Scotland has two wonderful cities 44 miles apart: the east coast
capital Edinburgh, the west coast metropolis Glasgow. I don't know of
any other country which has its two largest cities in such close
proximity. I was born in Edinburgh, but lived in Glasgow till I was
thirteen when I returned to Edinburgh to spend the rest of my teenage
years (then I ventured to Dundee, but that's a whole nother story). I
have always loved both cities, celebrating their unique attributes and
their differences.

There is a rivalry between Edinburgh and Glasgow. Half the time it's
good-natured banter; it's traditional for folk in the West to have a
dig at the expense of Edinonians and, to a lesser extent, the other
other way around. It's good old Scottish "flyting". There is, however,
all too often a seriousness in the rivalry which disturbs me. There is
a jealousy in it, and it's possible that the tongue-in-cheek abuse
reinforces a bigotry which exists at a deeper level. 

The cliches are too easy: Glasgow has fur-coat-and-hat snobs who could
rival any Morningside caricature, Edinburgh has areas of deprivation to
make your eyes open wide. Edinburgh contains some of the most warm,
friendly, honest people you could meet, Glasgow houses some
hypocritical aloof bastards. But this is not a competition. Cities
contain spectra of human life, and to try to generalise a
characteristic and apply it wholesale to such large urban settlements
is to deny that individuals make up society.

(What the hell am I doing? Obviously a slow day at my desk! Apologies
to anyone who, unlikely as it may seem, has read this far. Keep the
jibes coming, Ted - I can take it. Although I have to remind you that
my big brother is bigger than your big brother.)

-- 
Nigel Gatherer, Crieff, Scotland
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.argonet.co.uk/users/gatherer/

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