congregation. To the Scotch, cradled as they had been in the Shorter Catechism, and trained as they were from their youth up in theology, his preaching, like Paul's to the Greeks, was too often foolishness. He spoke to a people, as he complained, "who heard much, knew everything, and felt nothing."[1] Though "you use the most cutting words still they hear, but feel no more than the seats they sit upon."[2] Nowhere did he speak more roughly than in Scotland. No one there was offended at plain dealing. "In this respect they were a pattern to all mankind." But yet "they hear and hear, and are just what they were before."[3] He was fresh from the Kelso people and was preaching to a meeting in Northumberland when he wrote: "Oh! what a difference is there between these living stones, and the dead unfeeling multitudes in Scotland."[4] "The misfortune of a Scotch congregation," he recorded on another occasion, "is they know everything; so they learn nothing."[5]
With their disputatious learning the meagreness of their fare and the squalor of their dwellings but ill contrasted. "Dirty living," said Smollett, "is the great and general reproach of the commonalty of this kingdom."[6] While Scotland sent forth into the world year after year swarms of young men trained in thrift, well stored with knowledge, and full of energy and determination, the common people bore an ill-repute for industry. They were underfed, and under-feeding produced indolent work. "Flesh-meat they seldom or never tasted; nor any kind of strong liquor except two-penny at times of uncommon festivity."[7] "Ale," wrote Lord Kames, "makes no part of the maintenance of those in Scotland who live by the sweat of their brow. Water is their only drink."[8] Adam Smith admitted that both in bodily strength and personal appearance they were below the English standard. "They neither work so well, nor look so well."[9] Wolfe, when he returned to England from Scotland in 1753, said that he had not crossed the Border a mile when he saw the difference that was produced upon the face of the country by labour and industry. "The English are clean and laborious, and the Scotch excessively dirty and lazy."[10]
This dirtiness would offend an Englishman more than a man of