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Scottish
Inventors and inventions
Scottish
Monarchy
Scottish
Writers:
A.A.
Milne
Arthur
Conan Doyle
Scottish
Poets:
Andrew
Lang J.B. Selkirk
Robert Burns
Robert
Louis Stevenson Sir
Walter Scott
See
also Scottish History
Who's Like Us - Damn Few And
They're A' Deid
written by Tom Anderson Cairns.
The average Englishman, in the home he calls his castle, slips into his
national costume, a shabby raincoat, patented by chemist Charles Macintosh
from Glasgow, Scotland. En route to his office he strides along the
English lane, surfaced by John Macadam of Ayr, Scotland.
He drives an English car fitted with tires invented by John Boyd Dunlop
of Dreghorn, Scotland, arrives at the station and boards a train, the
forerunner of which was a steam engine, invented by James Watt of
Greenock, Scotland. He then pours himself a cup of coffee from a thermos
flask, the latter invented by Dewar, a Scotsman from Kincardine-on-Forth.
At the office he receives the mail bearing adhesive stamps invented by
James Chalmers of Dundee, Scotland.
During the day he uses the telephone invented by Alexander Graham Bell,
born in Edinburgh, Scotland.
At home in the evening his daughter pedals her bicycle invented by
Kirkpatrick Macmillan, blacksmith of Dumfries, Scotland.
He watches the news on his television, an invention of John Logie Baird of
Helensburgh, Scotland, and hears an item about the U.S. Navy, founded by
John Paul Jones of Kirkbean, Scotland.
He has by now been reminded too much of Scotland and in desperation he
picks up the Bible only to find that the first man mentioned in the good
book is a Scot, King James VI, who authorised its translation.
Nowhere can an Englishman turn to escape the ingenuity of the Scots.
He could take to drink, but
the Scots make the best in the world.
He could take a rifle and end it all but the breech-loading rifle was
invented by Captain Patrick of Pitfours, Scotland.
If he escapes death, he might then find himself on an operating table
injected with penicillin, which was discovered by Alexander Fleming of
Darvel, Scotland, and given an anaesthetic, which was discovered by Sir
James Young Simpson of Bathgate, Scotland.
Out of the anaesthetic, he would find no comfort in learning he was as
safe as the Bank of England founded by William Paterson of Dumfries,
Scotland.
Perhaps his only remaining hope would be to get a transfusion of guid
Scottish blood which would entitle him to ask "Wha’s Like Us".
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