Country Life

We’ll take a cup of kindness, yet

In Scotland, the biggest night of the year is yet to come. Jason Goodwin on surviving Hogmanay

- Illustrati­on by Mungo Mccosh

ILearned the elementary rules of surviving Hogmanay in a castle perched high on a bluff overlookin­g the gelid waters of the north Sea. It was new Year’s Day.

Hogmanay, as everyone knows, is a new Year’s revel, encapsulat­ed in a word that fuses elements of cottage and war-cry, of homeliness and wildness, with no origin or meaning that anyone can reasonably define. Perhaps it’s old Gaelic or old French or norse. nobody, significan­tly, can remember.

everything started smoothly. We were whisked off the night train by our kindly hosts through a wonderland of frosted hedgerows, to be fed with ham and chocolate and entertaine­d with views of the rolling sea. The place was a hubbub of activity, preparing for the great Hogmanay dance that would stamp out the old year and trip in the new: there were telephone calls and people shooting off on bicycles and in Land rovers as the roasting pit, which was to put the hog into Hogmanay, had its annual scrub.

The castle had certainly been cleaned from top to bottom and made pretty with boughs of greenery, although whether that was because of the party in prospect or because the household cleaved to the old Hogmanay rite of redding the House, I can’t say. Traditiona­lly, a house would be swept and aired before new Year, with particular care given to sweeping out the ashes of the fire.

The ashes can be read, like runes or tealeaves, to predict what the year will bring. This is called spodomancy, but we had no spodomance­rs to hand. nor did we participat­e in the ritual cleansing of house and farm known as ‘saining’, a spiritual affair, sprinkling the rooms with river water and burning juniper until everyone coughs.

Instead, our fire was lit in the quiet library, with a decanter on a side table and always that view of the darkening waves, as we guests from the south put in a few moments shuffling our feet on the axminster, hoping to recall the Bachian geometry of Strip the Willow.

Outside, in the courtyard, bonfire preparatio­ns were under way. Fire looms large in

You’ll be propelled at the head of a gregarious body to first foot the next people up the glen and on to the next

Hogmanay celebratio­ns and the fire festivals that take place across Scotland at New Year doubtless have roots in a pagan, Viking past. Hogmanay does take to itself many of the more fiery and festive elements of Christmas, which the Presbyteri­ans refused to celebrate because it wasn’t in the Bible— Christmas Day only became a national holiday in Scotland in 1958.

At Stonehaven, young bloods swirl baskets of fire around their heads as they march to the sea. In Edinburgh, where the celebratio­ns kick off with a torchlit procession through the town, they end with the burning of a wicker figure on Carlton Hill. Up Helly Aa has nothing to do with it (that is the torchlit procession on the Shetland Islands, in late January, which ends with the burning of a Viking longship. It’s very 19th century).

There’s nothing very puritanica­l about first footing, however, especially when good luck is ensured by the arrival after midnight of a tall, dark, handsome stranger. The first foot can bring a number of magical fairy gifts, including black bun, fruitcake baked in a pastry wrapper, which Robert Louis Stevenson described as ‘a black substance inimical to life’.

First footing is, I think, at the very heart of Hogmanay, weaving a web of solidarity and neighbourl­iness. Some say the gifts should be coal, bread, silver and greenery, for warmth, good cheer, prosperity and long life. In return, the first foot gets a wee dram or two and may be sent from the house with a pan of ashes, swept from the fireplace during the Redding, to represent the departure of the old year.

In all the talk of tall, dark, handsome strangers, the key word is stranger: you may be small, even ugly, but if you’re a guest, and a man, it may fall to you to bring in the black substance inimical to life.

As a one-off, this is jolly. You steal from the house before midnight, carrying your

trappings, stamp about in the cold looking for holly as everyone inside cheers and sings, and then return, to knock with appropriat­e pomp on the front door and be welcomed in with thumps, kisses and a stiff drink.

At this point, in remoter settlement­s, you may find yourself being recycled. Everyone loves a stranger at Hogmanay. You’ll be propelled at the head of a gregarious body to first foot the next people up the glen and on to the next, to wake eventually with a pounding head and frozen limbs, lying under cushions on the sofa in a strange house. Women may first foot these days, but redheads? Never.

Mug up on your dance steps and do at least learn one verse of Auld Lang Syne, a feature of New Year celebratio­ns the world over, although it was set to die a natural death until Robert Burns revived it. The national bard called it ‘an old song, of the olden times, and which has never been in print, nor even in manuscript until I took it down from an old man’.

At the castle, the pipers skirled, the reelers whirled, young and old trod the measure. It was a wonderful, magical night. Outside, sparks flew and the hog rolled on his spit. Then came a morning, and drowsy revellers rose like the sheeted dead, clutching their heads and croaking for water. And there was none, as the pumps had failed in the night.

We drank what was left in the ice buckets and a few bold souls slaked their thirst with amber liquid before our host led us on a sevenmile tramp along the beach to town. There was a ceilidh in the hall and hot tea, truly wet, and buns. We were so much revived that, as I recall, we carried off a prize for dancing. The rudimentar­y lesson? Stick to your drink and keep a jug of water by the bed.

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