The
Unspeakable Scot
BY
T. W. H. CROSLAND
London: GRANT RICHARDS
New York: G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS
1902
Copyright, 1902, by
T. W. H. CROSLAND
Published, July, 1902
The Knickerbocker Press, New York
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | The Superstition | 1 |
II. | Predecessors | 23 |
III. | The Pow-wow Men | 42 |
IV. | The Scot in Journalism | 57 |
V. | Thrums and Drumtochty | 76 |
VI. | Barbie | 92 |
VII. | The Bard | 101 |
VIII. | The Scot as a Critic | 117 |
IX. | The Scot as Biographer | 142 |
X. | The Scot in Letters | 153 |
XI. | The Scot in Commerce | 163 |
XII. | The Scot as a Dipsomaniac | 172 |
XIII. | The Scot as Criminal | 179 |
XIV. | The Scot by Adoption | 186 |
XV. | The Scot and England | 194 |
XVI. | The Way Out | 204 |
XVII. | Advertisement | 212 |
This book is for Anglo-Saxons. It is alsoin the nature of a broad hint for Scotchmen.My qualification to