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+<title>A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland</title>
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland, by Samuel Johnson</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland,
+by Samuel Johnson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland
+
+
+Author: Samuel Johnson
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2005 [eBook #2064]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A JOURNEY TO THE WESTERN ISLES OF
+SCOTLAND***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1775 edition with the corrections noted in the
+1785 errata by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1>A JOURNEY TO THE WESTERN ISLANDS OF SCOTLAND</h1>
+<h2>INCH KEITH</h2>
+<p>I had desired to visit the Hebrides, or Western Islands of Scotland,
+so long, that I scarcely remember how the wish was originally excited;
+and was in the Autumn of the year 1773 induced to undertake the journey,
+by finding in Mr. Boswell a companion, whose acuteness would help my
+inquiry, and whose gaiety of conversation and civility of manners are
+sufficient to counteract the inconveniences of travel, in countries
+less hospitable than we have passed.</p>
+<p>On the eighteenth of August we left Edinburgh, a city too well known
+to admit description, and directed our course northward, along the eastern
+coast of Scotland, accompanied the first day by another gentleman, who
+could stay with us only long enough to shew us how much we lost at separation.</p>
+<p>As we crossed the Frith of Forth, our curiosity was attracted by
+Inch Keith, a small island, which neither of my companions had ever
+visited, though, lying within their view, it had all their lives solicited
+their notice.&nbsp; Here, by climbing with some difficulty over shattered
+crags, we made the first experiment of unfrequented coasts.&nbsp; Inch
+Keith is nothing more than a rock covered with a thin layer of earth,
+not wholly bare of grass, and very fertile of thistles.&nbsp; A small
+herd of cows grazes annually upon it in the summer.&nbsp; It seems never
+to have afforded to man or beast a permanent habitation.</p>
+<p>We found only the ruins of a small fort, not so injured by time but
+that it might be easily restored to its former state.&nbsp; It seems
+never to have been intended as a place of strength, nor was built to
+endure a siege, but merely to afford cover to a few soldiers, who perhaps
+had the charge of a battery, or were stationed to give signals of approaching
+danger.&nbsp; There is therefore no provision of water within the walls,
+though the spring is so near, that it might have been easily enclosed.&nbsp;
+One of the stones had this inscription: &lsquo;Maria Reg. 1564.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+It has probably been neglected from the time that the whole island had
+the same king.</p>
+<p>We left this little island with our thoughts employed awhile on the
+different appearance that it would have made, if it had been placed
+at the same distance from London, with the same facility of approach;
+with what emulation of price a few rocky acres would have been purchased,
+and with what expensive industry they would have been cultivated and
+adorned.</p>
+<p>When we landed, we found our chaise ready, and passed through Kinghorn,
+Kirkaldy, and Cowpar, places not unlike the small or straggling market-towns
+in those parts of England where commerce and manufactures have not yet
+produced opulence.</p>
+<p>Though we were yet in the most populous part of Scotland, and at
+so small a distance from the capital, we met few passengers.</p>
+<p>The roads are neither rough nor dirty; and it affords a southern
+stranger a new kind of pleasure to travel so commodiously without the
+interruption of toll-gates.&nbsp; Where the bottom is rocky, as it seems
+commonly to be in Scotland, a smooth way is made indeed with great labour,
+but it never wants repairs; and in those parts where adventitious materials
+are necessary, the ground once consolidated is rarely broken; for the
+inland commerce is not great, nor are heavy commodities often transported
+otherwise than by water.&nbsp; The carriages in common use are small
+carts, drawn each by one little horse; and a man seems to derive some
+degree of dignity and importance from the reputation of possessing a
+two-horse cart.</p>
+<h2>ST. ANDREWS</h2>
+<p>At an hour somewhat late we came to St. Andrews, a city once archiepiscopal;
+where that university still subsists in which philosophy was formerly
+taught by Buchanan, whose name has as fair a claim to immortality as
+can be conferred by modern latinity, and perhaps a fairer than the instability
+of vernacular languages admits.</p>
+<p>We found, that by the interposition of some invisible friend, lodgings
+had been provided for us at the house of one of the professors, whose
+easy civility quickly made us forget that we were strangers; and in
+the whole time of our stay we were gratified by every mode of kindness,
+and entertained with all the elegance of lettered hospitality.</p>
+<p>In the morning we rose to perambulate a city, which only history
+shews to have once flourished, and surveyed the ruins of ancient magnificence,
+of which even the ruins cannot long be visible, unless some care be
+taken to preserve them; and where is the pleasure of preserving such
+mournful memorials?&nbsp; They have been till very lately so much neglected,
+that every man carried away the stones who fancied that he wanted them.</p>
+<p>The cathedral, of which the foundations may be still traced, and
+a small part of the wall is standing, appears to have been a spacious
+and majestick building, not unsuitable to the primacy of the kingdom.&nbsp;
+Of the architecture, the poor remains can hardly exhibit, even to an
+artist, a sufficient specimen.&nbsp; It was demolished, as is well known,
+in the tumult and violence of Knox&rsquo;s reformation.</p>
+<p>Not far from the cathedral, on the margin of the water, stands a
+fragment of the castle, in which the archbishop anciently resided.&nbsp;
+It was never very large, and was built with more attention to security
+than pleasure.&nbsp; Cardinal Beatoun is said to have had workmen employed
+in improving its fortifications at the time when he was murdered by
+the ruffians of reformation, in the manner of which Knox has given what
+he himself calls a merry narrative.</p>
+<p>The change of religion in Scotland, eager and vehement as it was,
+raised an epidemical enthusiasm, compounded of sullen scrupulousness
+and warlike ferocity, which, in a people whom idleness resigned to their
+own thoughts, and who, conversing only with each other, suffered no
+dilution of their zeal from the gradual influx of new opinions, was
+long transmitted in its full strength from the old to the young, but
+by trade and intercourse with England, is now visibly abating, and giving
+way too fast to that laxity of practice and indifference of opinion,
+in which men, not sufficiently instructed to find the middle point,
+too easily shelter themselves from rigour and constraint.</p>
+<p>The city of St. Andrews, when it had lost its archiepiscopal pre-eminence,
+gradually decayed: One of its streets is now lost; and in those that
+remain, there is silence and solitude of inactive indigence and gloomy
+depopulation.</p>
+<p>The university, within a few years, consisted of three colleges,
+but is now reduced to two; the college of St. Leonard being lately dissolved
+by the sale of its buildings and the appropriation of its revenues to
+the professors of the two others.&nbsp; The chapel of the alienated
+college is yet standing, a fabrick not inelegant of external structure;
+but I was always, by some civil excuse, hindred from entering it.&nbsp;
+A decent attempt, as I was since told, has been made to convert it into
+a kind of green-house, by planting its area with shrubs.&nbsp; This
+new method of gardening is unsuccessful; the plants do not hitherto
+prosper.&nbsp; To what use it will next be put I have no pleasure in
+conjecturing.&nbsp; It is something that its present state is at least
+not ostentatiously displayed.&nbsp; Where there is yet shame, there
+may in time be virtue.</p>
+<p>The dissolution of St. Leonard&rsquo;s college was doubtless necessary;
+but of that necessity there is reason to complain.&nbsp; It is surely
+not without just reproach, that a nation, of which the commerce is hourly
+extending, and the wealth encreasing, denies any participation of its
+prosperity to its literary societies; and while its merchants or its
+nobles are raising palaces, suffers its universities to moulder into
+dust.</p>
+<p>Of the two colleges yet standing, one is by the institution of its
+founder appropriated to Divinity.&nbsp; It is said to be capable of
+containing fifty students; but more than one must occupy a chamber.&nbsp;
+The library, which is of late erection, is not very spacious, but elegant
+and luminous.</p>
+<p>The doctor, by whom it was shewn, hoped to irritate or subdue my
+English vanity by telling me, that we had no such repository of books
+in England.</p>
+<p>Saint Andrews seems to be a place eminently adapted to study and
+education, being situated in a populous, yet a cheap country, and exposing
+the minds and manners of young men neither to the levity and dissoluteness
+of a capital city, nor to the gross luxury of a town of commerce, places
+naturally unpropitious to learning; in one the desire of knowledge easily
+gives way to the love of pleasure, and in the other, is in danger of
+yielding to the love of money.</p>
+<p>The students however are represented as at this time not exceeding
+a hundred.&nbsp; Perhaps it may be some obstruction to their increase
+that there is no episcopal chapel in the place.&nbsp; I saw no reason
+for imputing their paucity to the present professors; nor can the expence
+of an academical education be very reasonably objected.&nbsp; A student
+of the highest class may keep his annual session, or as the English
+call it, his term, which lasts seven months, for about fifteen pounds,
+and one of lower rank for less than ten; in which board, lodging, and
+instruction are all included.</p>
+<p>The chief magistrate resident in the university, answering to our
+vice-chancellor, and to the <i>rector magnificus</i> on the continent,
+had commonly the title of Lord Rector; but being addressed only as Mr.
+Rector in an inauguratory speech by the present chancellor, he has fallen
+from his former dignity of style.&nbsp; Lordship was very liberally
+annexed by our ancestors to any station or character of dignity: They
+said, the Lord General, and Lord Ambassador; so we still say, my Lord,
+to the judge upon the circuit, and yet retain in our Liturgy the Lords
+of the Council.</p>
+<p>In walking among the ruins of religious buildings, we came to two
+vaults over which had formerly stood the house of the sub-prior.&nbsp;
+One of the vaults was inhabited by an old woman, who claimed the right
+of abode there, as the widow of a man whose ancestors had possessed
+the same gloomy mansion for no less than four generations.&nbsp; The
+right, however it began, was considered as established by legal prescription,
+and the old woman lives undisturbed.&nbsp; She thinks however that she
+has a claim to something more than sufferance; for as her husband&rsquo;s
+name was Bruce, she is allied to royalty, and told Mr. Boswell that
+when there were persons of quality in the place, she was distinguished
+by some notice; that indeed she is now neglected, but she spins a thread,
+has the company of her cat, and is troublesome to nobody.</p>
+<p>Having now seen whatever this ancient city offered to our curiosity,
+we left it with good wishes, having reason to be highly pleased with
+the attention that was paid us.&nbsp; But whoever surveys the world
+must see many things that give him pain.&nbsp; The kindness of the professors
+did not contribute to abate the uneasy remembrance of an university
+declining, a college alienated, and a church profaned and hastening
+to the ground.</p>
+<p>St. Andrews indeed has formerly suffered more atrocious ravages and
+more extensive destruction, but recent evils affect with greater force.&nbsp;
+We were reconciled to the sight of archiepiscopal ruins.&nbsp; The distance
+of a calamity from the present time seems to preclude the mind from
+contact or sympathy.&nbsp; Events long past are barely known; they are
+not considered.&nbsp; We read with as little emotion the violence of
+Knox and his followers, as the irruptions of Alaric and the Goths.&nbsp;
+Had the university been destroyed two centuries ago, we should not have
+regretted it; but to see it pining in decay and struggling for life,
+fills the mind with mournful images and ineffectual wishes.</p>
+<h2>ABERBROTHICK</h2>
+<p>As we knew sorrow and wishes to be vain, it was now our business
+to mind our way.&nbsp; The roads of Scotland afford little diversion
+to the traveller, who seldom sees himself either encountered or overtaken,
+and who has nothing to contemplate but grounds that have no visible
+boundaries, or are separated by walls of loose stone.&nbsp; From the
+bank of the Tweed to St. Andrews I had never seen a single tree, which
+I did not believe to have grown up far within the present century.&nbsp;
+Now and then about a gentleman&rsquo;s house stands a small plantation,
+which in Scotch is called a policy, but of these there are few, and
+those few all very young.&nbsp; The variety of sun and shade is here
+utterly unknown.&nbsp; There is no tree for either shelter or timber.&nbsp;
+The oak and the thorn is equally a stranger, and the whole country is
+extended in uniform nakedness, except that in the road between Kirkaldy
+and Cowpar, I passed for a few yards between two hedges.&nbsp; A tree
+might be a show in Scotland as a horse in Venice.&nbsp; At St. Andrews
+Mr. Boswell found only one, and recommended it to my notice; I told
+him that it was rough and low, or looked as if I thought so.&nbsp; This,
+said he, is nothing to another a few miles off.&nbsp; I was still less
+delighted to hear that another tree was not to be seen nearer.&nbsp;
+Nay, said a gentleman that stood by, I know but of this and that tree
+in the county.</p>
+<p>The Lowlands of Scotland had once undoubtedly an equal portion of
+woods with other countries.&nbsp; Forests are every where gradually
+diminished, as architecture and cultivation prevail by the increase
+of people and the introduction of arts.&nbsp; But I believe few regions
+have been denuded like this, where many centuries must have passed in
+waste without the least thought of future supply.&nbsp; Davies observes
+in his account of Ireland, that no Irishman had ever planted an orchard.&nbsp;
+For that negligence some excuse might be drawn from an unsettled state
+of life, and the instability of property; but in Scotland possession
+has long been secure, and inheritance regular, yet it may be doubted
+whether before the Union any man between Edinburgh and England had ever
+set a tree.</p>
+<p>Of this improvidence no other account can be given than that it probably
+began in times of tumult, and continued because it had begun.&nbsp;
+Established custom is not easily broken, till some great event shakes
+the whole system of things, and life seems to recommence upon new principles.&nbsp;
+That before the Union the Scots had little trade and little money, is
+no valid apology; for plantation is the least expensive of all methods
+of improvement.&nbsp; To drop a seed into the ground can cost nothing,
+and the trouble is not great of protecting the young plant, till it
+is out of danger; though it must be allowed to have some difficulty
+in places like these, where they have neither wood for palisades, nor
+thorns for hedges.</p>
+<p>Our way was over the Firth of Tay, where, though the water was not
+wide, we paid four shillings for ferrying the chaise.&nbsp; In Scotland
+the necessaries of life are easily procured, but superfluities and elegancies
+are of the same price at least as in England, and therefore may be considered
+as much dearer.</p>
+<p>We stopped a while at Dundee, where I remember nothing remarkable,
+and mounting our chaise again, came about the close of the day to Aberbrothick.</p>
+<p>The monastery of Aberbrothick is of great renown in the history of
+Scotland.&nbsp; Its ruins afford ample testimony of its ancient magnificence:
+Its extent might, I suppose, easily be found by following the walls
+among the grass and weeds, and its height is known by some parts yet
+standing.&nbsp; The arch of one of the gates is entire, and of another
+only so far dilapidated as to diversify the appearance.&nbsp; A square
+apartment of great loftiness is yet standing; its use I could not conjecture,
+as its elevation was very disproportionate to its area.&nbsp; Two corner
+towers, particularly attracted our attention.&nbsp; Mr. Boswell, whose
+inquisitiveness is seconded by great activity, scrambled in at a high
+window, but found the stairs within broken, and could not reach the
+top.&nbsp; Of the other tower we were told that the inhabitants sometimes
+climbed it, but we did not immediately discern the entrance, and as
+the night was gathering upon us, thought proper to desist.&nbsp; Men
+skilled in architecture might do what we did not attempt: They might
+probably form an exact ground-plot of this venerable edifice.&nbsp;
+They may from some parts yet standing conjecture its general form, and
+perhaps by comparing it with other buildings of the same kind and the
+same age, attain an idea very near to truth.&nbsp; I should scarcely
+have regretted my journey, had it afforded nothing more than the sight
+of Aberbrothick.</p>
+<h2>MONTROSE</h2>
+<p>Leaving these fragments of magnificence, we travelled on to Montrose,
+which we surveyed in the morning, and found it well built, airy, and
+clean.&nbsp; The townhouse is a handsome fabrick with a portico.&nbsp;
+We then went to view the English chapel, and found a small church, clean
+to a degree unknown in any other part of Scotland, with commodious galleries,
+and what was yet less expected, with an organ.</p>
+<p>At our inn we did not find a reception such as we thought proportionate
+to the commercial opulence of the place; but Mr. Boswell desired me
+to observe that the innkeeper was an Englishman, and I then defended
+him as well as I could.</p>
+<p>When I had proceeded thus far, I had opportunities of observing what
+I had never heard, that there are many beggars in Scotland.&nbsp; In
+Edinburgh the proportion is, I think, not less than in London, and in
+the smaller places it is far greater than in English towns of the same
+extent.&nbsp; It must, however, be allowed that they are not importunate,
+nor clamorous.&nbsp; They solicit silently, or very modestly, and therefore
+though their behaviour may strike with more force the heart of a stranger,
+they are certainly in danger of missing the attention of their countrymen.&nbsp;
+Novelty has always some power, an unaccustomed mode of begging excites
+an unaccustomed degree of pity.&nbsp; But the force of novelty is by
+its own nature soon at an end; the efficacy of outcry and perseverance
+is permanent and certain.</p>
+<p>The road from Montrose exhibited a continuation of the same appearances.&nbsp;
+The country is still naked, the hedges are of stone, and the fields
+so generally plowed that it is hard to imagine where grass is found
+for the horses that till them.&nbsp; The harvest, which was almost ripe,
+appeared very plentiful.</p>
+<p>Early in the afternoon Mr. Boswell observed that we were at no great
+distance from the house of lord Monboddo.&nbsp; The magnetism of his
+conversation easily drew us out of our way, and the entertainment which
+we received would have been a sufficient recompense for a much greater
+deviation.</p>
+<p>The roads beyond Edinburgh, as they are less frequented, must be
+expected to grow gradually rougher; but they were hitherto by no means
+incommodious.&nbsp; We travelled on with the gentle pace of a Scotch
+driver, who having no rivals in expedition, neither gives himself nor
+his horses unnecessary trouble.&nbsp; We did not affect the impatience
+we did not feel, but were satisfied with the company of each other as
+well riding in the chaise, as sitting at an inn.&nbsp; The night and
+the day are equally solitary and equally safe; for where there are so
+few travellers, why should there be robbers.</p>
+<h2>ABERDEEN</h2>
+<p>We came somewhat late to Aberdeen, and found the inn so full, that
+we had some difficulty in obtaining admission, till Mr. Boswell made
+himself known: His name overpowered all objection, and we found a very
+good house and civil treatment.</p>
+<p>I received the next day a very kind letter from Sir Alexander Gordon,
+whom I had formerly known in London, and after a cessation of all intercourse
+for near twenty years met here professor of physic in the King&rsquo;s
+College.&nbsp; Such unexpected renewals of acquaintance may be numbered
+among the most pleasing incidents of life.</p>
+<p>The knowledge of one professor soon procured me the notice of the
+rest, and I did not want any token of regard, being conducted wherever
+there was any thing which I desired to see, and entertained at once
+with the novelty of the place, and the kindness of communication.</p>
+<p>To write of the cities of our own island with the solemnity of geographical
+description, as if we had been cast upon a newly discovered coast, has
+the appearance of very frivolous ostentation; yet as Scotland is little
+known to the greater part of those who may read these observations,
+it is not superfluous to relate, that under the name of Aberdeen are
+comprised two towns standing about a mile distant from each other, but
+governed, I think, by the same magistrates.</p>
+<p>Old Aberdeen is the ancient episcopal city, in which are still to
+be seen the remains of the cathedral.&nbsp; It has the appearance of
+a town in decay, having been situated in times when commerce was yet
+unstudied, with very little attention to the commodities of the harbour.</p>
+<p>New Aberdeen has all the bustle of prosperous trade, and all the
+shew of increasing opulence.&nbsp; It is built by the water-side.&nbsp;
+The houses are large and lofty, and the streets spacious and clean.&nbsp;
+They build almost wholly with the granite used in the new pavement of
+the streets of London, which is well known not to want hardness, yet
+they shape it easily.&nbsp; It is beautiful and must be very lasting.</p>
+<p>What particular parts of commerce are chiefly exercised by the merchants
+of Aberdeen, I have not inquired.&nbsp; The manufacture which forces
+itself upon a stranger&rsquo;s eye is that of knit-stockings, on which
+the women of the lower class are visibly employed.</p>
+<p>In each of these towns there is a college, or in stricter language,
+an university; for in both there are professors of the same parts of
+learning, and the colleges hold their sessions and confer degrees separately,
+with total independence of one on the other.</p>
+<p>In old Aberdeen stands the King&rsquo;s College, of which the first
+president was Hector Boece, or Boethius, who may be justly reverenced
+as one of the revivers of elegant learning.&nbsp; When he studied at
+Paris, he was acquainted with Erasmus, who afterwards gave him a public
+testimony of his esteem, by inscribing to him a catalogue of his works.&nbsp;
+The stile of Boethius, though, perhaps, not always rigorously pure,
+is formed with great diligence upon ancient models, and wholly uninfected
+with monastic barbarity.&nbsp; His history is written with elegance
+and vigour, but his fabulousness and credulity are justly blamed.&nbsp;
+His fabulousness, if he was the author of the fictions, is a fault for
+which no apology can be made; but his credulity may be excused in an
+age, when all men were credulous.&nbsp; Learning was then rising on
+the world; but ages so long accustomed to darkness, were too much dazzled
+with its light to see any thing distinctly.&nbsp; The first race of
+scholars, in the fifteenth century, and some time after, were, for the
+most part, learning to speak, rather than to think, and were therefore
+more studious of elegance than of truth.&nbsp; The contemporaries of
+Boethius thought it sufficient to know what the ancients had delivered.&nbsp;
+The examination of tenets and of facts was reserved for another generation.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>Boethius, as president of the university, enjoyed a revenue of forty
+Scottish marks, about two pounds four shillings and sixpence of sterling
+money.&nbsp; In the present age of trade and taxes, it is difficult
+even for the imagination so to raise the value of money, or so to diminish
+the demands of life, as to suppose four and forty shillings a year,
+an honourable stipend; yet it was probably equal, not only to the needs,
+but to the rank of Boethius.&nbsp; The wealth of England was undoubtedly
+to that of Scotland more than five to one, and it is known that Henry
+the eighth, among whose faults avarice was never reckoned, granted to
+Roger Ascham, as a reward of his learning, a pension of ten pounds a
+year.</p>
+<p>The other, called the Marischal College, is in the new town.&nbsp;
+The hall is large and well lighted.&nbsp; One of its ornaments is the
+picture of Arthur Johnston, who was principal of the college, and who
+holds among the Latin poets of Scotland the next place to the elegant
+Buchanan.</p>
+<p>In the library I was shewn some curiosities; a Hebrew manuscript
+of exquisite penmanship, and a Latin translation of Aristotle&rsquo;s
+Politicks by Leonardus Aretinus, written in the Roman character with
+nicety and beauty, which, as the art of printing has made them no longer
+necessary, are not now to be found.&nbsp; This was one of the latest
+performances of the transcribers, for Aretinus died but about twenty
+years before typography was invented.&nbsp; This version has been printed,
+and may be found in libraries, but is little read; for the same books
+have been since translated both by Victorius and Lambinus, who lived
+in an age more cultivated, but perhaps owed in part to Aretinus that
+they were able to excel him.&nbsp; Much is due to those who first broke
+the way to knowledge, and left only to their successors the task of
+smoothing it.</p>
+<p>In both these colleges the methods of instruction are nearly the
+same; the lectures differing only by the accidental difference of diligence,
+or ability in the professors.&nbsp; The students wear scarlet gowns
+and the professors black, which is, I believe, the academical dress
+in all the Scottish universities, except that of Edinburgh, where the
+scholars are not distinguished by any particular habit.&nbsp; In the
+King&rsquo;s College there is kept a public table, but the scholars
+of the Marischal College are boarded in the town.&nbsp; The expence
+of living is here, according to the information that I could obtain,
+somewhat more than at St. Andrews.</p>
+<p>The course of education is extended to four years, at the end of
+which those who take a degree, who are not many, become masters of arts,
+and whoever is a master may, if he pleases, immediately commence doctor.&nbsp;
+The title of doctor, however, was for a considerable time bestowed only
+on physicians.&nbsp; The advocates are examined and approved by their
+own body; the ministers were not ambitious of titles, or were afraid
+of being censured for ambition; and the doctorate in every faculty was
+commonly given or sold into other countries.&nbsp; The ministers are
+now reconciled to distinction, and as it must always happen that some
+will excel others, have thought graduation a proper testimony of uncommon
+abilities or acquisitions.</p>
+<p>The indiscriminate collation of degrees has justly taken away that
+respect which they originally claimed as stamps, by which the literary
+value of men so distinguished was authoritatively denoted.&nbsp; That
+academical honours, or any others should be conferred with exact proportion
+to merit, is more than human judgment or human integrity have given
+reason to expect.&nbsp; Perhaps degrees in universities cannot be better
+adjusted by any general rule than by the length of time passed in the
+public profession of learning.&nbsp; An English or Irish doctorate cannot
+be obtained by a very young man, and it is reasonable to suppose, what
+is likewise by experience commonly found true, that he who is by age
+qualified to be a doctor, has in so much time gained learning sufficient
+not to disgrace the title, or wit sufficient not to desire it.</p>
+<p>The Scotch universities hold but one term or session in the year.&nbsp;
+That of St. Andrews continues eight months, that of Aberdeen only five,
+from the first of November to the first of April.</p>
+<p>In Aberdeen there is an English Chapel, in which the congregation
+was numerous and splendid.&nbsp; The form of public worship used by
+the church of England is in Scotland legally practised in licensed chapels
+served by clergymen of English or Irish ordination, and by tacit connivance
+quietly permitted in separate congregations supplied with ministers
+by the successors of the bishops who were deprived at the Revolution.</p>
+<p>We came to Aberdeen on Saturday August 21.&nbsp; On Monday we were
+invited into the town-hall, where I had the freedom of the city given
+me by the Lord Provost.&nbsp; The honour conferred had all the decorations
+that politeness could add, and what I am afraid I should not have had
+to say of any city south of the Tweed, I found no petty officer bowing
+for a fee.</p>
+<p>The parchment containing the record of admission is, with the seal
+appending, fastened to a riband and worn for one day by the new citizen
+in his hat.</p>
+<p>By a lady who saw us at the chapel, the Earl of Errol was informed
+of our arrival, and we had the honour of an invitation to his seat,
+called Slanes Castle, as I am told, improperly, from the castle of that
+name, which once stood at a place not far distant.</p>
+<p>The road beyond Aberdeen grew more stony, and continued equally naked
+of all vegetable decoration.&nbsp; We travelled over a tract of ground
+near the sea, which, not long ago, suffered a very uncommon, and unexpected
+calamity.&nbsp; The sand of the shore was raised by a tempest in such
+quantities, and carried to such a distance, that an estate was overwhelmed
+and lost.&nbsp; Such and so hopeless was the barrenness superinduced,
+that the owner, when he was required to pay the usual tax, desired rather
+to resign the ground.</p>
+<h2>SLANES CASTLE, THE BULLER OF BUCHAN</h2>
+<p>We came in the afternoon to Slanes Castle, built upon the margin
+of the sea, so that the walls of one of the towers seem only a continuation
+of a perpendicular rock, the foot of which is beaten by the waves.&nbsp;
+To walk round the house seemed impracticable.&nbsp; From the windows
+the eye wanders over the sea that separates Scotland from Norway, and
+when the winds beat with violence must enjoy all the terrifick grandeur
+of the tempestuous ocean.&nbsp; I would not for my amusement wish for
+a storm; but as storms, whether wished or not, will sometimes happen,
+I may say, without violation of humanity, that I should willingly look
+out upon them from Slanes Castle.</p>
+<p>When we were about to take our leave, our departure was prohibited
+by the countess till we should have seen two places upon the coast,
+which she rightly considered as worthy of curiosity, Dun Buy, and the
+Buller of Buchan, to which Mr. Boyd very kindly conducted us.</p>
+<p>Dun Buy, which in Erse is said to signify the Yellow Rock, is a double
+protuberance of stone, open to the main sea on one side, and parted
+from the land by a very narrow channel on the other.&nbsp; It has its
+name and its colour from the dung of innumerable sea-fowls, which in
+the Spring chuse this place as convenient for incubation, and have their
+eggs and their young taken in great abundance.&nbsp; One of the birds
+that frequent this rock has, as we were told, its body not larger than
+a duck&rsquo;s, and yet lays eggs as large as those of a goose.&nbsp;
+This bird is by the inhabitants named a Coot.&nbsp; That which is called
+Coot in England, is here a Cooter.</p>
+<p>Upon these rocks there was nothing that could long detain attention,
+and we soon turned our eyes to the Buller, or Bouilloir of Buchan, which
+no man can see with indifference, who has either sense of danger or
+delight in rarity.&nbsp; It is a rock perpendicularly tubulated, united
+on one side with a high shore, and on the other rising steep to a great
+height, above the main sea.&nbsp; The top is open, from which may be
+seen a dark gulf of water which flows into the cavity, through a breach
+made in the lower part of the inclosing rock.&nbsp; It has the appearance
+of a vast well bordered with a wall.&nbsp; The edge of the Buller is
+not wide, and to those that walk round, appears very narrow.&nbsp; He
+that ventures to look downward sees, that if his foot should slip, he
+must fall from his dreadful elevation upon stones on one side, or into
+water on the other.&nbsp; We however went round, and were glad when
+the circuit was completed.</p>
+<p>When we came down to the sea, we saw some boats, and rowers, and
+resolved to explore the Buller at the bottom.&nbsp; We entered the arch,
+which the water had made, and found ourselves in a place, which, though
+we could not think ourselves in danger, we could scarcely survey without
+some recoil of the mind.&nbsp; The bason in which we floated was nearly
+circular, perhaps thirty yards in diameter.&nbsp; We were inclosed by
+a natural wall, rising steep on every side to a height which produced
+the idea of insurmountable confinement.&nbsp; The interception of all
+lateral light caused a dismal gloom.&nbsp; Round us was a perpendicular
+rock, above us the distant sky, and below an unknown profundity of water.&nbsp;
+If I had any malice against a walking spirit, instead of laying him
+in the Red-sea, I would condemn him to reside in the Buller of Buchan.</p>
+<p>But terrour without danger is only one of the sports of fancy, a
+voluntary agitation of the mind that is permitted no longer than it
+pleases.&nbsp; We were soon at leisure to examine the place with minute
+inspection, and found many cavities which, as the waterman told us,
+went backward to a depth which they had never explored.&nbsp; Their
+extent we had not time to try; they are said to serve different purposes.&nbsp;
+Ladies come hither sometimes in the summer with collations, and smugglers
+make them storehouses for clandestine merchandise.&nbsp; It is hardly
+to be doubted but the pirates of ancient times often used them as magazines
+of arms, or repositories of plunder.</p>
+<p>To the little vessels used by the northern rovers, the Buller may
+have served as a shelter from storms, and perhaps as a retreat from
+enemies; the entrance might have been stopped, or guarded with little
+difficulty, and though the vessels that were stationed within would
+have been battered with stones showered on them from above, yet the
+crews would have lain safe in the caverns.</p>
+<p>Next morning we continued our journey, pleased with our reception
+at Slanes Castle, of which we had now leisure to recount the grandeur
+and the elegance; for our way afforded us few topics of conversation.&nbsp;
+The ground was neither uncultivated nor unfruitful; but it was still
+all arable.&nbsp; Of flocks or herds there was no appearance.&nbsp;
+I had now travelled two hundred miles in Scotland, and seen only one
+tree not younger than myself.</p>
+<h2>BAMFF</h2>
+<p>We dined this day at the house of Mr. Frazer of Streichton, who shewed
+us in his grounds some stones yet standing of a druidical circle, and
+what I began to think more worthy of notice, some forest trees of full
+growth.</p>
+<p>At night we came to Bamff, where I remember nothing that particularly
+claimed my attention.&nbsp; The ancient towns of Scotland have generally
+an appearance unusual to Englishmen.&nbsp; The houses, whether great
+or small, are for the most part built of stones.&nbsp; Their ends are
+now and then next the streets, and the entrance into them is very often
+by a flight of steps, which reaches up to the second story, the floor
+which is level with the ground being entered only by stairs descending
+within the house.</p>
+<p>The art of joining squares of glass with lead is little used in Scotland,
+and in some places is totally forgotten.&nbsp; The frames of their windows
+are all of wood.&nbsp; They are more frugal of their glass than the
+English, and will often, in houses not otherwise mean, compose a square
+of two pieces, not joining like cracked glass, but with one edge laid
+perhaps half an inch over the other.&nbsp; Their windows do not move
+upon hinges, but are pushed up and drawn down in grooves, yet they are
+seldom accommodated with weights and pullies.&nbsp; He that would have
+his window open must hold it with his hand, unless what may be sometimes
+found among good contrivers, there be a nail which he may stick into
+a hole, to keep it from falling.</p>
+<p>What cannot be done without some uncommon trouble or particular expedient,
+will not often be done at all.&nbsp; The incommodiousness of the Scotch
+windows keeps them very closely shut.&nbsp; The necessity of ventilating
+human habitations has not yet been found by our northern neighbours;
+and even in houses well built and elegantly furnished, a stranger may
+be sometimes forgiven, if he allows himself to wish for fresher air.</p>
+<p>These diminutive observations seem to take away something from the
+dignity of writing, and therefore are never communicated but with hesitation,
+and a little fear of abasement and contempt.&nbsp; But it must be remembered,
+that life consists not of a series of illustrious actions, or elegant
+enjoyments; the greater part of our time passes in compliance with necessities,
+in the performance of daily duties, in the removal of small inconveniences,
+in the procurement of petty pleasures; and we are well or ill at ease,
+as the main stream of life glides on smoothly, or is ruffled by small
+obstacles and frequent interruption.&nbsp; The true state of every nation
+is the state of common life.&nbsp; The manners of a people are not to
+be found in the schools of learning, or the palaces of greatness, where
+the national character is obscured or obliterated by travel or instruction,
+by philosophy or vanity; nor is public happiness to be estimated by
+the assemblies of the gay, or the banquets of the rich.&nbsp; The great
+mass of nations is neither rich nor gay: they whose aggregate constitutes
+the people, are found in the streets, and the villages, in the shops
+and farms; and from them collectively considered, must the measure of
+general prosperity be taken.&nbsp; As they approach to delicacy a nation
+is refined, as their conveniences are multiplied, a nation, at least
+a commercial nation, must be denominated wealthy.</p>
+<h2>ELGIN</h2>
+<p>Finding nothing to detain us at Bamff, we set out in the morning,
+and having breakfasted at Cullen, about noon came to Elgin, where in
+the inn, that we supposed the best, a dinner was set before us, which
+we could not eat.&nbsp; This was the first time, and except one, the
+last, that I found any reason to complain of a Scotish table; and such
+disappointments, I suppose, must be expected in every country, where
+there is no great frequency of travellers.</p>
+<p>The ruins of the cathedral of Elgin afforded us another proof of
+the waste of reformation.&nbsp; There is enough yet remaining to shew,
+that it was once magnificent.&nbsp; Its whole plot is easily traced.&nbsp;
+On the north side of the choir, the chapter-house, which is roofed with
+an arch of stone, remains entire; and on the south side, another mass
+of building, which we could not enter, is preserved by the care of the
+family of Gordon; but the body of the church is a mass of fragments.</p>
+<p>A paper was here put into our hands, which deduced from sufficient
+authorities the history of this venerable ruin.&nbsp; The church of
+Elgin had, in the intestine tumults of the barbarous ages, been laid
+waste by the irruption of a highland chief, whom the bishop had offended;
+but it was gradually restored to the state, of which the traces may
+be now discerned, and was at last not destroyed by the tumultuous violence
+of Knox, but more shamefully suffered to dilapidate by deliberate robbery
+and frigid indifference.&nbsp; There is still extant, in the books of
+the council, an order, of which I cannot remember the date, but which
+was doubtless issued after the Reformation, directing that the lead,
+which covers the two cathedrals of Elgin and Aberdeen, shall be taken
+away, and converted into money for the support of the army.&nbsp; A
+Scotch army was in those times very cheaply kept; yet the lead of two
+churches must have born so small a proportion to any military expence,
+that it is hard not to believe the reason alleged to be merely popular,
+and the money intended for some private purse.&nbsp; The order however
+was obeyed; the two churches were stripped, and the lead was shipped
+to be sold in Holland.&nbsp; I hope every reader will rejoice that this
+cargo of sacrilege was lost at sea.</p>
+<p>Let us not however make too much haste to despise our neighbours.&nbsp;
+Our own cathedrals are mouldering by unregarded dilapidation.&nbsp;
+It seems to be part of the despicable philosophy of the time to despise
+monuments of sacred magnificence, and we are in danger of doing that
+deliberately, which the Scots did not do but in the unsettled state
+of an imperfect constitution.</p>
+<p>Those who had once uncovered the cathedrals never wished to cover
+them again; and being thus made useless, they were, first neglected,
+and perhaps, as the stone was wanted, afterwards demolished.</p>
+<p>Elgin seems a place of little trade, and thinly inhabited.&nbsp;
+The episcopal cities of Scotland, I believe, generally fell with their
+churches, though some of them have since recovered by a situation convenient
+for commerce.&nbsp; Thus Glasgow, though it has no longer an archbishop,
+has risen beyond its original state by the opulence of its traders;
+and Aberdeen, though its ancient stock had decayed, flourishes by a
+new shoot in another place.</p>
+<p>In the chief street of Elgin, the houses jut over the lowest story,
+like the old buildings of timber in London, but with greater prominence;
+so that there is sometimes a walk for a considerable length under a
+cloister, or portico, which is now indeed frequently broken, because
+the new houses have another form, but seems to have been uniformly continued
+in the old city.</p>
+<h2>FORES.&nbsp; CALDER.&nbsp; FORT GEORGE</h2>
+<p>We went forwards the same day to Fores, the town to which Macbeth
+was travelling, when he met the weird sisters in his way.&nbsp; This
+to an Englishman is classic ground.&nbsp; Our imaginations were heated,
+and our thoughts recalled to their old amusements.</p>
+<p>We had now a prelude to the Highlands.&nbsp; We began to leave fertility
+and culture behind us, and saw for a great length of road nothing but
+heath; yet at Fochabars, a seat belonging to the duke of Gordon, there
+is an orchard, which in Scotland I had never seen before, with some
+timber trees, and a plantation of oaks.</p>
+<p>At Fores we found good accommodation, but nothing worthy of particular
+remark, and next morning entered upon the road, on which Macbeth heard
+the fatal prediction; but we travelled on not interrupted by promises
+of kingdoms, and came to Nairn, a royal burgh, which, if once it flourished,
+is now in a state of miserable decay; but I know not whether its chief
+annual magistrate has not still the title of Lord Provost.</p>
+<p>At Nairn we may fix the verge of the Highlands; for here I first
+saw peat fires, and first heard the Erse language.&nbsp; We had no motive
+to stay longer than to breakfast, and went forward to the house of Mr.
+Macaulay, the minister who published an account of St. Kilda, and by
+his direction visited Calder Castle, from which Macbeth drew his second
+title.&nbsp; It has been formerly a place of strength.&nbsp; The drawbridge
+is still to be seen, but the moat is now dry.&nbsp; The tower is very
+ancient: Its walls are of great thickness, arched on the top with stone,
+and surrounded with battlements.&nbsp; The rest of the house is later,
+though far from modern.</p>
+<p>We were favoured by a gentleman, who lives in the castle, with a
+letter to one of the officers at Fort George, which being the most regular
+fortification in the island, well deserves the notice of a traveller,
+who has never travelled before.&nbsp; We went thither next day, found
+a very kind reception, were led round the works by a gentleman, who
+explained the use of every part, and entertained by Sir Eyre Coote,
+the governour, with such elegance of conversation as left us no attention
+to the delicacies of his table.</p>
+<p>Of Fort George I shall not attempt to give any account.&nbsp; I cannot
+delineate it scientifically, and a loose and popular description is
+of use only when the imagination is to be amused.&nbsp; There was every
+where an appearance of the utmost neatness and regularity.&nbsp; But
+my suffrage is of little value, because this and Fort Augustus are the
+only garrisons that I ever saw.</p>
+<p>We did not regret the time spent at the fort, though in consequence
+of our delay we came somewhat late to Inverness, the town which may
+properly be called the capital of the Highlands.&nbsp; Hither the inhabitants
+of the inland parts come to be supplied with what they cannot make for
+themselves: Hither the young nymphs of the mountains and valleys are
+sent for education, and as far as my observation has reached, are not
+sent in vain.</p>
+<h2>INVERNESS</h2>
+<p>Inverness was the last place which had a regular communication by
+high roads with the southern counties.&nbsp; All the ways beyond it
+have, I believe, been made by the soldiers in this century.&nbsp; At
+Inverness therefore Cromwell, when he subdued Scotland, stationed a
+garrison, as at the boundary of the Highlands.&nbsp; The soldiers seem
+to have incorporated afterwards with the inhabitants, and to have peopled
+the place with an English race; for the language of this town has been
+long considered as peculiarly elegant.</p>
+<p>Here is a castle, called the castle of Macbeth, the walls of which
+are yet standing.&nbsp; It was no very capacious edifice, but stands
+upon a rock so high and steep, that I think it was once not accessible,
+but by the help of ladders, or a bridge.&nbsp; Over against it, on another
+hill, was a fort built by Cromwell, now totally demolished; for no faction
+of Scotland loved the name of Cromwell, or had any desire to continue
+his memory.</p>
+<p>Yet what the Romans did to other nations, was in a great degree done
+by Cromwell to the Scots; he civilized them by conquest, and introduced
+by useful violence the arts of peace.&nbsp; I was told at Aberdeen that
+the people learned from Cromwell&rsquo;s soldiers to make shoes and
+to plant kail.</p>
+<p>How they lived without kail, it is not easy to guess: They cultivate
+hardly any other plant for common tables, and when they had not kail
+they probably had nothing.&nbsp; The numbers that go barefoot are still
+sufficient to shew that shoes may be spared: They are not yet considered
+as necessaries of life; for tall boys, not otherwise meanly dressed,
+run without them in the streets; and in the islands the sons of gentlemen
+pass several of their first years with naked feet.</p>
+<p>I know not whether it be not peculiar to the Scots to have attained
+the liberal, without the manual arts, to have excelled in ornamental
+knowledge, and to have wanted not only the elegancies, but the conveniences
+of common life.&nbsp; Literature soon after its revival found its way
+to Scotland, and from the middle of the sixteenth century, almost to
+the middle of the seventeenth, the politer studies were very diligently
+pursued.&nbsp; The Latin poetry of <i>Delici&aelig; Po&euml;tarum Scotorum</i>
+would have done honour to any nation, at least till the publication
+of <i>May&rsquo;s Supplement</i> the English had very little to oppose.</p>
+<p>Yet men thus ingenious and inquisitive were content to live in total
+ignorance of the trades by which human wants are supplied, and to supply
+them by the grossest means.&nbsp; Till the Union made them acquainted
+with English manners, the culture of their lands was unskilful, and
+their domestick life unformed; their tables were coarse as the feasts
+of Eskimeaux, and their houses filthy as the cottages of Hottentots.</p>
+<p>Since they have known that their condition was capable of improvement,
+their progress in useful knowledge has been rapid and uniform.&nbsp;
+What remains to be done they will quickly do, and then wonder, like
+me, why that which was so necessary and so easy was so long delayed.&nbsp;
+But they must be for ever content to owe to the English that elegance
+and culture, which, if they had been vigilant and active, perhaps the
+English might have owed to them.</p>
+<p>Here the appearance of life began to alter.&nbsp; I had seen a few
+women with plaids at Aberdeen; but at Inverness the Highland manners
+are common.&nbsp; There is I think a kirk, in which only the Erse language
+is used.&nbsp; There is likewise an English chapel, but meanly built,
+where on Sunday we saw a very decent congregation.</p>
+<p>We were now to bid farewel to the luxury of travelling, and to enter
+a country upon which perhaps no wheel has ever rolled.&nbsp; We could
+indeed have used our post-chaise one day longer, along the military
+road to Fort Augustus, but we could have hired no horses beyond Inverness,
+and we were not so sparing of ourselves, as to lead them, merely that
+we might have one day longer the indulgence of a carriage.</p>
+<p>At Inverness therefore we procured three horses for ourselves and
+a servant, and one more for our baggage, which was no very heavy load.&nbsp;
+We found in the course of our journey the convenience of having disencumbered
+ourselves, by laying aside whatever we could spare; for it is not to
+be imagined without experience, how in climbing crags, and treading
+bogs, and winding through narrow and obstructed passages, a little bulk
+will hinder, and a little weight will burthen; or how often a man that
+has pleased himself at home with his own resolution, will, in the hour
+of darkness and fatigue, be content to leave behind him every thing
+but himself.</p>
+<h2>LOUGH NESS</h2>
+<p>We took two Highlanders to run beside us, partly to shew us the way,
+and partly to take back from the sea-side the horses, of which they
+were the owners.&nbsp; One of them was a man of great liveliness and
+activity, of whom his companion said, that he would tire any horse in
+Inverness.&nbsp; Both of them were civil and ready-handed.&nbsp; Civility
+seems part of the national character of Highlanders.&nbsp; Every chieftain
+is a monarch, and politeness, the natural product of royal government,
+is diffused from the laird through the whole clan.&nbsp; But they are
+not commonly dexterous: their narrowness of life confines them to a
+few operations, and they are accustomed to endure little wants more
+than to remove them.</p>
+<p>We mounted our steeds on the thirtieth of August, and directed our
+guides to conduct us to Fort Augustus.&nbsp; It is built at the head
+of Lough Ness, of which Inverness stands at the outlet.&nbsp; The way
+between them has been cut by the soldiers, and the greater part of it
+runs along a rock, levelled with great labour and exactness, near the
+water-side.</p>
+<p>Most of this day&rsquo;s journey was very pleasant.&nbsp; The day,
+though bright, was not hot; and the appearance of the country, if I
+had not seen the Peak, would have been wholly new.&nbsp; We went upon
+a surface so hard and level, that we had little care to hold the bridle,
+and were therefore at full leisure for contemplation.&nbsp; On the left
+were high and steep rocks shaded with birch, the hardy native of the
+North, and covered with fern or heath.&nbsp; On the right the limpid
+waters of Lough Ness were beating their bank, and waving their surface
+by a gentle agitation.&nbsp; Beyond them were rocks sometimes covered
+with verdure, and sometimes towering in horrid nakedness.&nbsp; Now
+and then we espied a little cornfield, which served to impress more
+strongly the general barrenness.</p>
+<p>Lough Ness is about twenty-four miles long, and from one mile to
+two miles broad.&nbsp; It is remarkable that Boethius, in his description
+of Scotland, gives it twelve miles of breadth.&nbsp; When historians
+or geographers exhibit false accounts of places far distant, they may
+be forgiven, because they can tell but what they are told; and that
+their accounts exceed the truth may be justly supposed, because most
+men exaggerate to others, if not to themselves: but Boethius lived at
+no great distance; if he never saw the lake, he must have been very
+incurious, and if he had seen it, his veracity yielded to very slight
+temptations.</p>
+<p>Lough Ness, though not twelve miles broad, is a very remarkable diffusion
+of water without islands.&nbsp; It fills a large hollow between two
+ridges of high rocks, being supplied partly by the torrents which fall
+into it on either side, and partly, as is supposed, by springs at the
+bottom.&nbsp; Its water is remarkably clear and pleasant, and is imagined
+by the natives to be medicinal.&nbsp; We were told, that it is in some
+places a hundred and forty fathoms deep, a profundity scarcely credible,
+and which probably those that relate it have never sounded.&nbsp; Its
+fish are salmon, trout, and pike.</p>
+<p>It was said at fort Augustus, that Lough Ness is open in the hardest
+winters, though a lake not far from it is covered with ice.&nbsp; In
+discussing these exceptions from the course of nature, the first question
+is, whether the fact be justly stated.&nbsp; That which is strange is
+delightful, and a pleasing error is not willingly detected.&nbsp; Accuracy
+of narration is not very common, and there are few so rigidly philosophical,
+as not to represent as perpetual, what is only frequent, or as constant,
+what is really casual.&nbsp; If it be true that Lough Ness never freezes,
+it is either sheltered by its high banks from the cold blasts, and exposed
+only to those winds which have more power to agitate than congeal; or
+it is kept in perpetual motion by the rush of streams from the rocks
+that inclose it.&nbsp; Its profundity though it should be such as is
+represented can have little part in this exemption; for though deep
+wells are not frozen, because their water is secluded from the external
+air, yet where a wide surface is exposed to the full influence of a
+freezing atmosphere, I know not why the depth should keep it open.&nbsp;
+Natural philosophy is now one of the favourite studies of the Scottish
+nation, and Lough Ness well deserves to be diligently examined.</p>
+<p>The road on which we travelled, and which was itself a source of
+entertainment, is made along the rock, in the direction of the lough,
+sometimes by breaking off protuberances, and sometimes by cutting the
+great mass of stone to a considerable depth.&nbsp; The fragments are
+piled in a loose wall on either side, with apertures left at very short
+spaces, to give a passage to the wintry currents.&nbsp; Part of it is
+bordered with low trees, from which our guides gathered nuts, and would
+have had the appearance of an English lane, except that an English lane
+is almost always dirty.&nbsp; It has been made with great labour, but
+has this advantage, that it cannot, without equal labour, be broken
+up.</p>
+<p>Within our sight there were goats feeding or playing.&nbsp; The mountains
+have red deer, but they came not within view; and if what is said of
+their vigilance and subtlety be true, they have some claim to that palm
+of wisdom, which the eastern philosopher, whom Alexander interrogated,
+gave to those beasts which live furthest from men.</p>
+<p>Near the way, by the water side, we espied a cottage.&nbsp; This
+was the first Highland Hut that I had seen; and as our business was
+with life and manners, we were willing to visit it.&nbsp; To enter a
+habitation without leave, seems to be not considered here as rudeness
+or intrusion.&nbsp; The old laws of hospitality still give this licence
+to a stranger.</p>
+<p>A hut is constructed with loose stones, ranged for the most part
+with some tendency to circularity.&nbsp; It must be placed where the
+wind cannot act upon it with violence, because it has no cement; and
+where the water will run easily away, because it has no floor but the
+naked ground.&nbsp; The wall, which is commonly about six feet high,
+declines from the perpendicular a little inward.&nbsp; Such rafters
+as can be procured are then raised for a roof, and covered with heath,
+which makes a strong and warm thatch, kept from flying off by ropes
+of twisted heath, of which the ends, reaching from the center of the
+thatch to the top of the wall, are held firm by the weight of a large
+stone.&nbsp; No light is admitted but at the entrance, and through a
+hole in the thatch, which gives vent to the smoke.&nbsp; This hole is
+not directly over the fire, lest the rain should extinguish it; and
+the smoke therefore naturally fills the place before it escapes.&nbsp;
+Such is the general structure of the houses in which one of the nations
+of this opulent and powerful island has been hitherto content to live.&nbsp;
+Huts however are not more uniform than palaces; and this which we were
+inspecting was very far from one of the meanest, for it was divided
+into several apartments; and its inhabitants possessed such property
+as a pastoral poet might exalt into riches.</p>
+<p>When we entered, we found an old woman boiling goats-flesh in a kettle.&nbsp;
+She spoke little English, but we had interpreters at hand; and she was
+willing enough to display her whole system of economy.&nbsp; She has
+five children, of which none are yet gone from her.&nbsp; The eldest,
+a boy of thirteen, and her husband, who is eighty years old, were at
+work in the wood.&nbsp; Her two next sons were gone to Inverness to
+buy meal, by which oatmeal is always meant.&nbsp; Meal she considered
+as expensive food, and told us, that in Spring, when the goats gave
+milk, the children could live without it.&nbsp; She is mistress of sixty
+goats, and I saw many kids in an enclosure at the end of her house.&nbsp;
+She had also some poultry.&nbsp; By the lake we saw a potatoe-garden,
+and a small spot of ground on which stood four shucks, containing each
+twelve sheaves of barley.&nbsp; She has all this from the labour of
+their own hands, and for what is necessary to be bought, her kids and
+her chickens are sent to market.</p>
+<p>With the true pastoral hospitality, she asked us to sit down and
+drink whisky.&nbsp; She is religious, and though the kirk is four miles
+off, probably eight English miles, she goes thither every Sunday.&nbsp;
+We gave her a shilling, and she begged snuff; for snuff is the luxury
+of a Highland cottage.</p>
+<p>Soon afterwards we came to the General&rsquo;s Hut, so called because
+it was the temporary abode of Wade, while he superintended the works
+upon the road.&nbsp; It is now a house of entertainment for passengers,
+and we found it not ill stocked with provisions.</p>
+<h2>FALL OF FIERS</h2>
+<p>Towards evening we crossed, by a bridge, the river which makes the
+celebrated fall of Fiers.&nbsp; The country at the bridge strikes the
+imagination with all the gloom and grandeur of Siberian solitude.&nbsp;
+The way makes a flexure, and the mountains, covered with trees, rise
+at once on the left hand and in the front.&nbsp; We desired our guides
+to shew us the fall, and dismounting, clambered over very rugged crags,
+till I began to wish that our curiosity might have been gratified with
+less trouble and danger.&nbsp; We came at last to a place where we could
+overlook the river, and saw a channel torn, as it seems, through black
+piles of stone, by which the stream is obstructed and broken, till it
+comes to a very steep descent, of such dreadful depth, that we were
+naturally inclined to turn aside our eyes.</p>
+<p>But we visited the place at an unseasonable time, and found it divested
+of its dignity and terror.&nbsp; Nature never gives every thing at once.&nbsp;
+A long continuance of dry weather, which made the rest of the way easy
+and delightful, deprived us of the pleasure expected from the fall of
+Fiers.&nbsp; The river having now no water but what the springs supply,
+showed us only a swift current, clear and shallow, fretting over the
+asperities of the rocky bottom, and we were left to exercise our thoughts,
+by endeavouring to conceive the effect of a thousand streams poured
+from the mountains into one channel, struggling for expansion in a narrow
+passage, exasperated by rocks rising in their way, and at last discharging
+all their violence of waters by a sudden fall through the horrid chasm.</p>
+<p>The way now grew less easy, descending by an uneven declivity, but
+without either dirt or danger.&nbsp; We did not arrive at Fort Augustus
+till it was late.&nbsp; Mr. Boswell, who, between his father&rsquo;s
+merit and his own, is sure of reception wherever he comes, sent a servant
+before to beg admission and entertainment for that night.&nbsp; Mr.
+Trapaud, the governor, treated us with that courtesy which is so closely
+connected with the military character.&nbsp; He came out to meet us
+beyond the gates, and apologized that, at so late an hour, the rules
+of a garrison suffered him to give us entrance only at the postern.</p>
+<h2>FORT AUGUSTUS</h2>
+<p>In the morning we viewed the fort, which is much less than that of
+St. George, and is said to be commanded by the neighbouring hills.&nbsp;
+It was not long ago taken by the Highlanders.&nbsp; But its situation
+seems well chosen for pleasure, if not for strength; it stands at the
+head of the lake, and, by a sloop of sixty tuns, is supplied from Inverness
+with great convenience.</p>
+<p>We were now to cross the Highlands towards the western coast, and
+to content ourselves with such accommodations, as a way so little frequented
+could afford.&nbsp; The journey was not formidable, for it was but of
+two days, very unequally divided, because the only house, where we could
+be entertained, was not further off than a third of the way.&nbsp; We
+soon came to a high hill, which we mounted by a military road, cut in
+traverses, so that as we went upon a higher stage, we saw the baggage
+following us below in a contrary direction.&nbsp; To make this way,
+the rock has been hewn to a level with labour that might have broken
+the perseverance of a Roman legion.</p>
+<p>The country is totally denuded of its wood, but the stumps both of
+oaks and firs, which are still found, shew that it has been once a forest
+of large timber.&nbsp; I do not remember that we saw any animals, but
+we were told that, in the mountains, there are stags, roebucks, goats
+and rabbits.</p>
+<p>We did not perceive that this tract was possessed by human beings,
+except that once we saw a corn field, in which a lady was walking with
+some gentlemen.&nbsp; Their house was certainly at no great distance,
+but so situated that we could not descry it.</p>
+<p>Passing on through the dreariness of solitude, we found a party of
+soldiers from the fort, working on the road, under the superintendence
+of a serjeant.&nbsp; We told them how kindly we had been treated at
+the garrison, and as we were enjoying the benefit of their labours,
+begged leave to shew our gratitude by a small present.</p>
+<h2>ANOCH</h2>
+<p>Early in the afternoon we came to Anoch, a village in Glenmollison
+of three huts, one of which is distinguished by a chimney.&nbsp; Here
+we were to dine and lodge, and were conducted through the first room,
+that had the chimney, into another lighted by a small glass window.&nbsp;
+The landlord attended us with great civility, and told us what he could
+give us to eat and drink.&nbsp; I found some books on a shelf, among
+which were a volume or more of Prideaux&rsquo;s Connection.</p>
+<p>This I mentioned as something unexpected, and perceived that I did
+not please him.&nbsp; I praised the propriety of his language, and was
+answered that I need not wonder, for he had learned it by grammar.</p>
+<p>By subsequent opportunities of observation, I found that my host&rsquo;s
+diction had nothing peculiar.&nbsp; Those Highlanders that can speak
+English, commonly speak it well, with few of the words, and little of
+the tone by which a Scotchman is distinguished.&nbsp; Their language
+seems to have been learned in the army or the navy, or by some communication
+with those who could give them good examples of accent and pronunciation.&nbsp;
+By their Lowland neighbours they would not willingly be taught; for
+they have long considered them as a mean and degenerate race.&nbsp;
+These prejudices are wearing fast away; but so much of them still remains,
+that when I asked a very learned minister in the islands, which they
+considered as their most savage clans: &lsquo;Those,&rsquo; said he,
+&lsquo;that live next the Lowlands.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>As we came hither early in the day, we had time sufficient to survey
+the place.&nbsp; The house was built like other huts of loose stones,
+but the part in which we dined and slept was lined with turf and wattled
+with twigs, which kept the earth from falling.&nbsp; Near it was a garden
+of turnips and a field of potatoes.&nbsp; It stands in a glen, or valley,
+pleasantly watered by a winding river.&nbsp; But this country, however
+it may delight the gazer or amuse the naturalist, is of no great advantage
+to its owners.&nbsp; Our landlord told us of a gentleman, who possesses
+lands, eighteen Scotch miles in length, and three in breadth; a space
+containing at least a hundred square English miles.&nbsp; He has raised
+his rents, to the danger of depopulating his farms, and he fells his
+timber, and by exerting every art of augmentation, has obtained an yearly
+revenue of four hundred pounds, which for a hundred square miles is
+three halfpence an acre.</p>
+<p>Some time after dinner we were surprised by the entrance of a young
+woman, not inelegant either in mien or dress, who asked us whether we
+would have tea.&nbsp; We found that she was the daughter of our host,
+and desired her to make it.&nbsp; Her conversation, like her appearance,
+was gentle and pleasing.&nbsp; We knew that the girls of the Highlands
+are all gentlewomen, and treated her with great respect, which she received
+as customary and due, and was neither elated by it, nor confused, but
+repaid my civilities without embarassment, and told me how much I honoured
+her country by coming to survey it.</p>
+<p>She had been at Inverness to gain the common female qualifications,
+and had, like her father, the English pronunciation.&nbsp; I presented
+her with a book, which I happened to have about me, and should not be
+pleased to think that she forgets me.</p>
+<p>In the evening the soldiers, whom we had passed on the road, came
+to spend at our inn the little money that we had given them.&nbsp; They
+had the true military impatience of coin in their pockets, and had marched
+at least six miles to find the first place where liquor could be bought.&nbsp;
+Having never been before in a place so wild and unfrequented, I was
+glad of their arrival, because I knew that we had made them friends,
+and to gain still more of their good will, we went to them, where they
+were carousing in the barn, and added something to our former gift.&nbsp;
+All that we gave was not much, but it detained them in the barn, either
+merry or quarrelling, the whole night, and in the morning they went
+back to their work, with great indignation at the bad qualities of whisky.</p>
+<p>We had gained so much the favour of our host, that, when we left
+his house in the morning, he walked by us a great way, and entertained
+us with conversation both on his own condition, and that of the country.&nbsp;
+His life seemed to be merely pastoral, except that he differed from
+some of the ancient Nomades in having a settled dwelling.&nbsp; His
+wealth consists of one hundred sheep, as many goats, twelve milk-cows,
+and twenty-eight beeves ready for the drover.</p>
+<p>From him we first heard of the general dissatisfaction, which is
+now driving the Highlanders into the other hemisphere; and when I asked
+him whether they would stay at home, if they were well treated, he answered
+with indignation, that no man willingly left his native country.&nbsp;
+Of the farm, which he himself occupied, the rent had, in twenty-five
+years, been advanced from five to twenty pounds, which he found himself
+so little able to pay, that he would be glad to try his fortune in some
+other place.&nbsp; Yet he owned the reasonableness of raising the Highland
+rents in a certain degree, and declared himself willing to pay ten pounds
+for the ground which he had formerly had for five.</p>
+<p>Our host having amused us for a time, resigned us to our guides.&nbsp;
+The journey of this day was long, not that the distance was great, but
+that the way was difficult.&nbsp; We were now in the bosom of the Highlands,
+with full leisure to contemplate the appearance and properties of mountainous
+regions, such as have been, in many countries, the last shelters of
+national distress, and are every where the scenes of adventures, stratagems,
+surprises and escapes.</p>
+<p>Mountainous countries are not passed but with difficulty, not merely
+from the labour of climbing; for to climb is not always necessary: but
+because that which is not mountain is commonly bog, through which the
+way must be picked with caution.&nbsp; Where there are hills, there
+is much rain, and the torrents pouring down into the intermediate spaces,
+seldom find so ready an outlet, as not to stagnate, till they have broken
+the texture of the ground.</p>
+<p>Of the hills, which our journey offered to the view on either side,
+we did not take the height, nor did we see any that astonished us with
+their loftiness.&nbsp; Towards the summit of one, there was a white
+spot, which I should have called a naked rock, but the guides, who had
+better eyes, and were acquainted with the phenomena of the country,
+declared it to be snow.&nbsp; It had already lasted to the end of August,
+and was likely to maintain its contest with the sun, till it should
+be reinforced by winter.</p>
+<p>The height of mountains philosophically considered is properly computed
+from the surface of the next sea; but as it affects the eye or imagination
+of the passenger, as it makes either a spectacle or an obstruction,
+it must be reckoned from the place where the rise begins to make a considerable
+angle with the plain.&nbsp; In extensive continents the land may, by
+gradual elevation, attain great height, without any other appearance
+than that of a plane gently inclined, and if a hill placed upon such
+raised ground be described, as having its altitude equal to the whole
+space above the sea, the representation will be fallacious.</p>
+<p>These mountains may be properly enough measured from the inland base;
+for it is not much above the sea.&nbsp; As we advanced at evening towards
+the western coast, I did not observe the declivity to be greater than
+is necessary for the discharge of the inland waters.</p>
+<p>We passed many rivers and rivulets, which commonly ran with a clear
+shallow stream over a hard pebbly bottom.&nbsp; These channels, which
+seem so much wider than the water that they convey would naturally require,
+are formed by the violence of wintry floods, produced by the accumulation
+of innumerable streams that fall in rainy weather from the hills, and
+bursting away with resistless impetuosity, make themselves a passage
+proportionate to their mass.</p>
+<p>Such capricious and temporary waters cannot be expected to produce
+many fish.&nbsp; The rapidity of the wintry deluge sweeps them away,
+and the scantiness of the summer stream would hardly sustain them above
+the ground.&nbsp; This is the reason why in fording the northern rivers,
+no fishes are seen, as in England, wandering in the water.</p>
+<p>Of the hills many may be called with Homer&rsquo;s Ida &lsquo;abundant
+in springs&rsquo;, but few can deserve the epithet which he bestows
+upon Pelion by &lsquo;waving their leaves.&rsquo;&nbsp; They exhibit
+very little variety; being almost wholly covered with dark heath, and
+even that seems to be checked in its growth.&nbsp; What is not heath
+is nakedness, a little diversified by now and then a stream rushing
+down the steep.&nbsp; An eye accustomed to flowery pastures and waving
+harvests is astonished and repelled by this wide extent of hopeless
+sterility.&nbsp; The appearance is that of matter incapable of form
+or usefulness, dismissed by nature from her care and disinherited of
+her favours, left in its original elemental state, or quickened only
+with one sullen power of useless vegetation.</p>
+<p>It will very readily occur, that this uniformity of barrenness can
+afford very little amusement to the traveller; that it is easy to sit
+at home and conceive rocks and heath, and waterfalls; and that these
+journeys are useless labours, which neither impregnate the imagination,
+nor enlarge the understanding.&nbsp; It is true that of far the greater
+part of things, we must content ourselves with such knowledge as description
+may exhibit, or analogy supply; but it is true likewise, that these
+ideas are always incomplete, and that at least, till we have compared
+them with realities, we do not know them to be just.&nbsp; As we see
+more, we become possessed of more certainties, and consequently gain
+more principles of reasoning, and found a wider basis of analogy.</p>
+<p>Regions mountainous and wild, thinly inhabited, and little cultivated,
+make a great part of the earth, and he that has never seen them, must
+live unacquainted with much of the face of nature, and with one of the
+great scenes of human existence.</p>
+<p>As the day advanced towards noon, we entered a narrow valley not
+very flowery, but sufficiently verdant.&nbsp; Our guides told us, that
+the horses could not travel all day without rest or meat, and intreated
+us to stop here, because no grass would be found in any other place.&nbsp;
+The request was reasonable and the argument cogent.&nbsp; We therefore
+willingly dismounted and diverted ourselves as the place gave us opportunity.</p>
+<p>I sat down on a bank, such as a writer of Romance might have delighted
+to feign.&nbsp; I had indeed no trees to whisper over my head, but a
+clear rivulet streamed at my feet.&nbsp; The day was calm, the air soft,
+and all was rudeness, silence, and solitude.&nbsp; Before me, and on
+either side, were high hills, which by hindering the eye from ranging,
+forced the mind to find entertainment for itself.&nbsp; Whether I spent
+the hour well I know not; for here I first conceived the thought of
+this narration.</p>
+<p>We were in this place at ease and by choice, and had no evils to
+suffer or to fear; yet the imaginations excited by the view of an unknown
+and untravelled wilderness are not such as arise in the artificial solitude
+of parks and gardens, a flattering notion of self-sufficiency, a placid
+indulgence of voluntary delusions, a secure expansion of the fancy,
+or a cool concentration of the mental powers.&nbsp; The phantoms which
+haunt a desert are want, and misery, and danger; the evils of dereliction
+rush upon the thoughts; man is made unwillingly acquainted with his
+own weakness, and meditation shows him only how little he can sustain,
+and how little he can perform.&nbsp; There were no traces of inhabitants,
+except perhaps a rude pile of clods called a summer hut, in which a
+herdsman had rested in the favourable seasons.&nbsp; Whoever had been
+in the place where I then sat, unprovided with provisions and ignorant
+of the country, might, at least before the roads were made, have wandered
+among the rocks, till he had perished with hardship, before he could
+have found either food or shelter.&nbsp; Yet what are these hillocks
+to the ridges of Taurus, or these spots of wildness to the desarts of
+America?</p>
+<p>It was not long before we were invited to mount, and continued our
+journey along the side of a lough, kept full by many streams, which
+with more or less rapidity and noise, crossed the road from the hills
+on the other hand.&nbsp; These currents, in their diminished state,
+after several dry months, afford, to one who has always lived in level
+countries, an unusual and delightful spectacle; but in the rainy season,
+such as every winter may be expected to bring, must precipitate an impetuous
+and tremendous flood.&nbsp; I suppose the way by which we went, is at
+that time impassable.</p>
+<h2>GLENSHEALS</h2>
+<p>The lough at last ended in a river broad and shallow like the rest,
+but that it may be passed when it is deeper, there is a bridge over
+it.&nbsp; Beyond it is a valley called Glensheals, inhabited by the
+clan of Macrae.&nbsp; Here we found a village called Auknasheals, consisting
+of many huts, perhaps twenty, built all of dry-stone, that is, stones
+piled up without mortar.</p>
+<p>We had, by the direction of the officers at Fort Augustus, taken
+bread for ourselves, and tobacco for those Highlanders who might show
+us any kindness.&nbsp; We were now at a place where we could obtain
+milk, but we must have wanted bread if we had not brought it.&nbsp;
+The people of this valley did not appear to know any English, and our
+guides now became doubly necessary as interpreters.&nbsp; A woman, whose
+hut was distinguished by greater spaciousness and better architecture,
+brought out some pails of milk.&nbsp; The villagers gathered about us
+in considerable numbers, I believe without any evil intention, but with
+a very savage wildness of aspect and manner.&nbsp; When our meal was
+over, Mr. Boswell sliced the bread, and divided it amongst them, as
+he supposed them never to have tasted a wheaten loaf before.&nbsp; He
+then gave them little pieces of twisted tobacco, and among the children
+we distributed a small handful of halfpence, which they received with
+great eagerness.&nbsp; Yet I have been since told, that the people of
+that valley are not indigent; and when we mentioned them afterwards
+as needy and pitiable, a Highland lady let us know, that we might spare
+our commiseration; for the dame whose milk we drank had probably more
+than a dozen milk-cows.&nbsp; She seemed unwilling to take any price,
+but being pressed to make a demand, at last named a shilling.&nbsp;
+Honesty is not greater where elegance is less.&nbsp; One of the bystanders,
+as we were told afterwards, advised her to ask for more, but she said
+a shilling was enough.&nbsp; We gave her half a crown, and I hope got
+some credit for our behaviour; for the company said, if our interpreters
+did not flatter us, that they had not seen such a day since the old
+laird of Macleod passed through their country.</p>
+<p>The Macraes, as we heard afterwards in the Hebrides, were originally
+an indigent and subordinate clan, and having no farms nor stock, were
+in great numbers servants to the Maclellans, who, in the war of Charles
+the First, took arms at the call of the heroic Montrose, and were, in
+one of his battles, almost all destroyed.&nbsp; The women that were
+left at home, being thus deprived of their husbands, like the Scythian
+ladies of old, married their servants, and the Macraes became a considerable
+race.</p>
+<h2>THE HIGHLANDS</h2>
+<p>As we continued our journey, we were at leisure to extend our speculations,
+and to investigate the reason of those peculiarities by which such rugged
+regions as these before us are generally distinguished.</p>
+<p>Mountainous countries commonly contain the original, at least the
+oldest race of inhabitants, for they are not easily conquered, because
+they must be entered by narrow ways, exposed to every power of mischief
+from those that occupy the heights; and every new ridge is a new fortress,
+where the defendants have again the same advantages.&nbsp; If the assailants
+either force the strait, or storm the summit, they gain only so much
+ground; their enemies are fled to take possession of the next rock,
+and the pursuers stand at gaze, knowing neither where the ways of escape
+wind among the steeps, nor where the bog has firmness to sustain them:
+besides that, mountaineers have an agility in climbing and descending
+distinct from strength or courage, and attainable only by use.</p>
+<p>If the war be not soon concluded, the invaders are dislodged by hunger;
+for in those anxious and toilsome marches, provisions cannot easily
+be carried, and are never to be found.&nbsp; The wealth of mountains
+is cattle, which, while the men stand in the passes, the women drive
+away.&nbsp; Such lands at last cannot repay the expence of conquest,
+and therefore perhaps have not been so often invaded by the mere ambition
+of dominion; as by resentment of robberies and insults, or the desire
+of enjoying in security the more fruitful provinces.</p>
+<p>As mountains are long before they are conquered, they are likewise
+long before they are civilized.&nbsp; Men are softened by intercourse
+mutually profitable, and instructed by comparing their own notions with
+those of others.&nbsp; Thus C&aelig;sar found the maritime parts of
+Britain made less barbarous by their commerce with the Gauls.&nbsp;
+Into a barren and rough tract no stranger is brought either by the hope
+of gain or of pleasure.&nbsp; The inhabitants having neither commodities
+for sale, nor money for purchase, seldom visit more polished places,
+or if they do visit them, seldom return.</p>
+<p>It sometimes happens that by conquest, intermixture, or gradual refinement,
+the cultivated parts of a country change their language.&nbsp; The mountaineers
+then become a distinct nation, cut off by dissimilitude of speech from
+conversation with their neighbours.&nbsp; Thus in Biscay, the original
+Cantabrian, and in Dalecarlia, the old Swedish still subsists.&nbsp;
+Thus Wales and the Highlands speak the tongue of the first inhabitants
+of Britain, while the other parts have received first the Saxon, and
+in some degree afterwards the French, and then formed a third language
+between them.</p>
+<p>That the primitive manners are continued where the primitive language
+is spoken, no nation will desire me to suppose, for the manners of mountaineers
+are commonly savage, but they are rather produced by their situation
+than derived from their ancestors.</p>
+<p>Such seems to be the disposition of man, that whatever makes a distinction
+produces rivalry.&nbsp; England, before other causes of enmity were
+found, was disturbed for some centuries by the contests of the northern
+and southern counties; so that at Oxford, the peace of study could for
+a long time be preserved only by chusing annually one of the Proctors
+from each side of the Trent.&nbsp; A tract intersected by many ridges
+of mountains, naturally divides its inhabitants into petty nations,
+which are made by a thousand causes enemies to each other.&nbsp; Each
+will exalt its own chiefs, each will boast the valour of its men, or
+the beauty of its women, and every claim of superiority irritates competition;
+injuries will sometimes be done, and be more injuriously defended; retaliation
+will sometimes be attempted, and the debt exacted with too much interest.</p>
+<p>In the Highlands it was a law, that if a robber was sheltered from
+justice, any man of the same clan might be taken in his place.&nbsp;
+This was a kind of irregular justice, which, though necessary in savage
+times, could hardly fail to end in a feud, and a feud once kindled among
+an idle people with no variety of pursuits to divert their thoughts,
+burnt on for ages either sullenly glowing in secret mischief, or openly
+blazing into public violence.&nbsp; Of the effects of this violent judicature,
+there are not wanting memorials.&nbsp; The cave is now to be seen to
+which one of the Campbells, who had injured the Macdonalds, retired
+with a body of his own clan.&nbsp; The Macdonalds required the offender,
+and being refused, made a fire at the mouth of the cave, by which he
+and his adherents were suffocated together.</p>
+<p>Mountaineers are warlike, because by their feuds and competitions
+they consider themselves as surrounded with enemies, and are always
+prepared to repel incursions, or to make them.&nbsp; Like the Greeks
+in their unpolished state, described by Thucydides, the Highlanders,
+till lately, went always armed, and carried their weapons to visits,
+and to church.</p>
+<p>Mountaineers are thievish, because they are poor, and having neither
+manufactures nor commerce, can grow richer only by robbery.&nbsp; They
+regularly plunder their neighbours, for their neighbours are commonly
+their enemies; and having lost that reverence for property, by which
+the order of civil life is preserved, soon consider all as enemies,
+whom they do not reckon as friends, and think themselves licensed to
+invade whatever they are not obliged to protect.</p>
+<p>By a strict administration of the laws, since the laws have been
+introduced into the Highlands, this disposition to thievery is very
+much represt.&nbsp; Thirty years ago no herd had ever been conducted
+through the mountains, without paying tribute in the night, to some
+of the clans; but cattle are now driven, and passengers travel without
+danger, fear, or molestation.</p>
+<p>Among a warlike people, the quality of highest esteem is personal
+courage, and with the ostentatious display of courage are closely connected
+promptitude of offence and quickness of resentment.&nbsp; The Highlanders,
+before they were disarmed, were so addicted to quarrels, that the boys
+used to follow any publick procession or ceremony, however festive,
+or however solemn, in expectation of the battle, which was sure to happen
+before the company dispersed.</p>
+<p>Mountainous regions are sometimes so remote from the seat of government,
+and so difficult of access, that they are very little under the influence
+of the sovereign, or within the reach of national justice.&nbsp; Law
+is nothing without power; and the sentence of a distant court could
+not be easily executed, nor perhaps very safely promulgated, among men
+ignorantly proud and habitually violent, unconnected with the general
+system, and accustomed to reverence only their own lords.&nbsp; It has
+therefore been necessary to erect many particular jurisdictions, and
+commit the punishment of crimes, and the decision of right to the proprietors
+of the country who could enforce their own decrees.&nbsp; It immediately
+appears that such judges will be often ignorant, and often partial;
+but in the immaturity of political establishments no better expedient
+could be found.&nbsp; As government advances towards perfection, provincial
+judicature is perhaps in every empire gradually abolished.</p>
+<p>Those who had thus the dispensation of law, were by consequence themselves
+lawless.&nbsp; Their vassals had no shelter from outrages and oppressions;
+but were condemned to endure, without resistance, the caprices of wantonness,
+and the rage of cruelty.</p>
+<p>In the Highlands, some great lords had an hereditary jurisdiction
+over counties; and some chieftains over their own lands; till the final
+conquest of the Highlands afforded an opportunity of crushing all the
+local courts, and of extending the general benefits of equal law to
+the low and the high, in the deepest recesses and obscurest corners.</p>
+<p>While the chiefs had this resemblance of royalty, they had little
+inclination to appeal, on any question, to superior judicatures.&nbsp;
+A claim of lands between two powerful lairds was decided like a contest
+for dominion between sovereign powers.&nbsp; They drew their forces
+into the field, and right attended on the strongest.&nbsp; This was,
+in ruder times, the common practice, which the kings of Scotland could
+seldom control.</p>
+<p>Even so lately as in the last years of King William, a battle was
+fought at Mull Roy, on a plain a few miles to the south of Inverness,
+between the clans of Mackintosh and Macdonald of Keppoch.&nbsp; Col.&nbsp;
+Macdonald, the head of a small clan, refused to pay the dues demanded
+from him by Mackintosh, as his superior lord.&nbsp; They disdained the
+interposition of judges and laws, and calling each his followers to
+maintain the dignity of the clan, fought a formal battle, in which several
+considerable men fell on the side of Mackintosh, without a complete
+victory to either.&nbsp; This is said to have been the last open war
+made between the clans by their own authority.</p>
+<p>The Highland lords made treaties, and formed alliances, of which
+some traces may still be found, and some consequences still remain as
+lasting evidences of petty regality.&nbsp; The terms of one of these
+confederacies were, that each should support the other in the right,
+or in the wrong, except against the king.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of mountains form distinct races, and are careful
+to preserve their genealogies.&nbsp; Men in a small district necessarily
+mingle blood by intermarriages, and combine at last into one family,
+with a common interest in the honour and disgrace of every individual.&nbsp;
+Then begins that union of affections, and co-operation of endeavours,
+that constitute a clan.&nbsp; They who consider themselves as ennobled
+by their family, will think highly of their progenitors, and they who
+through successive generations live always together in the same place,
+will preserve local stories and hereditary prejudices.&nbsp; Thus every
+Highlander can talk of his ancestors, and recount the outrages which
+they suffered from the wicked inhabitants of the next valley.</p>
+<p>Such are the effects of habitation among mountains, and such were
+the qualities of the Highlanders, while their rocks secluded them from
+the rest of mankind, and kept them an unaltered and discriminated race.&nbsp;
+They are now losing their distinction, and hastening to mingle with
+the general community.</p>
+<h2>GLENELG</h2>
+<p>We left Auknasheals and the Macraes its the afternoon, and in the
+evening came to Ratiken, a high hill on which a road is cut, but so
+steep and narrow, that it is very difficult.&nbsp; There is now a design
+of making another way round the bottom.&nbsp; Upon one of the precipices,
+my horse, weary with the steepness of the rise, staggered a little,
+and I called in haste to the Highlander to hold him.&nbsp; This was
+the only moment of my journey, in which I thought myself endangered.</p>
+<p>Having surmounted the hill at last, we were told that at Glenelg,
+on the sea-side, we should come to a house of lime and slate and glass.&nbsp;
+This image of magnificence raised our expectation.&nbsp; At last we
+came to our inn weary and peevish, and began to inquire for meat and
+beds.</p>
+<p>Of the provisions the negative catalogue was very copious.&nbsp;
+Here was no meat, no milk, no bread, no eggs, no wine.&nbsp; We did
+not express much satisfaction.&nbsp; Here however we were to stay.&nbsp;
+Whisky we might have, and I believe at last they caught a fowl and killed
+it.&nbsp; We had some bread, and with that we prepared ourselves to
+be contented, when we had a very eminent proof of Highland hospitality.&nbsp;
+Along some miles of the way, in the evening, a gentleman&rsquo;s servant
+had kept us company on foot with very little notice on our part.&nbsp;
+He left us near Glenelg, and we thought on him no more till he came
+to us again, in about two hours, with a present from his master of rum
+and sugar.&nbsp; The man had mentioned his company, and the gentleman,
+whose name, I think, is Gordon, well knowing the penury of the place,
+had this attention to two men, whose names perhaps he had not heard,
+by whom his kindness was not likely to be ever repaid, and who could
+be recommended to him only by their necessities.</p>
+<p>We were now to examine our lodging.&nbsp; Out of one of the beds,
+on which we were to repose, started up, at our entrance, a man black
+as a Cyclops from the forge.&nbsp; Other circumstances of no elegant
+recital concurred to disgust us.&nbsp; We had been frighted by a lady
+at Edinburgh, with discouraging representations of Highland lodgings.&nbsp;
+Sleep, however, was necessary.&nbsp; Our Highlanders had at last found
+some hay, with which the inn could not supply them.&nbsp; I directed
+them to bring a bundle into the room, and slept upon it in my riding
+coat.&nbsp; Mr. Boswell being more delicate, laid himself sheets with
+hay over and under him, and lay in linen like a gentleman.</p>
+<h2>SKY.&nbsp; ARMIDEL</h2>
+<p>In the morning, September the second, we found ourselves on the edge
+of the sea.&nbsp; Having procured a boat, we dismissed our Highlanders,
+whom I would recommend to the service of any future travellers, and
+were ferried over to the Isle of Sky.&nbsp; We landed at Armidel, where
+we were met on the sands by Sir Alexander Macdonald, who was at that
+time there with his lady, preparing to leave the island and reside at
+Edinburgh.</p>
+<p>Armidel is a neat house, built where the Macdonalds had once a seat,
+which was burnt in the commotions that followed the Revolution.&nbsp;
+The walled orchard, which belonged to the former house, still remains.&nbsp;
+It is well shaded by tall ash trees, of a species, as Mr. Janes the
+fossilist informed me, uncommonly valuable.&nbsp; This plantation is
+very properly mentioned by Dr. Campbell, in his new account of the state
+of Britain, and deserves attention; because it proves that the present
+nakedness of the Hebrides is not wholly the fault of Nature.</p>
+<p>As we sat at Sir Alexander&rsquo;s table, we were entertained, according
+to the ancient usage of the North, with the melody of the bagpipe.&nbsp;
+Everything in those countries has its history.&nbsp; As the bagpiper
+was playing, an elderly Gentleman informed us, that in some remote time,
+the Macdonalds of Glengary having been injured, or offended by the inhabitants
+of Culloden, and resolving to have justice or vengeance, came to Culloden
+on a Sunday, where finding their enemies at worship, they shut them
+up in the church, which they set on fire; and this, said he, is the
+tune that the piper played while they were burning.</p>
+<p>Narrations like this, however uncertain, deserve the notice of the
+traveller, because they are the only records of a nation that has no
+historians, and afford the most genuine representation of the life and
+character of the ancient Highlanders.</p>
+<p>Under the denomination of Highlander are comprehended in Scotland
+all that now speak the Erse language, or retain the primitive manners,
+whether they live among the mountains or in the islands; and in that
+sense I use the name, when there is not some apparent reason for making
+a distinction.</p>
+<p>In Sky I first observed the use of Brogues, a kind of artless shoes,
+stitched with thongs so loosely, that though they defend the foot from
+stones, they do not exclude water.&nbsp; Brogues were formerly made
+of raw hides, with the hair inwards, and such are perhaps still used
+in rude and remote parts; but they are said not to last above two days.&nbsp;
+Where life is somewhat improved, they are now made of leather tanned
+with oak bark, as in other places, or with the bark of birch, or roots
+of tormentil, a substance recommended in defect of bark, about forty
+years ago, to the Irish tanners, by one to whom the parliament of that
+kingdom voted a reward.&nbsp; The leather of Sky is not completely penetrated
+by vegetable matter, and therefore cannot be very durable.</p>
+<p>My inquiries about brogues, gave me an early specimen of Highland
+information.&nbsp; One day I was told, that to make brogues was a domestick
+art, which every man practised for himself, and that a pair of brogues
+was the work of an hour.&nbsp; I supposed that the husband made brogues
+as the wife made an apron, till next day it was told me, that a brogue-maker
+was a trade, and that a pair would cost half a crown.&nbsp; It will
+easily occur that these representations may both be true, and that,
+in some places, men may buy them, and in others, make them for themselves;
+but I had both the accounts in the same house within two days.</p>
+<p>Many of my subsequent inquiries upon more interesting topicks ended
+in the like uncertainty.&nbsp; He that travels in the Highlands may
+easily saturate his soul with intelligence, if he will acquiesce in
+the first account.&nbsp; The Highlander gives to every question an answer
+so prompt and peremptory, that skepticism itself is dared into silence,
+and the mind sinks before the bold reporter in unresisting credulity;
+but, if a second question be ventured, it breaks the enchantment; for
+it is immediately discovered, that what was told so confidently was
+told at hazard, and that such fearlessness of assertion was either the
+sport of negligence, or the refuge of ignorance.</p>
+<p>If individuals are thus at variance with themselves, it can be no
+wonder that the accounts of different men are contradictory.&nbsp; The
+traditions of an ignorant and savage people have been for ages negligently
+heard, and unskilfully related.&nbsp; Distant events must have been
+mingled together, and the actions of one man given to another.&nbsp;
+These, however, are deficiencies in story, for which no man is now to
+be censured.&nbsp; It were enough, if what there is yet opportunity
+of examining were accurately inspected, and justly represented; but
+such is the laxity of Highland conversation, that the inquirer is kept
+in continual suspense, and by a kind of intellectual retrogradation,
+knows less as he hears more.</p>
+<p>In the islands the plaid is rarely worn.&nbsp; The law by which the
+Highlanders have been obliged to change the form of their dress, has,
+in all the places that we have visited, been universally obeyed.&nbsp;
+I have seen only one gentleman completely clothed in the ancient habit,
+and by him it was worn only occasionally and wantonly.&nbsp; The common
+people do not think themselves under any legal necessity of having coats;
+for they say that the law against plaids was made by Lord Hardwicke,
+and was in force only for his life: but the same poverty that made it
+then difficult for them to change their clothing, hinders them now from
+changing it again.</p>
+<p>The fillibeg, or lower garment, is still very common, and the bonnet
+almost universal; but their attire is such as produces, in a sufficient
+degree, the effect intended by the law, of abolishing the dissimilitude
+of appearance between the Highlanders and the other inhabitants of Britain;
+and, if dress be supposed to have much influence, facilitates their
+coalition with their fellow-subjects.</p>
+<p>What we have long used we naturally like, and therefore the Highlanders
+were unwilling to lay aside their plaid, which yet to an unprejudiced
+spectator must appear an incommodious and cumbersome dress; for hanging
+loose upon the body, it must flutter in a quick motion, or require one
+of the hands to keep it close.&nbsp; The Romans always laid aside the
+gown when they had anything to do.&nbsp; It was a dress so unsuitable
+to war, that the same word which signified a gown signified peace.&nbsp;
+The chief use of a plaid seems to be this, that they could commodiously
+wrap themselves in it, when they were obliged to sleep without a better
+cover.</p>
+<p>In our passage from Scotland to Sky, we were wet for the first time
+with a shower.&nbsp; This was the beginning of the Highland winter,
+after which we were told that a succession of three dry days was not
+to be expected for many months.&nbsp; The winter of the Hebrides consists
+of little more than rain and wind.&nbsp; As they are surrounded by an
+ocean never frozen, the blasts that come to them over the water are
+too much softened to have the power of congelation.&nbsp; The salt loughs,
+or inlets of the sea, which shoot very far into the island, never have
+any ice upon them, and the pools of fresh water will never bear the
+walker.&nbsp; The snow that sometimes falls, is soon dissolved by the
+air, or the rain.</p>
+<p>This is not the description of a cruel climate, yet the dark months
+are here a time of great distress; because the summer can do little
+more than feed itself, and winter comes with its cold and its scarcity
+upon families very slenderly provided.</p>
+<h2>CORIATACHAN IN SKY</h2>
+<p>The third or fourth day after our arrival at Armidel, brought us
+an invitation to the isle of Raasay, which lies east of Sky.&nbsp; It
+is incredible how soon the account of any event is propagated in these
+narrow countries by the love of talk, which much leisure produces, and
+the relief given to the mind in the penury of insular conversation by
+a new topick.&nbsp; The arrival of strangers at a place so rarely visited,
+excites rumour, and quickens curiosity.&nbsp; I know not whether we
+touched at any corner, where Fame had not already prepared us a reception.</p>
+<p>To gain a commodious passage to Raasay, it was necessary to pass
+over a large part of Sky.&nbsp; We were furnished therefore with horses
+and a guide.&nbsp; In the Islands there are no roads, nor any marks
+by which a stranger may find his way.&nbsp; The horseman has always
+at his side a native of the place, who, by pursuing game, or tending
+cattle, or being often employed in messages or conduct, has learned
+where the ridge of the hill has breadth sufficient to allow a horse
+and his rider a passage, and where the moss or bog is hard enough to
+bear them.&nbsp; The bogs are avoided as toilsome at least, if not unsafe,
+and therefore the journey is made generally from precipice to precipice;
+from which if the eye ventures to look down, it sees below a gloomy
+cavity, whence the rush of water is sometimes heard.</p>
+<p>But there seems to be in all this more alarm than danger.&nbsp; The
+Highlander walks carefully before, and the horse, accustomed to the
+ground, follows him with little deviation.&nbsp; Sometimes the hill
+is too steep for the horseman to keep his seat, and sometimes the moss
+is too tremulous to bear the double weight of horse and man.&nbsp; The
+rider then dismounts, and all shift as they can.</p>
+<p>Journies made in this manner are rather tedious than long.&nbsp;
+A very few miles require several hours.&nbsp; From Armidel we came at
+night to Coriatachan, a house very pleasantly situated between two brooks,
+with one of the highest hills of the island behind it.&nbsp; It is the
+residence of Mr. Mackinnon, by whom we were treated with very liberal
+hospitality, among a more numerous and elegant company than it could
+have been supposed easy to collect.</p>
+<p>The hill behind the house we did not climb.&nbsp; The weather was
+rough, and the height and steepness discouraged us.&nbsp; We were told
+that there is a cairne upon it.&nbsp; A cairne is a heap of stones thrown
+upon the grave of one eminent for dignity of birth, or splendour of
+atchievements.&nbsp; It is said that by digging, an urn is always found
+under these cairnes: they must therefore have been thus piled by a people
+whose custom was to burn the dead.&nbsp; To pile stones is, I believe,
+a northern custom, and to burn the body was the Roman practice; nor
+do I know when it was that these two acts of sepulture were united.</p>
+<p>The weather was next day too violent for the continuation of our
+journey; but we had no reason to complain of the interruption.&nbsp;
+We saw in every place, what we chiefly desired to know, the manners
+of the people.&nbsp; We had company, and, if we had chosen retirement,
+we might have had books.</p>
+<p>I never was in any house of the Islands, where I did not find books
+in more languages than one, if I staid long enough to want them, except
+one from which the family was removed.&nbsp; Literature is not neglected
+by the higher rank of the Hebridians.</p>
+<p>It need not, I suppose, be mentioned, that in countries so little
+frequented as the Islands, there are no houses where travellers are
+entertained for money.&nbsp; He that wanders about these wilds, either
+procures recommendations to those whose habitations lie near his way,
+or, when night and weariness come upon him, takes the chance of general
+hospitality.&nbsp; If he finds only a cottage, he can expect little
+more than shelter; for the cottagers have little more for themselves:
+but if his good fortune brings him to the residence of a gentleman,
+he will be glad of a storm to prolong his stay.&nbsp; There is, however,
+one inn by the sea-side at Sconsor, in Sky, where the post-office is
+kept.</p>
+<p>At the tables where a stranger is received, neither plenty nor delicacy
+is wanting.&nbsp; A tract of land so thinly inhabited, must have much
+wild-fowl; and I scarcely remember to have seen a dinner without them.&nbsp;
+The moorgame is every where to be had.&nbsp; That the sea abounds with
+fish, needs not be told, for it supplies a great part of Europe.&nbsp;
+The Isle of Sky has stags and roebucks, but no hares.&nbsp; They sell
+very numerous droves of oxen yearly to England, and therefore cannot
+be supposed to want beef at home.&nbsp; Sheep and goats are in great
+numbers, and they have the common domestick fowls.</p>
+<p>But as here is nothing to be bought, every family must kill its own
+meat, and roast part of it somewhat sooner than Apicius would prescribe.&nbsp;
+Every kind of flesh is undoubtedly excelled by the variety and emulation
+of English markets; but that which is not best may be yet very far from
+bad, and he that shall complain of his fare in the Hebrides, has improved
+his delicacy more than his manhood.</p>
+<p>Their fowls are not like those plumped for sale by the poulterers
+of London, but they are as good as other places commonly afford, except
+that the geese, by feeding in the sea, have universally a fishy rankness.</p>
+<p>These geese seem to be of a middle race, between the wild and domestick
+kinds.&nbsp; They are so tame as to own a home, and so wild as sometimes
+to fly quite away.</p>
+<p>Their native bread is made of oats, or barley.&nbsp; Of oatmeal they
+spread very thin cakes, coarse and hard, to which unaccustomed palates
+are not easily reconciled.&nbsp; The barley cakes are thicker and softer;
+I began to eat them without unwillingness; the blackness of their colour
+raises some dislike, but the taste is not disagreeable.&nbsp; In most
+houses there is wheat flower, with which we were sure to be treated,
+if we staid long enough to have it kneaded and baked.&nbsp; As neither
+yeast nor leaven are used among them, their bread of every kind is unfermented.&nbsp;
+They make only cakes, and never mould a loaf.</p>
+<p>A man of the Hebrides, for of the women&rsquo;s diet I can give no
+account, as soon as he appears in the morning, swallows a glass of whisky;
+yet they are not a drunken race, at least I never was present at much
+intemperance; but no man is so abstemious as to refuse the morning dram,
+which they call a skalk.</p>
+<p>The word whisky signifies water, and is applied by way of eminence
+to strong water, or distilled liquor.&nbsp; The spirit drunk in the
+North is drawn from barley.&nbsp; I never tasted it, except once for
+experiment at the inn in Inverary, when I thought it preferable to any
+English malt brandy.&nbsp; It was strong, but not pungent, and was free
+from the empyreumatick taste or smell.&nbsp; What was the process I
+had no opportunity of inquiring, nor do I wish to improve the art of
+making poison pleasant.</p>
+<p>Not long after the dram, may be expected the breakfast, a meal in
+which the Scots, whether of the lowlands or mountains, must be confessed
+to excel us.&nbsp; The tea and coffee are accompanied not only with
+butter, but with honey, conserves, and marmalades.&nbsp; If an epicure
+could remove by a wish, in quest of sensual gratifications, wherever
+he had supped he would breakfast in Scotland.</p>
+<p>In the islands however, they do what I found it not very easy to
+endure.&nbsp; They pollute the tea-table by plates piled with large
+slices of cheshire cheese, which mingles its less grateful odours with
+the fragrance of the tea.</p>
+<p>Where many questions are to be asked, some will be omitted.&nbsp;
+I forgot to inquire how they were supplied with so much exotic luxury.&nbsp;
+Perhaps the French may bring them wine for wool, and the Dutch give
+them tea and coffee at the fishing season, in exchange for fresh provision.&nbsp;
+Their trade is unconstrained; they pay no customs, for there is no officer
+to demand them; whatever therefore is made dear only by impost, is obtained
+here at an easy rate.</p>
+<p>A dinner in the Western Islands differs very little from a dinner
+in England, except that in the place of tarts, there are always set
+different preparations of milk.&nbsp; This part of their diet will admit
+some improvement.&nbsp; Though they have milk, and eggs, and sugar,
+few of them know how to compound them in a custard.&nbsp; Their gardens
+afford them no great variety, but they have always some vegetables on
+the table.&nbsp; Potatoes at least are never wanting, which, though
+they have not known them long, are now one of the principal parts of
+their food.&nbsp; They are not of the mealy, but the viscous kind.</p>
+<p>Their more elaborate cookery, or made dishes, an Englishman at the
+first taste is not likely to approve, but the culinary compositions
+of every country are often such as become grateful to other nations
+only by degrees; though I have read a French author, who, in the elation
+of his heart, says, that French cookery pleases all foreigners, but
+foreign cookery never satisfies a Frenchman.</p>
+<p>Their suppers are, like their dinners, various and plentiful.&nbsp;
+The table is always covered with elegant linen.&nbsp; Their plates for
+common use are often of that kind of manufacture which is called cream
+coloured, or queen&rsquo;s ware.&nbsp; They use silver on all occasions
+where it is common in England, nor did I ever find the spoon of horn,
+but in one house.</p>
+<p>The knives are not often either very bright, or very sharp.&nbsp;
+They are indeed instruments of which the Highlanders have not been long
+acquainted with the general use.&nbsp; They were not regularly laid
+on the table, before the prohibition of arms, and the change of dress.&nbsp;
+Thirty years ago the Highlander wore his knife as a companion to his
+dirk or dagger, and when the company sat down to meat, the men who had
+knives, cut the flesh into small pieces for the women, who with their
+fingers conveyed it to their mouths.</p>
+<p>There was perhaps never any change of national manners so quick,
+so great, and so general, as that which has operated in the Highlands,
+by the last conquest, and the subsequent laws.&nbsp; We came thither
+too late to see what we expected, a people of peculiar appearance, and
+a system of antiquated life.&nbsp; The clans retain little now of their
+original character, their ferocity of temper is softened, their military
+ardour is extinguished, their dignity of independence is depressed,
+their contempt of government subdued, and the reverence for their chiefs
+abated.&nbsp; Of what they had before the late conquest of their country,
+there remain only their language and their poverty.&nbsp; Their language
+is attacked on every side.&nbsp; Schools are erected, in which English
+only is taught, and there were lately some who thought it reasonable
+to refuse them a version of the holy scriptures, that they might have
+no monument of their mother-tongue.</p>
+<p>That their poverty is gradually abated, cannot be mentioned among
+the unpleasing consequences of subjection.&nbsp; They are now acquainted
+with money, and the possibility of gain will by degrees make them industrious.&nbsp;
+Such is the effect of the late regulations, that a longer journey than
+to the Highlands must be taken by him whose curiosity pants for savage
+virtues and barbarous grandeur.</p>
+<h2>RAASAY</h2>
+<p>At the first intermission of the stormy weather we were informed,
+that the boat, which was to convey us to Raasay, attended us on the
+coast.&nbsp; We had from this time our intelligence facilitated, and
+our conversation enlarged, by the company of Mr. Macqueen, minister
+of a parish in Sky, whose knowledge and politeness give him a title
+equally to kindness and respect, and who, from this time, never forsook
+us till we were preparing to leave Sky, and the adjacent places.</p>
+<p>The boat was under the direction of Mr. Malcolm Macleod, a gentleman
+of Raasay.&nbsp; The water was calm, and the rowers were vigorous; so
+that our passage was quick and pleasant.&nbsp; When we came near the
+island, we saw the laird&rsquo;s house, a neat modern fabrick, and found
+Mr. Macleod, the proprietor of the Island, with many gentlemen, expecting
+us on the beach.&nbsp; We had, as at all other places, some difficulty
+in landing.&nbsp; The craggs were irregularly broken, and a false step
+would have been very mischievous.</p>
+<p>It seemed that the rocks might, with no great labour, have been hewn
+almost into a regular flight of steps; and as there are no other landing
+places, I considered this rugged ascent as the consequence of a form
+of life inured to hardships, and therefore not studious of nice accommodations.&nbsp;
+But I know not whether, for many ages, it was not considered as a part
+of military policy, to keep the country not easily accessible.&nbsp;
+The rocks are natural fortifications, and an enemy climbing with difficulty,
+was easily destroyed by those who stood high above him.</p>
+<p>Our reception exceeded our expectations.&nbsp; We found nothing but
+civility, elegance, and plenty.&nbsp; After the usual refreshments,
+and the usual conversation, the evening came upon us.&nbsp; The carpet
+was then rolled off the floor; the musician was called, and the whole
+company was invited to dance, nor did ever fairies trip with greater
+alacrity.&nbsp; The general air of festivity, which predominated in
+this place, so far remote from all those regions which the mind has
+been used to contemplate as the mansions of pleasure, struck the imagination
+with a delightful surprise, analogous to that which is felt at an unexpected
+emersion from darkness into light.</p>
+<p>When it was time to sup, the dance ceased, and six and thirty persons
+sat down to two tables in the same room.&nbsp; After supper the ladies
+sung Erse songs, to which I listened as an English audience to an Italian
+opera, delighted with the sound of words which I did not understand.</p>
+<p>I inquired the subjects of the songs, and was told of one, that it
+was a love song, and of another, that it was a farewell composed by
+one of the Islanders that was going, in this epidemical fury of emigration,
+to seek his fortune in America.&nbsp; What sentiments would arise, on
+such an occasion, in the heart of one who had not been taught to lament
+by precedent, I should gladly have known; but the lady, by whom I sat,
+thought herself not equal to the work of translating.</p>
+<p>Mr. Macleod is the proprietor of the islands of Raasay, Rona, and
+Fladda, and possesses an extensive district in Sky.&nbsp; The estate
+has not, during four hundred years, gained or lost a single acre.&nbsp;
+He acknowledges Macleod of Dunvegan as his chief, though his ancestors
+have formerly disputed the pre-eminence.</p>
+<p>One of the old Highland alliances has continued for two hundred years,
+and is still subsisting between Macleod of Raasay and Macdonald of Sky,
+in consequence of which, the survivor always inherits the arms of the
+deceased; a natural memorial of military friendship.&nbsp; At the death
+of the late Sir James Macdonald, his sword was delivered to the present
+laird of Raasay.</p>
+<p>The family of Raasay consists of the laird, the lady, three sons
+and ten daughters.&nbsp; For the sons there is a tutor in the house,
+and the lady is said to be very skilful and diligent in the education
+of her girls.&nbsp; More gentleness of manners, or a more pleasing appearance
+of domestick society, is not found in the most polished countries.</p>
+<p>Raasay is the only inhabited island in Mr. Macleod&rsquo;s possession.&nbsp;
+Rona and Fladda afford only pasture for cattle, of which one hundred
+and sixty winter in Rona, under the superintendence of a solitary herdsman.</p>
+<p>The length of Raasay is, by computation, fifteen miles, and the breadth
+two.&nbsp; These countries have never been measured, and the computation
+by miles is negligent and arbitrary.&nbsp; We observed in travelling,
+that the nominal and real distance of places had very little relation
+to each other.&nbsp; Raasay probably contains near a hundred square
+miles.&nbsp; It affords not much ground, notwithstanding its extent,
+either for tillage, or pasture; for it is rough, rocky, and barren.&nbsp;
+The cattle often perish by falling from the precipices.&nbsp; It is
+like the other islands, I think, generally naked of shade, but it is
+naked by neglect; for the laird has an orchard, and very large forest
+trees grow about his house.&nbsp; Like other hilly countries it has
+many rivulets.&nbsp; One of the brooks turns a corn-mill, and at least
+one produces trouts.</p>
+<p>In the streams or fresh lakes of the Islands, I have never heard
+of any other fish than trouts and eels.&nbsp; The trouts, which I have
+seen, are not large; the colour of their flesh is tinged as in England.&nbsp;
+Of their eels I can give no account, having never tasted them; for I
+believe they are not considered as wholesome food.</p>
+<p>It is not very easy to fix the principles upon which mankind have
+agreed to eat some animals, and reject others; and as the principle
+is not evident, it is not uniform.&nbsp; That which is selected as delicate
+in one country, is by its neighbours abhorred as loathsome.&nbsp; The
+Neapolitans lately refused to eat potatoes in a famine.&nbsp; An Englishman
+is not easily persuaded to dine on snails with an Italian, on frogs
+with a Frenchman, or on horseflesh with a Tartar.&nbsp; The vulgar inhabitants
+of Sky, I know not whether of the other islands, have not only eels,
+but pork and bacon in abhorrence, and accordingly I never saw a hog
+in the Hebrides, except one at Dunvegan.</p>
+<p>Raasay has wild fowl in abundance, but neither deer, hares, nor rabbits.&nbsp;
+Why it has them not, might be asked, but that of such questions there
+is no end.&nbsp; Why does any nation want what it might have?&nbsp;
+Why are not spices transplanted to America?&nbsp; Why does tea continue
+to be brought from China?&nbsp; Life improves but by slow degrees, and
+much in every place is yet to do.&nbsp; Attempts have been made to raise
+roebucks in Raasay, but without effect.&nbsp; The young ones it is extremely
+difficult to rear, and the old can very seldom be taken alive.</p>
+<p>Hares and rabbits might be more easily obtained.&nbsp; That they
+have few or none of either in Sky, they impute to the ravage of the
+foxes, and have therefore set, for some years past, a price upon their
+heads, which, as the number was diminished, has been gradually raised,
+from three shillings and sixpence to a guinea, a sum so great in this
+part of the world, that, in a short time, Sky may be as free from foxes,
+as England from wolves.&nbsp; The fund for these rewards is a tax of
+sixpence in the pound, imposed by the farmers on themselves, and said
+to be paid with great willingness.</p>
+<p>The beasts of prey in the Islands are foxes, otters, and weasels.&nbsp;
+The foxes are bigger than those of England; but the otters exceed ours
+in a far greater proportion.&nbsp; I saw one at Armidel, of a size much
+beyond that which I supposed them ever to attain; and Mr. Maclean, the
+heir of Col, a man of middle stature, informed me that he once shot
+an otter, of which the tail reached the ground, when he held up the
+head to a level with his own.&nbsp; I expected the otter to have a foot
+particularly formed for the art of swimming; but upon examination, I
+did not find it differing much from that of a spaniel.&nbsp; As he preys
+in the sea, he does little visible mischief, and is killed only for
+his fur.&nbsp; White otters are sometimes seen.</p>
+<p>In Raasay they might have hares and rabbits, for they have no foxes.&nbsp;
+Some depredations, such as were never made before, have caused a suspicion
+that a fox has been lately landed in the Island by spite or wantonness.&nbsp;
+This imaginary stranger has never yet been seen, and therefore, perhaps,
+the mischief was done by some other animal.&nbsp; It is not likely that
+a creature so ungentle, whose head could have been sold in Sky for a
+guinea, should be kept alive only to gratify the malice of sending him
+to prey upon a neighbour: and the passage from Sky is wider than a fox
+would venture to swim, unless he were chased by dogs into the sea, and
+perhaps than his strength would enable him to cross.&nbsp; How beasts
+of prey came into any islands is not easy to guess.&nbsp; In cold countries
+they take advantage of hard winters, and travel over the ice: but this
+is a very scanty solution; for they are found where they have no discoverable
+means of coming.</p>
+<p>The corn of this island is but little.&nbsp; I saw the harvest of
+a small field.&nbsp; The women reaped the Corn, and the men bound up
+the sheaves.&nbsp; The strokes of the sickle were timed by the modulation
+of the harvest song, in which all their voices were united.&nbsp; They
+accompany in the Highlands every action, which can be done in equal
+time, with an appropriated strain, which has, they say, not much meaning;
+but its effects are regularity and cheerfulness.&nbsp; The ancient proceleusmatick
+song, by which the rowers of gallies were animated, may be supposed
+to have been of this kind.&nbsp; There is now an oar-song used by the
+Hebridians.</p>
+<p>The ground of Raasay seems fitter for cattle than for corn, and of
+black cattle I suppose the number is very great.&nbsp; The Laird himself
+keeps a herd of four hundred, one hundred of which are annually sold.&nbsp;
+Of an extensive domain, which he holds in his own hands, he considers
+the sale of cattle as repaying him the rent, and supports the plenty
+of a very liberal table with the remaining product.</p>
+<p>Raasay is supposed to have been very long inhabited.&nbsp; On one
+side of it they show caves, into which the rude nations of the first
+ages retreated from the weather.&nbsp; These dreary vaults might have
+had other uses.&nbsp; There is still a cavity near the house called
+the oar-cave, in which the seamen, after one of those piratical expeditions,
+which in rougher times were very frequent, used, as tradition tells,
+to hide their oars.&nbsp; This hollow was near the sea, that nothing
+so necessary might be far to be fetched; and it was secret, that enemies,
+if they landed, could find nothing.&nbsp; Yet it is not very evident
+of what use it was to hide their oars from those, who, if they were
+masters of the coast, could take away their boats.</p>
+<p>A proof much stronger of the distance at which the first possessors
+of this island lived from the present time, is afforded by the stone
+heads of arrows which are very frequently picked up.&nbsp; The people
+call them Elf-bolts, and believe that the fairies shoot them at the
+cattle.&nbsp; They nearly resemble those which Mr. Banks has lately
+brought from the savage countries in the Pacifick Ocean, and must have
+been made by a nation to which the use of metals was unknown.</p>
+<p>The number of this little community has never been counted by its
+ruler, nor have I obtained any positive account, consistent with the
+result of political computation.&nbsp; Not many years ago, the late
+Laird led out one hundred men upon a military expedition.&nbsp; The
+sixth part of a people is supposed capable of bearing arms: Raasay had
+therefore six hundred inhabitants.&nbsp; But because it is not likely,
+that every man able to serve in the field would follow the summons,
+or that the chief would leave his lands totally defenceless, or take
+away all the hands qualified for labour, let it be supposed, that half
+as many might be permitted to stay at home.&nbsp; The whole number will
+then be nine hundred, or nine to a square mile; a degree of populousness
+greater than those tracts of desolation can often show.&nbsp; They are
+content with their country, and faithful to their chiefs, and yet uninfected
+with the fever of migration.</p>
+<p>Near the house, at Raasay, is a chapel unroofed and ruinous, which
+has long been used only as a place of burial.&nbsp; About the churches,
+in the Islands, are small squares inclosed with stone, which belong
+to particular families, as repositories for the dead.&nbsp; At Raasay
+there is one, I think, for the proprietor, and one for some collateral
+house.</p>
+<p>It is told by Martin, that at the death of the Lady of the Island,
+it has been here the custom to erect a cross.&nbsp; This we found not
+to be true.&nbsp; The stones that stand about the chapel at a small
+distance, some of which perhaps have crosses cut upon them, are believed
+to have been not funeral monuments, but the ancient boundaries of the
+sanctuary or consecrated ground.</p>
+<p>Martin was a man not illiterate: he was an inhabitant of Sky, and
+therefore was within reach of intelligence, and with no great difficulty
+might have visited the places which he undertakes to describe; yet with
+all his opportunities, he has often suffered himself to be deceived.&nbsp;
+He lived in the last century, when the chiefs of the clans had lost
+little of their original influence.&nbsp; The mountains were yet unpenetrated,
+no inlet was opened to foreign novelties, and the feudal institution
+operated upon life with their full force.&nbsp; He might therefore have
+displayed a series of subordination and a form of government, which,
+in more luminous and improved regions, have been long forgotten, and
+have delighted his readers with many uncouth customs that are now disused,
+and wild opinions that prevail no longer.&nbsp; But he probably had
+not knowledge of the world sufficient to qualify him for judging what
+would deserve or gain the attention of mankind.&nbsp; The mode of life
+which was familiar to himself, he did not suppose unknown to others,
+nor imagined that he could give pleasure by telling that of which it
+was, in his little country, impossible to be ignorant.</p>
+<p>What he has neglected cannot now be performed.&nbsp; In nations,
+where there is hardly the use of letters, what is once out of sight
+is lost for ever.&nbsp; They think but little, and of their few thoughts,
+none are wasted on the past, in which they are neither interested by
+fear nor hope.&nbsp; Their only registers are stated observances and
+practical representations.&nbsp; For this reason an age of ignorance
+is an age of ceremony.&nbsp; Pageants, and processions, and commemorations,
+gradually shrink away, as better methods come into use of recording
+events, and preserving rights.</p>
+<p>It is not only in Raasay that the chapel is unroofed and useless;
+through the few islands which we visited, we neither saw nor heard of
+any house of prayer, except in Sky, that was not in ruins.&nbsp; The
+malignant influence of Calvinism has blasted ceremony and decency together;
+and if the remembrance of papal superstition is obliterated, the monuments
+of papal piety are likewise effaced.</p>
+<p>It has been, for many years, popular to talk of the lazy devotion
+of the Romish clergy; over the sleepy laziness of men that erected churches,
+we may indulge our superiority with a new triumph, by comparing it with
+the fervid activity of those who suffer them to fall.</p>
+<p>Of the destruction of churches, the decay of religion must in time
+be the consequence; for while the publick acts of the ministry are now
+performed in houses, a very small number can be present; and as the
+greater part of the Islanders make no use of books, all must necessarily
+live in total ignorance who want the opportunity of vocal instruction.</p>
+<p>From these remains of ancient sanctity, which are every where to
+be found, it has been conjectured, that, for the last two centuries,
+the inhabitants of the Islands have decreased in number.&nbsp; This
+argument, which supposes that the churches have been suffered to fall,
+only because they were no longer necessary, would have some force, if
+the houses of worship still remaining were sufficient for the people.&nbsp;
+But since they have now no churches at all, these venerable fragments
+do not prove the people of former times to have been more numerous,
+but to have been more devout.&nbsp; If the inhabitants were doubled
+with their present principles, it appears not that any provision for
+publick worship would be made.&nbsp; Where the religion of a country
+enforces consecrated buildings, the number of those buildings may be
+supposed to afford some indication, however uncertain, of the populousness
+of the place; but where by a change of manners a nation is contented
+to live without them, their decay implies no diminution of inhabitants.</p>
+<p>Some of these dilapidations are said to be found in islands now uninhabited;
+but I doubt whether we can thence infer that they were ever peopled.&nbsp;
+The religion of the middle age, is well known to have placed too much
+hope in lonely austerities.&nbsp; Voluntary solitude was the great act
+of propitiation, by which crimes were effaced, and conscience was appeased;
+it is therefore not unlikely, that oratories were often built in places
+where retirement was sure to have no disturbance.</p>
+<p>Raasay has little that can detain a traveller, except the Laird and
+his family; but their power wants no auxiliaries.&nbsp; Such a seat
+of hospitality, amidst the winds and waters, fills the imagination with
+a delightful contrariety of images.&nbsp; Without is the rough ocean
+and the rocky land, the beating billows and the howling storm: within
+is plenty and elegance, beauty and gaiety, the song and the dance.&nbsp;
+In Raasay, if I could have found an Ulysses, I had fancied a Phoeacia.</p>
+<h2>DUNVEGAN</h2>
+<p>At Raasay, by good fortune, Macleod, so the chief of the clan is
+called, was paying a visit, and by him we were invited to his seat at
+Dunvegan.&nbsp; Raasay has a stout boat, built in Norway, in which,
+with six oars, he conveyed us back to Sky.&nbsp; We landed at Port Re,
+so called, because James the Fifth of Scotland, who had curiosity to
+visit the Islands, came into it.&nbsp; The port is made by an inlet
+of the sea, deep and narrow, where a ship lay waiting to dispeople Sky,
+by carrying the natives away to America.</p>
+<p>In coasting Sky, we passed by the cavern in which it was the custom,
+as Martin relates, to catch birds in the night, by making a fire at
+the entrance.&nbsp; This practice is disused; for the birds, as is known
+often to happen, have changed their haunts.</p>
+<p>Here we dined at a publick house, I believe the only inn of the island,
+and having mounted our horses, travelled in the manner already described,
+till we came to Kingsborough, a place distinguished by that name, because
+the King lodged here when he landed at Port Re.&nbsp; We were entertained
+with the usual hospitality by Mr. Macdonald and his lady, Flora Macdonald,
+a name that will be mentioned in history, and if courage and fidelity
+be virtues, mentioned with honour.&nbsp; She is a woman of middle stature,
+soft features, gentle manners, and elegant presence.</p>
+<p>In the morning we sent our horses round a promontory to meet us,
+and spared ourselves part of the day&rsquo;s fatigue, by crossing an
+arm of the sea.&nbsp; We had at last some difficulty in coming to Dunvegan;
+for our way led over an extensive moor, where every step was to be taken
+with caution, and we were often obliged to alight, because the ground
+could not be trusted.&nbsp; In travelling this watery flat, I perceived
+that it had a visible declivity, and might without much expence or difficulty
+be drained.&nbsp; But difficulty and expence are relative terms, which
+have different meanings in different places.</p>
+<p>To Dunvegan we came, very willing to be at rest, and found our fatigue
+amply recompensed by our reception.&nbsp; Lady Macleod, who had lived
+many years in England, was newly come hither with her son and four daughters,
+who knew all the arts of southern elegance, and all the modes of English
+economy.&nbsp; Here therefore we settled, and did not spoil the present
+hour with thoughts of departure.</p>
+<p>Dunvegan is a rocky prominence, that juts out into a bay, on the
+west side of Sky.&nbsp; The house, which is the principal seat of Macleod,
+is partly old and partly modern; it is built upon the rock, and looks
+upon the water.&nbsp; It forms two sides of a small square: on the third
+side is the skeleton of a castle of unknown antiquity, supposed to have
+been a Norwegian fortress, when the Danes were masters of the Islands.&nbsp;
+It is so nearly entire, that it might have easily been made habitable,
+were there not an ominous tradition in the family, that the owner shall
+not long outlive the reparation.&nbsp; The grandfather of the present
+Laird, in defiance of prediction, began the work, but desisted in a
+little time, and applied his money to worse uses.</p>
+<p>As the inhabitants of the Hebrides lived, for many ages, in continual
+expectation of hostilities, the chief of every clan resided in a fortress.&nbsp;
+This house was accessible only from the water, till the last possessor
+opened an entrance by stairs upon the land.</p>
+<p>They had formerly reason to be afraid, not only of declared wars
+and authorized invaders, or of roving pirates, which, in the northern
+seas, must have been very common; but of inroads and insults from rival
+clans, who, in the plenitude of feudal independence, asked no leave
+of their Sovereign to make war on one another.&nbsp; Sky has been ravaged
+by a feud between the two mighty powers of Macdonald and Macleod.&nbsp;
+Macdonald having married a Macleod upon some discontent dismissed her,
+perhaps because she had brought him no children.&nbsp; Before the reign
+of James the Fifth, a Highland Laird made a trial of his wife for a
+certain time, and if she did not please him, he was then at liberty
+to send her away.&nbsp; This however must always have offended, and
+Macleod resenting the injury, whatever were its circumstances, declared,
+that the wedding had been solemnized without a bonfire, but that the
+separation should be better illuminated; and raising a little army,
+set fire to the territories of Macdonald, who returned the visit, and
+prevailed.</p>
+<p>Another story may show the disorderly state of insular neighbourhood.&nbsp;
+The inhabitants of the Isle of Egg, meeting a boat manned by Macleods,
+tied the crew hand and foot, and set them a-drift.&nbsp; Macleod landed
+upon Egg, and demanded the offenders; but the inhabitants refusing to
+surrender them, retreated to a cavern, into which they thought their
+enemies unlikely to follow them.&nbsp; Macleod choked them with smoke,
+and left them lying dead by families as they stood.</p>
+<p>Here the violence of the weather confined us for some time, not at
+all to our discontent or inconvenience.&nbsp; We would indeed very willingly
+have visited the Islands, which might be seen from the house scattered
+in the sea, and I was particularly desirous to have viewed Isay; but
+the storms did not permit us to launch a boat, and we were condemned
+to listen in idleness to the wind, except when we were better engaged
+by listening to the ladies.</p>
+<p>We had here more wind than waves, and suffered the severity of a
+tempest, without enjoying its magnificence.&nbsp; The sea being broken
+by the multitude of islands, does not roar with so much noise, nor beat
+the shore with such foamy violence, as I have remarked on the coast
+of Sussex.&nbsp; Though, while I was in the Hebrides, the wind was extremely
+turbulent, I never saw very high billows.</p>
+<p>The country about Dunvegan is rough and barren.&nbsp; There are no
+trees, except in the orchard, which is a low sheltered spot surrounded
+with a wall.</p>
+<p>When this house was intended to sustain a siege, a well was made
+in the court, by boring the rock downwards, till water was found, which
+though so near to the sea, I have not heard mentioned as brackish, though
+it has some hardness, or other qualities, which make it less fit for
+use; and the family is now better supplied from a stream, which runs
+by the rock, from two pleasing waterfalls.</p>
+<p>Here we saw some traces of former manners, and heard some standing
+traditions.&nbsp; In the house is kept an ox&rsquo;s horn, hollowed
+so as to hold perhaps two quarts, which the heir of Macleod was expected
+to swallow at one draught, as a test of his manhood, before he was permitted
+to bear arms, or could claim a seat among the men.&nbsp; It is held
+that the return of the Laird to Dunvegan, after any considerable absence,
+produces a plentiful capture of herrings; and that, if any woman crosses
+the water to the opposite Island, the herrings will desert the coast.&nbsp;
+Boetius tells the same of some other place.&nbsp; This tradition is
+not uniform.&nbsp; Some hold that no woman may pass, and others that
+none may pass but a Macleod.</p>
+<p>Among other guests, which the hospitality of Dunvegan brought to
+the table, a visit was paid by the Laird and Lady of a small island
+south of Sky, of which the proper name is Muack, which signifies swine.&nbsp;
+It is commonly called Muck, which the proprietor not liking, has endeavoured,
+without effect, to change to Monk.&nbsp; It is usual to call gentlemen
+in Scotland by the name of their possessions, as Raasay, Bernera, Loch
+Buy, a practice necessary in countries inhabited by clans, where all
+that live in the same territory have one name, and must be therefore
+discriminated by some addition.&nbsp; This gentleman, whose name, I
+think, is Maclean, should be regularly called Muck; but the appellation,
+which he thinks too coarse for his Island, he would like still less
+for himself, and he is therefore addressed by the title of, Isle of
+Muck.</p>
+<p>This little Island, however it be named, is of considerable value.&nbsp;
+It is two English miles long, and three quarters of a mile broad, and
+consequently contains only nine hundred and sixty English acres.&nbsp;
+It is chiefly arable.&nbsp; Half of this little dominion the Laird retains
+in his own hand, and on the other half, live one hundred and sixty persons,
+who pay their rent by exported corn.&nbsp; What rent they pay, we were
+not told, and could not decently inquire.&nbsp; The proportion of the
+people to the land is such, as the most fertile countries do not commonly
+maintain.</p>
+<p>The Laird having all his people under his immediate view, seems to
+be very attentive to their happiness.&nbsp; The devastation of the small-pox,
+when it visits places where it comes seldom, is well known.&nbsp; He
+has disarmed it of its terrour at Muack, by inoculating eighty of his
+people.&nbsp; The expence was two shillings and sixpence a head.&nbsp;
+Many trades they cannot have among them, but upon occasion, he fetches
+a smith from the Isle of Egg, and has a tailor from the main land, six
+times a year.&nbsp; This island well deserved to be seen, but the Laird&rsquo;s
+absence left us no opportunity.</p>
+<p>Every inhabited island has its appendant and subordinate islets.&nbsp;
+Muck, however small, has yet others smaller about it, one of which has
+only ground sufficient to afford pasture for three wethers.</p>
+<p>At Dunvegan I had tasted lotus, and was in danger of forgetting that
+I was ever to depart, till Mr. Boswell sagely reproached me with my
+sluggishness and softness.&nbsp; I had no very forcible defence to make;
+and we agreed to pursue our journey.&nbsp; Macleod accompanied us to
+Ulinish, where we were entertained by the sheriff of the Island.</p>
+<h2>ULINISH</h2>
+<p>Mr. Macqueen travelled with us, and directed our attention to all
+that was worthy of observation.&nbsp; With him we went to see an ancient
+building, called a dun or borough.&nbsp; It was a circular inclosure,
+about forty-two feet in diameter, walled round with loose stones, perhaps
+to the height of nine feet.&nbsp; The walls were very thick, diminishing
+a little toward the top, and though in these countries, stone is not
+brought far, must have been raised with much labour.&nbsp; Within the
+great circle were several smaller rounds of wall, which formed distinct
+apartments.&nbsp; Its date, and its use are unknown.&nbsp; Some suppose
+it the original seat of the chiefs of the Macleods.&nbsp; Mr. Macqueen
+thought it a Danish fort.</p>
+<p>The entrance is covered with flat stones, and is narrow, because
+it was necessary that the stones which lie over it, should reach from
+one wall to the other; yet, strait as the passage is, they seem heavier
+than could have been placed where they now lie, by the naked strength
+of as many men as might stand about them.&nbsp; They were probably raised
+by putting long pieces of wood under them, to which the action of a
+long line of lifters might be applied.&nbsp; Savages, in all countries,
+have patience proportionate to their unskilfulness, and are content
+to attain their end by very tedious methods.</p>
+<p>If it was ever roofed, it might once have been a dwelling, but as
+there is no provision for water, it could not have been a fortress.&nbsp;
+In Sky, as in every other place, there is an ambition of exalting whatever
+has survived memory, to some important use, and referring it to very
+remote ages.&nbsp; I am inclined to suspect, that in lawless times,
+when the inhabitants of every mountain stole the cattle of their neighbour,
+these inclosures were used to secure the herds and flocks in the night.&nbsp;
+When they were driven within the wall, they might be easily watched,
+and defended as long as could be needful; for the robbers durst not
+wait till the injured clan should find them in the morning.</p>
+<p>The interior inclosures, if the whole building were once a house,
+were the chambers of the chief inhabitants.&nbsp; If it was a place
+of security for cattle, they were probably the shelters of the keepers.</p>
+<p>From the Dun we were conducted to another place of security, a cave
+carried a great way under ground, which had been discovered by digging
+after a fox.&nbsp; These caves, of which many have been found, and many
+probably remain concealed, are formed, I believe, commonly by taking
+advantage of a hollow, where banks or rocks rise on either side.&nbsp;
+If no such place can be found, the ground must be cut away.&nbsp; The
+walls are made by piling stones against the earth, on either side.&nbsp;
+It is then roofed by larger stones laid across the cavern, which therefore
+cannot be wide.&nbsp; Over the roof, turfs were placed, and grass was
+suffered to grow; and the mouth was concealed by bushes, or some other
+cover.</p>
+<p>These caves were represented to us as the cabins of the first rude
+inhabitants, of which, however, I am by no means persuaded.&nbsp; This
+was so low, that no man could stand upright in it.&nbsp; By their construction
+they are all so narrow, that two can never pass along them together,
+and being subterraneous, they must be always damp.&nbsp; They are not
+the work of an age much ruder than the present; for they are formed
+with as much art as the construction of a common hut requires.&nbsp;
+I imagine them to have been places only of occasional use, in which
+the Islander, upon a sudden alarm, hid his utensils, or his cloaths,
+and perhaps sometimes his wife and children.</p>
+<p>This cave we entered, but could not proceed the whole length, and
+went away without knowing how far it was carried.&nbsp; For this omission
+we shall be blamed, as we perhaps have blamed other travellers; but
+the day was rainy, and the ground was damp.&nbsp; We had with us neither
+spades nor pickaxes, and if love of ease surmounted our desire of knowledge,
+the offence has not the invidiousness of singularity.</p>
+<p>Edifices, either standing or ruined, are the chief records of an
+illiterate nation.&nbsp; In some part of this journey, at no great distance
+from our way, stood a shattered fortress, of which the learned minister,
+to whose communication we are much indebted, gave us an account.</p>
+<p>Those, said he, are the walls of a place of refuge, built in the
+time of James the Sixth, by Hugh Macdonald, who was next heir to the
+dignity and fortune of his chief.&nbsp; Hugh, being so near his wish,
+was impatient of delay; and had art and influence sufficient to engage
+several gentlemen in a plot against the Laird&rsquo;s life.&nbsp; Something
+must be stipulated on both sides; for they would not dip their hands
+in blood merely for Hugh&rsquo;s advancement.&nbsp; The compact was
+formerly written, signed by the conspirators, and placed in the hands
+of one Macleod.</p>
+<p>It happened that Macleod had sold some cattle to a drover, who, not
+having ready money, gave him a bond for payment.&nbsp; The debt was
+discharged, and the bond re-demanded; which Macleod, who could not read,
+intending to put into his hands, gave him the conspiracy.&nbsp; The
+drover, when he had read the paper, delivered it privately to Macdonald;
+who, being thus informed of his danger, called his friends together,
+and provided for his safety.&nbsp; He made a public feast, and inviting
+Hugh Macdonald and his confederates, placed each of them at the table
+between two men of known fidelity.&nbsp; The compact of conspiracy was
+then shewn, and every man confronted with his own name.&nbsp; Macdonald
+acted with great moderation.&nbsp; He upbraided Hugh, both with disloyalty
+and ingratitude; but told the rest, that he considered them as men deluded
+and misinformed.&nbsp; Hugh was sworn to fidelity, and dismissed with
+his companions; but he was not generous enough to be reclaimed by lenity;
+and finding no longer any countenance among the gentlemen, endeavoured
+to execute the same design by meaner hands.&nbsp; In this practice he
+was detected, taken to Macdonald&rsquo;s castle, and imprisoned in the
+dungeon.&nbsp; When he was hungry, they let down a plentiful meal of
+salted meat; and when, after his repast, he called for drink, conveyed
+to him a covered cup, which, when he lifted the lid, he found empty.&nbsp;
+From that time they visited him no more, but left him to perish in solitude
+and darkness.</p>
+<p>We were then told of a cavern by the sea-side, remarkable for the
+powerful reverberation of sounds.&nbsp; After dinner we took a boat,
+to explore this curious cavity.&nbsp; The boatmen, who seemed to be
+of a rank above that of common drudges, inquired who the strangers were,
+and being told we came one from Scotland, and the other from England,
+asked if the Englishman could recount a long genealogy.&nbsp; What answer
+was given them, the conversation being in Erse, I was not much inclined
+to examine.</p>
+<p>They expected no good event of the voyage; for one of them declared
+that he heard the cry of an English ghost.&nbsp; This omen I was not
+told till after our return, and therefore cannot claim the dignity of
+despising it.</p>
+<p>The sea was smooth.&nbsp; We never left the shore, and came without
+any disaster to the cavern, which we found rugged and misshapen, about
+one hundred and eighty feet long, thirty wide in the broadest part,
+and in the loftiest, as we guessed, about thirty high.&nbsp; It was
+now dry, but at high water the sea rises in it near six feet.&nbsp;
+Here I saw what I had never seen before, limpets and mussels in their
+natural state.&nbsp; But, as a new testimony to the veracity of common
+fame, here was no echo to be heard.</p>
+<p>We then walked through a natural arch in the rock, which might have
+pleased us by its novelty, had the stones, which incumbered our feet,
+given us leisure to consider it.&nbsp; We were shown the gummy seed
+of the kelp, that fastens itself to a stone, from which it grows into
+a strong stalk.</p>
+<p>In our return, we found a little boy upon the point of rock, catching
+with his angle, a supper for the family.&nbsp; We rowed up to him, and
+borrowed his rod, with which Mr. Boswell caught a cuddy.</p>
+<p>The cuddy is a fish of which I know not the philosophical name.&nbsp;
+It is not much bigger than a gudgeon, but is of great use in these Islands,
+as it affords the lower people both food, and oil for their lamps.&nbsp;
+Cuddies are so abundant, at sometimes of the year, that they are caught
+like whitebait in the Thames, only by dipping a basket and drawing it
+back.</p>
+<p>If it were always practicable to fish, these Islands could never
+be in much danger from famine; but unhappily in the winter, when other
+provision fails, the seas are commonly too rough for nets, or boats.</p>
+<h2>TALISKER IN SKY</h2>
+<p>From Ulinish, our next stage was to Talisker, the house of colonel
+Macleod, an officer in the Dutch service, who, in this time of universal
+peace, has for several years been permitted to be absent from his regiment.&nbsp;
+Having been bred to physick, he is consequently a scholar, and his lady,
+by accompanying him in his different places of residence, is become
+skilful in several languages.&nbsp; Talisker is the place beyond all
+that I have seen, from which the gay and the jovial seem utterly excluded;
+and where the hermit might expect to grow old in meditation, without
+possibility of disturbance or interruption.&nbsp; It is situated very
+near the sea, but upon a coast where no vessel lands but when it is
+driven by a tempest on the rocks.&nbsp; Towards the land are lofty hills
+streaming with waterfalls.&nbsp; The garden is sheltered by firs or
+pines, which grow there so prosperously, that some, which the present
+inhabitant planted, are very high and thick.</p>
+<p>At this place we very happily met Mr. Donald Maclean, a young gentleman,
+the eldest son of the Laird of Col, heir to a very great extent of land,
+and so desirous of improving his inheritance, that he spent a considerable
+time among the farmers of Hertfordshire, and Hampshire, to learn their
+practice.&nbsp; He worked with his own hands at the principal operations
+of agriculture, that he might not deceive himself by a false opinion
+of skill, which, if he should find it deficient at home, he had no means
+of completing.&nbsp; If the world has agreed to praise the travels and
+manual labours of the Czar of Muscovy, let Col have his share of the
+like applause, in the proportion of his dominions to the empire of Russia.</p>
+<p>This young gentleman was sporting in the mountains of Sky, and when
+he was weary with following his game, repaired for lodging to Talisker.&nbsp;
+At night he missed one of his dogs, and when he went to seek him in
+the morning, found two eagles feeding on his carcass.</p>
+<p>Col, for he must be named by his possessions, hearing that our intention
+was to visit Jona, offered to conduct us to his chief, Sir Allan Maclean,
+who lived in the isle of Inch Kenneth, and would readily find us a convenient
+passage.&nbsp; From this time was formed an acquaintance, which being
+begun by kindness, was accidentally continued by constraint; we derived
+much pleasure from it, and I hope have given him no reason to repent
+it.</p>
+<p>The weather was now almost one continued storm, and we were to snatch
+some happy intermission to be conveyed to Mull, the third Island of
+the Hebrides, lying about a degree south of Sky, whence we might easily
+find our way to Inch Kenneth, where Sir Allan Maclean resided, and afterward
+to Jona.</p>
+<p>For this purpose, the most commodious station that we could take
+was Armidel, which Sir Alexander Macdonald had now left to a gentleman,
+who lived there as his factor or steward.</p>
+<p>In our way to Armidel was Coriatachan, where we had already been,
+and to which therefore we were very willing to return.&nbsp; We staid
+however so long at Talisker, that a great part of our journey was performed
+in the gloom of the evening.&nbsp; In travelling even thus almost without
+light thro&rsquo; naked solitude, when there is a guide whose conduct
+may be trusted, a mind not naturally too much disposed to fear, may
+preserve some degree of cheerfulness; but what must be the solicitude
+of him who should be wandering, among the craggs and hollows, benighted,
+ignorant, and alone?</p>
+<p>The fictions of the Gothick romances were not so remote from credibility
+as they are now thought.&nbsp; In the full prevalence of the feudal
+institution, when violence desolated the world, and every baron lived
+in a fortress, forests and castles were regularly succeeded by each
+other, and the adventurer might very suddenly pass from the gloom of
+woods, or the ruggedness of moors, to seats of plenty, gaiety, and magnificence.&nbsp;
+Whatever is imaged in the wildest tale, if giants, dragons, and enchantment
+be excepted, would be felt by him, who, wandering in the mountains without
+a guide, or upon the sea without a pilot, should be carried amidst his
+terror and uncertainty, to the hospitality and elegance of Raasay or
+Dunvegan.</p>
+<p>To Coriatachan at last we came, and found ourselves welcomed as before.&nbsp;
+Here we staid two days, and made such inquiries as curiosity suggested.&nbsp;
+The house was filled with company, among whom Mr. Macpherson and his
+sister distinguished themselves by their politeness and accomplishments.&nbsp;
+By him we were invited to Ostig, a house not far from Armidel, where
+we might easily hear of a boat, when the weather would suffer us to
+leave the Island.</p>
+<h2>OSTIG IN SKY</h2>
+<p>At Ostig, of which Mr. Macpherson is minister, we were entertained
+for some days, then removed to Armidel, where we finished our observations
+on the island of Sky.</p>
+<p>As this Island lies in the fifty-seventh degree, the air cannot be
+supposed to have much warmth.&nbsp; The long continuance of the sun
+above the horizon, does indeed sometimes produce great heat in northern
+latitudes; but this can only happen in sheltered places, where the atmosphere
+is to a certain degree stagnant, and the same mass of air continues
+to receive for many hours the rays of the sun, and the vapours of the
+earth.&nbsp; Sky lies open on the west and north to a vast extent of
+ocean, and is cooled in the summer by perpetual ventilation, but by
+the same blasts is kept warm in winter.&nbsp; Their weather is not pleasing.&nbsp;
+Half the year is deluged with rain.&nbsp; From the autumnal to the vernal
+equinox, a dry day is hardly known, except when the showers are suspended
+by a tempest.&nbsp; Under such skies can be expected no great exuberance
+of vegetation.&nbsp; Their winter overtakes their summer, and their
+harvest lies upon the ground drenched with rain.&nbsp; The autumn struggles
+hard to produce some of our early fruits.&nbsp; I gathered gooseberries
+in September; but they were small, and the husk was thick.</p>
+<p>Their winter is seldom such as puts a full stop to the growth of
+plants, or reduces the cattle to live wholly on the surplusage of the
+summer.&nbsp; In the year Seventy-one they had a severe season, remembered
+by the name of the Black Spring, from which the island has not yet recovered.&nbsp;
+The snow lay long upon the ground, a calamity hardly known before.&nbsp;
+Part of their cattle died for want, part were unseasonably sold to buy
+sustenance for the owners; and, what I have not read or heard of before,
+the kine that survived were so emaciated and dispirited, that they did
+not require the male at the usual time.&nbsp; Many of the roebucks perished.</p>
+<p>The soil, as in other countries, has its diversities.&nbsp; In some
+parts there is only a thin layer of earth spread upon a rock, which
+bears nothing but short brown heath, and perhaps is not generally capable
+of any better product.&nbsp; There are many bogs or mosses of greater
+or less extent, where the soil cannot be supposed to want depth, though
+it is too wet for the plow.&nbsp; But we did not observe in these any
+aquatick plants.&nbsp; The vallies and the mountains are alike darkened
+with heath.&nbsp; Some grass, however, grows here and there, and some
+happier spots of earth are capable of tillage.</p>
+<p>Their agriculture is laborious, and perhaps rather feeble than unskilful.&nbsp;
+Their chief manure is seaweed, which, when they lay it to rot upon the
+field, gives them a better crop than those of the Highlands.&nbsp; They
+heap sea shells upon the dunghill, which in time moulder into a fertilising
+substance.&nbsp; When they find a vein of earth where they cannot use
+it, they dig it up, and add it to the mould of a more commodious place.</p>
+<p>Their corn grounds often lie in such intricacies among the craggs,
+that there is no room for the action of a team and plow.&nbsp; The soil
+is then turned up by manual labour, with an instrument called a crooked
+spade, of a form and weight which to me appeared very incommodious,
+and would perhaps be soon improved in a country where workmen could
+be easily found and easily paid.&nbsp; It has a narrow blade of iron
+fixed to a long and heavy piece of wood, which must have, about a foot
+and a half above the iron, a knee or flexure with the angle downwards.&nbsp;
+When the farmer encounters a stone which is the great impediment of
+his operations, he drives the blade under it, and bringing the knee
+or angle to the ground, has in the long handle a very forcible lever.</p>
+<p>According to the different mode of tillage, farms are distinguished
+into long land and short land.&nbsp; Long land is that which affords
+room for a plow, and short land is turned up by the spade.</p>
+<p>The grain which they commit to the furrows thus tediously formed,
+is either oats or barley.&nbsp; They do not sow barley without very
+copious manure, and then they expect from it ten for one, an increase
+equal to that of better countries; but the culture is so operose that
+they content themselves commonly with oats; and who can relate without
+compassion, that after all their diligence they are to expect only a
+triple increase?&nbsp; It is in vain to hope for plenty, when a third
+part of the harvest must be reserved for seed.</p>
+<p>When their grain is arrived at the state which they must consider
+as ripeness, they do not cut, but pull the barley: to the oats they
+apply the sickle.&nbsp; Wheel carriages they have none, but make a frame
+of timber, which is drawn by one horse with the two points behind pressing
+on the ground.&nbsp; On this they sometimes drag home their sheaves,
+but often convey them home in a kind of open panier, or frame of sticks
+upon the horse&rsquo;s back.</p>
+<p>Of that which is obtained with so much difficulty, nothing surely
+ought to be wasted; yet their method of clearing their oats from the
+husk is by parching them in the straw.&nbsp; Thus with the genuine improvidence
+of savages, they destroy that fodder for want of which their cattle
+may perish.&nbsp; From this practice they have two petty conveniences.&nbsp;
+They dry the grain so that it is easily reduced to meal, and they escape
+the theft of the thresher.&nbsp; The taste contracted from the fire
+by the oats, as by every other scorched substance, use must long ago
+have made grateful.&nbsp; The oats that are not parched must be dried
+in a kiln.</p>
+<p>The barns of Sky I never saw.&nbsp; That which Macleod of Raasay
+had erected near his house was so contrived, because the harvest is
+seldom brought home dry, as by perpetual perflation to prevent the mow
+from heating.</p>
+<p>Of their gardens I can judge only from their tables.&nbsp; I did
+not observe that the common greens were wanting, and suppose, that by
+choosing an advantageous exposition, they can raise all the more hardy
+esculent plants.&nbsp; Of vegetable fragrance or beauty they are not
+yet studious.&nbsp; Few vows are made to Flora in the Hebrides.</p>
+<p>They gather a little hay, but the grass is mown late; and is so often
+almost dry and again very wet, before it is housed, that it becomes
+a collection of withered stalks without taste or fragrance; it must
+be eaten by cattle that have nothing else, but by most English farmers
+would be thrown away.</p>
+<p>In the Islands I have not heard that any subterraneous treasures
+have been discovered, though where there are mountains, there are commonly
+minerals.&nbsp; One of the rocks in Col has a black vein, imagined to
+consist of the ore of lead; but it was never yet opened or essayed.&nbsp;
+In Sky a black mass was accidentally picked up, and brought into the
+house of the owner of the land, who found himself strongly inclined
+to think it a coal, but unhappily it did not burn in the chimney.&nbsp;
+Common ores would be here of no great value; for what requires to be
+separated by fire, must, if it were found, be carried away in its mineral
+state, here being no fewel for the smelting-house or forge.&nbsp; Perhaps
+by diligent search in this world of stone, some valuable species of
+marble might be discovered.&nbsp; But neither philosophical curiosity,
+nor commercial industry, have yet fixed their abode here, where the
+importunity of immediate want supplied but for the day, and craving
+on the morrow, has left little room for excursive knowledge or the pleasing
+fancies of distant profit.</p>
+<p>They have lately found a manufacture considerably lucrative.&nbsp;
+Their rocks abound with kelp, a sea-plant, of which the ashes are melted
+into glass.&nbsp; They burn kelp in great quantities, and then send
+it away in ships, which come regularly to purchase them.&nbsp; This
+new source of riches has raised the rents of many maritime farms; but
+the tenants pay, like all other tenants, the additional rent with great
+unwillingness; because they consider the profits of the kelp as the
+mere product of personal labour, to which the landlord contributes nothing.&nbsp;
+However, as any man may be said to give, what he gives the power of
+gaining, he has certainly as much right to profit from the price of
+kelp as of any thing else found or raised upon his ground.</p>
+<p>This new trade has excited a long and eager litigation between Macdonald
+and Macleod, for a ledge of rocks, which, till the value of kelp was
+known, neither of them desired the reputation of possessing.</p>
+<p>The cattle of Sky are not so small as is commonly believed.&nbsp;
+Since they have sent their beeves in great numbers to southern marts,
+they have probably taken more care of their breed.&nbsp; At stated times
+the annual growth of cattle is driven to a fair, by a general drover,
+and with the money, which he returns to the farmer, the rents are paid.</p>
+<p>The price regularly expected, is from two to three pounds a head:
+there was once one sold for five pounds.&nbsp; They go from the Islands
+very lean, and are not offered to the butcher, till they have been long
+fatted in English pastures.</p>
+<p>Of their black cattle, some are without horns, called by the Scots
+humble cows, as we call a bee an humble bee, that wants a sting.&nbsp;
+Whether this difference be specifick, or accidental, though we inquired
+with great diligence, we could not be informed.&nbsp; We are not very
+sure that the bull is ever without horns, though we have been told,
+that such bulls there are.&nbsp; What is produced by putting a horned
+and unhorned male and female together, no man has ever tried, that thought
+the result worthy of observation.</p>
+<p>Their horses are, like their cows, of a moderate size.&nbsp; I had
+no difficulty to mount myself commodiously by the favour of the gentlemen.&nbsp;
+I heard of very little cows in Barra, and very little horses in Rum,
+where perhaps no care is taken to prevent that diminution of size, which
+must always happen, where the greater and the less copulate promiscuously,
+and the young animal is restrained from growth by penury of sustenance.</p>
+<p>The goat is the general inhabitant of the earth, complying with every
+difference of climate, and of soil.&nbsp; The goats of the Hebrides
+are like others: nor did I hear any thing of their sheep, to be particularly
+remarked.</p>
+<p>In the penury of these malignant regions, nothing is left that can
+be converted to food.&nbsp; The goats and the sheep are milked like
+the cows.&nbsp; A single meal of a goat is a quart, and of a sheep a
+pint.&nbsp; Such at least was the account, which I could extract from
+those of whom I am not sure that they ever had inquired.</p>
+<p>The milk of goats is much thinner than that of cows, and that of
+sheep is much thicker.&nbsp; Sheeps milk is never eaten before it is
+boiled: as it is thick, it must be very liberal of curd, and the people
+of St. Kilda form it into small cheeses.</p>
+<p>The stags of the mountains are less than those of our parks, or forests,
+perhaps not bigger than our fallow deer.&nbsp; Their flesh has no rankness,
+nor is inferiour in flavour to our common venison.&nbsp; The roebuck
+I neither saw nor tasted.&nbsp; These are not countries for a regular
+chase.&nbsp; The deer are not driven with horns and hounds.&nbsp; A
+sportsman, with his gun in his hand, watches the animal, and when he
+has wounded him, traces him by the blood.</p>
+<p>They have a race of brinded greyhounds, larger and stronger than
+those with which we course hares, and those are the only dogs used by
+them for the chase.</p>
+<p>Man is by the use of fire-arms made so much an overmatch for other
+animals, that in all countries, where they are in use, the wild part
+of the creation sensibly diminishes.&nbsp; There will probably not be
+long, either stags or roebucks in the Islands.&nbsp; All the beasts
+of chase would have been lost long ago in countries well inhabited,
+had they not been preserved by laws for the pleasure of the rich.</p>
+<p>There are in Sky neither rats nor mice, but the weasel is so frequent,
+that he is heard in houses rattling behind chests or beds, as rats in
+England.&nbsp; They probably owe to his predominance that they have
+no other vermin; for since the great rat took possession of this part
+of the world, scarce a ship can touch at any port, but some of his race
+are left behind.&nbsp; They have within these few years began to infest
+the isle of Col, where being left by some trading vessel, they have
+increased for want of weasels to oppose them.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of Sky, and of the other Islands, which I have seen,
+are commonly of the middle stature, with fewer among them very tall
+or very short, than are seen in England, or perhaps, as their numbers
+are small, the chances of any deviation from the common measure are
+necessarily few.&nbsp; The tallest men that I saw are among those of
+higher rank.&nbsp; In regions of barrenness and scarcity, the human
+race is hindered in its growth by the same causes as other animals.</p>
+<p>The ladies have as much beauty here as in other places, but bloom
+and softness are not to be expected among the lower classes, whose faces
+are exposed to the rudeness of the climate, and whose features are sometimes
+contracted by want, and sometimes hardened by the blasts.&nbsp; Supreme
+beauty is seldom found in cottages or work-shops, even where no real
+hardships are suffered.&nbsp; To expand the human face to its full perfection,
+it seems necessary that the mind should co-operate by placidness of
+content, or consciousness of superiority.</p>
+<p>Their strength is proportionate to their size, but they are accustomed
+to run upon rough ground, and therefore can with great agility skip
+over the bog, or clamber the mountain.&nbsp; For a campaign in the wastes
+of America, soldiers better qualified could not have been found.&nbsp;
+Having little work to do, they are not willing, nor perhaps able to
+endure a long continuance of manual labour, and are therefore considered
+as habitually idle.</p>
+<p>Having never been supplied with those accommodations, which life
+extensively diversified with trades affords, they supply their wants
+by very insufficient shifts, and endure many inconveniences, which a
+little attention would easily relieve.&nbsp; I have seen a horse carrying
+home the harvest on a crate.&nbsp; Under his tail was a stick for a
+crupper, held at the two ends by twists of straw.&nbsp; Hemp will grow
+in their islands, and therefore ropes may be had.&nbsp; If they wanted
+hemp, they might make better cordage of rushes, or perhaps of nettles,
+than of straw.</p>
+<p>Their method of life neither secures them perpetual health, nor exposes
+them to any particular diseases.&nbsp; There are physicians in the Islands,
+who, I believe, all practise chirurgery, and all compound their own
+medicines.</p>
+<p>It is generally supposed, that life is longer in places where there
+are few opportunities of luxury; but I found no instance here of extraordinary
+longevity.&nbsp; A cottager grows old over his oaten cakes, like a citizen
+at a turtle feast.&nbsp; He is indeed seldom incommoded by corpulence.&nbsp;
+Poverty preserves him from sinking under the burden of himself, but
+he escapes no other injury of time.&nbsp; Instances of long life are
+often related, which those who hear them are more willing to credit
+than examine.&nbsp; To be told that any man has attained a hundred years,
+gives hope and comfort to him who stands trembling on the brink of his
+own climacterick.</p>
+<p>Length of life is distributed impartially to very different modes
+of life in very different climates; and the mountains have no greater
+examples of age and health than the low lands, where I was introduced
+to two ladies of high quality; one of whom, in her ninety-fourth year,
+presided at her table with the full exercise of all her powers; and
+the other has attained her eighty-fourth, without any diminution of
+her vivacity, and with little reason to accuse time of depredations
+on her beauty.</p>
+<p>In the Islands, as in most other places, the inhabitants are of different
+rank, and one does not encroach here upon another.&nbsp; Where there
+is no commerce nor manufacture, he that is born poor can scarcely become
+rich; and if none are able to buy estates, he that is born to land cannot
+annihilate his family by selling it.&nbsp; This was once the state of
+these countries.&nbsp; Perhaps there is no example, till within a century
+and half, of any family whose estate was alienated otherwise than by
+violence or forfeiture.&nbsp; Since money has been brought amongst them,
+they have found, like others, the art of spending more than they receive;
+and I saw with grief the chief of a very ancient clan, whose Island
+was condemned by law to be sold for the satisfaction of his creditors.</p>
+<p>The name of highest dignity is Laird, of which there are in the extensive
+Isle of Sky only three, Macdonald, Macleod, and Mackinnon.&nbsp; The
+Laird is the original owner of the land, whose natural power must be
+very great, where no man lives but by agriculture; and where the produce
+of the land is not conveyed through the labyrinths of traffick, but
+passes directly from the hand that gathers it to the mouth that eats
+it.&nbsp; The Laird has all those in his power that live upon his farms.&nbsp;
+Kings can, for the most part, only exalt or degrade.&nbsp; The Laird
+at pleasure can feed or starve, can give bread, or withold it.&nbsp;
+This inherent power was yet strengthened by the kindness of consanguinity,
+and the reverence of patriarchal authority.&nbsp; The Laird was the
+father of the Clan, and his tenants commonly bore his name.&nbsp; And
+to these principles of original command was added, for many ages, an
+exclusive right of legal jurisdiction.</p>
+<p>This multifarious, and extensive obligation operated with force scarcely
+credible.&nbsp; Every duty, moral or political, was absorbed in affection
+and adherence to the Chief.&nbsp; Not many years have passed since the
+clans knew no law but the Laird&rsquo;s will.&nbsp; He told them to
+whom they should be friends or enemies, what King they should obey,
+and what religion they should profess.</p>
+<p>When the Scots first rose in arms against the succession of the house
+of Hanover, Lovat, the Chief of the Frasers, was in exile for a rape.&nbsp;
+The Frasers were very numerous, and very zealous against the government.&nbsp;
+A pardon was sent to Lovat.&nbsp; He came to the English camp, and the
+clan immediately deserted to him.</p>
+<p>Next in dignity to the Laird is the Tacksman; a large taker or lease-holder
+of land, of which he keeps part, as a domain, in his own hand, and lets
+part to under tenants.&nbsp; The Tacksman is necessarily a man capable
+of securing to the Laird the whole rent, and is commonly a collateral
+relation.&nbsp; These tacks, or subordinate possessions, were long considered
+as hereditary, and the occupant was distinguished by the name of the
+place at which he resided.&nbsp; He held a middle station, by which
+the highest and the lowest orders were connected.&nbsp; He paid rent
+and reverence to the Laird, and received them from the tenants.&nbsp;
+This tenure still subsists, with its original operation, but not with
+the primitive stability.&nbsp; Since the islanders, no longer content
+to live, have learned the desire of growing rich, an ancient dependent
+is in danger of giving way to a higher bidder, at the expense of domestick
+dignity and hereditary power.&nbsp; The stranger, whose money buys him
+preference, considers himself as paying for all that he has, and is
+indifferent about the Laird&rsquo;s honour or safety.&nbsp; The commodiousness
+of money is indeed great; but there are some advantages which money
+cannot buy, and which therefore no wise man will by the love of money
+be tempted to forego.</p>
+<p>I have found in the hither parts of Scotland, men not defective in
+judgment or general experience, who consider the Tacksman as a useless
+burden of the ground, as a drone who lives upon the product of an estate,
+without the right of property, or the merit of labour, and who impoverishes
+at once the landlord and the tenant.&nbsp; The land, say they, is let
+to the Tacksman at sixpence an acre, and by him to the tenant at ten-pence.&nbsp;
+Let the owner be the immediate landlord to all the tenants; if he sets
+the ground at eight-pence, he will increase his revenue by a fourth
+part, and the tenant&rsquo;s burthen will be diminished by a fifth.</p>
+<p>Those who pursue this train of reasoning, seem not sufficiently to
+inquire whither it will lead them, nor to know that it will equally
+shew the propriety of suppressing all wholesale trade, of shutting up
+the shops of every man who sells what he does not make, and of extruding
+all whose agency and profit intervene between the manufacturer and the
+consumer.&nbsp; They may, by stretching their understandings a little
+wider, comprehend, that all those who by undertaking large quantities
+of manufacture, and affording employment to many labourers, make themselves
+considered as benefactors to the publick, have only been robbing their
+workmen with one hand, and their customers with the other.&nbsp; If
+Crowley had sold only what he could make, and all his smiths had wrought
+their own iron with their own hammers, he would have lived on less,
+and they would have sold their work for more.&nbsp; The salaries of
+superintendents and clerks would have been partly saved, and partly
+shared, and nails been sometimes cheaper by a farthing in a hundred.&nbsp;
+But then if the smith could not have found an immediate purchaser, he
+must have deserted his anvil; if there had by accident at any time been
+more sellers than buyers, the workmen must have reduced their profit
+to nothing, by underselling one another; and as no great stock could
+have been in any hand, no sudden demand of large quantities could have
+been answered and the builder must have stood still till the nailer
+could supply him.</p>
+<p>According to these schemes, universal plenty is to begin and end
+in universal misery.&nbsp; Hope and emulation will be utterly extinguished;
+and as all must obey the call of immediate necessity, nothing that requires
+extensive views, or provides for distant consequences will ever be performed.</p>
+<p>To the southern inhabitants of Scotland, the state of the mountains
+and the islands is equally unknown with that of Borneo or Sumatra: Of
+both they have only heard a little, and guess the rest.&nbsp; They are
+strangers to the language and the manners, to the advantages and wants
+of the people, whose life they would model, and whose evils they would
+remedy.</p>
+<p>Nothing is less difficult than to procure one convenience by the
+forfeiture of another.&nbsp; A soldier may expedite his march by throwing
+away his arms.&nbsp; To banish the Tacksman is easy, to make a country
+plentiful by diminishing the people, is an expeditious mode of husbandry;
+but little abundance, which there is nobody to enjoy, contributes little
+to human happiness.</p>
+<p>As the mind must govern the hands, so in every society the man of
+intelligence must direct the man of labour.&nbsp; If the Tacksmen be
+taken away, the Hebrides must in their present state be given up to
+grossness and ignorance; the tenant, for want of instruction, will be
+unskilful, and for want of admonition will be negligent.&nbsp; The Laird
+in these wide estates, which often consist of islands remote from one
+another, cannot extend his personal influence to all his tenants; and
+the steward having no dignity annexed to his character, can have little
+authority among men taught to pay reverence only to birth, and who regard
+the Tacksman as their hereditary superior; nor can the steward have
+equal zeal for the prosperity of an estate profitable only to the Laird,
+with the Tacksman, who has the Laird&rsquo;s income involved in his
+own.</p>
+<p>The only gentlemen in the Islands are the Lairds, the Tacksmen, and
+the Ministers, who frequently improve their livings by becoming farmers.&nbsp;
+If the Tacksmen be banished, who will be left to impart knowledge, or
+impress civility?&nbsp; The Laird must always be at a distance from
+the greater part of his lands; and if he resides at all upon them, must
+drag his days in solitude, having no longer either a friend or a companion;
+he will therefore depart to some more comfortable residence, and leave
+the tenants to the wisdom and mercy of a factor.</p>
+<p>Of tenants there are different orders, as they have greater or less
+stock.&nbsp; Land is sometimes leased to a small fellowship, who live
+in a cluster of huts, called a Tenants Town, and are bound jointly and
+separately for the payment of their rent.&nbsp; These, I believe, employ
+in the care of their cattle, and the labour of tillage, a kind of tenants
+yet lower; who having a hut with grass for a certain number of cows
+and sheep, pay their rent by a stipulated quantity of labour.</p>
+<p>The condition of domestick servants, or the price of occasional labour,
+I do not know with certainty.&nbsp; I was told that the maids have sheep,
+and are allowed to spin for their own clothing; perhaps they have no
+pecuniary wages, or none but in very wealthy families.&nbsp; The state
+of life, which has hitherto been purely pastoral, begins now to be a
+little variegated with commerce; but novelties enter by degrees, and
+till one mode has fully prevailed over the other, no settled notion
+can be formed.</p>
+<p>Such is the system of insular subordination, which, having little
+variety, cannot afford much delight in the view, nor long detain the
+mind in contemplation.&nbsp; The inhabitants were for a long time perhaps
+not unhappy; but their content was a muddy mixture of pride and ignorance,
+an indifference for pleasures which they did not know, a blind veneration
+for their chiefs, and a strong conviction of their own importance.</p>
+<p>Their pride has been crushed by the heavy hand of a vindictive conqueror,
+whose seventies have been followed by laws, which, though they cannot
+be called cruel, have produced much discontent, because they operate
+upon the surface of life, and make every eye bear witness to subjection.&nbsp;
+To be compelled to a new dress has always been found painful.</p>
+<p>Their Chiefs being now deprived of their jurisdiction, have already
+lost much of their influence; and as they gradually degenerate from
+patriarchal rulers to rapacious landlords, they will divest themselves
+of the little that remains.</p>
+<p>That dignity which they derived from an opinion of their military
+importance, the law, which disarmed them, has abated.&nbsp; An old gentleman,
+delighting himself with the recollection of better days, related, that
+forty years ago, a Chieftain walked out attended by ten or twelve followers,
+with their arms rattling.&nbsp; That animating rabble has now ceased.&nbsp;
+The Chief has lost his formidable retinue; and the Highlander walks
+his heath unarmed and defenceless, with the peaceable submission of
+a French peasant or English cottager.</p>
+<p>Their ignorance grows every day less, but their knowledge is yet
+of little other use than to shew them their wants.&nbsp; They are now
+in the period of education, and feel the uneasiness of discipline, without
+yet perceiving the benefit of instruction.</p>
+<p>The last law, by which the Highlanders are deprived of their arms,
+has operated with efficacy beyond expectation.&nbsp; Of former statutes
+made with the same design, the execution had been feeble, and the effect
+inconsiderable.&nbsp; Concealment was undoubtedly practised, and perhaps
+often with connivance.&nbsp; There was tenderness, or partiality, on
+one side, and obstinacy on the other.&nbsp; But the law, which followed
+the victory of Culloden, found the whole nation dejected and intimidated;
+informations were given without danger, and without fear, and the arms
+were collected with such rigour, that every house was despoiled of its
+defence.</p>
+<p>To disarm part of the Highlands, could give no reasonable occasion
+of complaint.&nbsp; Every government must be allowed the power of taking
+away the weapon that is lifted against it.&nbsp; But the loyal clans
+murmured, with some appearance of justice, that after having defended
+the King, they were forbidden for the future to defend themselves; and
+that the sword should be forfeited, which had been legally employed.&nbsp;
+Their case is undoubtedly hard, but in political regulations, good cannot
+be complete, it can only be predominant.</p>
+<p>Whether by disarming a people thus broken into several tribes, and
+thus remote from the seat of power, more good than evil has been produced,
+may deserve inquiry.&nbsp; The supreme power in every community has
+the right of debarring every individual, and every subordinate society
+from self-defence, only because the supreme power is able to defend
+them; and therefore where the governor cannot act, he must trust the
+subject to act for himself.&nbsp; These Islands might be wasted with
+fire and sword before their sovereign would know their distress.&nbsp;
+A gang of robbers, such as has been lately found confederating themselves
+in the Highlands, might lay a wide region under contribution.&nbsp;
+The crew of a petty privateer might land on the largest and most wealthy
+of the Islands, and riot without control in cruelty and waste.&nbsp;
+It was observed by one of the Chiefs of Sky, that fifty armed men might,
+without resistance ravage the country.&nbsp; Laws that place the subjects
+in such a state, contravene the first principles of the compact of authority:
+they exact obedience, and yield no protection.</p>
+<p>It affords a generous and manly pleasure to conceive a little nation
+gathering its fruits and tending its herds with fearless confidence,
+though it lies open on every side to invasion, where, in contempt of
+walls and trenches, every man sleeps securely with his sword beside
+him; where all on the first approach of hostility came together at the
+call to battle, as at a summons to a festal show; and committing their
+cattle to the care of those whom age or nature has disabled, engage
+the enemy with that competition for hazard and for glory, which operate
+in men that fight under the eye of those, whose dislike or kindness
+they have always considered as the greatest evil or the greatest good.</p>
+<p>This was, in the beginning of the present century, the state of the
+Highlands.&nbsp; Every man was a soldier, who partook of national confidence,
+and interested himself in national honour.&nbsp; To lose this spirit,
+is to lose what no small advantage will compensate.</p>
+<p>It may likewise deserve to be inquired, whether a great nation ought
+to be totally commercial? whether amidst the uncertainty of human affairs,
+too much attention to one mode of happiness may not endanger others?
+whether the pride of riches must not sometimes have recourse to the
+protection of courage? and whether, if it be necessary to preserve in
+some part of the empire the military spirit, it can subsist more commodiously
+in any place, than in remote and unprofitable provinces, where it can
+commonly do little harm, and whence it may be called forth at any sudden
+exigence?</p>
+<p>It must however be confessed, that a man, who places honour only
+in successful violence, is a very troublesome and pernicious animal
+in time of peace; and that the martial character cannot prevail in a
+whole people, but by the diminution of all other virtues.&nbsp; He that
+is accustomed to resolve all right into conquest, will have very little
+tenderness or equity.&nbsp; All the friendship in such a life can be
+only a confederacy of invasion, or alliance of defence.&nbsp; The strong
+must flourish by force, and the weak subsist by stratagem.</p>
+<p>Till the Highlanders lost their ferocity, with their arms, they suffered
+from each other all that malignity could dictate, or precipitance could
+act.&nbsp; Every provocation was revenged with blood, and no man that
+ventured into a numerous company, by whatever occasion brought together,
+was sure of returning without a wound.&nbsp; If they are now exposed
+to foreign hostilities, they may talk of the danger, but can seldom
+feel it.&nbsp; If they are no longer martial, they are no longer quarrelsome.&nbsp;
+Misery is caused for the most part, not by a heavy crush of disaster,
+but by the corrosion of less visible evils, which canker enjoyment,
+and undermine security.&nbsp; The visit of an invader is necessarily
+rare, but domestick animosities allow no cessation.</p>
+<p>The abolition of the local jurisdictions, which had for so many ages
+been exercised by the chiefs, has likewise its evil and its good.&nbsp;
+The feudal constitution naturally diffused itself into long ramifications
+of subordinate authority.&nbsp; To this general temper of the government
+was added the peculiar form of the country, broken by mountains into
+many subdivisions scarcely accessible but to the natives, and guarded
+by passes, or perplexed with intricacies, through which national justice
+could not find its way.</p>
+<p>The power of deciding controversies, and of punishing offences, as
+some such power there must always be, was intrusted to the Lairds of
+the country, to those whom the people considered as their natural judges.&nbsp;
+It cannot be supposed that a rugged proprietor of the rocks, unprincipled
+and unenlightened, was a nice resolver of entangled claims, or very
+exact in proportioning punishment to offences.&nbsp; But the more he
+indulged his own will, the more he held his vassals in dependence.&nbsp;
+Prudence and innocence, without the favour of the Chief, conferred no
+security; and crimes involved no danger, when the judge was resolute
+to acquit.</p>
+<p>When the chiefs were men of knowledge and virtue, the convenience
+of a domestick judicature was great.&nbsp; No long journies were necessary,
+nor artificial delays could be practised; the character, the alliances,
+and interests of the litigants were known to the court, and all false
+pretences were easily detected.&nbsp; The sentence, when it was past,
+could not be evaded; the power of the Laird superseded formalities,
+and justice could not be defeated by interest or stratagem.</p>
+<p>I doubt not but that since the regular judges have made their circuits
+through the whole country, right has been every where more wisely, and
+more equally distributed; the complaint is, that litigation is grown
+troublesome, and that the magistrates are too few, and therefore often
+too remote for general convenience.</p>
+<p>Many of the smaller Islands have no legal officer within them.&nbsp;
+I once asked, If a crime should be committed, by what authority the
+offender could be seized? and was told, that the Laird would exert his
+right; a right which he must now usurp, but which surely necessity must
+vindicate, and which is therefore yet exercised in lower degrees, by
+some of the proprietors, when legal processes cannot be obtained.</p>
+<p>In all greater questions, however, there is now happily an end to
+all fear or hope from malice or from favour.&nbsp; The roads are secure
+in those places through which, forty years ago, no traveller could pass
+without a convoy.&nbsp; All trials of right by the sword are forgotten,
+and the mean are in as little danger from the powerful as in other places.&nbsp;
+No scheme of policy has, in any country, yet brought the rich and poor
+on equal terms into courts of judicature.&nbsp; Perhaps experience,
+improving on experience, may in time effect it.</p>
+<p>Those who have long enjoyed dignity and power, ought not to lose
+it without some equivalent.&nbsp; There was paid to the Chiefs by the
+publick, in exchange for their privileges, perhaps a sum greater than
+most of them had ever possessed, which excited a thirst for riches,
+of which it shewed them the use.&nbsp; When the power of birth and station
+ceases, no hope remains but from the prevalence of money.&nbsp; Power
+and wealth supply the place of each other.&nbsp; Power confers the ability
+of gratifying our desire without the consent of others.&nbsp; Wealth
+enables us to obtain the consent of others to our gratification.&nbsp;
+Power, simply considered, whatever it confers on one, must take from
+another.&nbsp; Wealth enables its owner to give to others, by taking
+only from himself.&nbsp; Power pleases the violent and proud: wealth
+delights the placid and the timorous.&nbsp; Youth therefore flies at
+power, and age grovels after riches.</p>
+<p>The Chiefs, divested of their prerogatives, necessarily turned their
+thoughts to the improvement of their revenues, and expect more rent,
+as they have less homage.&nbsp; The tenant, who is far from perceiving
+that his condition is made better in the same proportion, as that of
+his landlord is made worse, does not immediately see why his industry
+is to be taxed more heavily than before.&nbsp; He refuses to pay the
+demand, and is ejected; the ground is then let to a stranger, who perhaps
+brings a larger stock, but who, taking the land at its full price, treats
+with the Laird upon equal terms, and considers him not as a Chief, but
+as a trafficker in land.&nbsp; Thus the estate perhaps is improved,
+but the clan is broken.</p>
+<p>It seems to be the general opinion, that the rents have been raised
+with too much eagerness.&nbsp; Some regard must be paid to prejudice.&nbsp;
+Those who have hitherto paid but little, will not suddenly be persuaded
+to pay much, though they can afford it.&nbsp; As ground is gradually
+improved, and the value of money decreases, the rent may be raised without
+any diminution of the farmer&rsquo;s profits: yet it is necessary in
+these countries, where the ejection of a tenant is a greater evil, than
+in more populous places, to consider not merely what the land will produce,
+but with what ability the inhabitant can cultivate it.&nbsp; A certain
+stock can allow but a certain payment; for if the land be doubled, and
+the stock remains the same, the tenant becomes no richer.&nbsp; The
+proprietors of the Highlands might perhaps often increase their income,
+by subdividing the farms, and allotting to every occupier only so many
+acres as he can profitably employ, but that they want people.</p>
+<p>There seems now, whatever be the cause, to be through a great part
+of the Highlands a general discontent.&nbsp; That adherence, which was
+lately professed by every man to the chief of his name, has now little
+prevalence; and he that cannot live as he desires at home, listens to
+the tale of fortunate islands, and happy regions, where every man may
+have land of his own, and eat the product of his labour without a superior.</p>
+<p>Those who have obtained grants of American lands, have, as is well
+known, invited settlers from all quarters of the globe; and among other
+places, where oppression might produce a wish for new habitations, their
+emissaries would not fail to try their persuasions in the Isles of Scotland,
+where at the time when the clans were newly disunited from their Chiefs,
+and exasperated by unprecedented exactions, it is no wonder that they
+prevailed.</p>
+<p>Whether the mischiefs of emigration were immediately perceived, may
+be justly questioned.&nbsp; They who went first, were probably such
+as could best be spared; but the accounts sent by the earliest adventurers,
+whether true or false, inclined many to follow them; and whole neighbourhoods
+formed parties for removal; so that departure from their native country
+is no longer exile.&nbsp; He that goes thus accompanied, carries with
+him all that makes life pleasant.&nbsp; He sits down in a better climate,
+surrounded by his kindred and his friends: they carry with them their
+language, their opinions, their popular songs, and hereditary merriment:
+they change nothing but the place of their abode; and of that change
+they perceive the benefit.</p>
+<p>This is the real effect of emigration, if those that go away together
+settle on the same spot, and preserve their ancient union.&nbsp; But
+some relate that these adventurous visitants of unknown regions, after
+a voyage passed in dreams of plenty and felicity, are dispersed at last
+upon a Sylvan wilderness, where their first years must be spent in toil,
+to clear the ground which is afterwards to be tilled, and that the whole
+effect of their undertakings is only more fatigue and equal scarcity.</p>
+<p>Both accounts may be suspected.&nbsp; Those who are gone will endeavour
+by every art to draw others after them; for as their numbers are greater,
+they will provide better for themselves.&nbsp; When Nova Scotia was
+first peopled, I remember a letter, published under the character of
+a New Planter, who related how much the climate put him in mind of Italy.&nbsp;
+Such intelligence the Hebridians probably receive from their transmarine
+correspondents.&nbsp; But with equal temptations of interest, and perhaps
+with no greater niceness of veracity, the owners of the Islands spread
+stories of American hardships to keep their people content at home.</p>
+<p>Some method to stop this epidemick desire of wandering, which spreads
+its contagion from valley to valley, deserves to be sought with great
+diligence.&nbsp; In more fruitful countries, the removal of one only
+makes room for the succession of another: but in the Hebrides, the loss
+of an inhabitant leaves a lasting vacuity; for nobody born in any other
+parts of the world will choose this country for his residence, and an
+Island once depopulated will remain a desert, as long as the present
+facility of travel gives every one, who is discontented and unsettled,
+the choice of his abode.</p>
+<p>Let it be inquired, whether the first intention of those who are
+fluttering on the wing, and collecting a flock that they may take their
+flight, be to attain good, or to avoid evil.&nbsp; If they are dissatisfied
+with that part of the globe, which their birth has allotted them, and
+resolve not to live without the pleasures of happier climates; if they
+long for bright suns, and calm skies, and flowery fields, and fragrant
+gardens, I know not by what eloquence they can be persuaded, or by what
+offers they can be hired to stay.</p>
+<p>But if they are driven from their native country by positive evils,
+and disgusted by ill-treatment, real or imaginary, it were fit to remove
+their grievances, and quiet their resentment; since, if they have been
+hitherto undutiful subjects, they will not much mend their principles
+by American conversation.</p>
+<p>To allure them into the army, it was thought proper to indulge them
+in the continuance of their national dress.&nbsp; If this concession
+could have any effect, it might easily be made.&nbsp; That dissimilitude
+of appearance, which was supposed to keep them distinct from the rest
+of the nation, might disincline them from coalescing with the Pensylvanians,
+or people of Connecticut.&nbsp; If the restitution of their arms will
+reconcile them to their country, let them have again those weapons,
+which will not be more mischievous at home than in the Colonies.&nbsp;
+That they may not fly from the increase of rent, I know not whether
+the general good does not require that the landlords be, for a time,
+restrained in their demands, and kept quiet by pensions proportionate
+to their loss.</p>
+<p>To hinder insurrection, by driving away the people, and to govern
+peaceably, by having no subjects, is an expedient that argues no great
+profundity of politicks.&nbsp; To soften the obdurate, to convince the
+mistaken, to mollify the resentful, are worthy of a statesman; but it
+affords a legislator little self-applause to consider, that where there
+was formerly an insurrection, there is now a wilderness.</p>
+<p>It has been a question often agitated without solution, why those
+northern regions are now so thinly peopled, which formerly overwhelmed
+with their armies the Roman empire.&nbsp; The question supposes what
+I believe is not true, that they had once more inhabitants than they
+could maintain, and overflowed only because they were full.</p>
+<p>This is to estimate the manners of all countries and ages by our
+own.&nbsp; Migration, while the state of life was unsettled, and there
+was little communication of intelligence between distant places, was
+among the wilder nations of Europe, capricious and casual.&nbsp; An
+adventurous projector heard of a fertile coast unoccupied, and led out
+a colony; a chief of renown for bravery, called the young men together,
+and led them out to try what fortune would present.&nbsp; When C&aelig;sar
+was in Gaul, he found the Helvetians preparing to go they knew not whither,
+and put a stop to their motions.&nbsp; They settled again in their own
+country, where they were so far from wanting room, that they had accumulated
+three years provision for their march.</p>
+<p>The religion of the North was military; if they could not find enemies,
+it was their duty to make them: they travelled in quest of danger, and
+willingly took the chance of Empire or Death.&nbsp; If their troops
+were numerous, the countries from which they were collected are of vast
+extent, and without much exuberance of people great armies may be raised
+where every man is a soldier.&nbsp; But their true numbers were never
+known.&nbsp; Those who were conquered by them are their historians,
+and shame may have excited them to say, that they were overwhelmed with
+multitudes.&nbsp; To count is a modern practice, the ancient method
+was to guess; and when numbers are guessed they are always magnified.</p>
+<p>Thus England has for several years been filled with the atchievements
+of seventy thousand Highlanders employed in America.&nbsp; I have heard
+from an English officer, not much inclined to favour them, that their
+behaviour deserved a very high degree of military praise; but their
+number has been much exaggerated.&nbsp; One of the ministers told me,
+that seventy thousand men could not have been found in all the Highlands,
+and that more than twelve thousand never took the field.&nbsp; Those
+that went to the American war, went to destruction.&nbsp; Of the old
+Highland regiment, consisting of twelve hundred, only seventy-six survived
+to see their country again.</p>
+<p>The Gothick swarms have at least been multiplied with equal liberality.&nbsp;
+That they bore no great proportion to the inhabitants, in whose countries
+they settled, is plain from the paucity of northern words now found
+in the provincial languages.&nbsp; Their country was not deserted for
+want of room, because it was covered with forests of vast extent; and
+the first effect of plenitude of inhabitants is the destruction of wood.&nbsp;
+As the Europeans spread over America the lands are gradually laid naked.</p>
+<p>I would not be understood to say, that necessity had never any part
+in their expeditions.&nbsp; A nation, whose agriculture is scanty or
+unskilful, may be driven out by famine.&nbsp; A nation of hunters may
+have exhausted their game.&nbsp; I only affirm that the northern regions
+were not, when their irruptions subdued the Romans, overpeopled with
+regard to their real extent of territory, and power of fertility.&nbsp;
+In a country fully inhabited, however afterward laid waste, evident
+marks will remain of its former populousness.&nbsp; But of Scandinavia
+and Germany, nothing is known but that as we trace their state upwards
+into antiquity, their woods were greater, and their cultivated ground
+was less.</p>
+<p>That causes were different from want of room may produce a general
+disposition to seek another country is apparent from the present conduct
+of the Highlanders, who are in some places ready to threaten a total
+secession.&nbsp; The numbers which have already gone, though like other
+numbers they may be magnified, are very great, and such as if they had
+gone together and agreed upon any certain settlement, might have founded
+an independent government in the depths of the western continent.&nbsp;
+Nor are they only the lowest and most indigent; many men of considerable
+wealth have taken with them their train of labourers and dependants;
+and if they continue the feudal scheme of polity, may establish new
+clans in the other hemisphere.</p>
+<p>That the immediate motives of their desertion must be imputed to
+their landlords, may be reasonably concluded, because some Lairds of
+more prudence and less rapacity have kept their vassals undiminished.&nbsp;
+From Raasa only one man had been seduced, and at Col there was no wish
+to go away.</p>
+<p>The traveller who comes hither from more opulent countries, to speculate
+upon the remains of pastoral life, will not much wonder that a common
+Highlander has no strong adherence to his native soil; for of animal
+enjoyments, or of physical good, he leaves nothing that he may not find
+again wheresoever he may be thrown.</p>
+<p>The habitations of men in the Hebrides may be distinguished into
+huts and houses.&nbsp; By a house, I mean a building with one story
+over another; by a hut, a dwelling with only one floor.&nbsp; The Laird,
+who formerly lived in a castle, now lives in a house; sometimes sufficiently
+neat, but seldom very spacious or splendid.&nbsp; The Tacksmen and the
+Ministers have commonly houses.&nbsp; Wherever there is a house, the
+stranger finds a welcome, and to the other evils of exterminating Tacksmen
+may be added the unavoidable cessation of hospitality, or the devolution
+of too heavy a burden on the Ministers.</p>
+<p>Of the houses little can be said.&nbsp; They are small, and by the
+necessity of accumulating stores, where there are so few opportunities
+of purchase, the rooms are very heterogeneously filled.&nbsp; With want
+of cleanliness it were ingratitude to reproach them.&nbsp; The servants
+having been bred upon the naked earth, think every floor clean, and
+the quick succession of guests, perhaps not always over-elegant, does
+not allow much time for adjusting their apartments.</p>
+<p>Huts are of many gradations; from murky dens, to commodious dwellings.</p>
+<p>The wall of a common hut is always built without mortar, by a skilful
+adaptation of loose stones.&nbsp; Sometimes perhaps a double wall of
+stones is raised, and the intermediate space filled with earth.&nbsp;
+The air is thus completely excluded.&nbsp; Some walls are, I think,
+formed of turfs, held together by a wattle, or texture of twigs.&nbsp;
+Of the meanest huts, the first room is lighted by the entrance, and
+the second by the smoke hole.&nbsp; The fire is usually made in the
+middle.&nbsp; But there are huts, or dwellings of only one story, inhabited
+by gentlemen, which have walls cemented with mortar, glass windows,
+and boarded floors.&nbsp; Of these all have chimneys, and some chimneys
+have grates.</p>
+<p>The house and the furniture are not always nicely suited.&nbsp; We
+were driven once, by missing a passage, to the hut of a gentleman, where,
+after a very liberal supper, when I was conducted to my chamber, I found
+an elegant bed of Indian cotton, spread with fine sheets.&nbsp; The
+accommodation was flattering; I undressed myself, and felt my feet in
+the mire.&nbsp; The bed stood upon the bare earth, which a long course
+of rain had softened to a puddle.</p>
+<p>In pastoral countries the condition of the lowest rank of people
+is sufficiently wretched.&nbsp; Among manufacturers, men that have no
+property may have art and industry, which make them necessary, and therefore
+valuable.&nbsp; But where flocks and corn are the only wealth, there
+are always more hands than work, and of that work there is little in
+which skill and dexterity can be much distinguished.&nbsp; He therefore
+who is born poor never can be rich.&nbsp; The son merely occupies the
+place of the father, and life knows nothing of progression or advancement.</p>
+<p>The petty tenants, and labouring peasants, live in miserable cabins,
+which afford them little more than shelter from the storms.&nbsp; The
+Boor of Norway is said to make all his own utensils.&nbsp; In the Hebrides,
+whatever might be their ingenuity, the want of wood leaves them no materials.&nbsp;
+They are probably content with such accommodations as stones of different
+forms and sizes can afford them.</p>
+<p>Their food is not better than their lodging.&nbsp; They seldom taste
+the flesh of land animals; for here are no markets.&nbsp; What each
+man eats is from his own stock.&nbsp; The great effect of money is to
+break property into small parts.&nbsp; In towns, he that has a shilling
+may have a piece of meat; but where there is no commerce, no man can
+eat mutton but by killing a sheep.</p>
+<p>Fish in fair weather they need not want; but, I believe, man never
+lives long on fish, but by constraint; he will rather feed upon roots
+and berries.</p>
+<p>The only fewel of the Islands is peat.&nbsp; Their wood is all consumed,
+and coal they have not yet found.&nbsp; Peat is dug out of the marshes,
+from the depth of one foot to that of six.&nbsp; That is accounted the
+best which is nearest the surface.&nbsp; It appears to be a mass of
+black earth held together by vegetable fibres.&nbsp; I know not whether
+the earth be bituminous, or whether the fibres be not the only combustible
+part; which, by heating the interposed earth red hot, make a burning
+mass.&nbsp; The heat is not very strong nor lasting.&nbsp; The ashes
+are yellowish, and in a large quantity.&nbsp; When they dig peat, they
+cut it into square pieces, and pile it up to dry beside the house.&nbsp;
+In some places it has an offensive smell.&nbsp; It is like wood charked
+for the smith.&nbsp; The common method of making peat fires, is by heaping
+it on the hearth; but it burns well in grates, and in the best houses
+is so used.</p>
+<p>The common opinion is, that peat grows again where it has been cut;
+which, as it seems to be chiefly a vegetable substance, is not unlikely
+to be true, whether known or not to those who relate it.</p>
+<p>There are water mills in Sky and Raasa; but where they are too far
+distant, the house-wives grind their oats with a quern, or hand-mill,
+which consists of two stones, about a foot and a half in diameter; the
+lower is a little convex, to which the concavity of the upper must be
+fitted.&nbsp; In the middle of the upper stone is a round hole, and
+on one side is a long handle.&nbsp; The grinder sheds the corn gradually
+into the hole with one hand, and works the handle round with the other.&nbsp;
+The corn slides down the convexity of the lower stone, and by the motion
+of the upper is ground in its passage.&nbsp; These stones are found
+in Lochabar.</p>
+<p>The Islands afford few pleasures, except to the hardy sportsman,
+who can tread the moor and climb the mountain.&nbsp; The distance of
+one family from another, in a country where travelling has so much difficulty,
+makes frequent intercourse impracticable.&nbsp; Visits last several
+days, and are commonly paid by water; yet I never saw a boat furnished
+with benches, or made commodious by any addition to the first fabric.&nbsp;
+Conveniences are not missed where they never were enjoyed.</p>
+<p>The solace which the bagpipe can give, they have long enjoyed; but
+among other changes, which the last Revolution introduced, the use of
+the bagpipe begins to be forgotten.&nbsp; Some of the chief families
+still entertain a piper, whose office was anciently hereditary.&nbsp;
+Macrimmon was piper to Macleod, and Rankin to Maclean of Col.</p>
+<p>The tunes of the bagpipe are traditional.&nbsp; There has been in
+Sky, beyond all time of memory, a college of pipers, under the direction
+of Macrimmon, which is not quite extinct.&nbsp; There was another in
+Mull, superintended by Rankin, which expired about sixteen years ago.&nbsp;
+To these colleges, while the pipe retained its honour, the students
+of musick repaired for education.&nbsp; I have had my dinner exhilarated
+by the bagpipe, at Armidale, at Dunvegan, and in Col.</p>
+<p>The general conversation of the Islanders has nothing particular.&nbsp;
+I did not meet with the inquisitiveness of which I have read, and suspect
+the judgment to have been rashly made.&nbsp; A stranger of curiosity
+comes into a place where a stranger is seldom seen: he importunes the
+people with questions, of which they cannot guess the motive, and gazes
+with surprise on things which they, having had them always before their
+eyes, do not suspect of any thing wonderful.&nbsp; He appears to them
+like some being of another world, and then thinks it peculiar that they
+take their turn to inquire whence he comes, and whither he is going.</p>
+<p>The Islands were long unfurnished with instruction for youth, and
+none but the sons of gentlemen could have any literature.&nbsp; There
+are now parochial schools, to which the lord of every manor pays a certain
+stipend.&nbsp; Here the children are taught to read; but by the rule
+of their institution, they teach only English, so that the natives read
+a language which they may never use or understand.&nbsp; If a parish,
+which often happens, contains several Islands, the school being but
+in one, cannot assist the rest.&nbsp; This is the state of Col, which,
+however, is more enlightened than some other places; for the deficiency
+is supplied by a young gentleman, who, for his own improvement, travels
+every year on foot over the Highlands to the session at Aberdeen; and
+at his return, during the vacation, teaches to read and write in his
+native Island.</p>
+<p>In Sky there are two grammar schools, where boarders are taken to
+be regularly educated.&nbsp; The price of board is from three pounds,
+to four pounds ten shillings a year, and that of instruction is half
+a crown a quarter.&nbsp; But the scholars are birds of passage, who
+live at school only in the summer; for in winter provisions cannot be
+made for any considerable number in one place.&nbsp; This periodical
+dispersion impresses strongly the scarcity of these countries.</p>
+<p>Having heard of no boarding-school for ladies nearer than Inverness,
+I suppose their education is generally domestick.&nbsp; The elder daughters
+of the higher families are sent into the world, and may contribute by
+their acquisitions to the improvement of the rest.</p>
+<p>Women must here study to be either pleasing or useful.&nbsp; Their
+deficiencies are seldom supplied by very liberal fortunes.&nbsp; A hundred
+pounds is a portion beyond the hope of any but the Laird&rsquo;s daughter.&nbsp;
+They do not indeed often give money with their daughters; the question
+is, How many cows a young lady will bring her husband.&nbsp; A rich
+maiden has from ten to forty; but two cows are a decent fortune for
+one who pretends to no distinction.</p>
+<p>The religion of the Islands is that of the Kirk of Scotland.&nbsp;
+The gentlemen with whom I conversed are all inclined to the English
+liturgy; but they are obliged to maintain the established Minister,
+and the country is too poor to afford payment to another, who must live
+wholly on the contribution of his audience.</p>
+<p>They therefore all attend the worship of the Kirk, as often as a
+visit from their Minister, or the practicability of travelling gives
+them opportunity; nor have they any reason to complain of insufficient
+pastors; for I saw not one in the Islands, whom I had reason to think
+either deficient in learning, or irregular in life: but found several
+with whom I could not converse without wishing, as my respect increased,
+that they had not been Presbyterians.</p>
+<p>The ancient rigour of puritanism is now very much relaxed, though
+all are not yet equally enlightened.&nbsp; I sometimes met with prejudices
+sufficiently malignant, but they were prejudices of ignorance.&nbsp;
+The Ministers in the Islands had attained such knowledge as may justly
+be admired in men, who have no motive to study, but generous curiosity,
+or, what is still better, desire of usefulness; with such politeness
+as so narrow a circle of converse could not have supplied, but to minds
+naturally disposed to elegance.</p>
+<p>Reason and truth will prevail at last.&nbsp; The most learned of
+the Scottish Doctors would now gladly admit a form of prayer, if the
+people would endure it.&nbsp; The zeal or rage of congregations has
+its different degrees.&nbsp; In some parishes the Lord&rsquo;s Prayer
+is suffered: in others it is still rejected as a form; and he that should
+make it part of his supplication would be suspected of heretical pravity.</p>
+<p>The principle upon which extemporary prayer was originally introduced,
+is no longer admitted.&nbsp; The Minister formerly, in the effusion
+of his prayer, expected immediate, and perhaps perceptible inspiration,
+and therefore thought it his duty not to think before what he should
+say.&nbsp; It is now universally confessed, that men pray as they speak
+on other occasions, according to the general measure of their abilities
+and attainments.&nbsp; Whatever each may think of a form prescribed
+by another, he cannot but believe that he can himself compose by study
+and meditation a better prayer than will rise in his mind at a sudden
+call; and if he has any hope of supernatural help, why may he not as
+well receive it when he writes as when he speaks?</p>
+<p>In the variety of mental powers, some must perform extemporary prayer
+with much imperfection; and in the eagerness and rashness of contradictory
+opinions, if publick liturgy be left to the private judgment of every
+Minister, the congregation may often be offended or misled.</p>
+<p>There is in Scotland, as among ourselves, a restless suspicion of
+popish machinations, and a clamour of numerous converts to the Romish
+religion.&nbsp; The report is, I believe, in both parts of the Island
+equally false.&nbsp; The Romish religion is professed only in Egg and
+Canna, two small islands, into which the Reformation never made its
+way.&nbsp; If any missionaries are busy in the Highlands, their zeal
+entitles them to respect, even from those who cannot think favourably
+of their doctrine.</p>
+<p>The political tenets of the Islanders I was not curious to investigate,
+and they were not eager to obtrude.&nbsp; Their conversation is decent
+and inoffensive.&nbsp; They disdain to drink for their principles, and
+there is no disaffection at their tables.&nbsp; I never heard a health
+offered by a Highlander that might not have circulated with propriety
+within the precincts of the King&rsquo;s palace.</p>
+<p>Legal government has yet something of novelty to which they cannot
+perfectly conform.&nbsp; The ancient spirit, that appealed only to the
+sword, is yet among them.&nbsp; The tenant of Scalpa, an island belonging
+to Macdonald, took no care to bring his rent; when the landlord talked
+of exacting payment, he declared his resolution to keep his ground,
+and drive all intruders from the Island, and continued to feed his cattle
+as on his own land, till it became necessary for the Sheriff to dislodge
+him by violence.</p>
+<p>The various kinds of superstition which prevailed here, as in all
+other regions of ignorance, are by the diligence of the Ministers almost
+extirpated.</p>
+<p>Of Browny, mentioned by Martin, nothing has been heard for many years.&nbsp;
+Browny was a sturdy Fairy; who, if he was fed, and kindly treated, would,
+as they said, do a great deal of work.&nbsp; They now pay him no wages,
+and are content to labour for themselves.</p>
+<p>In Troda, within these three-and-thirty years, milk was put every
+Saturday for Greogach, or &lsquo;the Old Man with the Long Beard.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Whether Greogach was courted as kind, or dreaded as terrible, whether
+they meant, by giving him the milk, to obtain good, or avert evil, I
+was not informed.&nbsp; The Minister is now living by whom the practice
+was abolished.</p>
+<p>They have still among them a great number of charms for the cure
+of different diseases; they are all invocations, perhaps transmitted
+to them from the times of popery, which increasing knowledge will bring
+into disuse.</p>
+<p>They have opinions, which cannot be ranked with superstition, because
+they regard only natural effects.&nbsp; They expect better crops of
+grain, by sowing their seed in the moon&rsquo;s increase.&nbsp; The
+moon has great influence in vulgar philosophy.&nbsp; In my memory it
+was a precept annually given in one of the English Almanacks, &lsquo;to
+kill hogs when the moon was increasing, and the bacon would prove the
+better in boiling.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>We should have had little claim to the praise of curiosity, if we
+had not endeavoured with particular attention to examine the question
+of the Second Sight.&nbsp; Of an opinion received for centuries by a
+whole nation, and supposed to be confirmed through its whole descent,
+by a series of successive facts, it is desirable that the truth should
+be established, or the fallacy detected.</p>
+<p>The Second Sight is an impression made either by the mind upon the
+eye, or by the eye upon the mind, by which things distant or future
+are perceived, and seen as if they were present.&nbsp; A man on a journey
+far from home falls from his horse, another, who is perhaps at work
+about the house, sees him bleeding on the ground, commonly with a landscape
+of the place where the accident befalls him.&nbsp; Another seer, driving
+home his cattle, or wandering in idleness, or musing in the sunshine,
+is suddenly surprised by the appearance of a bridal ceremony, or funeral
+procession, and counts the mourners or attendants, of whom, if he knows
+them, he relates the names, if he knows them not, he can describe the
+dresses.&nbsp; Things distant are seen at the instant when they happen.&nbsp;
+Of things future I know not that there is any rule for determining the
+time between the Sight and the event.</p>
+<p>This receptive faculty, for power it cannot be called, is neither
+voluntary nor constant.&nbsp; The appearances have no dependence upon
+choice: they cannot be summoned, detained, or recalled.&nbsp; The impression
+is sudden, and the effect often painful.</p>
+<p>By the term Second Sight, seems to be meant a mode of seeing, superadded
+to that which Nature generally bestows.&nbsp; In the Earse it is called
+Taisch; which signifies likewise a spectre, or a vision.&nbsp; I know
+not, nor is it likely that the Highlanders ever examined, whether by
+Taisch, used for Second Sight, they mean the power of seeing, or the
+thing seen.</p>
+<p>I do not find it to be true, as it is reported, that to the Second
+Sight nothing is presented but phantoms of evil.&nbsp; Good seems to
+have the same proportions in those visionary scenes, as it obtains in
+real life: almost all remarkable events have evil for their basis; and
+are either miseries incurred, or miseries escaped.&nbsp; Our sense is
+so much stronger of what we suffer, than of what we enjoy, that the
+ideas of pain predominate in almost every mind.&nbsp; What is recollection
+but a revival of vexations, or history but a record of wars, treasons,
+and calamities?&nbsp; Death, which is considered as the greatest evil,
+happens to all.&nbsp; The greatest good, be it what it will, is the
+lot but of a part.</p>
+<p>That they should often see death is to be expected; because death
+is an event frequent and important.&nbsp; But they see likewise more
+pleasing incidents.&nbsp; A gentleman told me, that when he had once
+gone far from his own Island, one of his labouring servants predicted
+his return, and described the livery of his attendant, which he had
+never worn at home; and which had been, without any previous design,
+occasionally given him.</p>
+<p>Our desire of information was keen, and our inquiry frequent.&nbsp;
+Mr. Boswell&rsquo;s frankness and gaiety made every body communicative;
+and we heard many tales of these airy shows, with more or less evidence
+and distinctness.</p>
+<p>It is the common talk of the Lowland Scots, that the notion of the
+Second Sight is wearing away with other superstitions; and that its
+reality is no longer supposed, but by the grossest people.&nbsp; How
+far its prevalence ever extended, or what ground it has lost, I know
+not.&nbsp; The Islanders of all degrees, whether of rank or understanding,
+universally admit it, except the Ministers, who universally deny it,
+and are suspected to deny it, in consequence of a system, against conviction.&nbsp;
+One of them honestly told me, that he came to Sky with a resolution
+not to believe it.</p>
+<p>Strong reasons for incredulity will readily occur.&nbsp; This faculty
+of seeing things out of sight is local, and commonly useless.&nbsp;
+It is a breach of the common order of things, without any visible reason
+or perceptible benefit.&nbsp; It is ascribed only to a people very little
+enlightened; and among them, for the most part, to the mean and the
+ignorant.</p>
+<p>To the confidence of these objections it may be replied, that by
+presuming to determine what is fit, and what is beneficial, they presuppose
+more knowledge of the universal system than man has attained; and therefore
+depend upon principles too complicated and extensive for our comprehension;
+and that there can be no security in the consequence, when the premises
+are not understood; that the Second Sight is only wonderful because
+it is rare, for, considered in itself, it involves no more difficulty
+than dreams, or perhaps than the regular exercise of the cogitative
+faculty; that a general opinion of communicative impulses, or visionary
+representations, has prevailed in all ages and all nations; that particular
+instances have been given, with such evidence, as neither Bacon nor
+Bayle has been able to resist; that sudden impressions, which the event
+has verified, have been felt by more than own or publish them; that
+the Second Sight of the Hebrides implies only the local frequency of
+a power, which is nowhere totally unknown; and that where we are unable
+to decide by antecedent reason, we must be content to yield to the force
+of testimony.</p>
+<p>By pretension to Second Sight, no profit was ever sought or gained.&nbsp;
+It is an involuntary affection, in which neither hope nor fear are known
+to have any part.&nbsp; Those who profess to feel it, do not boast of
+it as a privilege, nor are considered by others as advantageously distinguished.&nbsp;
+They have no temptation to feign; and their hearers have no motive to
+encourage the imposture.</p>
+<p>To talk with any of these seers is not easy.&nbsp; There is one living
+in Sky, with whom we would have gladly conversed; but he was very gross
+and ignorant, and knew no English.&nbsp; The proportion in these countries
+of the poor to the rich is such, that if we suppose the quality to be
+accidental, it can very rarely happen to a man of education; and yet
+on such men it has sometimes fallen.&nbsp; There is now a Second Sighted
+gentleman in the Highlands, who complains of the terrors to which he
+is exposed.</p>
+<p>The foresight of the Seers is not always prescience; they are impressed
+with images, of which the event only shews them the meaning.&nbsp; They
+tell what they have seen to others, who are at that time not more knowing
+than themselves, but may become at last very adequate witnesses, by
+comparing the narrative with its verification.</p>
+<p>To collect sufficient testimonies for the satisfaction of the publick,
+or of ourselves, would have required more time than we could bestow.&nbsp;
+There is, against it, the seeming analogy of things confusedly seen,
+and little understood, and for it, the indistinct cry of national persuasion,
+which may be perhaps resolved at last into prejudice and tradition.&nbsp;
+I never could advance my curiosity to conviction; but came away at last
+only willing to believe.</p>
+<p>As there subsists no longer in the Islands much of that peculiar
+and discriminative form of life, of which the idea had delighted our
+imagination, we were willing to listen to such accounts of past times
+as would be given us.&nbsp; But we soon found what memorials were to
+be expected from an illiterate people, whose whole time is a series
+of distress; where every morning is labouring with expedients for the
+evening; and where all mental pains or pleasure arose from the dread
+of winter, the expectation of spring, the caprices of their Chiefs,
+and the motions of the neighbouring clans; where there was neither shame
+from ignorance, nor pride in knowledge; neither curiosity to inquire,
+nor vanity to communicate.</p>
+<p>The Chiefs indeed were exempt from urgent penury, and daily difficulties;
+and in their houses were preserved what accounts remained of past ages.&nbsp;
+But the Chiefs were sometimes ignorant and careless, and sometimes kept
+busy by turbulence and contention; and one generation of ignorance effaces
+the whole series of unwritten history.&nbsp; Books are faithful repositories,
+which may be a while neglected or forgotten; but when they are opened
+again, will again impart their instruction: memory, once interrupted,
+is not to be recalled.&nbsp; Written learning is a fixed luminary, which,
+after the cloud that had hidden it has past away, is again bright in
+its proper station.&nbsp; Tradition is but a meteor, which, if once
+it falls, cannot be rekindled.</p>
+<p>It seems to be universally supposed, that much of the local history
+was preserved by the Bards, of whom one is said to have been retained
+by every great family.&nbsp; After these Bards were some of my first
+inquiries; and I received such answers as, for a while, made me please
+myself with my increase of knowledge; for I had not then learned how
+to estimate the narration of a Highlander.</p>
+<p>They said that a great family had a Bard and a Senachi, who were
+the poet and historian of the house; and an old gentleman told me that
+he remembered one of each.&nbsp; Here was a dawn of intelligence.&nbsp;
+Of men that had lived within memory, some certain knowledge might be
+attained.&nbsp; Though the office had ceased, its effects might continue;
+the poems might be found, though there was no poet.</p>
+<p>Another conversation indeed informed me, that the same man was both
+Bard and Senachi.&nbsp; This variation discouraged me; but as the practice
+might be different in different times, or at the same time in different
+families, there was yet no reason for supposing that I must necessarily
+sit down in total ignorance.</p>
+<p>Soon after I was told by a gentleman, who is generally acknowledged
+the greatest master of Hebridian antiquities, that there had indeed
+once been both Bards and Senachies; and that Senachi signified &lsquo;the
+man of talk,&rsquo; or of conversation; but that neither Bard nor Senachi
+had existed for some centuries.&nbsp; I have no reason to suppose it
+exactly known at what time the custom ceased, nor did it probably cease
+in all houses at once.&nbsp; But whenever the practice of recitation
+was disused, the works, whether poetical or historical, perished with
+the authors; for in those times nothing had been written in the Earse
+language.</p>
+<p>Whether the &lsquo;Man of talk&rsquo; was a historian, whose office
+was to tell truth, or a story-teller, like those which were in the last
+century, and perhaps are now among the Irish, whose trade was only to
+amuse, it now would be vain to inquire.</p>
+<p>Most of the domestick offices were, I believe, hereditary; and probably
+the laureat of a clan was always the son of the last laureat.&nbsp;
+The history of the race could no otherwise be communicated, or retained;
+but what genius could be expected in a poet by inheritance?</p>
+<p>The nation was wholly illiterate.&nbsp; Neither bards nor Senachies
+could write or read; but if they were ignorant, there was no danger
+of detection; they were believed by those whose vanity they flattered.</p>
+<p>The recital of genealogies, which has been considered as very efficacious
+to the preservation of a true series of ancestry, was anciently made,
+when the heir of the family came to manly age.&nbsp; This practice has
+never subsisted within time of memory, nor was much credit due to such
+rehearsers, who might obtrude fictitious pedigrees, either to please
+their masters, or to hide the deficiency of their own memories.</p>
+<p>Where the Chiefs of the Highlands have found the histories of their
+descent is difficult to tell; for no Earse genealogy was ever written.&nbsp;
+In general this only is evident, that the principal house of a clan
+must be very ancient, and that those must have lived long in a place,
+of whom it is not known when they came thither.</p>
+<p>Thus hopeless are all attempts to find any traces of Highland learning.&nbsp;
+Nor are their primitive customs and ancient manner of life otherwise
+than very faintly and uncertainly remembered by the present race.</p>
+<p>The peculiarities which strike the native of a commercial country,
+proceeded in a great measure from the want of money.&nbsp; To the servants
+and dependents that were not domesticks, and if an estimate be made
+from the capacity of any of their old houses which I have seen, their
+domesticks could have been but few, were appropriated certain portions
+of land for their support.&nbsp; Macdonald has a piece of ground yet,
+called the Bards or Senachies field.&nbsp; When a beef was killed for
+the house, particular parts were claimed as fees by the several officers,
+or workmen.&nbsp; What was the right of each I have not learned.&nbsp;
+The head belonged to the smith, and the udder of a cow to the piper:
+the weaver had likewise his particular part; and so many pieces followed
+these prescriptive claims, that the Laird&rsquo;s was at last but little.</p>
+<p>The payment of rent in kind has been so long disused in England,
+that it is totally forgotten.&nbsp; It was practised very lately in
+the Hebrides, and probably still continues, not only in St. Kilda, where
+money is not yet known, but in others of the smaller and remoter Islands.&nbsp;
+It were perhaps to be desired, that no change in this particular should
+have been made.&nbsp; When the Laird could only eat the produce of his
+lands, he was under the necessity of residing upon them; and when the
+tenant could not convert his stock into more portable riches, he could
+never be tempted away from his farm, from the only place where he could
+be wealthy.&nbsp; Money confounds subordination, by overpowering the
+distinctions of rank and birth, and weakens authority by supplying power
+of resistance, or expedients for escape.&nbsp; The feudal system is
+formed for a nation employed in agriculture, and has never long kept
+its hold where gold and silver have become common.</p>
+<p>Their arms were anciently the Glaymore, or great two-handed sword,
+and afterwards the two-edged sword and target, or buckler, which was
+sustained on the left arm.&nbsp; In the midst of the target, which was
+made of wood, covered with leather, and studded with nails, a slender
+lance, about two feet long, was sometimes fixed; it was heavy and cumberous,
+and accordingly has for some time past been gradually laid aside.&nbsp;
+Very few targets were at Culloden.&nbsp; The dirk, or broad dagger,
+I am afraid, was of more use in private quarrels than in battles.&nbsp;
+The Lochaber-ax is only a slight alteration of the old English bill.</p>
+<p>After all that has been said of the force and terrour of the Highland
+sword, I could not find that the art of defence was any part of common
+education.&nbsp; The gentlemen were perhaps sometimes skilful gladiators,
+but the common men had no other powers than those of violence and courage.&nbsp;
+Yet it is well known, that the onset of the Highlanders was very formidable.&nbsp;
+As an army cannot consist of philosophers, a panick is easily excited
+by any unwonted mode of annoyance.&nbsp; New dangers are naturally magnified;
+and men accustomed only to exchange bullets at a distance, and rather
+to hear their enemies than see them, are discouraged and amazed when
+they find themselves encountered hand to hand, and catch the gleam of
+steel flashing in their faces.</p>
+<p>The Highland weapons gave opportunity for many exertions of personal
+courage, and sometimes for single combats in the field; like those which
+occur so frequently in fabulous wars.&nbsp; At Falkirk, a gentleman
+now living, was, I suppose after the retreat of the King&rsquo;s troops,
+engaged at a distance from the rest with an Irish dragoon.&nbsp; They
+were both skilful swordsmen, and the contest was not easily decided:
+the dragoon at last had the advantage, and the Highlander called for
+quarter; but quarter was refused him, and the fight continued till he
+was reduced to defend himself upon his knee.&nbsp; At that instant one
+of the Macleods came to his rescue; who, as it is said, offered quarter
+to the dragoon, but he thought himself obliged to reject what he had
+before refused, and, as battle gives little time to deliberate, was
+immediately killed.</p>
+<p>Funerals were formerly solemnized by calling multitudes together,
+and entertaining them at great expence.&nbsp; This emulation of useless
+cost has been for some time discouraged, and at last in the Isle of
+Sky is almost suppressed.</p>
+<p>Of the Earse language, as I understand nothing, I cannot say more
+than I have been told.&nbsp; It is the rude speech of a barbarous people,
+who had few thoughts to express, and were content, as they conceived
+grossly, to be grossly understood.&nbsp; After what has been lately
+talked of Highland Bards, and Highland genius, many will startle when
+they are told, that the Earse never was a written language; that there
+is not in the world an Earse manuscript a hundred years old; and that
+the sounds of the Highlanders were never expressed by letters, till
+some little books of piety were translated, and a metrical version of
+the Psalms was made by the Synod of Argyle.&nbsp; Whoever therefore
+now writes in this language, spells according to his own perception
+of the sound, and his own idea of the power of the letters.&nbsp; The
+Welsh and the Irish are cultivated tongues.&nbsp; The Welsh, two hundred
+years ago, insulted their English neighbours for the instability of
+their Orthography; while the Earse merely floated in the breath of the
+people, and could therefore receive little improvement.</p>
+<p>When a language begins to teem with books, it is tending to refinement;
+as those who undertake to teach others must have undergone some labour
+in improving themselves, they set a proportionate value on their own
+thoughts, and wish to enforce them by efficacious expressions; speech
+becomes embodied and permanent; different modes and phrases are compared,
+and the best obtains an establishment.&nbsp; By degrees one age improves
+upon another.&nbsp; Exactness is first obtained, and afterwards elegance.&nbsp;
+But diction, merely vocal, is always in its childhood.&nbsp; As no man
+leaves his eloquence behind him, the new generations have all to learn.&nbsp;
+There may possibly be books without a polished language, but there can
+be no polished language without books.</p>
+<p>That the Bards could not read more than the rest of their countrymen,
+it is reasonable to suppose; because, if they had read, they could probably
+have written; and how high their compositions may reasonably be rated,
+an inquirer may best judge by considering what stores of imagery, what
+principles of ratiocination, what comprehension of knowledge, and what
+delicacy of elocution he has known any man attain who cannot read.&nbsp;
+The state of the Bards was yet more hopeless.&nbsp; He that cannot read,
+may now converse with those that can; but the Bard was a barbarian among
+barbarians, who, knowing nothing himself, lived with others that knew
+no more.</p>
+<p>There has lately been in the Islands one of these illiterate poets,
+who hearing the Bible read at church, is said to have turned the sacred
+history into verse.&nbsp; I heard part of a dialogue, composed by him,
+translated by a young lady in Mull, and thought it had more meaning
+than I expected from a man totally uneducated; but he had some opportunities
+of knowledge; he lived among a learned people.&nbsp; After all that
+has been done for the instruction of the Highlanders, the antipathy
+between their language and literature still continues; and no man that
+has learned only Earse is, at this time, able to read.</p>
+<p>The Earse has many dialects, and the words used in some Islands are
+not always known in others.&nbsp; In literate nations, though the pronunciation,
+and sometimes the words of common speech may differ, as now in England,
+compared with the South of Scotland, yet there is a written diction,
+which pervades all dialects, and is understood in every province.&nbsp;
+But where the whole language is colloquial, he that has only one part,
+never gets the rest, as he cannot get it but by change of residence.</p>
+<p>In an unwritten speech, nothing that is not very short is transmitted
+from one generation to another.&nbsp; Few have opportunities of hearing
+a long composition often enough to learn it, or have inclination to
+repeat it so often as is necessary to retain it; and what is once forgotten
+is lost for ever.&nbsp; I believe there cannot be recovered, in the
+whole Earse language, five hundred lines of which there is any evidence
+to prove them a hundred years old.&nbsp; Yet I hear that the father
+of Ossian boasts of two chests more of ancient poetry, which he suppresses,
+because they are too good for the English.</p>
+<p>He that goes into the Highlands with a mind naturally acquiescent,
+and a credulity eager for wonders, may come back with an opinion very
+different from mine; for the inhabitants knowing the ignorance of all
+strangers in their language and antiquities, perhaps are not very scrupulous
+adherents to truth; yet I do not say that they deliberately speak studied
+falsehood, or have a settled purpose to deceive.&nbsp; They have inquired
+and considered little, and do not always feel their own ignorance.&nbsp;
+They are not much accustomed to be interrogated by others; and seem
+never to have thought upon interrogating themselves; so that if they
+do not know what they tell to be true, they likewise do not distinctly
+perceive it to be false.</p>
+<p>Mr. Boswell was very diligent in his inquiries; and the result of
+his investigations was, that the answer to the second question was commonly
+such as nullified the answer to the first.</p>
+<p>We were a while told, that they had an old translation of the scriptures;
+and told it till it would appear obstinacy to inquire again.&nbsp; Yet
+by continued accumulation of questions we found, that the translation
+meant, if any meaning there were, was nothing else than the Irish Bible.</p>
+<p>We heard of manuscripts that were, or that had been in the hands
+of somebody&rsquo;s father, or grandfather; but at last we had no reason
+to believe they were other than Irish.&nbsp; Martin mentions Irish,
+but never any Earse manuscripts, to be found in the Islands in his time.</p>
+<p>I suppose my opinion of the poems of Ossian is already discovered.&nbsp;
+I believe they never existed in any other form than that which we have
+seen.&nbsp; The editor, or author, never could shew the original; nor
+can it be shewn by any other; to revenge reasonable incredulity, by
+refusing evidence, is a degree of insolence, with which the world is
+not yet acquainted; and stubborn audacity is the last refuge of guilt.&nbsp;
+It would be easy to shew it if he had it; but whence could it be had?&nbsp;
+It is too long to be remembered, and the language formerly had nothing
+written.&nbsp; He has doubtless inserted names that circulate in popular
+stories, and may have translated some wandering ballads, if any can
+be found; and the names, and some of the images being recollected, make
+an inaccurate auditor imagine, by the help of Caledonian bigotry, that
+he has formerly heard the whole.</p>
+<p>I asked a very learned Minister in Sky, who had used all arts to
+make me believe the genuineness of the book, whether at last he believed
+it himself? but he would not answer.&nbsp; He wished me to be deceived,
+for the honour of his country; but would not directly and formally deceive
+me.&nbsp; Yet has this man&rsquo;s testimony been publickly produced,
+as of one that held Fingal to be the work of Ossian.</p>
+<p>It is said, that some men of integrity profess to have heard parts
+of it, but they all heard them when they were boys; and it was never
+said that any of them could recite six lines.&nbsp; They remember names,
+and perhaps some proverbial sentiments; and, having no distinct ideas,
+coin a resemblance without an original.&nbsp; The persuasion of the
+Scots, however, is far from universal; and in a question so capable
+of proof, why should doubt be suffered to continue?&nbsp; The editor
+has been heard to say, that part of the poem was received by him, in
+the Saxon character.&nbsp; He has then found, by some peculiar fortune,
+an unwritten language, written in a character which the natives probably
+never beheld.</p>
+<p>I have yet supposed no imposture but in the publisher, yet I am far
+from certainty, that some translations have not been lately made, that
+may now be obtruded as parts of the original work.&nbsp; Credulity on
+one part is a strong temptation to deceit on the other, especially to
+deceit of which no personal injury is the consequence, and which flatters
+the author with his own ingenuity.&nbsp; The Scots have something to
+plead for their easy reception of an improbable fiction; they are seduced
+by their fondness for their supposed ancestors.&nbsp; A Scotchman must
+be a very sturdy moralist, who does not love Scotland better than truth:
+he will always love it better than inquiry; and if falsehood flatters
+his vanity, will not be very diligent to detect it.&nbsp; Neither ought
+the English to be much influenced by Scotch authority; for of the past
+and present state of the whole Earse nation, the Lowlanders are at least
+as ignorant as ourselves.&nbsp; To be ignorant is painful; but it is
+dangerous to quiet our uneasiness by the delusive opiate of hasty persuasion.</p>
+<p>But this is the age, in which those who could not read, have been
+supposed to write; in which the giants of antiquated romance have been
+exhibited as realities.&nbsp; If we know little of the ancient Highlanders,
+let us not fill the vacuity with Ossian.&nbsp; If we had not searched
+the Magellanick regions, let us however forbear to people them with
+Patagons.</p>
+<p>Having waited some days at Armidel, we were flattered at last with
+a wind that promised to convey us to Mull.&nbsp; We went on board a
+boat that was taking in kelp, and left the Isle of Sky behind us.&nbsp;
+We were doomed to experience, like others, the danger of trusting to
+the wind, which blew against us, in a short time, with such violence,
+that we, being no seasoned sailors, were willing to call it a tempest.&nbsp;
+I was sea-sick and lay down.&nbsp; Mr. Boswell kept the deck.&nbsp;
+The master knew not well whither to go; and our difficulties might perhaps
+have filled a very pathetick page, had not Mr. Maclean of Col, who,
+with every other qualification which insular life requires, is a very
+active and skilful mariner, piloted us safe into his own harbour.</p>
+<h2>COL</h2>
+<p>In the morning we found ourselves under the Isle of Col, where we
+landed; and passed the first day and night with Captain Maclean, a gentleman
+who has lived some time in the East Indies; but having dethroned no
+Nabob, is not too rich to settle in own country.</p>
+<p>Next day the wind was fair, and we might have had an easy passage
+to Mull; but having, contrarily to our own intention, landed upon a
+new Island, we would not leave it wholly unexamined.&nbsp; We therefore
+suffered the vessel to depart without us, and trusted the skies for
+another wind.</p>
+<p>Mr. Maclean of Col, having a very numerous family, has, for some
+time past, resided at Aberdeen, that he may superintend their education,
+and leaves the young gentleman, our friend, to govern his dominions,
+with the full power of a Highland Chief.&nbsp; By the absence of the
+Laird&rsquo;s family, our entertainment was made more difficult, because
+the house was in a great degree disfurnished; but young Col&rsquo;s
+kindness and activity supplied all defects, and procured us more than
+sufficient accommodation.</p>
+<p>Here I first mounted a little Highland steed; and if there had been
+many spectators, should have been somewhat ashamed of my figure in the
+march.&nbsp; The horses of the Islands, as of other barren countries,
+are very low: they are indeed musculous and strong, beyond what their
+size gives reason for expecting; but a bulky man upon one of their backs
+makes a very disproportionate appearance.</p>
+<p>From the habitation of Captain Maclean, we went to Grissipol, but
+called by the way on Mr. Hector Maclean, the Minister of Col, whom we
+found in a hut, that is, a house of only one floor, but with windows
+and chimney, and not inelegantly furnished.&nbsp; Mr. Maclean has the
+reputation of great learning: he is seventy-seven years old, but not
+infirm, with a look of venerable dignity, excelling what I remember
+in any other man.</p>
+<p>His conversation was not unsuitable to his appearance.&nbsp; I lost
+some of his good-will, by treating a heretical writer with more regard
+than, in his opinion, a heretick could deserve.&nbsp; I honoured his
+orthodoxy, and did not much censure his asperity.&nbsp; A man who has
+settled his opinions, does not love to have the tranquillity of his
+conviction disturbed; and at seventy-seven it is time to be in earnest.</p>
+<p>Mention was made of the Earse translation of the New Testament, which
+has been lately published, and of which the learned Mr. Macqueen of
+Sky spoke with commendation; but Mr. Maclean said he did not use it,
+because he could make the text more intelligible to his auditors by
+an extemporary version.&nbsp; From this I inferred, that the language
+of the translation was not the language of the Isle of Col.</p>
+<p>He has no publick edifice for the exercise of his ministry; and can
+officiate to no greater number, than a room can contain; and the room
+of a hut is not very large.&nbsp; This is all the opportunity of worship
+that is now granted to the inhabitants of the Island, some of whom must
+travel thither perhaps ten miles.&nbsp; Two chapels were erected by
+their ancestors, of which I saw the skeletons, which now stand faithful
+witnesses of the triumph of the Reformation.</p>
+<p>The want of churches is not the only impediment to piety: there is
+likewise a want of Ministers.&nbsp; A parish often contains more Islands
+than one; and each Island can have the Minister only in its own turn.&nbsp;
+At Raasa they had, I think, a right to service only every third Sunday.&nbsp;
+All the provision made by the present ecclesiastical constitution, for
+the inhabitants of about a hundred square miles, is a prayer and sermon
+in a little room, once in three weeks: and even this parsimonious distribution
+is at the mercy of the weather; and in those Islands where the Minister
+does not reside, it is impossible to tell how many weeks or months may
+pass without any publick exercise of religion.</p>
+<h2>GRISSIPOL IN COL</h2>
+<p>After a short conversation with Mr. Maclean, we went on to Grissipol,
+a house and farm tenanted by Mr. Macsweyn, where I saw more of the ancient
+life of a Highlander, than I had yet found.&nbsp; Mrs. Macsweyn could
+speak no English, and had never seen any other places than the Islands
+of Sky, Mull, and Col: but she was hospitable and good-humoured, and
+spread her table with sufficient liberality.&nbsp; We found tea here,
+as in every other place, but our spoons were of horn.</p>
+<p>The house of Grissipol stands by a brook very clear and quick; which
+is, I suppose, one of the most copious streams in the Island.&nbsp;
+This place was the scene of an action, much celebrated in the traditional
+history of Col, but which probably no two relaters will tell alike.</p>
+<p>Some time, in the obscure ages, Macneil of Barra married the Lady
+Maclean, who had the Isle of Col for her jointure.&nbsp; Whether Macneil
+detained Col, when the widow was dead, or whether she lived so long
+as to make her heirs impatient, is perhaps not now known.&nbsp; The
+younger son, called John Gerves, or John the Giant, a man of great strength
+who was then in Ireland, either for safety, or for education, dreamed
+of recovering his inheritance; and getting some adventurers together,
+which, in those unsettled times, was not hard to do, invaded Col.&nbsp;
+He was driven away, but was not discouraged, and collecting new followers,
+in three years came again with fifty men.&nbsp; In his way he stopped
+at Artorinish in Morvern, where his uncle was prisoner to Macleod, and
+was then with his enemies in a tent.&nbsp; Maclean took with him only
+one servant, whom he ordered to stay at the outside; and where he should
+see the tent pressed outwards, to strike with his dirk, it being the
+intention of Maclean, as any man provoked him, to lay hands upon him,
+and push him back.&nbsp; He entered the tent alone, with his Lochabar-axe
+in his hand, and struck such terror into the whole assembly, that they
+dismissed his uncle.</p>
+<p>When he landed at Col, he saw the sentinel, who kept watch towards
+the sea, running off to Grissipol, to give Macneil, who was there with
+a hundred and twenty men, an account of the invasion.&nbsp; He told
+Macgill, one of his followers, that if he intercepted that dangerous
+intelligence, by catching the courier, he would give him certain lands
+in Mull.&nbsp; Upon this promise, Macgill pursued the messenger, and
+either killed, or stopped him; and his posterity, till very lately,
+held the lands in Mull.</p>
+<p>The alarm being thus prevented, he came unexpectedly upon Macneil.&nbsp;
+Chiefs were in those days never wholly unprovided for an enemy.&nbsp;
+A fight ensued, in which one of their followers is said to have given
+an extraordinary proof of activity, by bounding backwards over the brook
+of Grissipol.&nbsp; Macneil being killed, and many of his clan destroyed,
+Maclean took possession of the Island, which the Macneils attempted
+to conquer by another invasion, but were defeated and repulsed.</p>
+<p>Maclean, in his turn, invaded the estate of the Macneils, took the
+castle of Brecacig, and conquered the Isle of Barra, which he held for
+seven years, and then restored it to the heirs.</p>
+<h2>CASTLE OF COL</h2>
+<p>From Grissipol, Mr. Maclean conducted us to his father&rsquo;s seat;
+a neat new house, erected near the old castle, I think, by the last
+proprietor.&nbsp; Here we were allowed to take our station, and lived
+very commodiously, while we waited for moderate weather and a fair wind,
+which we did not so soon obtain, but we had time to get some information
+of the present state of Col, partly by inquiry, and partly by occasional
+excursions.</p>
+<p>Col is computed to be thirteen miles in length, and three in breadth.&nbsp;
+Both the ends are the property of the Duke of Argyle, but the middle
+belongs to Maclean, who is called Col, as the only Laird.</p>
+<p>Col is not properly rocky; it is rather one continued rock, of a
+surface much diversified with protuberances, and covered with a thin
+layer of earth, which is often broken, and discovers the stone.&nbsp;
+Such a soil is not for plants that strike deep roots; and perhaps in
+the whole Island nothing has ever yet grown to the height of a table.&nbsp;
+The uncultivated parts are clothed with heath, among which industry
+has interspersed spots of grass and corn; but no attempt has yet been
+made to raise a tree.&nbsp; Young Col, who has a very laudable desire
+of improving his patrimony, purposes some time to plant an orchard;
+which, if it be sheltered by a wall, may perhaps succeed.&nbsp; He has
+introduced the culture of turnips, of which he has a field, where the
+whole work was performed by his own hand.&nbsp; His intention is to
+provide food for his cattle in the winter.&nbsp; This innovation was
+considered by Mr. Macsweyn as the idle project of a young head, heated
+with English fancies; but he has now found that turnips will really
+grow, and that hungry sheep and cows will really eat them.</p>
+<p>By such acquisitions as these, the Hebrides may in time rise above
+their annual distress.&nbsp; Wherever heath will grow, there is reason
+to think something better may draw nourishment; and by trying the production
+of other places, plants will be found suitable to every soil.</p>
+<p>Col has many lochs, some of which have trouts and eels, and others
+have never yet been stocked; another proof of the negligence of the
+Islanders, who might take fish in the inland waters, when they cannot
+go to sea.</p>
+<p>Their quadrupeds are horses, cows, sheep, and goats.&nbsp; They have
+neither deer, hares, nor rabbits.&nbsp; They have no vermin, except
+rats, which have been lately brought thither by sea, as to other places;
+and are free from serpents, frogs, and toads.</p>
+<p>The harvest in Col, and in Lewis, is ripe sooner than in Sky; and
+the winter in Col is never cold, but very tempestuous.&nbsp; I know
+not that I ever heard the wind so loud in any other place; and Mr. Boswell
+observed, that its noise was all its own, for there were no trees to
+increase it.</p>
+<p>Noise is not the worst effect of the tempests; for they have thrown
+the sand from the shore over a considerable part of the land; and it
+is said still to encroach and destroy more and more pasture; but I am
+not of opinion, that by any surveys or landmarks, its limits have been
+ever fixed, or its progression ascertained.&nbsp; If one man has confidence
+enough to say, that it advances, nobody can bring any proof to support
+him in denying it.&nbsp; The reason why it is not spread to a greater
+extent, seems to be, that the wind and rain come almost together, and
+that it is made close and heavy by the wet before the storms can put
+it in motion.&nbsp; So thick is the bed, and so small the particles,
+that if a traveller should be caught by a sudden gust in dry weather,
+he would find it very difficult to escape with life.</p>
+<p>For natural curiosities, I was shown only two great masses of stone,
+which lie loose upon the ground; one on the top of a hill, and the other
+at a small distance from the bottom.&nbsp; They certainly were never
+put into their present places by human strength or skill; and though
+an earthquake might have broken off the lower stone, and rolled it into
+the valley, no account can be given of the other, which lies on the
+hill, unless, which I forgot to examine, there be still near it some
+higher rock, from which it might be torn.&nbsp; All nations have a tradition,
+that their earliest ancestors were giants, and these stones are said
+to have been thrown up and down by a giant and his mistress.&nbsp; There
+are so many more important things, of which human knowledge can give
+no account, that it may be forgiven us, if we speculate no longer on
+two stones in Col.</p>
+<p>This Island is very populous.&nbsp; About nine-and-twenty years ago,
+the fencible men of Col were reckoned one hundred and forty, which is
+the sixth of eight hundred and forty; and probably some contrived to
+be left out of the list.&nbsp; The Minister told us, that a few years
+ago the inhabitants were eight hundred, between the ages of seven and
+of seventy.&nbsp; Round numbers are seldom exact.&nbsp; But in this
+case the authority is good, and the errour likely to be little.&nbsp;
+If to the eight hundred be added what the laws of computation require,
+they will be increased to at least a thousand; and if the dimensions
+of the country have been accurately related, every mile maintains more
+than twenty-five.</p>
+<p>This proportion of habitation is greater than the appearance of the
+country seems to admit; for wherever the eye wanders, it sees much waste
+and little cultivation.&nbsp; I am more inclined to extend the land,
+of which no measure has ever been taken, than to diminish the people,
+who have been really numbered.&nbsp; Let it be supposed, that a computed
+mile contains a mile and a half, as was commonly found true in the mensuration
+of the English roads, and we shall then allot nearly twelve to a mile,
+which agrees much better with ocular observation.</p>
+<p>Here, as in Sky, and other Islands, are the Laird, the Tacksmen,
+and the under tenants.</p>
+<p>Mr. Maclean, the Laird, has very extensive possessions, being proprietor,
+not only of far the greater part of Col, but of the extensive Island
+of Rum, and a very considerable territory in Mull.</p>
+<p>Rum is one of the larger Islands, almost square, and therefore of
+great capacity in proportion to its sides.&nbsp; By the usual method
+of estimating computed extent, it may contain more than a hundred and
+twenty square miles.</p>
+<p>It originally belonged to Clanronald, and was purchased by Col; who,
+in some dispute about the bargain, made Clanronald prisoner, and kept
+him nine months in confinement.&nbsp; Its owner represents it as mountainous,
+rugged, and barren.&nbsp; In the hills there are red deer.&nbsp; The
+horses are very small, but of a breed eminent for beauty.&nbsp; Col,
+not long ago, bought one of them from a tenant; who told him, that as
+he was of a shape uncommonly elegant, he could not sell him but at a
+high price; and that whoever had him should pay a guinea and a half.</p>
+<p>There are said to be in Barra a race of horses yet smaller, of which
+the highest is not above thirty-six inches.</p>
+<p>The rent of Rum is not great.&nbsp; Mr. Maclean declared, that he
+should be very rich, if he could set his land at two-pence halfpenny
+an acre.&nbsp; The inhabitants are fifty-eight families, who continued
+Papists for some time after the Laird became a Protestant.&nbsp; Their
+adherence to their old religion was strengthened by the countenance
+of the Laird&rsquo;s sister, a zealous Romanist, till one Sunday, as
+they were going to mass under the conduct of their patroness, Maclean
+met them on the way, gave one of them a blow on the head with a yellow
+stick, I suppose a cane, for which the Earse had no name, and drove
+them to the kirk, from which they have never since departed.&nbsp; Since
+the use of this method of conversion, the inhabitants of Egg and Canna,
+who continue Papists, call the Protestantism of Rum, the religion of
+the Yellow Stick.</p>
+<p>The only Popish Islands are Egg and Canna.&nbsp; Egg is the principal
+Island of a parish, in which, though he has no congregation, the Protestant
+Minister resides.&nbsp; I have heard of nothing curious in it, but the
+cave in which a former generation of the Islanders were smothered by
+Macleod.</p>
+<p>If we had travelled with more leisure, it had not been fit to have
+neglected the Popish Islands.&nbsp; Popery is favourable to ceremony;
+and among ignorant nations, ceremony is the only preservative of tradition.&nbsp;
+Since protestantism was extended to the savage parts of Scotland, it
+has perhaps been one of the chief labours of the Ministers to abolish
+stated observances, because they continued the remembrance of the former
+religion.&nbsp; We therefore who came to hear old traditions, and see
+antiquated manners, should probably have found them amongst the Papists.</p>
+<p>Canna, the other Popish Island, belongs to Clanronald.&nbsp; It is
+said not to comprise more than twelve miles of land, and yet maintains
+as many inhabitants as Rum.</p>
+<p>We were at Col under the protection of the young Laird, without any
+of the distresses, which Mr. Pennant, in a fit of simple credulity,
+seems to think almost worthy of an elegy by Ossian.&nbsp; Wherever we
+roved, we were pleased to see the reverence with which his subjects
+regarded him.&nbsp; He did not endeavour to dazzle them by any magnificence
+of dress: his only distinction was a feather in his bonnet; but as soon
+as he appeared, they forsook their work and clustered about him: he
+took them by the hand, and they seemed mutually delighted.&nbsp; He
+has the proper disposition of a Chieftain, and seems desirous to continue
+the customs of his house.&nbsp; The bagpiper played regularly, when
+dinner was served, whose person and dress made a good appearance; and
+he brought no disgrace upon the family of Rankin, which has long supplied
+the Lairds of Col with hereditary musick.</p>
+<p>The Tacksmen of Col seem to live with less dignity and convenience
+than those of Sky; where they had good houses, and tables not only plentiful,
+but delicate.&nbsp; In Col only two houses pay the window tax; for only
+two have six windows, which, I suppose, are the Laird&rsquo;s and Mr.
+Macsweyn&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>The rents have, till within seven years, been paid in kind, but the
+tenants finding that cattle and corn varied in their price, desired
+for the future to give their landlord money; which, not having yet arrived
+at the philosophy of commerce, they consider as being every year of
+the same value.</p>
+<p>We were told of a particular mode of under-tenure.&nbsp; The Tacksman
+admits some of his inferior neighbours to the cultivation of his grounds,
+on condition that performing all the work, and giving a third part of
+the seed, they shall keep a certain number of cows, sheep, and goats,
+and reap a third part of the harvest.&nbsp; Thus by less than the tillage
+of two acres they pay the rent of one.</p>
+<p>There are tenants below the rank of Tacksmen, that have got smaller
+tenants under them; for in every place, where money is not the general
+equivalent, there must be some whose labour is immediately paid by daily
+food.</p>
+<p>A country that has no money, is by no means convenient for beggars,
+both because such countries are commonly poor, and because charity requires
+some trouble and some thought.&nbsp; A penny is easily given upon the
+first impulse of compassion, or impatience of importunity; but few will
+deliberately search their cupboards or their granaries to find out something
+to give.&nbsp; A penny is likewise easily spent, but victuals, if they
+are unprepared, require houseroom, and fire, and utensils, which the
+beggar knows not where to find.</p>
+<p>Yet beggars there sometimes are, who wander from Island to Island.&nbsp;
+We had, in our passage to Mull, the company of a woman and her child,
+who had exhausted the charity of Col.&nbsp; The arrival of a beggar
+on an Island is accounted a sinistrous event.&nbsp; Every body considers
+that he shall have the less for what he gives away.&nbsp; Their alms,
+I believe, is generally oatmeal.</p>
+<p>Near to Col is another Island called Tireye, eminent for its fertility.&nbsp;
+Though it has but half the extent of Rum, it is so well peopled, that
+there have appeared, not long ago, nine hundred and fourteen at a funeral.&nbsp;
+The plenty of this Island enticed beggars to it, who seemed so burdensome
+to the inhabitants, that a formal compact was drawn up, by which they
+obliged themselves to grant no more relief to casual wanderers, because
+they had among them an indigent woman of high birth, whom they considered
+as entitled to all that they could spare.&nbsp; I have read the stipulation,
+which was indited with juridical formality, but was never made valid
+by regular subscription.</p>
+<p>If the inhabitants of Col have nothing to give, it is not that they
+are oppressed by their landlord: their leases seem to be very profitable.&nbsp;
+One farmer, who pays only seven pounds a year, has maintained seven
+daughters and three sons, of whom the eldest is educated at Aberdeen
+for the ministry; and now, at every vacation, opens a school in Col.</p>
+<p>Life is here, in some respects, improved beyond the condition of
+some other Islands.&nbsp; In Sky what is wanted can only be bought,
+as the arrival of some wandering pedlar may afford an opportunity; but
+in Col there is a standing shop, and in Mull there are two.&nbsp; A
+shop in the Islands, as in other places of little frequentation, is
+a repository of every thing requisite for common use.&nbsp; Mr. Boswell&rsquo;s
+journal was filled, and he bought some paper in Col.&nbsp; To a man
+that ranges the streets of London, where he is tempted to contrive wants,
+for the pleasure of supplying them, a shop affords no image worthy of
+attention; but in an Island, it turns the balance of existence between
+good and evil.&nbsp; To live in perpetual want of little things, is
+a state not indeed of torture, but of constant vexation.&nbsp; I have
+in Sky had some difficulty to find ink for a letter; and if a woman
+breaks her needle, the work is at a stop.</p>
+<p>As it is, the Islanders are obliged to content themselves with succedaneous
+means for many common purposes.&nbsp; I have seen the chief man of a
+very wide district riding with a halter for a bridle, and governing
+his hobby with a wooden curb.</p>
+<p>The people of Col, however, do not want dexterity to supply some
+of their necessities.&nbsp; Several arts which make trades, and demand
+apprenticeships in great cities, are here the practices of daily economy.&nbsp;
+In every house candles are made, both moulded and dipped.&nbsp; Their
+wicks are small shreds of linen cloth.&nbsp; They all know how to extract
+from the Cuddy, oil for their lamps.&nbsp; They all tan skins, and make
+brogues.</p>
+<p>As we travelled through Sky, we saw many cottages, but they very
+frequently stood single on the naked ground.&nbsp; In Col, where the
+hills opened a place convenient for habitation, we found a petty village,
+of which every hut had a little garden adjoining; thus they made an
+appearance of social commerce and mutual offices, and of some attention
+to convenience and future supply.&nbsp; There is not in the Western
+Islands any collection of buildings that can make pretensions to be
+called a town, except in the Isle of Lewis, which I have not seen.</p>
+<p>If Lewis is distinguished by a town, Col has also something peculiar.&nbsp;
+The young Laird has attempted what no Islander perhaps ever thought
+on.&nbsp; He has begun a road capable of a wheel-carriage.&nbsp; He
+has carried it about a mile, and will continue it by annual elongation
+from his house to the harbour.</p>
+<p>Of taxes here is no reason for complaining; they are paid by a very
+easy composition.&nbsp; The malt-tax for Col is twenty shillings.&nbsp;
+Whisky is very plentiful: there are several stills in the Island, and
+more is made than the inhabitants consume.</p>
+<p>The great business of insular policy is now to keep the people in
+their own country.&nbsp; As the world has been let in upon them, they
+have heard of happier climates, and less arbitrary government; and if
+they are disgusted, have emissaries among them ready to offer them land
+and houses, as a reward for deserting their Chief and clan.&nbsp; Many
+have departed both from the main of Scotland, and from the Islands;
+and all that go may be considered as subjects lost to the British crown;
+for a nation scattered in the boundless regions of America resembles
+rays diverging from a focus.&nbsp; All the rays remain, but the heat
+is gone.&nbsp; Their power consisted in their concentration: when they
+are dispersed, they have no effect.</p>
+<p>It may be thought that they are happier by the change; but they are
+not happy as a nation, for they are a nation no longer.&nbsp; As they
+contribute not to the prosperity of any community, they must want that
+security, that dignity, that happiness, whatever it be, which a prosperous
+community throws back upon individuals.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of Col have not yet learned to be weary of their
+heath and rocks, but attend their agriculture and their dairies, without
+listening to American seducements.</p>
+<p>There are some however who think that this emigration has raised
+terrour disproportionate to its real evil; and that it is only a new
+mode of doing what was always done.&nbsp; The Highlands, they say, never
+maintained their natural inhabitants; but the people, when they found
+themselves too numerous, instead of extending cultivation, provided
+for themselves by a more compendious method, and sought better fortune
+in other countries.&nbsp; They did not indeed go away in collective
+bodies, but withdrew invisibly, a few at a time; but the whole number
+of fugitives was not less, and the difference between other times and
+this, is only the same as between evaporation and effusion.</p>
+<p>This is plausible, but I am afraid it is not true.&nbsp; Those who
+went before, if they were not sensibly missed, as the argument supposes,
+must have gone either in less number, or in a manner less detrimental,
+than at present; because formerly there was no complaint.&nbsp; Those
+who then left the country were generally the idle dependants on overburdened
+families, or men who had no property; and therefore carried away only
+themselves.&nbsp; In the present eagerness of emigration, families,
+and almost communities, go away together.&nbsp; Those who were considered
+as prosperous and wealthy sell their stock and carry away the money.&nbsp;
+Once none went away but the useless and poor; in some parts there is
+now reason to fear, that none will stay but those who are too poor to
+remove themselves, and too useless to be removed at the cost of others.</p>
+<p>Of antiquity there is not more knowledge in Col than in other places;
+but every where something may be gleaned.</p>
+<p>How ladies were portioned, when there was no money, it would be difficult
+for an Englishman to guess.&nbsp; In 1649, Maclean of Dronart in Mull
+married his sister Fingala to Maclean of Coll, with a hundred and eighty
+kine; and stipulated, that if she became a widow, her jointure should
+be three hundred and sixty.&nbsp; I suppose some proportionate tract
+of land was appropriated to their pasturage.</p>
+<p>The disposition to pompous and expensive funerals, which has at one
+time or other prevailed in most parts of the civilized world, is not
+yet suppressed in the Islands, though some of the ancient solemnities
+are worn away, and singers are no longer hired to attend the procession.&nbsp;
+Nineteen years ago, at the burial of the Laird of Col, were killed thirty
+cows, and about fifty sheep.&nbsp; The number of the cows is positively
+told, and we must suppose other victuals in like proportion.</p>
+<p>Mr. Maclean informed us of an odd game, of which he did not tell
+the original, but which may perhaps be used in other places, where the
+reason of it is not yet forgot.&nbsp; At New-year&rsquo;s eve, in the
+hall or castle of the Laird, where, at festal seasons, there may be
+supposed a very numerous company, one man dresses himself in a cow&rsquo;s
+hide, upon which other men beat with sticks.&nbsp; He runs with all
+this noise round the house, which all the company quits in a counterfeited
+fright: the door is then shut.&nbsp; At New-year&rsquo;s eve there is
+no great pleasure to be had out of doors in the Hebrides.&nbsp; They
+are sure soon to recover from their terrour enough to solicit for re-admission;
+which, for the honour of poetry, is not to be obtained but by repeating
+a verse, with which those that are knowing and provident take care to
+be furnished.</p>
+<p>Very near the house of Maclean stands the castle of Col, which was
+the mansion of the Laird, till the house was built.&nbsp; It is built
+upon a rock, as Mr. Boswell remarked, that it might not be mined.&nbsp;
+It is very strong, and having been not long uninhabited, is yet in repair.&nbsp;
+On the wall was, not long ago, a stone with an inscription, importing,
+that &lsquo;if any man of the clan of Maclonich shall appear before
+this castle, though he come at midnight, with a man&rsquo;s head in
+his hand, he shall there find safety and protection against all but
+the King.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This is an old Highland treaty made upon a very memorable occasion.&nbsp;
+Maclean, the son of John Gerves, who recovered Col, and conquered Barra,
+had obtained, it is said, from James the Second, a grant of the lands
+of Lochiel, forfeited, I suppose, by some offence against the state.</p>
+<p>Forfeited estates were not in those days quietly resigned; Maclean,
+therefore, went with an armed force to seize his new possessions, and,
+I know not for what reason, took his wife with him.&nbsp; The Camerons
+rose in defence of their Chief, and a battle was fought at the head
+of Loch Ness, near the place where Fort Augustus now stands, in which
+Lochiel obtained the victory, and Maclean, with his followers, was defeated
+and destroyed.</p>
+<p>The lady fell into the hands of the conquerours, and being found
+pregnant was placed in the custody of Maclonich, one of a tribe or family
+branched from Cameron, with orders, if she brought a boy, to destroy
+him, if a girl, to spare her.</p>
+<p>Maclonich&rsquo;s wife, who was with child likewise, had a girl about
+the same time at which lady Maclean brought a boy, and Maclonich with
+more generosity to his captive, than fidelity to his trust, contrived
+that the children should be changed.</p>
+<p>Maclean being thus preserved from death, in time recovered his original
+patrimony; and in gratitude to his friend, made his castle a place of
+refuge to any of the clan that should think himself in danger; and,
+as a proof of reciprocal confidence, Maclean took upon himself and his
+posterity the care of educating the heir of Maclonich.</p>
+<p>This story, like all other traditions of the Highlands, is variously
+related, but though some circumstances are uncertain, the principal
+fact is true.&nbsp; Maclean undoubtedly owed his preservation to Maclonich;
+for the treaty between the two families has been strictly observed:
+it did not sink into disuse and oblivion, but continued in its full
+force while the chieftains retained their power.&nbsp; I have read a
+demand of protection, made not more than thirty-seven years ago, for
+one of the Maclonichs, named Ewen Cameron, who had been accessory to
+the death of Macmartin, and had been banished by Lochiel, his lord,
+for a certain term; at the expiration of which he returned married from
+France, but the Macmartins, not satisfied with the punishment, when
+he attempted to settle, still threatened him with vengeance.&nbsp; He
+therefore asked, and obtained shelter in the Isle of Col.</p>
+<p>The power of protection subsists no longer, but what the law permits
+is yet continued, and Maclean of Col now educates the heir of Maclonich.</p>
+<p>There still remains in the Islands, though it is passing fast away,
+the custom of fosterage.&nbsp; A Laird, a man of wealth and eminence,
+sends his child, either male or female, to a tacksman, or tenant, to
+be fostered.&nbsp; It is not always his own tenant, but some distant
+friend that obtains this honour; for an honour such a trust is very
+reasonably thought.&nbsp; The terms of fosterage seem to vary in different
+islands.&nbsp; In Mull, the father sends with his child a certain number
+of cows, to which the same number is added by the fosterer.&nbsp; The
+father appropriates a proportionable extent of ground, without rent,
+for their pasturage.&nbsp; If every cow brings a calf, half belongs
+to the fosterer, and half to the child; but if there be only one calf
+between two cows, it is the child&rsquo;s, and when the child returns
+to the parent, it is accompanied by all the cows given, both by the
+father and by the fosterer, with half of the increase of the stock by
+propagation.&nbsp; These beasts are considered as a portion, and called
+Macalive cattle, of which the father has the produce, but is supposed
+not to have the full property, but to owe the same number to the child,
+as a portion to the daughter, or a stock for the son.</p>
+<p>Children continue with the fosterer perhaps six years, and cannot,
+where this is the practice, be considered as burdensome.&nbsp; The fosterer,
+if he gives four cows, receives likewise four, and has, while the child
+continues with him, grass for eight without rent, with half the calves,
+and all the milk, for which he pays only four cows when he dismisses
+his Dalt, for that is the name for a foster child.</p>
+<p>Fosterage is, I believe, sometimes performed upon more liberal terms.&nbsp;
+Our friend, the young Laird of Col, was fostered by Macsweyn of Grissipol.&nbsp;
+Macsweyn then lived a tenant to Sir James Macdonald in the Isle of Sky;
+and therefore Col, whether he sent him cattle or not, could grant him
+no land.&nbsp; The Dalt, however, at his return, brought back a considerable
+number of Macalive cattle, and of the friendship so formed there have
+been good effects.&nbsp; When Macdonald raised his rents, Macsweyn was,
+like other tenants, discontented, and, resigning his farm, removed from
+Sky to Col, and was established at Grissipol.</p>
+<p>These observations we made by favour of the contrary wind that drove
+us to Col, an Island not often visited; for there is not much to amuse
+curiosity, or to attract avarice.</p>
+<p>The ground has been hitherto, I believe, used chiefly for pasturage.&nbsp;
+In a district, such as the eye can command, there is a general herdsman,
+who knows all the cattle of the neighbourhood, and whose station is
+upon a hill, from which he surveys the lower grounds; and if one man&rsquo;s
+cattle invade another&rsquo;s grass, drives them back to their own borders.&nbsp;
+But other means of profit begin to be found; kelp is gathered and burnt,
+and sloops are loaded with the concreted ashes.&nbsp; Cultivation is
+likely to be improved by the skill and encouragement of the present
+heir, and the inhabitants of those obscure vallies will partake of the
+general progress of life.</p>
+<p>The rents of the parts which belong to the Duke of Argyle, have been
+raised from fifty-five to one hundred and five pounds, whether from
+the land or the sea I cannot tell.&nbsp; The bounties of the sea have
+lately been so great, that a farm in Southuist has risen in ten years
+from a rent of thirty pounds to one hundred and eighty.</p>
+<p>He who lives in Col, and finds himself condemned to solitary meals,
+and incommunicable reflection, will find the usefulness of that middle
+order of Tacksmen, which some who applaud their own wisdom are wishing
+to destroy.&nbsp; Without intelligence man is not social, he is only
+gregarious; and little intelligence will there be, where all are constrained
+to daily labour, and every mind must wait upon the hand.</p>
+<p>After having listened for some days to the tempest, and wandered
+about the Island till our curiosity was satisfied, we began to think
+about our departure.&nbsp; To leave Col in October was not very easy.&nbsp;
+We however found a sloop which lay on the coast to carry kelp; and for
+a price which we thought levied upon our necessities, the master agreed
+to carry us to Mull, whence we might readily pass back to Scotland.</p>
+<h2>MULL</h2>
+<p>As we were to catch the first favourable breath, we spent the night
+not very elegantly nor pleasantly in the vessel, and were landed next
+day at Tobor Morar, a port in Mull, which appears to an unexperienced
+eye formed for the security of ships; for its mouth is closed by a small
+island, which admits them through narrow channels into a bason sufficiently
+capacious.&nbsp; They are indeed safe from the sea, but there is a hollow
+between the mountains, through which the wind issues from the land with
+very mischievous violence.</p>
+<p>There was no danger while we were there, and we found several other
+vessels at anchor; so that the port had a very commercial appearance.</p>
+<p>The young Laird of Col, who had determined not to let us lose his
+company, while there was any difficulty remaining, came over with us.&nbsp;
+His influence soon appeared; for he procured us horses, and conducted
+us to the house of Doctor Maclean, where we found very kind entertainment,
+and very pleasing conversation.&nbsp; Miss Maclean, who was born, and
+had been bred at Glasgow, having removed with her father to Mull, added
+to other qualifications, a great knowledge of the Earse language, which
+she had not learned in her childhood, but gained by study, and was the
+only interpreter of Earse poetry that I could ever find.</p>
+<p>The Isle of Mull is perhaps in extent the third of the Hebrides.&nbsp;
+It is not broken by waters, nor shot into promontories, but is a solid
+and compact mass, of breadth nearly equal to its length.&nbsp; Of the
+dimensions of the larger Islands, there is no knowledge approaching
+to exactness.&nbsp; I am willing to estimate it as containing about
+three hundred square miles.</p>
+<p>Mull had suffered like Sky by the black winter of seventy-one, in
+which, contrary to all experience, a continued frost detained the snow
+eight weeks upon the ground.&nbsp; Against a calamity never known, no
+provision had been made, and the people could only pine in helpless
+misery.&nbsp; One tenant was mentioned, whose cattle perished to the
+value of three hundred pounds; a loss which probably more than the life
+of man is necessary to repair.&nbsp; In countries like these, the descriptions
+of famine become intelligible.&nbsp; Where by vigorous and artful cultivation
+of a soil naturally fertile, there is commonly a superfluous growth
+both of grain and grass; where the fields are crowded with cattle; and
+where every hand is able to attract wealth from a distance, by making
+something that promotes ease, or gratifies vanity, a dear year produces
+only a comparative want, which is rather seen than felt, and which terminates
+commonly in no worse effect, than that of condemning the lower orders
+of the community to sacrifice a little luxury to convenience, or at
+most a little convenience to necessity.</p>
+<p>But where the climate is unkind, and the ground penurious, so that
+the most fruitful years will produce only enough to maintain themselves;
+where life unimproved, and unadorned, fades into something little more
+than naked existence, and every one is busy for himself, without any
+arts by which the pleasure of others may be increased; if to the daily
+burden of distress any additional weight be added, nothing remains but
+to despair and die.&nbsp; In Mull the disappointment of a harvest, or
+a murrain among the cattle, cuts off the regular provision; and they
+who have no manufactures can purchase no part of the superfluities of
+other countries.&nbsp; The consequence of a bad season is here not scarcity,
+but emptiness; and they whose plenty, was barely a supply of natural
+and present need, when that slender stock fails, must perish with hunger.</p>
+<p>All travel has its advantages.&nbsp; If the passenger visits better
+countries, he may learn to improve his own, and if fortune carries him
+to worse, he may learn to enjoy it.</p>
+<p>Mr. Boswell&rsquo;s curiosity strongly impelled him to survey Iona,
+or Icolmkil, which was to the early ages the great school of Theology,
+and is supposed to have been the place of sepulture for the ancient
+kings.&nbsp; I, though less eager, did not oppose him.</p>
+<p>That we might perform this expedition, it was necessary to traverse
+a great part of Mull.&nbsp; We passed a day at Dr. Maclean&rsquo;s,
+and could have been well contented to stay longer.&nbsp; But Col provided
+us horses, and we pursued our journey.&nbsp; This was a day of inconvenience,
+for the country is very rough, and my horse was but little.&nbsp; We
+travelled many hours through a tract, black and barren, in which, however,
+there were the reliques of humanity; for we found a ruined chapel in
+our way.</p>
+<p>It is natural, in traversing this gloom of desolation, to inquire,
+whether something may not be done to give nature a more cheerful face,
+and whether those hills and moors that afford heath cannot with a little
+care and labour bear something better?&nbsp; The first thought that
+occurs is to cover them with trees, for that in many of these naked
+regions trees will grow, is evident, because stumps and roots are yet
+remaining; and the speculatist hastily proceeds to censure that negligence
+and laziness that has omitted for so long a time so easy an improvement.</p>
+<p>To drop seeds into the ground, and attend their growth, requires
+little labour and no skill.&nbsp; He who remembers that all the woods,
+by which the wants of man have been supplied from the Deluge till now,
+were self-sown, will not easily be persuaded to think all the art and
+preparation necessary, which the Georgick writers prescribe to planters.&nbsp;
+Trees certainly have covered the earth with very little culture.&nbsp;
+They wave their tops among the rocks of Norway, and might thrive as
+well in the Highlands and Hebrides.</p>
+<p>But there is a frightful interval between the seed and timber.&nbsp;
+He that calculates the growth of trees, has the unwelcome remembrance
+of the shortness of life driven hard upon him.&nbsp; He knows that he
+is doing what will never benefit himself; and when he rejoices to see
+the stem rise, is disposed to repine that another shall cut it down.</p>
+<p>Plantation is naturally the employment of a mind unburdened with
+care, and vacant to futurity, saturated with present good, and at leisure
+to derive gratification from the prospect of posterity.&nbsp; He that
+pines with hunger, is in little care how others shall be fed.&nbsp;
+The poor man is seldom studious to make his grandson rich.&nbsp; It
+may be soon discovered, why in a place, which hardly supplies the cravings
+of necessity, there has been little attention to the delights of fancy,
+and why distant convenience is unregarded, where the thoughts are turned
+with incessant solicitude upon every possibility of immediate advantage.</p>
+<p>Neither is it quite so easy to raise large woods, as may be conceived.&nbsp;
+Trees intended to produce timber must be sown where they are to grow;
+and ground sown with trees must be kept useless for a long time, inclosed
+at an expence from which many will be discouraged by the remoteness
+of the profit, and watched with that attention, which, in places where
+it is most needed, will neither be given nor bought.&nbsp; That it cannot
+be plowed is evident; and if cattle be suffered to graze upon it, they
+will devour the plants as fast as they rise.&nbsp; Even in coarser countries,
+where herds and flocks are not fed, not only the deer and the wild goats
+will browse upon them, but the hare and rabbit will nibble them.&nbsp;
+It is therefore reasonable to believe, what I do not remember any naturalist
+to have remarked, that there was a time when the world was very thinly
+inhabited by beasts, as well as men, and that the woods had leisure
+to rise high before animals had bred numbers sufficient to intercept
+them.</p>
+<p>Sir James Macdonald, in part of the wastes of his territory, set
+or sowed trees, to the number, as I have been told, of several millions,
+expecting, doubtless, that they would grow up into future navies and
+cities; but for want of inclosure, and of that care which is always
+necessary, and will hardly ever be taken, all his cost and labour have
+been lost, and the ground is likely to continue an useless heath.</p>
+<p>Having not any experience of a journey in Mull, we had no doubt of
+reaching the sea by day-light, and therefore had not left Dr. Maclean&rsquo;s
+very early.&nbsp; We travelled diligently enough, but found the country,
+for road there was none, very difficult to pass.&nbsp; We were always
+struggling with some obstruction or other, and our vexation was not
+balanced by any gratification of the eye or mind.&nbsp; We were now
+long enough acquainted with hills and heath to have lost the emotion
+that they once raised, whether pleasing or painful, and had our mind
+employed only on our own fatigue.&nbsp; We were however sure, under
+Col&rsquo;s protection, of escaping all real evils.&nbsp; There was
+no house in Mull to which he could not introduce us.&nbsp; He had intended
+to lodge us, for that night, with a gentleman that lived upon the coast,
+but discovered on the way, that he then lay in bed without hope of life.</p>
+<p>We resolved not to embarrass a family, in a time of so much sorrow,
+if any other expedient could he found; and as the Island of Ulva was
+over-against us, it was determined that we should pass the strait and
+have recourse to the Laird, who, like the other gentlemen of the Islands,
+was known to Col.&nbsp; We expected to find a ferry-boat, but when at
+last we came to the water, the boat was gone.</p>
+<p>We were now again at a stop.&nbsp; It was the sixteenth of October,
+a time when it is not convenient to sleep in the Hebrides without a
+cover, and there was no house within our reach, but that which we had
+already declined.</p>
+<h2>ULVA</h2>
+<p>While we stood deliberating, we were happily espied from an Irish
+ship, that lay at anchor in the strait.&nbsp; The master saw that we
+wanted a passage, and with great civility sent us his boat, which quickly
+conveyed us to Ulva, where we were very liberally entertained by Mr.
+Macquarry.</p>
+<p>To Ulva we came in the dark, and left it before noon the next day.&nbsp;
+A very exact description therefore will not be expected.&nbsp; We were
+told, that it is an Island of no great extent, rough and barren, inhabited
+by the Macquarrys; a clan not powerful nor numerous, but of antiquity,
+which most other families are content to reverence.&nbsp; The name is
+supposed to be a depravation of some other; for the Earse language does
+not afford it any etymology.&nbsp; Macquarry is proprietor both of Ulva
+and some adjacent Islands, among which is Staffa, so lately raised to
+renown by Mr. Banks.</p>
+<p>When the Islanders were reproached with their ignorance, or insensibility
+of the wonders of Staffa, they had not much to reply.&nbsp; They had
+indeed considered it little, because they had always seen it; and none
+but philosophers, nor they always, are struck with wonder, otherwise
+than by novelty.&nbsp; How would it surprise an unenlightened ploughman,
+to hear a company of sober men, inquiring by what power the hand tosses
+a stone, or why the stone, when it is tossed, falls to the ground!</p>
+<p>Of the ancestors of Macquarry, who thus lies hid in his unfrequented
+Island, I have found memorials in all places where they could be expected.</p>
+<p>Inquiring after the reliques of former manners, I found that in Ulva,
+and, I think, no where else, is continued the payment of the Mercheta
+Mulierum; a fine in old times due to the Laird at the marriage of a
+virgin.&nbsp; The original of this claim, as of our tenure of Borough
+English, is variously delivered.&nbsp; It is pleasant to find ancient
+customs in old families.&nbsp; This payment, like others, was, for want
+of money, made anciently in the produce of the land.&nbsp; Macquarry
+was used to demand a sheep, for which he now takes a crown, by that
+inattention to the uncertain proportion between the value and the denomination
+of money, which has brought much disorder into Europe.&nbsp; A sheep
+has always the same power of supplying human wants, but a crown will
+bring at one time more, at another less.</p>
+<p>Ulva was not neglected by the piety of ardent times: it has still
+to show what was once a church.</p>
+<h2>INCH KENNETH</h2>
+<p>In the morning we went again into the boat, and were landed on Inch
+Kenneth, an Island about a mile long, and perhaps half a mile broad,
+remarkable for pleasantness and fertility.&nbsp; It is verdant and grassy,
+and fit both for pasture and tillage; but it has no trees.&nbsp; Its
+only inhabitants were Sir Allan Maclean and two young ladies, his daughters,
+with their servants.</p>
+<p>Romance does not often exhibit a scene that strikes the imagination
+more than this little desert in these depths of Western obscurity, occupied
+not by a gross herdsman, or amphibious fisherman, but by a gentleman
+and two ladies, of high birth, polished manners and elegant conversation,
+who, in a habitation raised not very far above the ground, but furnished
+with unexpected neatness and convenience, practised all the kindness
+of hospitality, and refinement of courtesy.</p>
+<p>Sir Allan is the Chieftain of the great clan of Maclean, which is
+said to claim the second place among the Highland families, yielding
+only to Macdonald.&nbsp; Though by the misconduct of his ancestors,
+most of the extensive territory, which would have descended to him,
+has been alienated, he still retains much of the dignity and authority
+of his birth.&nbsp; When soldiers were lately wanting for the American
+war, application was made to Sir Allan, and he nominated a hundred men
+for the service, who obeyed the summons, and bore arms under his command.</p>
+<p>He had then, for some time, resided with the young ladies in Inch
+Kenneth, where he lives not only with plenty, but with elegance, having
+conveyed to his cottage a collection of books, and what else is necessary
+to make his hours pleasant.</p>
+<p>When we landed, we were met by Sir Allan and the Ladies, accompanied
+by Miss Macquarry, who had passed some time with them, and now returned
+to Ulva with her father.</p>
+<p>We all walked together to the mansion, where we found one cottage
+for Sir Allan, and I think two more for the domesticks and the offices.&nbsp;
+We entered, and wanted little that palaces afford.&nbsp; Our room was
+neatly floored, and well lighted; and our dinner, which was dressed
+in one of the other huts, was plentiful and delicate.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon Sir Allan reminded us, that the day was Sunday,
+which he never suffered to pass without some religious distinction,
+and invited us to partake in his acts of domestick worship; which I
+hope neither Mr. Boswell nor myself will be suspected of a disposition
+to refuse.&nbsp; The elder of the Ladies read the English service.</p>
+<p>Inch Kenneth was once a seminary of ecclesiasticks, subordinate,
+I suppose, to Icolmkill.&nbsp; Sir Allan had a mind to trace the foundations
+of the college, but neither I nor Mr. Boswell, who bends a keener eye
+on vacancy, were able to perceive them.</p>
+<p>Our attention, however, was sufficiently engaged by a venerable chapel,
+which stands yet entire, except that the roof is gone.&nbsp; It is about
+sixty feet in length, and thirty in breadth.&nbsp; On one side of the
+altar is a bas relief of the blessed Virgin, and by it lies a little
+bell; which, though cracked, and without a clapper, has remained there
+for ages, guarded only by the venerableness of the place.&nbsp; The
+ground round the chapel is covered with gravestones of Chiefs and ladies;
+and still continues to be a place of sepulture.</p>
+<p>Inch Kenneth is a proper prelude to Icolmkill.&nbsp; It was not without
+some mournful emotion that we contemplated the ruins of religious structures
+and the monuments of the dead.</p>
+<p>On the next day we took a more distinct view of the place, and went
+with the boat to see oysters in the bed, out of which the boatmen forced
+up as many as were wanted.&nbsp; Even Inch Kenneth has a subordinate
+Island, named Sandiland, I suppose in contempt, where we landed, and
+found a rock, with a surface of perhaps four acres, of which one is
+naked stone, another spread with sand and shells, some of which I picked
+up for their glossy beauty, and two covered with a little earth and
+grass, on which Sir Allan has a few sheep.&nbsp; I doubt not but when
+there was a college at Inch Kenneth, there was a hermitage upon Sandiland.</p>
+<p>Having wandered over those extensive plains, we committed ourselves
+again to the winds and waters; and after a voyage of about ten minutes,
+in which we met with nothing very observable, were again safe upon dry
+ground.</p>
+<p>We told Sir Allan our desire of visiting Icolmkill, and entreated
+him to give us his protection, and his company.&nbsp; He thought proper
+to hesitate a little, but the Ladies hinted, that as they knew he would
+not finally refuse, he would do better if he preserved the grace of
+ready compliance.&nbsp; He took their advice, and promised to carry
+us on the morrow in his boat.</p>
+<p>We passed the remaining part of the day in such amusements as were
+in our power.&nbsp; Sir Allan related the American campaign, and at
+evening one of the Ladies played on her harpsichord, while Col and Mr.
+Boswell danced a Scottish reel with the other.</p>
+<p>We could have been easily persuaded to a longer stay upon Inch Kenneth,
+but life will not be all passed in delight.&nbsp; The session at Edinburgh
+was approaching, from which Mr. Boswell could not be absent.</p>
+<p>In the morning our boat was ready: it was high and strong.&nbsp;
+Sir Allan victualled it for the day, and provided able rowers.&nbsp;
+We now parted from the young Laird of Col, who had treated us with so
+much kindness, and concluded his favours by consigning us to Sir Allan.&nbsp;
+Here we had the last embrace of this amiable man, who, while these pages
+were preparing to attest his virtues, perished in the passage between
+Ulva and Inch Kenneth.</p>
+<p>Sir Allan, to whom the whole region was well known, told us of a
+very remarkable cave, to which he would show us the way.&nbsp; We had
+been disappointed already by one cave, and were not much elevated by
+the expectation of another.</p>
+<p>It was yet better to see it, and we stopped at some rocks on the
+coast of Mull.&nbsp; The mouth is fortified by vast fragments of stone,
+over which we made our way, neither very nimbly, nor very securely.&nbsp;
+The place, however, well repaid our trouble.&nbsp; The bottom, as far
+as the flood rushes in, was encumbered with large pebbles, but as we
+advanced was spread over with smooth sand.&nbsp; The breadth is about
+forty-five feet: the roof rises in an arch, almost regular, to a height
+which we could not measure; but I think it about thirty feet.</p>
+<p>This part of our curiosity was nearly frustrated; for though we went
+to see a cave, and knew that caves are dark, we forgot to carry tapers,
+and did not discover our omission till we were wakened by our wants.&nbsp;
+Sir Allan then sent one of the boatmen into the country, who soon returned
+with one little candle.&nbsp; We were thus enabled to go forward, but
+could not venture far.&nbsp; Having passed inward from the sea to a
+great depth, we found on the right hand a narrow passage, perhaps not
+more than six feet wide, obstructed by great stones, over which we climbed
+and came into a second cave, in breadth twenty-five feet.&nbsp; The
+air in this apartment was very warm, but not oppressive, nor loaded
+with vapours.&nbsp; Our light showed no tokens of a feculent or corrupted
+atmosphere.&nbsp; Here was a square stone, called, as we are told, Fingal&rsquo;s
+Table.</p>
+<p>If we had been provided with torches, we should have proceeded in
+our search, though we had already gone as far as any former adventurer,
+except some who are reported never to have returned; and, measuring
+our way back, we found it more than a hundred and sixty yards, the eleventh
+part of a mile.</p>
+<p>Our measures were not critically exact, having been made with a walking
+pole, such as it is convenient to carry in these rocky countries, of
+which I guessed the length by standing against it.&nbsp; In this there
+could be no great errour, nor do I much doubt but the Highlander, whom
+we employed, reported the number right.&nbsp; More nicety however is
+better, and no man should travel unprovided with instruments for taking
+heights and distances.</p>
+<p>There is yet another cause of errour not always easily surmounted,
+though more dangerous to the veracity of itinerary narratives, than
+imperfect mensuration.&nbsp; An observer deeply impressed by any remarkable
+spectacle, does not suppose, that the traces will soon vanish from his
+mind, and having commonly no great convenience for writing, defers the
+description to a time of more leisure, and better accommodation.</p>
+<p>He who has not made the experiment, or who is not accustomed to require
+rigorous accuracy from himself, will scarcely believe how much a few
+hours take from certainty of knowledge, and distinctness of imagery;
+how the succession of objects will be broken, how separate parts will
+be confused, and how many particular features and discriminations will
+be compressed and conglobated into one gross and general idea.</p>
+<p>To this dilatory notation must be imputed the false relations of
+travellers, where there is no imaginable motive to deceive.&nbsp; They
+trusted to memory, what cannot be trusted safely but to the eye, and
+told by guess what a few hours before they had known with certainty.&nbsp;
+Thus it was that Wheeler and Spon described with irreconcilable contrariety
+things which they surveyed together, and which both undoubtedly designed
+to show as they saw them.</p>
+<p>When we had satisfied our curiosity in the cave, so far as our penury
+of light permitted us, we clambered again to our boat, and proceeded
+along the coast of Mull to a headland, called Atun, remarkable for the
+columnar form of the rocks, which rise in a series of pilasters, with
+a degree of regularity, which Sir Allan thinks not less worthy of curiosity
+than the shore of Staffa.</p>
+<p>Not long after we came to another range of black rocks, which had
+the appearance of broken pilasters, set one behind another to a great
+depth.&nbsp; This place was chosen by Sir Allan for our dinner.&nbsp;
+We were easily accommodated with seats, for the stones were of all heights,
+and refreshed ourselves and our boatmen, who could have no other rest
+till we were at Icolmkill.</p>
+<p>The evening was now approaching, and we were yet at a considerable
+distance from the end of our expedition.&nbsp; We could therefore stop
+no more to make remarks in the way, but set forward with some degree
+of eagerness.&nbsp; The day soon failed us, and the moon presented a
+very solemn and pleasing scene.&nbsp; The sky was clear, so that the
+eye commanded a wide circle: the sea was neither still nor turbulent:
+the wind neither silent nor loud.&nbsp; We were never far from one coast
+or another, on which, if the weather had become violent, we could have
+found shelter, and therefore contemplated at ease the region through
+which we glided in the tranquillity of the night, and saw now a rock
+and now an island grow gradually conspicuous and gradually obscure.&nbsp;
+I committed the fault which I have just been censuring, in neglecting,
+as we passed, to note the series of this placid navigation.</p>
+<p>We were very near an Island, called Nun&rsquo;s Island, perhaps from
+an ancient convent.&nbsp; Here is said to have been dug the stone that
+was used in the buildings of Icolmkill.&nbsp; Whether it is now inhabited
+we could not stay to inquire.</p>
+<p>At last we came to Icolmkill, but found no convenience for landing.&nbsp;
+Our boat could not be forced very near the dry ground, and our Highlanders
+carried us over the water.</p>
+<p>We were now treading that illustrious Island, which was once the
+luminary of the Caledonian regions, whence savage clans and roving barbarians
+derived the benefits of knowledge, and the blessings of religion.&nbsp;
+To abstract the mind from all local emotion would be impossible, if
+it were endeavoured, and would be foolish, if it were possible.&nbsp;
+Whatever withdraws us from the power of our senses; whatever makes the
+past, the distant, or the future predominate over the present, advances
+us in the dignity of thinking beings.&nbsp; Far from me and from my
+friends, be such frigid philosophy as may conduct us indifferent and
+unmoved over any ground which has been dignified by wisdom, bravery,
+or virtue.&nbsp; That man is little to be envied, whose patriotism would
+not gain force upon the plain of Marathon, or whose piety would not
+grow warmer among the ruins of Iona!</p>
+<p>We came too late to visit monuments: some care was necessary for
+ourselves.&nbsp; Whatever was in the Island, Sir Allan could command,
+for the inhabitants were Macleans; but having little they could not
+give us much.&nbsp; He went to the headman of the Island, whom Fame,
+but Fame delights in amplifying, represents as worth no less than fifty
+pounds.&nbsp; He was perhaps proud enough of his guests, but ill prepared
+for our entertainment; however, he soon produced more provision than
+men not luxurious require.&nbsp; Our lodging was next to be provided.&nbsp;
+We found a barn well stocked with hay, and made our beds as soft as
+we could.</p>
+<p>In the morning we rose and surveyed the place.&nbsp; The churches
+of the two convents are both standing, though unroofed.&nbsp; They were
+built of unhewn stone, but solid, and not inelegant.&nbsp; I brought
+away rude measures of the buildings, such as I cannot much trust myself,
+inaccurately taken, and obscurely noted.&nbsp; Mr. Pennant&rsquo;s delineations,
+which are doubtless exact, have made my unskilful description less necessary.</p>
+<p>The episcopal church consists of two parts, separated by the belfry,
+and built at different times.&nbsp; The original church had, like others,
+the altar at one end, and tower at the other: but as it grew too small,
+another building of equal dimension was added, and the tower then was
+necessarily in the middle.</p>
+<p>That these edifices are of different ages seems evident.&nbsp; The
+arch of the first church is Roman, being part of a circle; that of the
+additional building is pointed, and therefore Gothick, or Saracenical;
+the tower is firm, and wants only to be floored and covered.</p>
+<p>Of the chambers or cells belonging to the monks, there are some walls
+remaining, but nothing approaching to a complete apartment.</p>
+<p>The bottom of the church is so incumbered with mud and rubbish, that
+we could make no discoveries of curious inscriptions, and what there
+are have been already published.&nbsp; The place is said to be known
+where the black stones lie concealed, on which the old Highland Chiefs,
+when they made contracts and alliances, used to take the oath, which
+was considered as more sacred than any other obligation, and which could
+not be violated without the blackest infamy.&nbsp; In those days of
+violence and rapine, it was of great importance to impress upon savage
+minds the sanctity of an oath, by some particular and extraordinary
+circumstances.&nbsp; They would not have recourse to the black stones,
+upon small or common occasions, and when they had established their
+faith by this tremendous sanction, inconstancy and treachery were no
+longer feared.</p>
+<p>The chapel of the nunnery is now used by the inhabitants as a kind
+of general cow-house, and the bottom is consequently too miry for examination.&nbsp;
+Some of the stones which covered the later abbesses have inscriptions,
+which might yet be read, if the chapel were cleansed.&nbsp; The roof
+of this, as of all the other buildings, is totally destroyed, not only
+because timber quickly decays when it is neglected, but because in an
+island utterly destitute of wood, it was wanted for use, and was consequently
+the first plunder of needy rapacity.</p>
+<p>The chancel of the nuns&rsquo; chapel is covered with an arch of
+stone, to which time has done no injury; and a small apartment communicating
+with the choir, on the north side, like the chapter-house in cathedrals,
+roofed with stone in the same manner, is likewise entire.</p>
+<p>In one of the churches was a marble altar, which the superstition
+of the inhabitants has destroyed.&nbsp; Their opinion was, that a fragment
+of this stone was a defence against shipwrecks, fire, and miscarriages.&nbsp;
+In one corner of the church the bason for holy water is yet unbroken.</p>
+<p>The cemetery of the nunnery was, till very lately, regarded with
+such reverence, that only women were buried in it.&nbsp; These reliques
+of veneration always produce some mournful pleasure.&nbsp; I could have
+forgiven a great injury more easily than the violation of this imaginary
+sanctity.</p>
+<p>South of the chapel stand the walls of a large room, which was probably
+the hall, or refectory of the nunnery.&nbsp; This apartment is capable
+of repair.&nbsp; Of the rest of the convent there are only fragments.</p>
+<p>Besides the two principal churches, there are, I think, five chapels
+yet standing, and three more remembered.&nbsp; There are also crosses,
+of which two bear the names of St. John and St. Matthew.</p>
+<p>A large space of ground about these consecrated edifices is covered
+with gravestones, few of which have any inscription.&nbsp; He that surveys
+it, attended by an insular antiquary, may be told where the Kings of
+many nations are buried, and if he loves to sooth his imagination with
+the thoughts that naturally rise in places where the great and the powerful
+lie mingled with the dust, let him listen in submissive silence; for
+if he asks any questions, his delight is at an end.</p>
+<p>Iona has long enjoyed, without any very credible attestation, the
+honour of being reputed the cemetery of the Scottish Kings.&nbsp; It
+is not unlikely, that, when the opinion of local sanctity was prevalent,
+the Chieftains of the Isles, and perhaps some of the Norwegian or Irish
+princes were reposited in this venerable enclosure.&nbsp; But by whom
+the subterraneous vaults are peopled is now utterly unknown.&nbsp; The
+graves are very numerous, and some of them undoubtedly contain the remains
+of men, who did not expect to be so soon forgotten.</p>
+<p>Not far from this awful ground, may be traced the garden of the monastery:
+the fishponds are yet discernible, and the aqueduct, which supplied
+them, is still in use.</p>
+<p>There remains a broken building, which is called the Bishop&rsquo;s
+house, I know not by what authority.&nbsp; It was once the residence
+of some man above the common rank, for it has two stories and a chimney.&nbsp;
+We were shewn a chimney at the other end, which was only a nich, without
+perforation, but so much does antiquarian credulity, or patriotick vanity
+prevail, that it was not much more safe to trust the eye of our instructor
+than the memory.</p>
+<p>There is in the Island one house more, and only one, that has a chimney:
+we entered it, and found it neither wanting repair nor inhabitants;
+but to the farmers, who now possess it, the chimney is of no great value;
+for their fire was made on the floor, in the middle of the room, and
+notwithstanding the dignity of their mansion, they rejoiced, like their
+neighbours, in the comforts of smoke.</p>
+<p>It is observed, that ecclesiastical colleges are always in the most
+pleasant and fruitful places.&nbsp; While the world allowed the monks
+their choice, it is surely no dishonour that they chose well.&nbsp;
+This Island is remarkably fruitful.&nbsp; The village near the churches
+is said to contain seventy families, which, at five in a family, is
+more than a hundred inhabitants to a mile.&nbsp; There are perhaps other
+villages: yet both corn and cattle are annually exported.</p>
+<p>But the fruitfulness of Iona is now its whole prosperity.&nbsp; The
+inhabitants are remarkably gross, and remarkably neglected: I know not
+if they are visited by any Minister.&nbsp; The Island, which was once
+the metropolis of learning and piety, has now no school for education,
+nor temple for worship, only two inhabitants that can speak English,
+and not one that can write or read.</p>
+<p>The people are of the clan of Maclean; and though Sir Allan had not
+been in the place for many years, he was received with all the reverence
+due to their Chieftain.&nbsp; One of them being sharply reprehended
+by him, for not sending him some rum, declared after his departure,
+in Mr. Boswell&rsquo;s presence, that he had no design of disappointing
+him, &lsquo;for,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I would cut my bones for him;
+and if he had sent his dog for it, he should have had it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When we were to depart, our boat was left by the ebb at a great distance
+from the water, but no sooner did we wish it afloat, than the islanders
+gathered round it, and, by the union of many hands, pushed it down the
+beach; every man who could contribute his help seemed to think himself
+happy in the opportunity of being, for a moment, useful to his Chief.</p>
+<p>We now left those illustrious ruins, by which Mr. Boswell was much
+affected, nor would I willingly be thought to have looked upon them
+without some emotion.&nbsp; Perhaps, in the revolutions of the world,
+Iona may be sometime again the instructress of the Western Regions.</p>
+<p>It was no long voyage to Mull, where, under Sir Allan&rsquo;s protection,
+we landed in the evening, and were entertained for the night by Mr.
+Maclean, a Minister that lives upon the coast, whose elegance of conversation,
+and strength of judgment, would make him conspicuous in places of greater
+celebrity.&nbsp; Next day we dined with Dr. Maclean, another physician,
+and then travelled on to the house of a very powerful Laird, Maclean
+of Lochbuy; for in this country every man&rsquo;s name is Maclean.</p>
+<p>Where races are thus numerous, and thus combined, none but the Chief
+of a clan is addressed by his name.&nbsp; The Laird of Dunvegan is called
+Macleod, but other gentlemen of the same family are denominated by the
+places where they reside, as Raasa, or Talisker.&nbsp; The distinction
+of the meaner people is made by their Christian names.&nbsp; In consequence
+of this practice, the late Laird of Macfarlane, an eminent genealogist,
+considered himself as disrespectfully treated, if the common addition
+was applied to him.&nbsp; Mr. Macfarlane, said he, may with equal propriety
+be said to many; but I, and I only, am Macfarlane.</p>
+<p>Our afternoon journey was through a country of such gloomy desolation,
+that Mr. Boswell thought no part of the Highlands equally terrifick,
+yet we came without any difficulty, at evening, to Lochbuy, where we
+found a true Highland Laird, rough and haughty, and tenacious of his
+dignity; who, hearing my name, inquired whether I was of the Johnstons
+of Glencroe, or of Ardnamurchan.</p>
+<p>Lochbuy has, like the other insular Chieftains, quitted the castle
+that sheltered his ancestors, and lives near it, in a mansion not very
+spacious or splendid.&nbsp; I have seen no houses in the Islands much
+to be envied for convenience or magnificence, yet they bare testimony
+to the progress of arts and civility, as they shew that rapine and surprise
+are no longer dreaded, and are much more commodious than the ancient
+fortresses.</p>
+<p>The castles of the Hebrides, many of which are standing, and many
+ruined, were always built upon points of land, on the margin of the
+sea.&nbsp; For the choice of this situation there must have been some
+general reason, which the change of manners has left in obscurity.&nbsp;
+They were of no use in the days of piracy, as defences of the coast;
+for it was equally accessible in other places.&nbsp; Had they been sea-marks
+or light-houses, they would have been of more use to the invader than
+the natives, who could want no such directions of their own waters:
+for a watch-tower, a cottage on a hill would have been better, as it
+would have commanded a wider view.</p>
+<p>If they be considered merely as places of retreat, the situation
+seems not well chosen; for the Laird of an Island is safest from foreign
+enemies in the center; on the coast he might be more suddenly surprised
+than in the inland parts; and the invaders, if their enterprise miscarried,
+might more easily retreat.&nbsp; Some convenience, however, whatever
+it was, their position on the shore afforded; for uniformity of practice
+seldom continues long without good reason.</p>
+<p>A castle in the Islands is only a single tower of three or four stories,
+of which the walls are sometimes eight or nine feet thick, with narrow
+windows, and close winding stairs of stone.&nbsp; The top rises in a
+cone, or pyramid of stone, encompassed by battlements.&nbsp; The intermediate
+floors are sometimes frames of timber, as in common houses, and sometimes
+arches of stone, or alternately stone and timber; so that there was
+very little danger from fire.&nbsp; In the center of every floor, from
+top to bottom, is the chief room, of no great extent, round which there
+are narrow cavities, or recesses, formed by small vacuities, or by a
+double wall.&nbsp; I know not whether there be ever more than one fire-place.&nbsp;
+They had not capacity to contain many people, or much provision; but
+their enemies could seldom stay to blockade them; for if they failed
+in the first attack, their next care was to escape.</p>
+<p>The walls were always too strong to be shaken by such desultory hostilities;
+the windows were too narrow to be entered, and the battlements too high
+to be scaled.&nbsp; The only danger was at the gates, over which the
+wall was built with a square cavity, not unlike a chimney, continued
+to the top.&nbsp; Through this hollow the defendants let fall stones
+upon those who attempted to break the gate, and poured down water, perhaps
+scalding water, if the attack was made with fire.&nbsp; The castle of
+Lochbuy was secured by double doors, of which the outer was an iron
+grate.</p>
+<p>In every castle is a well and a dungeon.&nbsp; The use of the well
+is evident.&nbsp; The dungeon is a deep subterraneous cavity, walled
+on the sides, and arched on the top, into which the descent is through
+a narrow door, by a ladder or a rope, so that it seems impossible to
+escape, when the rope or ladder is drawn up.&nbsp; The dungeon was,
+I suppose, in war, a prison for such captives as were treated with severity,
+and, in peace, for such delinquents as had committed crimes within the
+Laird&rsquo;s jurisdiction; for the mansions of many Lairds were, till
+the late privation of their privileges, the halls of justice to their
+own tenants.</p>
+<p>As these fortifications were the productions of mere necessity, they
+are built only for safety, with little regard to convenience, and with
+none to elegance or pleasure.&nbsp; It was sufficient for a Laird of
+the Hebrides, if he had a strong house, in which he could hide his wife
+and children from the next clan.&nbsp; That they are not large nor splendid
+is no wonder.&nbsp; It is not easy to find how they were raised, such
+as they are, by men who had no money, in countries where the labourers
+and artificers could scarcely be fed.&nbsp; The buildings in different
+parts of the Island shew their degrees of wealth and power.&nbsp; I
+believe that for all the castles which I have seen beyond the Tweed,
+the ruins yet remaining of some one of those which the English built
+in Wales, would supply materials.</p>
+<p>These castles afford another evidence that the fictions of romantick
+chivalry had for their basis the real manners of the feudal times, when
+every Lord of a seignory lived in his hold lawless and unaccountable,
+with all the licentiousness and insolence of uncontested superiority
+and unprincipled power.&nbsp; The traveller, whoever he might be, coming
+to the fortified habitation of a Chieftain, would, probably, have been
+interrogated from the battlements, admitted with caution at the gate,
+introduced to a petty Monarch, fierce with habitual hostility, and vigilant
+with ignorant suspicion; who, according to his general temper, or accidental
+humour, would have seated a stranger as his guest at the table, or as
+a spy confined him in the dungeon.</p>
+<p>Lochbuy means the Yellow Lake, which is the name given to an inlet
+of the sea, upon which the castle of Mr. Maclean stands.&nbsp; The reason
+of the appellation we did not learn.</p>
+<p>We were now to leave the Hebrides, where we had spent some weeks
+with sufficient amusement, and where we had amplified our thoughts with
+new scenes of nature, and new modes of life.&nbsp; More time would have
+given us a more distinct view, but it was necessary that Mr. Boswell
+should return before the courts of justice were opened; and it was not
+proper to live too long upon hospitality, however liberally imparted.</p>
+<p>Of these Islands it must be confessed, that they have not many allurements,
+but to the mere lover of naked nature.&nbsp; The inhabitants are thin,
+provisions are scarce, and desolation and penury give little pleasure.</p>
+<p>The people collectively considered are not few, though their numbers
+are small in proportion to the space which they occupy.&nbsp; Mull is
+said to contain six thousand, and Sky fifteen thousand.&nbsp; Of the
+computation respecting Mull, I can give no account; but when I doubted
+the truth of the numbers attributed to Sky, one of the Ministers exhibited
+such facts as conquered my incredulity.</p>
+<p>Of the proportion, which the product of any region bears to the people,
+an estimate is commonly made according to the pecuniary price of the
+necessaries of life; a principle of judgment which is never certain,
+because it supposes what is far from truth, that the value of money
+is always the same, and so measures an unknown quantity by an uncertain
+standard.&nbsp; It is competent enough when the markets of the same
+country, at different times, and those times not too distant, are to
+be compared; but of very little use for the purpose of making one nation
+acquainted with the state of another.&nbsp; Provisions, though plentiful,
+are sold in places of great pecuniary opulence for nominal prices, to
+which, however scarce, where gold and silver are yet scarcer, they can
+never be raised.</p>
+<p>In the Western Islands there is so little internal commerce, that
+hardly any thing has a known or settled rate.&nbsp; The price of things
+brought in, or carried out, is to be considered as that of a foreign
+market; and even this there is some difficulty in discovering, because
+their denominations of quantity are different from ours; and when there
+is ignorance on both sides, no appeal can be made to a common measure.</p>
+<p>This, however, is not the only impediment.&nbsp; The Scots, with
+a vigilance of jealousy which never goes to sleep, always suspect that
+an Englishman despises them for their poverty, and to convince him that
+they are not less rich than their neighbours, are sure to tell him a
+price higher than the true.&nbsp; When Lesley, two hundred years ago,
+related so punctiliously, that a hundred hen eggs, new laid, were sold
+in the Islands for a peny, he supposed that no inference could possibly
+follow, but that eggs were in great abundance.&nbsp; Posterity has since
+grown wiser; and having learned, that nominal and real value may differ,
+they now tell no such stories, lest the foreigner should happen to collect,
+not that eggs are many, but that pence are few.</p>
+<p>Money and wealth have by the use of commercial language been so long
+confounded, that they are commonly supposed to be the same; and this
+prejudice has spread so widely in Scotland, that I know not whether
+I found man or woman, whom I interrogated concerning payments of money,
+that could surmount the illiberal desire of deceiving me, by representing
+every thing as dearer than it is.</p>
+<p>From Lochbuy we rode a very few miles to the side of Mull, which
+faces Scotland, where, having taken leave of our kind protector, Sir
+Allan, we embarked in a boat, in which the seat provided for our accommodation
+was a heap of rough brushwood; and on the twenty-second of October reposed
+at a tolerable inn on the main land.</p>
+<p>On the next day we began our journey southwards.&nbsp; The weather
+was tempestuous.&nbsp; For half the day the ground was rough, and our
+horses were still small.&nbsp; Had they required much restraint, we
+might have been reduced to difficulties; for I think we had amongst
+us but one bridle.&nbsp; We fed the poor animals liberally, and they
+performed their journey well.&nbsp; In the latter part of the day, we
+came to a firm and smooth road, made by the soldiers, on which we travelled
+with great security, busied with contemplating the scene about us.&nbsp;
+The night came on while we had yet a great part of the way to go, though
+not so dark, but that we could discern the cataracts which poured down
+the hills, on one side, and fell into one general channel that ran with
+great violence on the other.&nbsp; The wind was loud, the rain was heavy,
+and the whistling of the blast, the fall of the shower, the rush of
+the cataracts, and the roar of the torrent, made a nobler chorus of
+the rough musick of nature than it had ever been my chance to hear before.&nbsp;
+The streams, which ran cross the way from the hills to the main current,
+were so frequent, that after a while I began to count them; and, in
+ten miles, reckoned fifty-five, probably missing some, and having let
+some pass before they forced themselves upon my notice.&nbsp; At last
+we came to Inverary, where we found an inn, not only commodious, but
+magnificent.</p>
+<p>The difficulties of peregrination were now at an end.&nbsp; Mr. Boswell
+had the honour of being known to the Duke of Argyle, by whom we were
+very kindly entertained at his splendid seat, and supplied with conveniences
+for surveying his spacious park and rising forests.</p>
+<p>After two days stay at Inverary we proceeded Southward over Glencroe,
+a black and dreary region, now made easily passable by a military road,
+which rises from either end of the glen by an acclivity not dangerously
+steep, but sufficiently laborious.&nbsp; In the middle, at the top of
+the hill, is a seat with this inscription, &lsquo;Rest, and be thankful.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Stones were placed to mark the distances, which the inhabitants have
+taken away, resolved, they said, &lsquo;to have no new miles.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In this rainy season the hills streamed with waterfalls, which, crossing
+the way, formed currents on the other side, that ran in contrary directions
+as they fell to the north or south of the summit.&nbsp; Being, by the
+favour of the Duke, well mounted, I went up and down the hill with great
+convenience.</p>
+<p>From Glencroe we passed through a pleasant country to the banks of
+Loch Lomond, and were received at the house of Sir James Colquhoun,
+who is owner of almost all the thirty islands of the Loch, which we
+went in a boat next morning to survey.&nbsp; The heaviness of the rain
+shortened our voyage, but we landed on one island planted with yew,
+and stocked with deer, and on another containing perhaps not more than
+half an acre, remarkable for the ruins of an old castle, on which the
+osprey builds her annual nest.&nbsp; Had Loch Lomond been in a happier
+climate, it would have been the boast of wealth and vanity to own one
+of the little spots which it incloses, and to have employed upon it
+all the arts of embellishment.&nbsp; But as it is, the islets, which
+court the gazer at a distance, disgust him at his approach, when he
+finds, instead of soft lawns; and shady thickets, nothing more than
+uncultivated ruggedness.</p>
+<p>Where the Loch discharges itself into a river, called the Leven,
+we passed a night with Mr. Smollet, a relation of Doctor Smollet, to
+whose memory he has raised an obelisk on the bank near the house in
+which he was born.&nbsp; The civility and respect which we found at
+every place, it is ungrateful to omit, and tedious to repeat.&nbsp;
+Here we were met by a post-chaise, that conveyed us to Glasgow.</p>
+<p>To describe a city so much frequented as Glasgow, is unnecessary.&nbsp;
+The prosperity of its commerce appears by the greatness of many private
+houses, and a general appearance of wealth.&nbsp; It is the only episcopal
+city whose cathedral was left standing in the rage of Reformation.&nbsp;
+It is now divided into many separate places of worship, which, taken
+all together, compose a great pile, that had been some centuries in
+building, but was never finished; for the change of religion intercepted
+its progress, before the cross isle was added, which seems essential
+to a Gothick cathedral.</p>
+<p>The college has not had a sufficient share of the increasing magnificence
+of the place.&nbsp; The session was begun; for it commences on the tenth
+of October and continues to the tenth of June, but the students appeared
+not numerous, being, I suppose, not yet returned from their several
+homes.&nbsp; The division of the academical year into one session, and
+one recess, seems to me better accommodated to the present state of
+life, than that variegation of time by terms and vacations derived from
+distant centuries, in which it was probably convenient, and still continued
+in the English universities.&nbsp; So many solid months as the Scotch
+scheme of education joins together, allow and encourage a plan for each
+part of the year; but with us, he that has settled himself to study
+in the college is soon tempted into the country, and he that has adjusted
+his life in the country, is summoned back to his college.</p>
+<p>Yet when I have allowed to the universities of Scotland a more rational
+distribution of time, I have given them, so far as my inquiries have
+informed me, all that they can claim.&nbsp; The students, for the most
+part, go thither boys, and depart before they are men; they carry with
+them little fundamental knowledge, and therefore the superstructure
+cannot be lofty.&nbsp; The grammar schools are not generally well supplied;
+for the character of a school-master being there less honourable than
+in England, is seldom accepted by men who are capable to adorn it, and
+where the school has been deficient, the college can effect little.</p>
+<p>Men bred in the universities of Scotland cannot be expected to be
+often decorated with the splendours of ornamental erudition, but they
+obtain a mediocrity of knowledge, between learning and ignorance, not
+inadequate to the purposes of common life, which is, I believe, very
+widely diffused among them, and which countenanced in general by a national
+combination so invidious, that their friends cannot defend it, and actuated
+in particulars by a spirit of enterprise, so vigorous, that their enemies
+are constrained to praise it, enables them to find, or to make their
+way to employment, riches, and distinction.</p>
+<p>From Glasgow we directed our course to Auchinleck, an estate devolved,
+through a long series of ancestors, to Mr. Boswell&rsquo;s father, the
+present possessor.&nbsp; In our way we found several places remarkable
+enough in themselves, but already described by those who viewed them
+at more leisure, or with much more skill; and stopped two days at Mr.
+Campbell&rsquo;s, a gentleman married to Mr. Boswell&rsquo;s sister.</p>
+<p>Auchinleck, which signifies a stony field, seems not now to have
+any particular claim to its denomination.&nbsp; It is a district generally
+level, and sufficiently fertile, but like all the Western side of Scotland,
+incommoded by very frequent rain.&nbsp; It was, with the rest of the
+country, generally naked, till the present possessor finding, by the
+growth of some stately trees near his old castle, that the ground was
+favourable enough to timber, adorned it very diligently with annual
+plantations.</p>
+<p>Lord Auchinleck, who is one of the Judges of Scotland, and therefore
+not wholly at leisure for domestick business or pleasure, has yet found
+time to make improvements in his patrimony.&nbsp; He has built a house
+of hewn stone, very stately, and durable, and has advanced the value
+of his lands with great tenderness to his tenants.</p>
+<p>I was, however, less delighted with the elegance of the modern mansion,
+than with the sullen dignity of the old castle.&nbsp; I clambered with
+Mr. Boswell among the ruins, which afford striking images of ancient
+life.&nbsp; It is, like other castles, built upon a point of rock, and
+was, I believe, anciently surrounded with a moat.&nbsp; There is another
+rock near it, to which the drawbridge, when it was let down, is said
+to have reached.&nbsp; Here, in the ages of tumult and rapine, the Laird
+was surprised and killed by the neighbouring Chief, who perhaps might
+have extinguished the family, had he not in a few days been seized and
+hanged, together with his sons, by Douglas, who came with his forces
+to the relief of Auchinleck.</p>
+<p>At no great distance from the house runs a pleasing brook, by a red
+rock, out of which has been hewn a very agreeable and commodious summer-house,
+at less expence, as Lord Auchinleck told me, than would have been required
+to build a room of the same dimensions.&nbsp; The rock seems to have
+no more dampness than any other wall.&nbsp; Such opportunities of variety
+it is judicious not to neglect.</p>
+<p>We now returned to Edinburgh, where I passed some days with men of
+learning, whose names want no advancement from my commemoration, or
+with women of elegance, which perhaps disclaims a pedant&rsquo;s praise.</p>
+<p>The conversation of the Scots grows every day less unpleasing to
+the English; their peculiarities wear fast away; their dialect is likely
+to become in half a century provincial and rustick, even to themselves.&nbsp;
+The great, the learned, the ambitious, and the vain, all cultivate the
+English phrase, and the English pronunciation, and in splendid companies
+Scotch is not much heard, except now and then from an old Lady.</p>
+<p>There is one subject of philosophical curiosity to be found in Edinburgh,
+which no other city has to shew; a college of the deaf and dumb, who
+are taught to speak, to read, to write, and to practice arithmetick,
+by a gentleman, whose name is Braidwood.&nbsp; The number which attends
+him is, I think, about twelve, which he brings together into a little
+school, and instructs according to their several degrees of proficiency.</p>
+<p>I do not mean to mention the instruction of the deaf as new.&nbsp;
+Having been first practised upon the son of a constable of Spain, it
+was afterwards cultivated with much emulation in England, by Wallis
+and Holder, and was lately professed by Mr. Baker, who once flattered
+me with hopes of seeing his method published.&nbsp; How far any former
+teachers have succeeded, it is not easy to know; the improvement of
+Mr. Braidwood&rsquo;s pupils is wonderful.&nbsp; They not only speak,
+write, and understand what is written, but if he that speaks looks towards
+them, and modifies his organs by distinct and full utterance, they know
+so well what is spoken, that it is an expression scarcely figurative
+to say, they hear with the eye.&nbsp; That any have attained to the
+power mentioned by Burnet, of feeling sounds, by laying a hand on the
+speaker&rsquo;s mouth, I know not; but I have seen so much, that I can
+believe more; a single word, or a short sentence, I think, may possibly
+be so distinguished.</p>
+<p>It will readily be supposed by those that consider this subject,
+that Mr. Braidwood&rsquo;s scholars spell accurately.&nbsp; Orthography
+is vitiated among such as learn first to speak, and then to write, by
+imperfect notions of the relation between letters and vocal utterance;
+but to those students every character is of equal importance; for letters
+are to them not symbols of names, but of things; when they write they
+do not represent a sound, but delineate a form.</p>
+<p>This school I visited, and found some of the scholars waiting for
+their master, whom they are said to receive at his entrance with smiling
+countenances and sparkling eyes, delighted with the hope of new ideas.&nbsp;
+One of the young Ladies had her slate before her, on which I wrote a
+question consisting of three figures, to be multiplied by two figures.&nbsp;
+She looked upon it, and quivering her fingers in a manner which I thought
+very pretty, but of which I know not whether it was art or play, multiplied
+the sum regularly in two lines, observing the decimal place; but did
+not add the two lines together, probably disdaining so easy an operation.&nbsp;
+I pointed at the place where the sum total should stand, and she noted
+it with such expedition as seemed to shew that she had it only to write.</p>
+<p>It was pleasing to see one of the most desperate of human calamities
+capable of so much help; whatever enlarges hope, will exalt courage;
+after having seen the deaf taught arithmetick, who would be afraid to
+cultivate the Hebrides?</p>
+<p>Such are the things which this journey has given me an opportunity
+of seeing, and such are the reflections which that sight has raised.&nbsp;
+Having passed my time almost wholly in cities, I may have been surprised
+by modes of life and appearances of nature, that are familiar to men
+of wider survey and more varied conversation.&nbsp; Novelty and ignorance
+must always be reciprocal, and I cannot but be conscious that my thoughts
+on national manners, are the thoughts of one who has seen but little.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A JOURNEY TO THE WESTERN ISLES OF</p>
+<pre>
+SCOTLAND***
+
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