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<h1>SCOTTISH REMINISCENCES</h1>
<h2>by Archibald Geikie</h2>
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<h2 class="nobreak" id="FROM_THE_PREFACE">FROM THE PREFACE.</h2>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">One</span> who has sojourned in every part of a
country and for sixty years has mingled with
all classes of its inhabitants; who has watched
the decay and disappearance of old, and the
uprise of new usages; who has been ever on
the outlook for illustrations of native humour,
and who has been in the habit all along of
freely recounting his experiences to his friends,
may perhaps be forgiven if he ventures to
put forth some record of what he has seen
and heard, as a slight contribution to the
history of social changes.</p>
<p>Literature is rich in Scottish reminiscences
of this kind, so rich indeed that a writer
who adds another volume to the long list
runs great risk of repeating what has already
been told. I have done my best to avoid
this danger by turning over the pages of as
many books of this class as I have been able<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span>
to lay hands upon. In the course of this
reading I have discovered that not a few of
the ‘stories’ which I picked up long ago
have found their way into print. These I
have generally excluded from the present
volume, save in cases where my version
seemed to me better than that which had
been published. But with all my care I
cannot hope to have wholly escaped from
pitfalls of this nature.</p>
<p>No one can have read much in this subject
without discovering the perennial vitality of
some anecdotes. With slight and generally
local modification, they are told by generation
after generation, and always as if they related
to events that had recently occurred and to
persons that were still familiarly known. Yet
the essential basis of their humour may
occasionally be traced back a long way. As
an example of this longevity I may cite the
incident of snoring in church, related at p. 86
of the following chapters, where an anecdote
which has been told to me as an event that
had recently happened among people now
living was in full vigour a hundred years ago,
and long before that time had formed the
foundation of a clever epigram in the reign of
Charles II. Another illustration of this per<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span>sistence
and transformation may be found in
the anecdote of the wolf’s den (p. 292). The
same recurring circumstances may sometimes
conceivably evoke, at long intervals, a similar
sally of humour; but probably in most cases
the original story survives, undergoing a process
of gradual evolution and local adaptation
as it passes down from one generation to
another.</p>
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