
During
                the early period of COVID-19 containment, many of us
                discovered a new way to explore interests by taking
                courses in the comfort of your own home. Something tells
                me this may be a positive legacy of COVID. Disease was
                nothing new to Sir Walter Scott, the writer
                and master of Abbotsford, who experienced loss of five
                siblings in infancy and a sixth died at the age of five
                month. Walter’s own challenges with health issues
                necessitated him being removed from his urban home to
                recuperate and live with relatives in the countryside
                when his bout of childhood polio left him lame. Having
                to deal with his health issues we now know allowed him
                to experience a part of Scotland unfamiliar to most
                children living in Edinburgh and triggered a lifelong
                interest in collecting, countryside exploration,
                storytelling and history. The molding of the man was
                clearly in his boyhood which led to his great legacy in
                historical novels, which continue to cultivate
                international interest in all things Scottish.
            I
                am currently taking an online course through the
                University of Aberdeen and FutureLearn called Walter Scott: The
                  Man Behind the Monument taught by Professor Ali
                Lumsden and Kirsty Archer-Thompson.
            Ali
                is the director of the University of Aberdeen’s Walter
                Scott Research Centre and Honorary Librarian at
                Abbotsford while Kirsty is responsible for the
                collections, interiors and built heritage of Abbotsford.
            The
                course literature indicates that it is a four-week short
                course and is delivered entirely online via FutureLearn.
                “You can study anywhere in the world and manage your
                study hours to suit you. You’ll learn with academics
                from the University of Aberdeen, the Walter Scott
                Research Centre, and experts at Abbotsford, Scott’s home
                in the Scottish Borders.
            The
                course features a range of online resources, including:
                videos, articles, audio clips, novel extracts,
                discussions, and quizzes. You’ll spend around two hours
                per week on this course.”
            They
                indicate that it was originally a free Massive Open
                Online Course (MOOC) produced by the University of
                Aberdeen and Abbotsford. “However, in response to the
                Covid-19 crisis and the increased demand for armchair
                learning opportunities, it has been decided to keep this
                popular course open and free for people to drop into
                until August. The course will be mentored once a week by
                tutors during this time, before the launch of a
                fully-mentored version to celebrate Scott’s birthday in
                August.
            The
                course has specifically been designed for beginners and
                there is no prior knowledge of the subject required. It
                requires no more than two hours of work each week and
                will provide a comprehensive overview of Scott’s work
                and legacy, while challenging common misconceptions.”
            I
                have read several biographies of Scott over the years
                and Abbotsford is a Mecca for me but I continue to learn
                new things about the character and mind of the great
                bard. Not only did he have a great mind for detail and a
                prolific writing ability but he had a direct connection
                to the land in his exploration as a countryside rambler
                and collector. Walking the trails he created in his
                woods at Abbotsford is a great way to commune with his
                love of the land. 
            Currently
                I am still taking the course and we are examining the
                early years that prepared Scott for the life of the
                writer. The course materials tell us that:
            “He
                collected historical artefacts. He later read relevant
                historical documents in Register House, and had friends
                transcribe relevant manuscripts in the British
                Museum. Scott's greatness as
                scholar and writer comes from his imaginative ability to
                synthesize these different kinds of historical evidence
                to create narratives in which detail is used to reveal
                the way in which people in the past construed their
                world and invested it with meaning.”
            The
                course covers the work and legacy of
                Walter Scott under topics like:
            ·        
                  Scott as a collector
            ·        
                  Relationship between
                Scott’s home at Abbotsford and storytelling
            ·        
                  Connections between
                Scott’s work and landscape, history and nationhood
            ·        
                  Curating Scott’s legacy
             The website address is
                
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/walter-scott