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Download Prof. David Hewitt's reading

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Readings from the Edinburgh Edition of the Waverley Novels

Engraving by Henry Meyer from a drawing by Sir William Allan

T he Antiquary (Ch.11) read by Prof. David Hewitt.

The passage comes from The Antiquary (1816), a novel set in July and August 1794. In it Jonathan Oldbuck, the Antiquary of the title, bargains with Maggie Meiklebackit for the purchase of fish. The two speakers are characterised by their forms of speech, Oldbuck uttering something rather more educated than Maggie, and yet both accommodating each other, adjusting what they say and how they say it. They represent different class attitudes to work and remuneration: 'It's no fish ye're buying—it's men's lives'. The gender difference is also a factor in their bargaining, for Oldbuck is rather more generous to Maggie than his sister would have been. Their respective views of drink illuminate a divergence in both their class and their religious perspectives. Yet the reference to the government's banning of whisky distilling brings in a political context which silently unites them in a kind of opposition to the British government. Though they differ, Maggie's views do not challenge Oldbuck's social position as laird, and Oldbuck's acceptance of his social responsibilities result in his paying Maggie half-a-crown for a couple of fish and some crabs when the average daily male agricultural wage in the county of Angus in 1794 was under 1s. It is brilliant dialogue: the argument moves to and fro, and, as it does, Oldbuck is uncovered as naive and generous, ignorant and wise, while Maggie's rhetoric has great moral force. 

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The Antiquary Buying Fish from Mrs Mucklebackit. 1820. Engraving by Henry Meyer from a drawing by Sir William Allanby. Used here with the permission of the Walter Scott Digital Archive Image Collection.

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The Edinburgh Edition of the Waverley Novels. The Antiquary by Walter Scott. Edited by David Hewitt. 
Published in 1995 by Edinburgh University Press. © The University Court of the University of Edinburgh.
Permission has been granted to The Edinburgh Sir Walter Scott Club for usage here until Dec.2012.
For more information about the series visit www.euppublishing.com/series/EEWN

 © The University Court of the University of Edinburgh
 © The University Court of the University of Edinburgh

The Edinburgh Edition of the Waverley Novels. The Antiquary by Walter Scott. Edited by David Hewitt. 
Published in 1995 by Edinburgh University Press. © The University Court of the University of Edinburgh.
Permission has been granted to The Edinburgh Sir Walter Scott Club for usage here until Dec.2012.
For more information about the series visit www.euppublishing.com/series/EEWN

Read more about this Edition on the EUP website

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