of Scotland" (186-187).
[6] Mrs MacGrundy's disapproval of rural community values had,
Muir maintains, literary consequences. "The vigorous Rabelaisian
life of the country-side ... had to creep into print with deprecating
sickly smiles," she writes, referring to the
late-nineteenth-century fictional depiction of rural life, dismissed by
early twentieth-century critics as the "kailyard [cabbage patch]
school" (165). While more recent scholarship acknowledges the
cultural elitism that informs much criticism of kailyard literature, its
sentimental and historically inaccurate representations of Scotland are
seen as powerful tools in the construction of national identity (see,
for example, Gifford, Dunnigan and MacGillivray 324; Wade 51-54; Cook
1053-1073). According to Ian Campbell, kailyard is a "packaged
environment," a contract between writer and reader which encourages
reader passivity and discourages independent thinking (Kailyard 116). In
the same vein, Richard Cook argues that kailyard narratives
"[encode] a distance between ... reader and text" (1059). The
reader is an "outsider peering at an attractive museum piece"
(1061). Cook also echoes Campbell's notion of a "packaged
environment" by emphasizing "boundaries"
"contain[ment]," and "limits," particularly in
relation to women: the "construction of gender ... leaves women no
room to move. They are defined by and restricted to the home"
(1063-64, 1066-67). Crossing the boundary, he continues, causes
"community crises" (1068). Kailyard fiction preserves the myth
of urban immorality by portraying the city as a chamber of horrors,
where women who leave the domestic sphere will meet their
"Ruin." At the same time, Campbell points out, "Ruin [is]
flinched from in a word" (Kailyard 14). Kailyard's women are
"ever baby-bearing," but they are respectably married, part of
its "bourgeois fantasy of merrie auld Scotland" (Cook 1059).
In the context of Blaikie's study, this "myth" or
"fantasy" clearly involves ignoring the statistical reality
that had worried Scotland since 1858, denying country courtship patterns
and premarital pregnancy, and instead promoting family values that may
never have existed.
[7] Much Scottish fiction of the early twentieth century is aimed
at tearing the cabbages out of the kailyard, exposing its idealistic and
misleading picture of rural life. Campbell argues that a new generation
of writers uses aspects of the kailyard to subvert it, to
"resume" "the process of synthesizing a view of
Scotland." The "limitations of the kailyard" are then
"overcome," and the literature can provide readers with
"the possibility of creating a flexible synthetic view of the
country in a wide range of audience response" (Kailyard 100).
Campbell's language recalls Muir's: the kailyard, like Mrs
MacGrundy, encourages passivity, conformity, and limited thinking while
discouraging creativity, independence, radicalism, and flexibility. The
kailyard is a "state of mind" (113), just as Mrs MacGrundy has
elbowed her way into the Scottish national psyche. Campbell describes a
resumption while Muir calls for a reevaluation; both words imply
renewal, and the writers Campbell discusses include those associated
with the Scottish Renaissance--Muir's contemporaries. Although
Campbell does not closely examine the Kirk's role in the emergence
of kailyard literature, his argument suggests that Scottish Renaissance
writers liberate Scotland from Mrs MacGrundy. One way they accomplish
this is, as Muir suggests, "to [reevaluate] the function of
women" by placing them and their sexual behavior center stage,
focusing frequently on premarital pregnancy.
[8] Single motherhood is just one of the many themes shared by Nan
Shepherd's The Quarry Wood and Lewis Grassic Gibbon's trilogy,
A Scots Quair. In the villages of Wester Cairns and Kinraddie,
respectively, country courtship patterns survive, but the traditional
interlocking of rural sexual behavior and farm economics is
disappearing. In The Quarry Wood, seventeen-year-old Madge, inverting
kailyard mythology, comes by her "ruin" in the village and
tries to escape rural limitations by running after her lover to Glasgow,
only to become one of the city's anonymous "outcasts"
(178). Shepherd does not romanticize country life and is realistic about
the difficulties the city might present to a single mother and child.
Aunt Sally, abandoned by her husband, admits to a
"venturesome" life in Glasgow, to which the narrator adds,
"For venturesome read betrayed, persecuted, forsaken, hampered, and
undaunted." Sally only survives because her child dies, which
(unthreatened by the 1624 Act) she sees as "a good thing," and
because of her "hearty capacity for life" (40,182). It is not
clear, though, why Madge, never one to hide her interest in boys, feels
compelled to hide her pregnancy since the villagers are not particularly
critical when they mistakenly suspect Martha Ironside of having secretly
given birth to a child. When Mrs Davie questions her about it, she does
so "genially" and "cheerily." After Martha denies
being Robin's mother, Mrs Davie pushes her to eat: "She would
have been just as hospitable had Martha owned to the child" (174).
She expresses no shock; nor does she speak of sin and shame. Later,
Martha's mother remarks that their neighbors are "happy's
a blake amon' traicle" (a beetle in treacle) when hashing over
other peoples' lives (176). Gossiping in Wester Cairns simply
offers the same short-term thrill as bingeing on sugar. Even though
Martha is a teacher, the village seems to accept making love to a
"lad" in the Quarry Wood as the latest intriguing example of
country courtship in action.
[9] This reaction is not surprising as, judging by the number of
illegitimate children Emmeline Ironside takes into her home, many in
Wester Cairns do their courting in bed. Year after year she brings home
babies with unhappy results. The children add to the disorder of
Emmeline's household, irking her biological daughter, Martha, and
when Madge repeats the cycle, Martha declares that she has "had
enough of illegitimate bairns" (169). Emmeline's motive in
fostering all these children is financial: she is paid to take them in
and would "undertake any expedition for gain" (15). This, and
her husband's realization that the children represent a net loss
for the family, suggests that children no longer carry economic value on
a farm. Furthermore, Geordie makes no effort to get them to help him in
the fields. Any economic advantage is Emmeline's illusion. The
children in Wester Cairns keep coming, an accepted element of village
life, but they only add to both emotional and financial instability.
[10] Sunset Song, part I of the Gibbon trilogy, is also set in a
scattered agricultural community. Kinraddie's lovers, like Wester
Cairns', observe rural traditions, and illegitimacy is common: John
Gordon, for example, has "two-three queans in trouble and him but
barely eighteen years old" (30). "Harvest madness"
affects the community, and Ewan Taverndale and Sarah Sinclair are
"seen coming out of the wood above the Upperhill" (78-79).
Kirsty Strachan is a pregnant bride; her "bairn, a bit quean, was
born before seven months was past" (21). The reader learns of these
stories through "the speak," the voice of village gossip. Like
Wester Cairns' hearsay, the speak is unreliable, infuriating Will
Guthrie when he is suspected of having got his girl pregnant, but even
if some lovers' trysts are figments of community imagination, many
Kinraddie couples do enjoy themselves in hidden corners of the
countryside. Avoiding the clacking tongues, however, is impossible:
"You might hide with your lass on the top of Ben Nevis and have
your bit pleasure there, but ten to one when you got up to go home
there'd be Mistress Munro or some claik of her kidney, near
sniggering herself with delight at your shame" (79). The word
"shame" recurs throughout A Scots Quair like a whispering
chorus, "Shame, Shame, Shame," drilling the notion of
respectability into the minds of the people. Chris Guthrie is troubled
by it. Tolerant herself of Ewan's dalliance with Sarah Sinclair,
she ponders the senseless hypocrisy of the community: "the old ways
of sinning and winning, having your own pleasure and standing affronted
at other folk having theirs, seemed often daft to her"(129). At the
same time, Mistress Munro's "delight" suggests that, as
in The Quarry Wood, Kinraddie gossips out of a desire for entertainment
rather than spite. It is fun to talk about courtship, delicious to feel
a shiver of shock, but nobody is truly ostracized or expelled from the
community. Scandal functions as the village soap opera and does not
threaten the "warm communal life" of Kinraddie (Campbell
"Introduction" xiv).
[11] In Cloud Howe, however, Gibbon moves the action to the mill
town of Segget, a community that is far less cohesive. As in Wester
Cairns and Kinraddie, aspects of country courtship survive, but here the
gossip is more malicious, exacerbated by class distinctions. As Hanne
Tange notes, "Segget voices are individualized and
competitive" (255). The annual Segget Show, a cross between village
fete and Highland Games, is a throwback to the town's rural past.
The people physically cross the town borders and congregate in "a
great ley park with a fringe of trees, the hills up above" (325).
Every year, men and women go "home from the Segget Show in their
pairs" (338). Chris Guthrie (now Chris Colquohoun, wife of the
minister) feels old and wistfully longs for an irretrievable past, to
"be young and be held in men's arms, and seem bonny to them
and look at them sly, not know next hour who would take you home, and
not know who would kiss you or what they would do" (336-337).
Initially it seems as if the community response to this coupling is
similar to that in Kinraddie:
A farmer went out in his barn, early next morning, and
what did he see? Two childes and two lasses asleep in
his hay. And he was sore shocked and went back for
his wife, and she came and looked and was shocked as
well, and if they'd had a camera they'd have taken
photographs, they were so delighted and shocked to
see two queans that they knew in such a like way,
they'd be able to tell the story about them all the years
that they lived on earth; and make it a tit-bit in hell
forbye. (339)
The humorous repetition shows that they are definitely not
seriously "shocked." Again, this is entertainment; the shock
is titillating, causing "delight," and the joke is that the
farmer and his wife, not at all self-righteous, are planning for their
own lives in hell. Presumably they can recall their own youthful
barnyard activities with pleasure.
[12] Gibbon continues to develop the theme of bucolic courtship by
introducing Cis Brown, who, after a moorland walk with Dod Cronin, far
from the jute mills, "the low smoulder of Segget," experiences
the "quivering" emotions of her first "shy, unaccustomed
kiss" (340). The scene is timeless and sweet, but Gibbon
immediately undermines it through the contrasting tale of Else Queen,
Chris's maid. Irritated because her boyfriend has vanished, Else
goes home with a local farmer and elder of the church, Dalziel of the
Meiklebogs, who rapes her. The event blots out the pastoral idyll of the
Segget Show:
He louped on her as a crawly beast loups, something all
hair and scales from the wall; or a black old monkey;
she bashed him hard, right in the eye, just once, then
he had her.... his hands upon her were like iron
clamps. She cried You're tearing my frock, he half
loosed her, he looked shy as ever, but he breathed like
a beast.
Ah well, we'll take the bit thing off, Else. (342-343)
Else recalls later that she "wept in his bed";
nevertheless, inexplicably even to herself, she allows this animal of a
man to court her and eventually moves in as housekeeper (369). When she
bears Dalziel's child, he disowns it and refuses "to register
the child as his" (387). She continues to work "outdoor and
indoor," the baby alongside her, until finally, sickened by his
cruelty to his horse, she returns to her parents' house in another
village (385). This step would have been typical of rural behavior
since, according to Blaikie, "Unmarried mothers appear to have
relied heavily on kin, especially their parents" (220). Else's
experience is sordid and sad in many ways, but never pathetic. She
retains her dignity. She fights back during the rape, excels as a strong
farm laborer and efficient housekeeper, cares for her baby, bosses
Dalziel around, and moves out the minute she decides she has had enough.
[13] Through the community's response to Else's behavior,
Gibbon takes aim at both the Kirk and the class system. Despite her
resilience, she remains an outsider and a maid, and from the moment she
leaves the Manse, she is the subject of Segget's prejudicial
gossip. Even though Dalziel is a church official and Else just the
latest in a succession of his housekeepers to have become pregnant, the
town ignores his religious hypocrisy, seizing instead on Else's
social class and apparent lack of embarrassment: "No, no you
didn't blame him overmuch, but she fairly must be an ill tink, that
Else Queen. And you'd look at her hard the next time that you met,
not a bit of shame she would show as she passed" (384). This is not
mere entertainment, not simple snickering for the "delight" of
the snickerer. Deemed by all to be the guilty party, Else is scornfully
dismissed as an "ill tink" or gypsy. Even worse, apparently
comfortable with the values of country courtship, she shows no shame
although the town is trying to force it out of her with its disapproving
stares. As a mill town, Segget has more significant class diversity than
Kinraddie. Besides the minister, the doctor, and the teacher, the
citizens include shopkeepers; craftsmen; a dissipated young mill owner;
and his discontented workers, known disparagingly as
"spinners." The community is in transition from agriculture to
industry, and the class tensions are drawn tightly, symbolized by the
division between New and Old Towns. Country courtship in this context
offends conventional morality, and Else is shunned because she is a
woman and has lower social status than Dalziel. Although Chris welcomes
her back to the Manse, the baby is exiled to its grandparents at
Fordoun.
[14] The denouement of Cis Brown's youthful love affair with
Dod Cronin provokes a similar response, complicated by Cis's role
as a student. After learning of her pregnancy, she and Dod marry. The
hasty wedding fits country courtship patterns, but again, the town
pounces:
But then, when you met with her out in the street, and
looked, and heard the news from the Manse, she and
Dod Cronin to be married in a week--your throat went
dry, you went into the Arms and had a bit dram and
swore at the bitch, all the folk said she was a foul
creature, but they said it with something catching their
throats, they'd been proud of Cis, all Segget had been,
and here she was showing herself in that way, no better
than that tink Else Queen at the Manse. (435)
The town tears apart Cis's reputation too, but with less ease
than it had with Else's. Cis is the local academic star, so in
becoming pregnant, she has betrayed Segget. In order to come up with the
appropriately damning epithets, the gossips have to loosen their tongues
with alcohol at the pub, but the words still come haltingly, almost as
if they are trying hard to convince themselves that Cis is "no
better than that tink" because they know that that is what they are
supposed to think.
[15] The townspeople's reluctance to malign Cis suggests that
they are under pressure from the Church and their own desire for
middle-class respectability, both of which Gibbon attacks through the
school master's wife. When Mrs Geddes visits the Manse for dinner,
"calling it lunch of course, she was so genteel," she asks
Chris if she will help with her "social work." Chris bluntly
refuses, explaining that she was brought up on a croft and knows
"what a nuisance we thought some folk, visiting and prying and
blithering about socials, doing everything to help us, or so they would
think--except to get out and get on with the work!" (365).
Apparently agreeing with Blaikie about the ineffectiveness of church
social programs, Chris invites a lecturer from the city to speak on
birth control at the Manse. Childless herself, Mrs Geddes wants to make
sure that people who can ill afford them keep having babies: she refuses
to attend. The community is behind her and turns on Chris: "all the
folk were against it at once, except the tink bitch the minister had
married" (455-456). Mrs Geddes and the gossiping Segget townsfolk
are the agents of Mrs MacGrundy.
[16] Three characters resist the MacGrundy mindset. Aik Ogilvie,
the joiner, astutely observes that the gossips had previously held Cis
up as a paragon of brains and virtue, as "clean as they might have
been" (435). Now that she has fallen and is no better than anyone
else, she has let the town down, and Segget denounces her (in contrast
to Wester Cairns' reaction when it believes its academic success,
Martha, has had a baby). Cloud Howe predates Mrs Grundy in Scotland, but
Aik could have been reading Willa Muir: "The fearful thrill of
contemplating one's own iniquity easily passes over into a thrill
at the iniquity of others" (47). Segget's gravedigger, John
Muir, also sympathizes with Cis and Dod, placing their sexual activity
in the context of the cycle of life:
God knew there wasn't much shame in the thing, a lot
overrated this bedding with a quean--you worked
yourself up and got damned little, and where did it end
then, all said and done? Down here with the clay and
the grass up above, be you rich be you poor, unwedded
like Cis, or as bonny as Mrs Colquohoun was bonny.
(436)
Muir, digging at his graves, scales down the significance of Cis
and Dod's shotgun marriage by seeing it as part of the natural
order of things, a natural order that supercedes the class system.
Lastly, Chris remains as alert as she was in Kinraddie to the joys of
courtship and the cruelty of gossip. She describes Cis's unplanned
pregnancy as "a tale so old--oh, old as the Howe, everlasting near
as the granite hills. This thing that brought men and women together, to
bring new life, to seek new birth, on and on since the world began"
(431). To Chris, courtship, love, sex, and childbirth are part of
nature. They endure, unchanged throughout history, as solid and ancient
as the "granite hills." These are minority views, however, and
Segget offers no moral or financial support to Cis and Dod. Whereas in
an agricultural economy their new young family might have been absorbed
into the community, the stigma is now so strong, the tongues so sharp,
and the economy so altered, that they must leave Segget for the city of
Dundon. Country courtship, the "tale so old," is as
irretrievable for the community as it is for Chris.
[17] Mrs MacGrundy and her disciples cause even greater damage in
Neil Gunn's 1926 short story, "Birdsong at Evening,"
which, like Cloud Howe, takes place in a small town. The Mrs Geddes
figure here is Miss Grainger, "an elderly maiden lady, an active
worker for the Church Militant" (140). She directs her wrath at a
young librarian, Miss Storey, who gives birth after having hidden her
pregnancy since arriving in the town just eight months previously. Miss
Grainger spits out her words:
"The wanton!" came in cutting feminine tones. "She
with her college training and all her orders! Corrupting [...]
"....
It's just what I warned them. And that's for the vicar!
And she won't open her mouth, the hussy! And even before she came
here she must[...]" The high-pitched voice choked. "I
don't know how she could have had the face!" (140)
While the Segget gossips have catches in their throats because they
are half-reluctant to utter their words, Miss Grainger is choking
because she can't get them out fast enough. She is so affronted by
Miss Storey's having fooled the community, so certain that she has
known all along, so desperate to say, "I told you so," even to
the vicar, that she can barely form sentences. Miss Storey is a
"hussy" and a "wanton," and probably only Miss
Grainger's carefully constructed gentility--she
"mince[s]" as she walks away--prevents her from using even
more offensive language. As the more sympathetic Mrs Gill says,
"Miss Grainger's hot on it," making sure that the news is
"all the talk" (141).
[18] Her campaign to expel Miss Story from respectable,
middle-class circles is deadly. By moonlight, Miss Storey takes her baby
to the river: "Her hood slipped from her hair. No sound came from
her, and like some fateful figure in a preordained tragedy, in whom
emotion and life had played out their parts, she turned to the
grey-glooming pool" (143). That she is a character in a
"preordained tragedy" emphasizes that this is a drama that has
been played out many times, her "hooded form" lifting her out
of the 1920s. She could be from any age. As Willa Muir writes,
"Girls murdered their illegitimate children rather than face the
ordeal of being pilloried." In fact, "so common was
infanticide that as late as 1751 ... the General Assembly had to order
the Act against the concealment of pregnancy to be read from every
pulpit. This awful authority of the kirk session endured" (49-50).
It continues to reverberate into the 1920s. Shaped by both her religious
heritage and the lingering impact of the 1624 Act, Miss Grainger
vilifies the secrecy as much as the pregnancy, thereby doubling Miss
Storey's sin. The baby is saved, but its mother dies, persecuted by
Miss Grainger's verbal pillory. As in Segget, Mrs. MacGrundy has
triumphed, and Miss Storey knows that the town will never accept her as
a single mother.
[19] Concluding his trilogy with Grey Granite, Lewis Grassic Gibbon
creates a complex picture of single motherhood in an industrial city of
the 1930s. Brief references to two minor characters imply that pregnancy
outside marriage occurs commonly among the metal workers: "Norman
had got a tart into trouble," and Bob's "quean was
"two months gone already" (526, 648). More significant to the
plot is Meg Watson, the kitchen maid at the boarding house run by Chris
(now a widow and herself a single mother). Meg, like Madge and Miss
Storey, hides her pregnancy for months. When her brother Alick finds
out, class prejudices color his angry reaction, and he is sure
Chris's son, Ewan, has fathered the child: "Where did he do
it, the bastard? Up in his toff's room in Windmill Place?"
(605) His suspicion of Ewan is not unreasonable. The powerful stereotype
of the educated "toff" taking advantage of the uneducated maid
is rooted in fact: church records document a high incidence of
illegitimate births among women in domestic service (Leneman and
Mitchison 58; Blaikie 215). Alick's assumptions, though, are
mistaken because the father is Steve Selden, the Communist organizer who
lodges at the Watsons'. Ironically, Meg's own prejudices might
have warned her to be wary. Earlier, she has been appalled at the
thought of "trying to land a Red in the house, maybe rape you and
gut you in the middle of the night" (502). But it appears that
Selden does not live up to this demonization. When Alick confronts him,
he insists that he did not know Meg was pregnant and that if he had,
"he'd have done the decent thing." The men witnessing
this take Selden's side: "those daft Bulgars the Reds were as
scared and respectable about bairning a quean as though they went to the
kirk three times a Sunday and said grace afore every meal, there was
hardly a one but was doucely married" (615). They are buying into a
different stereotype, but they are right: Selden immediately marries
Meg, and when she is unwell, embezzles money from the Party to care for
her, putting her welfare before his political allegiance (615).
[20] Social, political, and sexual forces collide in this story of
Ewan, the educated activist; Selden, the Communist organizer; Alick, the
hotheaded foundry worker; and Meg, the young maid. The characters in
Grey Granite are trying to cope, barely understanding a rapidly changing
public world that imposes its confusion on the personal. Ewan and his
schoolteacher girlfriend, Ellen, both educated and active in the
Communist Party, conduct a relationship bearing little resemblance to
the country courtship pattern probably followed by Ewan's crofting
ancestors. Rather than romping in the hay on first acquaintance, they
discuss class and politics and get around to consummating their
relationship only after Ellen realizes that Ewan has been sexually
abused by police in a holding cell, a "Horror" that haunts him
(609, 625). She first buys a wedding ring, in order to pass as newlyweds
at an inn. Then, having educated herself about birth control because
"there were thousands of unwanted babies already," she steels
herself to buy condoms in the "little shop with the ghastly books
and the half-hid door" (555, 622). Next she gets bus tickets and,
significantly, takes Ewan out to the countryside, perhaps trying to
reconnect with his rural roots and create a more traditional courtship.
Indeed, they pass Kinraddie, scene of his parents' young love, but
Ewan convinces himself it was "long ago" and "nothing to
do with him" (624). Even so, Ellen successfully orchestrates the
affair while Chris, waiting at home, is "hop[ing] to God
they'd at least been careful" and used that birth control
(630). As they sneak between bedrooms at the boarding house, Ewan and
Ellen are deaf to the disapproving clucks of a fellow lodger--an
aspiring Mrs Geddes; instead, class and politics destroy their
relationship. Despite her Communist sympathies, Ellen reacts in
"blank, dead silence" when Ewan takes a job as a
"labourer" (641). When she confesses that she has acquiesced
to pressure to leave the party, without much regret since she has become
disillusioned and wants a secure domestic life, Ewan brutally breaks off
the relationship, accusing her of prostituting herself in her desire for
a bourgeois lifestyle. They have ignored the pressures that chase away
Cis and destroy Miss Storey, but divided loyalties, class conflict, and
the painful frustrations of political activism prove too much.
[21] Amidst the pain, however, one positive development gleams
brightly: Ellen has avoided an unwanted pregnancy that would have cost
her her job. When she asks, "Ewan, will you put this on for
me," she is speaking of the wedding ring, but the reader can infer
that she means the condom too (629). Tange argues that A Scots Quair
"falls short ... on the visionary level," and "offers
little prospect of future regeneration" (262). However, Gibbon (to
whose memory Muir dedicates Mrs Grundy in Scotland) does envision a
changed role for women. The "grey granite" city is not
"solid and ancient" as Chris's "granite hills."
It is a society in flux. Out of that instability a new woman is born,
sexually active, but free to pack her bags and earn her own living.
[22] Writing in the mid-thirties, Gibbon offers a model based on
increased access to birth control. Gunn and Shepherd, however, present
another alternative: unmarried parenthood by choice. In "Birdsong
at Evening," a "bachelor clerk of sixty" adopts Miss
Storey's baby (132). Hoping to avert the "vast silence and
aimlessness of retirement," Philip Pope takes up the study of birds
(134). He seems to have practiced the lifelong celibacy implicit in his
surname, but when he meets the librarian, he is bewitched by her
"mesmeric eyes" 136). Fed by Miss Storey, his burgeoning
knowledge of ornithology elicits feelings Mr Pope has never known. As
spring blossoms, he experiences a psychological awakening, described in
sexually loaded terms: he hears "ecstasy" in the bird song, he
"glow[s]" with "secretive pleasure" (137). He is so
energized by watching the springtime rituals of the birds that "the
wonder is he did not ... expire from over-hasty acceleration of his
untried heart. Life was a debauch" (137). Gunn piles on the images:
Mr Pope "lick[s] his lips when Miss Storey refers him to poetry
about cuckoos and leaves the library, "his mind ... aflame"
(138). After learning of Miss Storey's baby, he spends a Keatsian
evening listening to nightingales, and it is then he prevents her from
drowning herself and her child, "putting an arm around her and
drawing her up against his heart (144). Already ill, Miss Storey does
not survive, but claiming he is "in loco parentis," a phrase
that "pulse[s]with life," Mr Pope adopts the child (145). The
extremity of his emotions--his "divine agony" on reading
Tennyson and his spirit's trip "Lethe-wards " as he hears
nightingales--are comedic. But Mr Pope is not simply a target of the
narrator's more sophisticated sense of humor. While his
transformation is real to him, he knows he is slightly ridiculous and is
capable of "self-mocking" laughter as he formally redefines
his world (146). The name at the top of his notebooks, previously
"ever-bare, inadequate," is now "Philip Pope and
Son." Rather than arid solitude, his "vision" of his
remaining years promises emotional fullness: "dark and mysterious
blood currents," "wonder," "gratitude,"
"sorrow," "joy," and "love" (145).
"Birdsong at Evening" offers a non-traditional family as
resolution. In gender, age, and sexual experience, Pope departs
radically from traditional models of parenthood. It is, after all, only
recently that single men and women have been able to adopt children.
[23] Nan Shepherd's protagonist, Martha Ironside, also chooses
single parenthood as a way to fulfillment. Martha tackles her education
with the same intensity and single mindedness as Philip Pope does his
bird watching. Like Gunn, Shepherd employs a "sexual metaphor for
Martha's pursuit of knowledge" (Carter 52). She
"pant[s]," she is "in a jealous agony," and she
"intrigue[s] like any lover" (50, 93). In both Philip Pope and
Martha Ironside, the hungers of the body sublimate themselves into the
hungers of the mind. As celibate as Pope, Martha, nevertheless,
undergoes a coming-of-age process involving three men: Luke, a married
doctor, who when he kisses her thinks she is an insubstantial phantom;
Andy, a serial kisser, who boasts that he has added her to his list of
conquests; and Roy, a colonial farmer, who assumes he can colonize her
too. Given this trio, it is hardly surprising when Martha famously asks
herself, "Am I such a slave as that? Dependent on a man to complete
me!" and declares, "I can be my own creator" (184).
Although she values her agricultural inheritance, she flirts only
briefly with the idea of returning to the land like Chris Guthrie (204).
The legacy she draws on instead is the money and house left to her by
Aunt Josephine (herself a new, positive model of single womanhood). As
her "own creator," Martha turns fantasy gossip into reality by
choosing to make baby Robin her own, a virgin birth that ironically
recalls Luke's vision of her as Mary in Rossetti's
annunciation (77). The decision empowers her: "She had no idea that
she could be so masterful.... Her old diffidence was gone. The current
of her life was running strong and sure" (197). Like Philip Pope,
she plans to educate her son and can imagine a future with all of
life's unpredictable joy and sorrow: "another game for the
gods was ahead of her" (206). Single motherhood in The Quarry Wood
is not a sinful aberration, but part of the "game" of life.
[24] Critics have sometimes read the end of The Quarry Wood as a
betrayal of feminist values. As Roderick Watson observes, it is possible
to see Martha's choice as "a return to women's
traditional place," and Margery Palmer McCulloch has noted that she
"seems to lose the will to pursue her intellectual ambitions after
university" (Watson 418; McCulloch 368). One can detect a
disapproving tone in these comments similar to the typical response to a
student pregnancy. Realistically, however, Martha's ambitions have
never gone far beyond teaching. Gillian Carter points out that she
"chooses to remain in the domestic world of her home and take on
the upbringing of the baby Robin, yet retains her Anglicised speech and
her work as a primary school teacher in the public world" (54).
This synthesis of the public and private is that of every contemporary
working mother. Martha's decision to be an unmarried, working
mother before World War I is a radical choice, but it also affirms the
legitimacy of traditional rural values. Disarming the voice of the
gossipers and exercising the increased choices of an emancipated woman,
she restores single motherhood as an acceptable way to make a family.
[25] While "transgressive behaviors are disciplined and
contained" within kailyard fiction (Cook 1064), Shepherd's,
Gibbon's, and Gunn's work validates Ian Campbell's claim
that in fiction of the Scottish Renaissance, the "limitations of
the kailyard have beem [sic] overcome" (Kailyard 100). In
acknowledging premarital sex as a natural, if messy, reality, they burst
open the "packaged environment," and a more complex Scotland
emerges as surely as Aunt Josephine's chickens run freely across
the fenceless boundaries of her garden (Shepherd 4). The characters
discussed here (and others, such as the residents of Shepherd's The
Weatherhouse, Meg Menzies in Gibbon's "Smeddum," and
Martha Williamson in Gunn's "The Tax-Gatherer") rescue
women from the "lifeless propriety' of a fenced-in life
(Shepherd 4). They demand more of readers, giving them moral ambiguity
and the possibility of alternatives, the "flexible view of the
Scots" to which Campbell refers.
[26] Using a metaphor completely opposed to the notion of
flexibility, Willa Muir writes that "the Reformation was a kind of
spiritual strychnine of which Scotland took an overdose. Instead of
acting as a tonic on the individual Scot, it cramped him in a tetanic rigor.... And that cramped stiffness was perpetuated in the tradition
which I have called Mrs MacGrundy" (165). Shepherd, Gibbon, and
Gunn relax that "rigor," attacking the MacGrundy alliance
between the Church and middle-class respectability, showing how it
controlled thought, persecuted individuals, and prescribed strict codes
of behavior. Against a background of urbanization and shifting class
demographics, they depict narrow-mindedness overpowering tolerance and
country courtship losing viability in an industrial economy. Working to
reinvigorate Scottish culture, they offer antidotes to the
"strychnine": new gender roles and alternative family
structures that honor traditional rural values.
[27] They also prefigure today's domestic reality in Scotland.
In 1986, the term "illegitimate" as a descriptor for children
disappeared from the Registrar General for Scotland's Annual
Reports. The percentage of children born to unmarried parents had risen
from a low of 4% in the late 1950s to 19% in 1985. This increase proved
"inexorable," and in 2004, nearly half of Scottish children
were born outside marriage ("2004 Annual Review"). Both
attitudes and family patterns have changed dramatically over the last
half-century. According to the Scottish Executive, by the turn of the
21st century, 25% of children lived with a lone parent and 10% in
"cohabiting couple families"; only 55% of Scots agreed that
"people who want children ought to get married" ("Family
Formation"). Clearly, the stigma attached to pregnancy outside
marriage has faded; indeed, the concept of illegitimacy itself has all
but vanished.
[28] Perhaps with its acceptance of premarital sex without shame,
bridal pregnancies, and single parenthood as legitimate ways to create a
family, twenty-first-century Scotland has revived some elements of
country courtship. This possibility has caused me to re-examine my
immediate response when, working here on the fringes of Appalachia, I
hear of yet another pregnant student. In her study of childbearing among
West Virginia adolescents, Sally J. Reel points out that "an
exploration of Appalachian issues parallels many rural concerns"
(2). Although she acknowledges that teen pregnancy has a negative
economic and educational impact on women, Reel concludes that
"pregnancy for some adolescents ... may be viewed as normative,
desired, and financially protective" (8-9). Her subjects see
pregnancy as an affirming "'rite of passage,'" the
"process by which independence, adulthood, and separate identity is
achieved" (4, 8). Recalling Martha Ironside's own declaration
of independence as she decides to become a mother to Robin, Reel's
language suggests that pre-marital pregnancy in contemporary rural
communities is a positive expression of a "tale so old," a
type of country courtship. Many in academia, on the other hand, have
chosen to delay parenthood into our thirties and even forties in order
to establish careers. We might cheer on fictional single mothers for
their dissident choices while privately questioning the decisions made
by real life single mothers in our classrooms who don't happen to
share our values. As an institution, academia needs to make sure it does
not emulate the Kirk by buying into its own form of MacGrundyism,
failing to recognize and respect the influence and importance of local
tradition.
Acknowledgements:
I thank Wilmington College for its support, my colleagues for their
interest and advice, and Edward Gale Agran for his help and
encouragement in the writing of this essay.
WORKS CITED
Blaikie, Andrew. Illegitimacy, Sex, and Society: Northeast
Scotland, 1750-1900. Oxford: Clarendon, 1993.
Campbell, Ian. "Introduction to the Trilogy." In Gibbon,
A Scots Quair. vi-xxxviii.
---. Kailyard. Edinburgh: Ramsay Head, 1981.
Cook, Richard. "The Home-Ly Kailyard Nation:
Nineteenth-Century Narratives of the Highland and the Myth of Merrie
Auld Scotland." ELH 66 (1999): 1053-1073.
"Family Formation and Dissolution: Trends and Attitudes among
the Scottish Population Research Finding." Scottish Executive. 22
May 2006. 22 June 2007.
<http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/200403/19144/35014>.
Gibbon, Lewis Grassic. A Scots Quair: Sunset Song, Cloud Howe, Grey
Granite. 1932-34. Edinburgh: Polygon, 2006.
Gifford, Douglas, Sarah Dunnigan, and Alan MacGillivray, eds.
Scottish Literature in English and Scots. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 2002.
Gifford, Douglas, and Dorothy McMillan, Eds. A History of Scottish
Women's Writing. Edinburgh: Edinburgh U.P., 1997.
Gunn, Neil M. "Birdsong at Evening." 1926. Rpt. in The
Man Who Came Back: Essays and Short Stories. Ed. Margery McCulloch.
Edinburgh: Polygon, 1991. 129-146.
Leneman, Leah, and Rosalind Mitchison. "Scottish Illegitimacy
Ratios in the Early Modern Period." Economic History Review, New
Series 40 (1987): 41-63.
McCulloch, Margery Palmer. "Fictions of Development
1920-1970." In Gifford and McMillan. 360-372.
McDonagh, Josephine. Child Murder and British Culture 1720-1900.
Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003.
Muir, Willa. Mrs Grundy in Scotland. London: George Routledge,
1936.
Reel, Sally J. "The Meaning of Childbearing among Rural
Appalachian Adolescent Women Living in West Virginia." Journal of
Multicultural Nursing & Health Summer (2001): 48-55. Find
Articles.com. 7 Jan. 2008. <http://findarticles.com/p/articles/
mi_qa3919/is_200107/ai_n8954213>.
Shepherd, Nan. The Quarry Wood. 1928. Edinburgh: Canongate, 1987.
Tange, Hanne. "Grassic Gibbon's Art of Community: A Scots
Quair and the Condition of Scotland." Studies in Scottish
Literature 33-34 (2004): 247-262.
"2004 Annual Review: Chapter 2--150 Years of Civil
Registration." General Register Office for Scotland. 22 June 2007.
<http://www.groscotland.gov.uk/statistics/
publications-and-data/annual-report-publications/>.
Wade, Stephen. In My Own Shire: Region and Belonging in British
Writing, 1840-1970. Contributions to the Study of World Lit. 119.
Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002.
Watson, Roderick. "'To Know Being': Substance and
Spirit in the Work of Nan Shepherd. In Gifford and McMillan. 416-427.
Contributor's Note:
CHARLOTTE FAIRLIE teaches English at Wilmington College in
Wilmington, Ohio. Her essay, "'Hastily Departed
Brothers': Saving the Lost Son in A River Runs Through It, Highland
River, and No Great Mischief," is forthcoming in the Spring 2008
issue of Scottish Studies Review.