It's a fitting image for the country as seen by independence campaigners, who hope voters will finish Scotland's incomplete journey to statehood by backing separation from Britain in a referendum on Thursday.
Polls suggest the outcome will be close. For many people south of the Scottish-English border, the idea that Scotland might leave the United Kingdom has come as a recent shock. But it has been decades, even centuries, in the making.
He adds an often-heard sentiment: "We've always been treated as second-rate up here, by down south."
Scots have always felt different to their southern neighbor, whose population today is 10 times Scotland's 5.3 million. The Romans never managed to conquer Scotland, and remnants of Hadrian's Wall still stand along the northern limit of their empire.
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Scotland and England fought skirmishes and wars throughout the Middle Ages, and the exploits of Scottish heroes William "Braveheart" Wallace and Robert the Bruce form part of the national mythology.
"Many felt it had been imposed upon them by a bullying England and that Scottish politicians had been bribed into submission," said Christopher Whatley, professor of Scottish history at Dundee University.
"That narrative ... Has pulsed through the Scottish body politic through the centuries."
But for a long time, in the eyes of most Scots, the Union worked. For almost three centuries, Britain was a global success story, carving out a vast empire. Scots were among the leading players, as colonists, soldiers, administrators, engineers and intellectuals.
In the 19th century, Glasgow and other Scottish cities thrived on shipbuilding and manufacturing that powered the empire.