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Scottish
Humour - The Patriotic Scot
Of the varied elements constituting the character of the Scot,
it can be claimed with some assurance that loyalty is perhaps
the most conspicuous. He is nothing if not patriotic. His proverbial
love of country not only binds him more closely to his native
town, village or glen, but also expresses itself in extreme loyalty
to kith and kin. Ardent Scottishness forms as it were the outmost
of the concentric bulwarks with which a Scotsman fortifies himself.
. . Surmount this mound, and you will find an inner and still
dearer barrier - the love of his local community, his village,
or most probably, his clan... Storm this second obstacle, you
have a third - his attachment to his own family, his father, mother,
sons, daughters, uncles, aunts, and cousins to the ninth generation
And finally, his loyalty to his friends.
There
are many recorded examples underlining this very distinctive Scottish
trait:
" After all," said the old widow on being consoled on the loss
of her husband, " After all, he wasn't a drop of blood kin to
me. "
This
reply recalls the domestic problem of the Scot whose sister had
been living with his wife and himself for many years. But two
women is " one two many " in any house and finally the situation
could be endured no longer. One of the women must leave. But blood
was blood and kin was kin - and his wife had to leave.
When
Jock moved to New York he constantly annoyed his American friends
by boasting about how great Scotland was. Finally, in exasperation,
one said, "If Scotland's so marvelous, how come you
didn't stay there?" "Well," explained Jock
"they're all so clever in Scotland I had to cross
the Atlantic to have any chance of making it at all."
An
Englishman, roused by a Scot's scorn of his race, protested
that he was born an Englishman and hoped to die an Englishman.
"Man," scoffed the Scot, "have you no ambition
at all?"
When
it comes to incidents in his national history his patriotic zeal
is even strong enough to shake him out of his native caution.
Witness the Bannockburn blacksmith who had shown some English
visitors over the battlefield and who, for his services and his
graphic descriptions of the events of that great day, had been
offered a nice tip. " No, no, keep you're your money, " he replied
with great self-denial; " this battlefield has cost you enough
already. "
( Bannockburn is where the Scots defeated the English )
When
it comes to the English, the loyal Scot will take any opportunity
to get them back for years of perceived, and actual, injustices.
There was an Scotsman, an Englishman and Sharon Stone sitting
together in a carriage in a train going through the Highlands
of Scotland. Suddenly the train went through a tunnel and as it
was an old style steam train, there were no lights in the carriages
and it went completely dark. Then there was this kissing noise
and the sound of a really loud slap. When the train came out of
the tunnel, Sharon Stone and the Scotsman were sitting as if nothing
had happened and the Englishman had his hand against his face
as he had been slapped.
The Englishman was thinking: " The Scotsman must have kissed Sharon
Stone and she missed him and slapped me instead. "
Sharon Stone was thinking: " The Englishman must have tried to
kiss me and actually kissed the Scotsman and got slapped for it."
And the Scotsman was thinking: " This is magic. The next time
the train goes through a tunnel I'll make that kissing noise
and slap that English fool again .
The
Competitive Scot
After
several hundred years of actual conflict with England, it is inevitable
that there should still be a competitive element in the relationship
with bigger countries. This comes through occasionally in some
of the jokes which are told when the rivals meet. Included on
this page are a few other jokes - involving such diverse stereotypes
as Americans and Texans, and of course, the English. (you can
take a joke, can't you?).
Jock and an American were flying across the Atlantic to New York
when the stewardess approached.
"May I get you something?" she asked.
" Yes, a whisky" Jock replied.
She poured him a drink then asked the American if he'd like
one.
"Never!" he said sternly. "I'd rather be raped
and ravished by whores all the way to America than drink whisky!"
Jock hurriedly passed the drink back, saying " Shoot, I didn't
know there was a choice!"
A Scottish farmer was in his field digging up his potatoes.
An American farmer looked over the fence and said
"In Texas we grow potatoes 5 times larger than that!"
The Scotsman replied " Ah but we just grow them for our own
mouths son!"
An American entered a bar and stood beside a Scotsman.
After they had chatted for a while the Scot asked, "Where
are you from?"
The American replied "I'm from the finest country
in the world."
The Scot looked skeptical and replied "Are you? You have
a damn funny accent for a Scotsman."
Irate American golfer, on his way to a round of 150: "You
must be the worst caddie in the world!"
Scottish caddie (dryly): "That would be too much of a coincidence,
sir."
A Scotsman and Englishman are strolling along the beach when they
find a lamp. They clean it up and out pops a genie. "I'll
give you each one wish for freeing me" says the genie.
The Englishman thinks then wishes. "I believe in an England
for the English, I'm sick and tired of all these Scots coming
into MY country. I wish for a huge wall around England - to keep
the English in and the Scots out"
POOF and it's done. The Scotsman thinks. "Genie?"
he says "tell me about this wall". "Well"
says the genie "it's 500 feet high, a third of a mile
thick, nothing can get in and nothing can get out".
"OK" says the Scotsman "Fill it with water".
MacDougal was offered 500 pounds for his dog by an American and
100 pounds by an Englishman. Much to everyone's surprise he
accepted the bid from the Englishman. Afterwards he explained.
"The dog can walk back home from England but he'll
never swim the Atlantic."
A
philosophical Scotland supporter on the train south to attend
the Scotland versus England soccer match was heard to comment:
"No matter if we win or lose this game, we will still
be winners in the game of life, because when our opponents waken
up tomorrow they'll still be English and we won't."
More
Scottish Humour - The Patriotic Scot
Of
the varied elements constituting the character of the Scot, it
can be claimed with some assurance that loyalty is perhaps the
most conspicuous. He is nothing if not patriotic. His proverbial
love of country not only binds him more closely to his native
town, village or glen, but also expresses itself in extreme loyalty
to kith and kin. Ardent Scottishness forms as it were the outmost
of the concentric bulwarks with which a Scotsman fortifies himself.
. . Surmount this mound, and you will find an inner and still
dearer barrier - the love of his local community, his village,
or most probably, his clan... Storm this second obstacle, you
have a third - his attachment to his own family, his father, mother,
sons, daughters, uncles, aunts, and cousins to the ninth generation
And finally, his loyalty to his friends.
There
are many recorded examples underlining this very distinctive Scottish
trait:
" After all," said the old widow on being consoled on the loss
of her husband, " After all, he wasn't a drop of blood kin to
me. "
This reply recalls the domestic problem of the Scot whose sister
had been living with his wife and himself for many years. But
two women is " one two many " in any house and finally the situation
could be endured no longer. One of the women must leave. But blood
was blood and kin was kin - and his wife had to leave.
When
Jock moved to New York he constantly annoyed his American friends
by boasting about how great Scotland was. Finally, in exasperation,
one said, "If Scotland's so marvelous, how come you
didn't stay there?" "Well," explained Jock
"they're all so clever in Scotland I had to cross
the Atlantic to have any chance of making it at all."
An
Englishman, roused by a Scot's scorn of his race, protested
that he was born an Englishman and hoped to die an Englishman.
"Man," scoffed the Scot, "have you no ambition
at all?"
When
it comes to incidents in his national history his patriotic zeal
is even strong enough to shake him out of his native caution.
Witness the Bannockburn blacksmith who had shown some English
visitors over the battlefield and who, for his services and his
graphic descriptions of the events of that great day, had been
offered a nice tip. " No, no, keep you're your money, " he replied
with great self-denial; " this battlefield has cost you enough
already. "
( Bannockburn is where the Scots defeated the English )
When
it comes to the English, the loyal Scot will take any opportunity
to get them back for years of perceived, and actual, injustices.
There was an Scotsman, an Englishman and Sharon Stone sitting
together in a carriage in a train going through the Highlands
of Scotland. Suddenly the train went through a tunnel and as it
was an old style steam train, there were no lights in the carriages
and it went completely dark. Then there was this kissing noise
and the sound of a really loud slap. When the train came out of
the tunnel, Sharon Stone and the Scotsman were sitting as if nothing
had happened and the Englishman had his hand against his face
as he had been slapped.
The Englishman was thinking: " The Scotsman must have kissed Sharon
Stone and she missed him and slapped me instead. "
Sharon Stone was thinking: " The Englishman must have tried to
kiss me and actually kissed the Scotsman and got slapped for it."
And the Scotsman was thinking: " This is magic. The next time
the train goes through a tunnel I'll make that kissing noise
and slap that English fool again .
The
Competitive Scot
After
several hundred years of actual conflict with England, it is inevitable
that there should still be a competitive element in the relationship
with bigger countries. This comes through occasionally in some
of the jokes which are told when the rivals meet. Included on
this page are a few other jokes - involving such diverse stereotypes
as Americans and Texans, and of course, the English. (you can
take a joke, can't you?).
Jock and an American were flying across the Atlantic to New York
when the stewardess approached.
"May I get you something?" she asked.
" Yes, a whisky" Jock replied.
She poured him a drink then asked the American if he'd like
one.
"Never!" he said sternly. "I'd rather be raped
and ravished by whores all the way to America than drink whisky!"
Jock hurriedly passed the drink back, saying " Shoot, I didn't
know there was a choice!"
A Scottish farmer was in his field digging up his potatoes.
An American farmer looked over the fence and said
"In Texas we grow potatoes 5 times larger than that!"
The Scotsman replied " Ah but we just grow them for our own
mouths son!"
An American entered a bar and stood beside a Scotsman.
After they had chatted for a while the Scot asked, "Where
are you from?"
The American replied "I'm from the finest country
in the world."
The Scot looked skeptical and replied "Are you? You have
a damn funny accent for a Scotsman."
Irate American golfer, on his way to a round of 150: "You
must be the worst caddie in the world!"
Scottish caddie (dryly): "That would be too much of a coincidence,
sir."
A Scotsman and Englishman are strolling along the beach when they
find a lamp. They clean it up and out pops a genie. "I'll
give you each one wish for freeing me" says the genie.
The Englishman thinks then wishes. "I believe in an England
for the English, I'm sick and tired of all these Scots coming
into MY country. I wish for a huge wall around England - to keep
the English in and the Scots out"
POOF and it's done. The Scotsman thinks. "Genie?"
he says "tell me about this wall". "Well"
says the genie "it's 500 feet high, a third of a mile
thick, nothing can get in and nothing can get out".
"OK" says the Scotsman "Fill it with water".
MacDougal was offered 500 pounds for his dog by an American and
100 pounds by an Englishman. Much to everyone's surprise he
accepted the bid from the Englishman. Afterwards he explained.
"The dog can walk back home from England but he'll
never swim the Atlantic."
A
philosophical Scotland supporter on the train south to attend
the Scotland versus England soccer match was heard to comment:
"No matter if we win or lose this game, we will still
be winners in the game of life, because when our opponents waken
up tomorrow they'll still be English and we won't."
Return
to Scottish Humor
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