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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/37882-8.txt b/37882-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3ba5c56 --- /dev/null +++ b/37882-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,3386 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Punch in the Highlands, by Various + +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: Mr. Punch in the Highlands + +Author: Various + +Editor: J. A. Hammerton + +Illustrator: Charles Keene + and others + +Release Date: October 30, 2011 [EBook #37882] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS *** + + + + +Produced by Neville Allen, Chris Curnow and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + + PUNCH LIBRARY OF HUMOUR + + Edited by J. A. Hammerton + +Designed to provide in a series of volumes, each complete in itself, the +cream of our national humour, contributed by the masters of comic +draughtsmanship and the leading wits of the age to "Punch", from its +beginning in 1841 to the present day. + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +[Illustration] + +[Illustration: THRIFT + +_Highlander (he had struck his foot against a "stane")._ "Phew-ts!--e-eh +what a ding ma puir buit wad a gotten if a'd had it on!!"] + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +[Illustration] + +AS PICTURED BY + +CHARLES KEENE, JOHN LEECH, GEORGE DU MAURIER, W. RALSTON, L. RAVEN-HILL, +J. BERNARD PARTRIDGE, E. T. REED, G. D. ARMOUR, CECIL ALDIN, A. S. BOYD, +ETC. + +_WITH 140 ILLUSTRATIONS_ + +PUBLISHED BY ARRANGEMENT WITH THE PROPRIETORS OF "PUNCH" + +THE EDUCATIONAL BOOK CO. LTD. + + * * * * * + +The Punch Library of Humour + +_Twenty-five volumes, crown 8vo, 192 pages +fully illustrated_ + + LIFE IN LONDON + COUNTRY LIFE + IN THE HIGHLANDS + SCOTTISH HUMOUR + IRISH HUMOUR + COCKNEY HUMOUR + IN SOCIETY + AFTER DINNER STORIES + IN BOHEMIA + AT THE PLAY + MR. PUNCH AT HOME + ON THE CONTINONG + RAILWAY BOOK + AT THE SEASIDE + MR. PUNCH AFLOAT + IN THE HUNTING FIELD + MR. PUNCH ON TOUR + WITH ROD AND GUN + MR. PUNCH AWHEEL + BOOK OF SPORTS + GOLF STORIES + IN WIG AND GOWN + ON THE WARPATH + BOOK OF LOVE + WITH THE CHILDREN + +[Illustration] + + * * * * * + +NORTHWARD HO! + +SCOTSMEN--Highlanders and Lowlanders--have furnished Mr. Punch with many +of his happiest jokes. Despite the curious tradition which the Cockney +imbibes with his mother's milk as to the sterility of Scotland in +humour, the Scots are not only the cause of humour in others but there +are occasions when they prove themselves not entirely bereft of the +faculty which, with his charming egoism, the Cockney supposes to be his +own exclusive birthright. Indeed, we have it on the authority of Mr. +Spielmann, the author of "The History of _Punch_", that "of the accepted +jokes from unattached contributors (to Punch), it is a notable fact that +at least 75 per cent. comes from north of the Tweed." As a very +considerable proportion of these Scottish jokes make fun of the national +characteristics of the Scot, it is clear that Donald has the supreme +gift of being able to laugh at himself. It should be noted, however, +that Mr. Punch's most celebrated Scottish joke ("Bang went saxpence"), +which we give on page 153, was no invention, but merely the record of an +actual conversation overheard by an Englishman! + +In the present volume the purpose has been not so much to bring together +a representative collection of the Scottish humour that has appeared in +_Punch_, but to illustrate the intercourse of the "Sassenach" with the +Highlander, chiefly as a visitor bent on sport, and incidentally to +illustrate some of the humours of Highland life. Perhaps the distinction +between Highlander and Lowlander has not been very rigidly kept, but +that need trouble none but the pedants, who are notoriously lacking in +the sense of humour, and by that token ought not to be peeping into +these pages. + +Of all Mr. Punch's contributors, we may say, without risk of being +invidious, that Charles Keene was by far the happiest in the portrayal +of Scottish character. His Highland types are perhaps somewhat closer to +the life than his Lowlanders, but all are invariably touched off with +the kindliest humour, and never in any way burlesqued. If his work +overshadows that of the other humorous artists past and present +represented in this volume, it is for the reason stated; yet it will be +found that from the days of John Leech to those of Mr. Raven-Hill. MR. +PUNCH'S artists have seldom been more happily inspired than when they +have sought to depict Highland life and the lighter side of sport and +travel north of the Tweed. + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +SPORTING NOTES + +[Illustration] + +The following are the notes we have received from our Sporting +Contributor. I wish we could say they were a fair equivalent for the +notes he has received from _us_, to say nothing of that new Henry's +patent double central-fire breech-loader, with all the latest +improvements, and one of Mr. Benjamin's heather-mixture suits. Such as +they are we print them, with the unsatisfactory consolation that if the +notes are bad they are like the sport and the birds. Of all these it may +be said that "bad is the best." + +_North and South Uist._--The awfully hard weather--the natives call it +"soft" here--having rendered the chances of winged game out of the +question, the sportsmen who have rented the shootings are glad to try +the chances of the game, sitting, and have confined themselves to the +whist from which the islands take their name. Being only two, they are +reduced to double dummy. As the rental of the Uist Moors is £400, they +find the points come rather high--so far. + +_Harris._--In spite of repeated inquiries, the proprietress of the +island was not visible. Her friend, Mrs. Gamp, now here on a visit, +declares she saw Mrs. H. very recently, but was quite unable to give me +any information as to shootings, except the shootings of her own corns. + +_Fifeshire._--The renters of the Fife shootings generally have been +seriously considering the feasibility of combining with those of the +once well-stocked Drum Moor in Aberdeenshire, to get up something like +a band--of hope, that a bag may be made some day. Thus far, the only +bags made have been those of the proprietors of the shootings, who have +bagged heavy rentals. + +_Rum._--I call the island a gross-misnomer, as there is nothing to drink +in it but whiskey, which, with the adjacent "Egg", may be supposed to +have given rise to the neighbouring "Mull"--hot drinks being the natural +resource of both natives and visitors in such weather as we've had ever +since I crossed the Tweed. I have seen one bird--at least so the gilly +says--after six tumblers, but to me it had all the appearance of a +brace. + +_Skye._--Birds wild. Sportsmen, ditto. Sky a gloomy grey--your +correspondent and the milk at the hotel at Corrieverrieslushin alike +sky-blue. + +_Cantire._--Can't you? Try tramping the moors for eight hours after a +pack of preternaturally old birds that know better than let you get +within half a mile of their tails. Then see if you can't tire. I beg +your pardon, but if you knew what it was to make jokes under my present +circumstances, you'd give it up, or do worse. If I should not turn up +shortly, and you hear of an inquest on a young man, in one of +Benjamin's heather-mixture suits, with a Henry's central-fire +breech-loader, and a roll of new notes in his possession, found hanging +wet through, in his braces in some remote Highland shieling--break it +gently to the family of + + Your Sporting Contributor. + + * * * * * + +A PIBROCH FOR BREAKFAST. + + Hech, ho, the Highland laddie! + Hech, ho, the Finnon haddie! + Breeks awa', + Heck, the braw, + Ho, the bonnie tartan plaidie! + Hech, the laddie, + Ho, the haddie, + Hech, ho, the cummer's caddie, + Dinna forget + The bannocks het, + Gin ye luve your Highland laddie. + + * * * * * + +The Member for Sark writes from the remote Highlands of Scotland, where +he has been driving past an interminable series of lochs, to inquire +where the keys are kept? He had better apply to the local authorities in +the Isle of Man. They have a whole House of Keys. Possibly those the +hon. Member is concerned about may be found among them. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ON THE HILLS + +_Deer Stalker (old hand, and fond of it)._ "Isn't it exciting? Keep +cool!" + + [_Jones isn't used to it, and, not having moved for the last half-hour, + his excitement has worn off. He's wet through, and sinking fast in the + boggy ground, and speechless with cold. So he doesn't answer._ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: 1) MR. BUGGLE'S FIRST STAG. + +AT THE FIRST SHOT MR BUGGLE'S FIRST STAG LAY PRONE.] + +[Illustration: 2) ELATED WITH SUCCESS MR B. RUSHED UP AND SEATED HIMSELF +ASTRIDE HIS VICTIM] + +[Illustration: 3) BUT ALAS IT WAS ONLY SLIGHTLY STUNNED, AND PROMPTLY +ROSE TO THE OCCASION.] + +[Illustration: 4) SO DID MR B.] + +[Illustration: 5) THE LAW OF GRAVITY PROVED TOO STRONG WHEN A LUCKY SHOT +FROM THE KEEPER] + +[Illustration: 6) PLACED MATTERS UPON A SATISFACTORY FOOTING ONCE MORE.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MY ONLY SHOT AT A CORMORANT. + +Here she comes!] + +[Illustration: There she goes!] + + * * * * * + +FULL STOP IN THE DAWDLE FROM THE NORTH. + +(_Leaves from the Highland Journal of Toby, M.P._) + +"Here's a go", I said, turning to Sark, after carefully looking round +the station to see if we really were back at Oban, having a quarter of +an hour ago started (as we supposed) on our journey, already fifteen +minutes late. + +[Illustration] + +"Well, if you put it in that way", he said, "I should call it an entire +absence of go. I thought it was a peculiarly jolting train. Never passed +over so many points in the same time in my life." + +"Looks as if we should miss train at Stirling", I remark, anxiously. "If +so, we can't get on from Carlisle to Woodside to-night." + +"Oh, that'll be all right", said Sark, airy to the last; "we'll make it +up as we go along." + +Again sort of faint bluish light, which I had come to recognise as a +smile, feebly flashed over cadaverous countenance of the stranger in +corner seat. + +Certainly no hurry in getting off. More whistling, more waving of green +flag. Observed that natives who had come to see friends off had quietly +waited on platform. Train evidently expected back. Now it had returned +they said good-bye over again to friends. Train deliberately steams out +of station thirty-five minutes late. Every eight or ten miles stopped at +roadside station. No one got in or got out. After waiting five or six +minutes, to see if any one would change his mind, train crawled out +again. Performance repeated few miles further on with same result. + +[Illustration] + +"Don't put your head out of the window and ask questions", Sark +remonstrated, as I banged down the window. "I never did it since I heard +a story against himself John Bright used to tell with great glee. +Travelling homeward one day in a particularly slow train, it stopped an +unconscionably long time at Oldham. Finally, losing all patience, he +leaned out of the window, and in his most magisterial manner said, 'Is +it intended that this train shall move on to-night?' The porter +addressed, not knowing the great man, tartly replied, 'Put in thy big +white yedd, and mebbe the train'll start.'" + +Due at Loch Awe 1.32; half-past one when we strolled into Connel Ferry +station, sixteen miles short of that point. Two more stations before we +reach Loch Awe. + +"Always heard it was a far cry to Loch Awe", said Sark, undauntedly +determined to regard matters cheerfully. + +"You haven't come to the hill yet", said a sepulchral voice in the +corner. + +"What hill?" I asked. + +"Oh, you'll see soon enough. It's where we usually get out and walk. If +there are on board the train any chums of the guard or driver, they are +expected to lend a shoulder to help the train up." + +Ice once broken, stranger became communicative. Told us his melancholy +story. Had been a W.S. in Edinburgh. Five years ago, still in prime of +life, bought a house at Oban; obliged to go to Edinburgh once, sometimes +twice, a week. Only thrice in all that time had train made junction +with Edinburgh train at Stirling. Appetite failed; flesh fell away; +spirits went down to water level. Through looking out of window on +approaching Stirling, in hope of seeing South train waiting, eyes put on +that gaze of strained anxiety that had puzzled me. Similarly habit +contracted of involuntarily jerking up right hand with gesture designed +to arrest departing train. + +"Last week, coming north from Edinburgh", said the hapless passenger, +"we were two hours late at Loch Awe. 'A little late to-day, aren't we?' +I timidly observed to the guard. 'Ou aye! we're a bit late,' he said. +'Ye see, we had a lot of rams, and we couldna' get baith them and you up +the hill; so we left ye at Tyndrum, and ran the rams through first, and +then came back for ye.'" + +Fifty minutes late at Killin Junction. So far from making up time lost +at Oban, more lost at every wayside station. + +"I hope we shan't miss the train at Stirling?" I anxiously inquired of +guard. + +"Weel, no", said he, looking at his watch. "I dinna think ye'll hae +managed that yet." + +This spoken in soothing tones, warm from the kindly Scottish heart. +Hadn't yet finally lost chance of missing train at Stirling that should +enable us to keep our tryst at Woodside. But no need for despair. A +little more dawdling and it would be done. + +Done it was. When we reached Stirling, porters complacently announced +English mail had left quarter of an hour ago. As for stationmaster, he +was righteously indignant with inconsiderate travellers who showed +disposition to lament their loss. + +"Good night", said cadaverous fellow-passenger, feebly walking out of +darkling station. "Hope you'll get a bed somewhere. Having been going up +and down line for five years, I keep a bedroom close by. Cheaper in the +end. I shall get on in the morning." + + * * * * * + +MERE INVENTION.--Up the Highlands way there is, in wet weather, a +handsome cataract, the name whereof is spelt anyhow you like, but is +pronounced "Fyres." There is not much water in hot weather, and then art +assists nature, and a bucket or so of the fluid is thrown over for the +delectation of tourists. One of them, observing this arrangement, said +that the proprietor + + "Began to pail his ineffectual Fyres." + +[This story is quite false, which would be of no consequence, but that +every Scottish tourist knows it to be false. Our contributor should +really be more careful.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "Where can that confounded fellow have got to with the +lunch-basket?"] + +[Illustration: Here he is, remarking, confidentially, that "that +ginger-peer is apout the pest he ever tasted."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Cockney Sportsman._ "Haw--young woman, whose whiskies do +you keep here?" + +_Highland Lassie._ "We only keep McPherson's, sir." + +_C. S._ "McPherson? Haw--who the deuce is McPherson?" + +_H. L._ "My brother, sir."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: During Mr. Spoffin's visit to the Highlands, he found a +difficulty in approaching his game--so invented a method of simplifying +matters. His "make-up", however, was so realistic, that the jealous old +stag nearly finished him!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: HIS IDEA OF IT + +_Native._ "Is 't no a daft-like place this tae be takin' a view? There's +no naething tae be seen for the trees. Noo, if ye was tae gang tae the +tap o' Knockcreggan, that wad set ye fine! Ye can see _five coonties_ +frae there!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: TOURING IN THE HIGHLANDS + +"Hullo, Sandy! Why haven't you cleaned my carriage, as I told you last +night?" + +"Hech, sir, what for would it need washing? It will be just the same +when you'll be using it again!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + + * * * * * + +FROM OUR BILIOUS CONTRIBUTOR. + +_To_ MR. PUNCH. + +MY DEAR SIR,[A] + +Embarking at Bannavie very early in the morning--_diluculo surgere +saluberrimum est_, but it is also particularly disagreeable--I was upon +the canal of the Caledonians, on my way to the capital of the Highlands. +This is the last voyage which, upon this occasion, I shall have the +pleasure of describing. The vessel was commanded by Captain Turner, who +is a remarkable meteorologist, and has emitted some wonderful weather +prophecies. Having had, moreover, much opportunity of observing +character, in his capacity of captain of boats chiefly used by tourists, +he is well acquainted with the inmost nature of the aristocracy and +their imitators. Being myself of an aristocratic turn of mind (as well +as shape of body) it was refreshing to me to sit with him on the bridge +and speak of our titled friends. + +[Footnote A: We perfectly understand this advance towards civility as +the writer approaches the end of his journey. He is a superior kind of +young man, if not the genius he imagines himself.--_Ed._] + +Fort Augustus, which we passed, is not called so from having been built +by the Roman Emperor of that name, quite the reverse. The next object of +interest is a thing called the Fall of Foyers, which latter word is +sounded like fires, and the announcement to Cockneys that they are going +to see the affair, leads them to expect something of a pyrotechnic +character. It is nothing of that sort. The steamboat is moored, you rush +on shore, and are instantly arrested by several pikemen--I do not mean +soldiers of a mediæval date, but fellows at a gate, who demand fourpence +apiece from everybody landing in those parts. Being in Scotland, this +naturally made me think I had come to Johnny Groat's house, but no such +thing, and I have no idea of the reason of this highway robbery, or why +a very dirty card should have been forced upon me in proof that I had +submitted. We were told to go up an ascending road, and then to climb a +dreadfully steep hill, and that then we should see something. For my own +part, I felt inclined to see everybody blowed first, but being +over-persuaded, I saw everybody blowed afterwards, for that hill is a +breather, I can tell you. However, I rushed up like a mounting deer, and +when at the top was told to run a little way down again. I did, and saw +the sight. You have seen the cataracts of the Nile? It's not like them. +You have seen a cataract in a party's eye. It's not like that. Foyers is +a very fine waterfall, and worthy of much better verses than some which +Mr. Burns addressed to it in his English style, which is vile. Still, +the waterfall at the Colosseum, Regent's Park, is a good one, and has +this advantage, that you can sit in a chair and look at it as long as +you like, whereas you walk a mile to Foyers, goaded by the sailors from +the vessel, who are perpetually telling you to make haste, and you are +allowed about three minutes and fourteen seconds to gaze upon the scene, +when the sailors begin to goad you back again, frightening you with +hints that the captain will depart without you. Precious hot you come on +board, with a recollection of a mass of foam falling into an abyss. That +is not the way to see Foyers, and I hereby advise all tourists who are +going to stop at Inverness, to drive over from thence, take their time +at the noble sight, and do the pier-beggars out of their fourpences. + +The stately towers of the capital of the Highlands are seen on our +right. A few minutes more, and we are moored. Friendly voices hail us, +and also hail a vehicle. We are borne away. There is news for us. We are +forthwith--even in that carriage, were it possible--to induct ourselves +into the black tr × ws × rs of refined life and the white cravat of +graceful sociality, and to accompany our host to the dinner of the +Highland railwaymen. _We_ rail. We have not come six hundred miles to +dress for dinner. Our host is of a different opinion, and being a host +in himself, conquers our single-handed resistance. We attend the dinner, +and find ourselves among Highland chieftains plaided and plumed in their +"tartan array." (Why doesn't Horatio MacCulloch, noble artist and +Highland-man, come to London and be _our_ tartan R.A.?) We hear wonders +of the new line, which is to save folks the trouble of visiting the lost +tribe at Aberdeen, and is to take them direct from Inverness to Perth, +through wonderful scenery. We see a programme of toasts, to the number +of thirty-four, which of course involves sixty-eight speeches. There is +also much music by the volunteers--not, happily, by bag-pipers. We +calculate, on the whole, that the proceedings will be over about four in +the morning. Ha! ha! _Dremacky_. There is a _deus ex machiná_ literally, +a driver on an engine, and he starts at ten. Numbers of the guests must +go with him. _Claymore!_ We slash out the toasts without mercy--without +mercy on men set down to speak and who have spoiled their dinner by +thinking over their _impromptus_. But there is one toast which shall be +honoured, yea, with the Highland honours. _Mr. Punch's_ health is +proposed. It is well that this handsome hall is built strongly, or the +Highland maidens should dance here no more. The shout goes up for _Mr. +Punch_. + +I believe that I have mentioned to you, once or twice, that I am an +admirable speaker, but upon this occasion I surpassed myself--I was in +fact, as the Covent Garden play-bills say, "unsurpassingly successful." +Your interests were safe in my hands. I believe that no person present +heard a syllable of what I said. It was this: + + [It may have been, but as what our correspondent has been pleased + to send as his speech would occupy four columns, we prefer to leave + it to immortality in the excellent newspaper of which he sends us a + "cutting." We incline to think that he _was_ weak enough to say + what he says he said, because he could not have invented and + written it out after a Highland dinner, and it was published next + morning. It is extremely egotistical, and not in the least + entertaining--_Ed._] + +Among the guests was a gentleman who owns the mare who will certainly +win the Cesarewitch. _I know this for a fact_, and I advise you to put +your money on _Lioness_. His health was proposed, and he returned thanks +with the soul of wit. I hope he recollects the hope expressed by the +proposer touching a certain saddling-bell. I thought it rather strong in +"Bible-loving Scotland", but to be sure, we were in the Highlands, which +are England, or at all events where the best English spoken in Scotland +is heard. + +We reached our house at an early hour, and I was lulled to a gentle +slumber by the sound of the river Ness. This comes out of Loch Ness, and +in the latest geographical work with which I am acquainted, namely, +"Geography Anatomiz'd, by Pat. Gordon, M.A.F.R.S. Printed for Andr. +Bell, at the Cross Keys and Bible in Cornhill, and R. Smith, under the +Royal Exchange, 1711", I read that "towards the north-west part of +_Murray_ is the famous _Lough-Ness_ which never freezeth, but retaineth +its natural heat, even in the extremest cold of winter, and in many +places this lake hath been sounded with a line of 500 fathom, but no +bottom can be found" (just as in the last rehearsal of the artisans' +play in the _Midsummer Night's Dream_), but I believe that recent +experiments have been more successful, and that though no lead plummet +would go so deep, a volume by a very particular friend of mine was +fastened to the line, and descended to the bottom in no time. I will +mention his name if he is not kind to my next work, but at present I +have the highest esteem and respect for him. I only show him that I know +this little anecdote. + +There were what are called Highland games to be solemnised in Inverness. +I resolved to attend them, and, if I saw fit, to join in them. But I was +informed by a Highland friend of mine, Laidle of Toddie, a laird much +respected, that all competitors must appear in the kilt. As my own +graceful proportions would look equally well in any costume, this +presented no difficulty, and I marched off to Mr. Macdougall, the great +Highland costumier, and after walking through a dazzling array of Gaelic +glories, I said, mildly, "Can you make me a Highland dress?" + +"Certainly, in a few hours", said Mr. Macdougall; but somehow I fancied +that he did not seem to think that I was displaying any vast amount of +sense. + +"Then, please to make me one, very handsome", said I; "and send it home +to-night." And I was going out of the warehouse. + +"But, sir", said Mr. Macdougall, "do you belong to any clan, or what +tartan will you have?" + +"Mr. Macdougall", said I, "it may be that I do belong to a clan, or am +affiliated to one. It may be, that like Edward Waverley, I shall be +known hereafter as the friend of the sons (and daughters) of the +clan ----. It may be that if war broke out between that clan and another, +I would shout our war-cry, and, drawing my claymore, would walk into the +hostile clan like one o'clock. But at present that is a secret, and I +wear not the garb of any clan in particular. Please to make me up a +costume out of the garbs of several clans, but be sure you put the +brightest colours, as they suit my complexion." + +I am bound to say that though Mr. Macdougall firmly declined being party +to this arrangement, which he said would be inartistic, he did so with +the utmost courtesy. My opinion is, that he thought I was a little +cracked. Many persons have thought that, but there is no foundation for +the suspicion. + +"You see, Mr. Macdougall", says I, "I am a Plantagenet by descent, and +one of my ancestors was hanged in the time of George the Second. Do +those facts suggest anything to you in the way of costume?" + +"The first does not", he said, "but the second may. A good many persons +had the misfortune to be hanged about the time you mention, and for the +same reason. I suppose your ancestor died for the Stuarts." + +"No, sir, he died for a steward. The unfortunate nobleman was most +iniquitously destroyed for shooting a plebeian of the name of Johnson, +for which reason I hate everybody of that name, from Ben downwards, and +will not have a Johnson's _Dictionary_ in my house." + +"Then, sir", says Mr. Macdougall, "the case is clear. You can mark your +sense of the conduct of the sovereign who executed your respected +relative. You can assume the costume of his chief enemies. You can wear +the Stuart tartan." + +"Hm", says I. "I should look well in it, no doubt; but then I have no +hostility to the present House of Brunswick." + +"Why", says he, laughing; "Her Majesty dresses her own princes in the +Stuart tartan. I ought to know that." + +"Then that's settled", I replied. + +Ha! You would indeed have been proud of your contributor, had you seen +him splendidly arrayed in that gorgeous garb, and treading the heather +of Inverness High Street like a young mountaineer. He did not look then +like + + EPICURUS ROTUNDUS. + + _Inverness Castle._ + + * * * * * + +NOTICE TO THE HIGHLANDERS.--Whereas Mr. Punch, through his "Bilious +Contributor", did on the 7th November, 1863, offer a prize of fifty +guineas to the best Highland player at Spellikins, in the games for +1873. And whereas Mr. Punch has had the money, with ten years' interest, +quite ready, and waiting to be claimed. And whereas no Highland player +at Spellikins appeared at the games of 1873. This to give notice that +Mr. Punch has irrevocably confiscated the money to his own sole and +peculiar use, and intends to use it in bribery at the next general +election. He begs to remark to the Highlands, in the words of his +ancestor, Robert Bruce, at Bannockburn--"There is a rose fallen from +your wreath!"[B] + + PUNCH. + + 7th November, 1873. + +[Footnote B: Of course the King said nothing so sweetly sentimental. +What he did say to Earl Randolph was, "Mind your eye, you great stupid +ass, or you'll have the English spears in your back directly." Nor did +the Earl reply, "My wreath shall bloom, or life shall fade. Follow, my +household!" but, with an amazing great curse, "I'll cook 'em. Come on, +you dawdling beggars, and fulfil the prophecies!" But so history is +written.] + + * * * * * + +MORE REVENGE FOR FLODDEN.--_Scene: a Scotch Hotel. Tourist (indignant at +his bill)._ "Why, landlord, there must be some mistake there!" +_Landlord._ "Mistake? Aye, aye. That stupid fellow, the waiter, has just +charged you five shillings--too little." + + * * * * * + +FROM THE MOORS.--_Sportsman._ "Much rain Donald?" _Donald._ "A bit soft. +Just wet a' day, wi' showers between." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A PLEASANT PROSPECT! + +_English Tourist._ "I say, look here. How far is it to this Glenstarvit? +They told us it was only----" + +_Native._ "Aboot four miles." + +_Tourist_ (_aghast_). "All bog like this?" + +_Native._ "Eh--h--this is just naethin' till't!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ANOTHER MISUNDERSTANDING + +_'Arry_ (_on a Northern tour, with Cockney pronunciation_). "Then I'll +'ave a bottle of aile." + +_Hostess of the Village Inn._ "_Ile_, sir? We've nane in the hoose, but +castor ile or paraffin. Wad ony o' them dae, sir?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE WEIRD SISTERS] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: DEER-STALKING MADE EASY + +The patent silent motor-crawler.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ILLUSTRATED QUOTATIONS + +(_One so seldom finds an Artist who realises the poetic conception._) + +"Is this the noble Moor ...?"--_Othello_, Act IV., Scene 1.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: DRACONIAN + +SCENE.--_Police Court, North Highlands._ + +_Accused._ "Put, Pailie, it's na provit!" + +_Bailie._ "Hoot toots, Tonal, and hear me speak! Aw'll only fine ye +ha'f-a-croon the day, because et's no varra well provit. But if ever ye +come before me again, ye'll no get aff under five shillin's, whether +et's provit or no!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF YE ENGLYSHE IN 1849 + +DEERE STALKYNGE IN YE HYGHLANDES] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ONE OF THE ADVANTAGES OF SHOOTING FROM A BUTT + +_Keeper (on moor rented by the latest South African millionaire, to +guest)._ "Never mind the birds, sir. For onny sake, lie down! The +maister's gawn tae shoot!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE TWELFTH + +(_Guilderstein in the Highlands_) + +_Guild. (His first experience)._ "I've been swindled! That confounded +agent said it was all drivin' on this moor, and look at it, all hills +and slosh! Not a decent carriage road within ten miles!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE MATERNAL INSTINCT + +_The Master._ "I'm sayin', wumman, ha'e ye gotten the tickets?" + +_The Mistress._ "Tuts, haud your tongue aboot tickets. Let me count the +weans!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "NEMO ME IMPUNE", &c. + +_The Irrepressible._ "Hi, Scotty, tip us the 'Ighland fling." + +TIPPED!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Return of the wounded and missing Popplewitz omitted to +send in after his day on the moors.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: RECRIMINATION + +_Inhabitant of Uist._ "I say, they'll pe speaking fa-ar petter English +in Uist than in Styornaway." + +_Lass of the Lewis._ "Put in Styornaway they'll not pe caa-in' fush +'feesh,' whatefer!"] + + * * * * * + +THE HIGHLAND GAMES AT MACJIGGITY + +Whilst staying at MacFoozle Castle, my excellent host insisted that I +should accompany him to see the Highland games. The MacFoozle himself is +a typical Hielander, and appeared in a kilt and jelly-bag--philabeg, I +mean. Suggested to him that I should go, attired in pair of +bathing-drawers, Norfolk jacket, and Glengarry cap, but he, for some +inscrutable reason of his own, negatived the idea. Had half a mind to +dress in kilt myself, but finally decided against the national costume +as being too draughty. Arrived on ground, and found that "tossing the +caber" was in full progress. Braw laddies struggled, in turn, with +enormous tree trunk. The idea of the contest is, that whoever succeeds +in killing the greatest number of spectators by hurling the tree on to +them, wins the prize. Fancy these laddies had been hung too long, or +else they were particularly braw. Moved up to windward of them promptly. + +"Who is the truculent-looking villain with red whiskers?" I ask. + +"Hush!" says my host, in awed tones. "That is the MacGinger himself!" + +I grovel. Not that I have ever even heard his name before, but I don't +want to show my ignorance before the MacFoozle. The competition of +pipers was next in order, and I took to my heels and fled. Rejoined +MacFoozle half an hour later to witness the dancing. On a large raised +platform sat the judges, with the mighty MacGinger himself at their +head. Can't quite make out whether the dance is a Reel, a Strathspey, a +Haggis, or a Skirl--sure it is one or the other. Just as I ask for +information, amid a confusing whirl of arms and legs and "Hoots!" a +terrific crack is heard, and the platform, as though protesting at the +indignities heaped upon it, suddenly gives way, and in a moment, +dancers, pipers, and judges are hurled in a confused and struggling heap +to the ground. The MacGinger falls upon some bag-pipes, which emit +dismal groanings beneath his massive weight. This ends the dancing +prematurely, and a notice is immediately put up all round the grounds +that (to take its place) "There will be another competition of +bag-pipes." I read it, evaded the MacFoozle, and fled. + + * * * * * + +SONG FOR A SCOTCH DUKE. + + My harts in the Highlands shall have their hills clear, + My harts in the Highlands no serf shall come near-- + I'll chase out the Gael to make room for the roe, + My harts in the Highlands were ever his foe. + + * * * * * + +THINGS NO HIGHLANDER CAN UNDERSTAND. + +Breaches of promise. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GUILDERSTEIN IN THE HIGHLANDS + +Guilderstein. "Missed again! And dat fellow, Hoggenheimer, comin'on +Monday too! Why did I not wire to Leadenhall for an 'aunch, as Betty +told me!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Juvenis. "Jolly day we had last week at McFoggarty's +wedding! Capital champagne he gave us, and we did it justice, I can tell +you--" + +Senex (who prefers whiskey). "Eh-h, mun, it's a' verra weel weddings at +ye-er time o' life. Gie me a gude funeral!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: HEBRIDEAN SPORT + +_Shooting Tenant (accounting for very large species of grouse which his +setter has just flushed)._ "Capercailzie! By George!" + +_Under-keeper Neil._ "I'm after thinking, sir, you'll have killed Widow +McSwan's cochin cock. Ye see the crofters were forced to put him and the +hens away out here till the oats is ripe!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: LATEST FROM THE MOORS + +_Intelligent Foreigner._ "Tell me--zee 'Ilanders, do zay always wear zee +raw legs?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + +A GROAN FROM A GILLIE + + Lasses shouldna' gang to shoot, + Na, na! + Gillies canna' help but hoot, + Ha, ha! + Yon douce bodies arena' fittin' + Wi' the gudeman's to be pittin', + Bide at hame and mind yere knittin'! + Hoot, awa'! + "Wimmen's Rechts" is vara weel, + Ooh, aye! + For hizzies wha've nae hearts to feel; + Forbye + Wimmen's Rechts is aiblins Wrang + When nat'ral weak maun ape the strang, + An' chaney cups wi' cau'drons gang, + Auch, fie! + Hennies shouldna' try to craw + Sae fast-- + Their westlin' thrapples canna' blair + Sic a blast. + Leave to men-folk bogs and ferns, + An' pairtricks, muircocks, braes, and cairns; + And lasses! ye may mind the bairns-- + That's best! + + TONALT (X) _his mark._ + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A PRECISIAN + +_Artist (affably)._ "Fine morning." _Native._ "No' bad ava'." + +_Artist._ "Pretty scenery." _Native._ "Gey an' good." + +_Artist (pointing to St. Bannoch's, in the distance)._ "What place is +that down at the bottom of the loch?" + +_Native._ "It's no at the bottom--it's at the fut!" + +_Artist (to himself)._ "You past-participled Highlander!" + + [_Drops the subject!_ +] + + * * * * * + +THE THING TO DO IN SCOTLAND + +(_More Leaves from the Highland Journal of Toby, M.P._) + +_Quiverfield, Haddingtonshire, Monday._--You can't spend twenty-four +hours at Quiverfield without having borne in upon you the truth that the +only thing to do in Scotland is to play goff. (On other side of Tweed +they call it golf. Here we are too much in a hurry to get at the game to +spend time on unnecessary consonant.) The waters of what Victor Hugo +called "The First of the Fourth" lave the links at Quiverfield. Blue as +the Mediterranean they have been in a marvellous autumn, soon to lapse +into November. We can see the Bass Rock from the eighth hole, and can +almost hear the whirr of the balls skimming with swallow flight over the +links at North Berwick. + +Prince Arthur here to-day, looking fully ten years younger than when I +last saw him at Westminster. Plays through live-long day, and drives off +fourteen miles for dinner at Whittinghame, thinking no more of it than +if he were crossing Palace Yard. Our host, Waverley Pen, is happy in +possession of links at his park gates. All his own, for self and +friends. You step through the shrubbery, and there are the far-reaching +links; beyond them the gleaming waters of the Forth. Stroll out +immediately after breakfast to meet the attendant caddies; play goff +till half-past one; reluctantly break off for luncheon; go back to +complete the fearsome foursome; have tea brought out to save time; leave +off in bare time to dress for dinner; talk goff at dinner; arrange +matches after dinner; and the new morning finds the caddies waiting as +before. + +[Illustration: Fingen's finger.] + +Decidedly the only thing to do in Scotland is to play goff. + +_Deeside, Aberdeenshire, Wednesday._--Fingen, M.P., once told an abashed +House of Commons that he "owned a mountain in Scotland." Find, on +visiting him in his ancestral home, that he owns a whole range. Go up +one or two of them; that comparatively easy; difficulty presents itself +when we try to get down. Man and boy, Fingen has lived here fifty years; +has not yet acquired knowledge necessary to guide a party home after +ascending one of his mountains. Walking up in cool of afternoon, we +usually get home sore-footed and hungry about midnight. + +"Must be going now", says Fingen, M.P., when we have seen view from top +of mountain. "Just time to get down before dark. But I know short cut; +be there in a jiffy. Come along." + +We come along. At end of twenty minutes find ourselves in front of +impassable gorge. + +"Ha!" says Fingen, M.P., cheerily. "Must have taken wrong turn; better +go back and start again." + +All very well to say go back; but where were we? Fingen, M.P., knows; +wets his finger; holds it up. + +"Ha!" he says, with increased joyousness of manner; "the wind is blowing +that way, is it? Then we turn to the left." + +Another twenty minutes stumbling through aged heather. Path trends +downwards. + +"That's all right", says Fingen, M.P.; "must lead on to the road." + +Instead of which we nearly fall into a bubbling burn. Go back again; +make bee line up acclivity nearly as steep as side of house; find +ourselves again on top of mountain. + +"How lucky!" shouts Fingen, M.P., beaming with delight. + +As if we had been trying all this time to get to top of mountain instead +of to bottom! + +Wants to wet his finger again and try how the wind lies. We protest. Let +us be saved that at least. Fingen leads off in quite another direction. +By rocky pathway which threatens sprains; through bushes and brambles +that tear the clothes; by dangerous leaps from rock to rock he brings us +to apparently impenetrable hedge. We stare forlorn. + +[Illustration: The crack of the whip('s pate!)] + +"Ha!" says Fingen, M.P., more aggressively cheerful than ever. "The road +is on other side. Thought we would come upon it somewhere." Somehow or +other we crawl through. + +"Nothing like having an eye to the lay of country", says Fingen, M.P., +as we limp along the road. "It's a sort of instinct, you know. If I +hadn't been with you, you might have had to camp out all night on the +mountain." + +They don't play goff at Deeside. They bicycle. Down the long avenue with +spreading elm trees deftly trained to make triumphal arches, the +bicycles come and go. Whipsroom, M.P., thinks opportunity convenient +for acquiring the art of cycling. W. is got up with consummate art. Has +had his trousers cut short at knee in order to display ribbed stockings +of rainbow hue. Loose tweed-jacket, blood-red necktie, white felt hat +with rim turned down all round, combine to lend him air of a Drury Lane +bandit out of work. Determined to learn to ride the bicycle, but spends +most of the day on his hands and knees, or on his back. Looking down +avenue at any moment pretty sure to find W. either running into the iron +fence, coming off sideways, or bolting head first over the handles of +his bike. Get quite new views of him fore-shortened in all possible +ways, some that would be impossible to any but a man of his +determination. + +"Never had a man stay in the house", says Fingen, M.P., ruefully, "who +so cut up the lawn with his head, or indented the gravel with his elbows +and his knees." + +Evidently I was mistaken about goff. Cycling's the thing in Scotland. + +_Goasyoucan, Inverness-shire, Saturday._--Wrong again. Not goff nor +cycling is the thing to do in Scotland. It's stalking. Soon learn that +great truth at Goasyoucan. The hills that encircle the house densely +populated with stags. To-day three guns grassed nine, one a royal. This +the place to spend a happy day, crouching down among the heather +awaiting the fortuitous moment. Weather no object. Rain or snow out you +go, submissive to guidance and instruction of keeper; by comparison with +whose tyranny life of the ancient galley-slave was perfect freedom. + +Consummation of human delight this, to lie prone on your face amid the +wet heather, with the rain pattering down incessantly, or the snow +pitilessly falling, covering you up flake by flake as if it were a robin +and you a babe in the wood. Mustn't stir; mustn't speak; if you can +conveniently dispense with the operation, better not breathe. Sometimes, +after morning and greater part of afternoon thus cheerfully spent, you +may get a shot; even a stag. Also you may not; or, having attained the +first, may miss the latter. At any rate you have spent a day of +exhilarating delight. + +Stalking is evidently the thing to do in Scotland. It's a far cry to the +Highlands. Happily there is Arthur's Seat by Edinburgh town where +beginners can practise, and old hands may feign delight of early +triumphs. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE "IRREPRESSIBLE" AGAIN + +_Gent in Knickerbockers._ "Rummy speakers them 'Ighlanders, 'Enery. When +we wos talking to one of the 'ands, did you notice 'im saying +'_nozzing_' for '_nothink_,' and '_she_' for '_e_'?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "THE LAST STRAW" + +"Tired out, are you? Try a drop of brandy! Eh!--what!--confound----By +jingo, I've forgotten my flask!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: NOTHING LIKE MOUNTAIN AIR + +_Tourist (who has been refreshing himself with the toddy of the +country)._ "I shay, ole fler! Highlands seem to 'gree with you +wonerfly--annomishtake. Why, you look DOUBLE the man already!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE HEIGHT OF BLISS + +_Highland Shepherd._ "Fine toon, Glasco', I pelieve, and lots o' coot +meat there." + +_Tourist._ "Oh, yes, lots." + +_Highland Shepherd._ "An' drink, too?" + +_Tourist._ "Oh, yes." + +_Highland Shepherd (doubtingly)._ "Ye'll get porter tae yir parrich?" + +_Tourist._ "Yes, if we like." + +_Highland Shepherd._ "Cra-ci-ous!" + + [_Speechless with admiration._ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: TENACITY + +_First North Briton_ (_on the Oban boat, in a rolling sea and dirty +weather_). "Thraw it up, man, and ye'll feel a' the better!" + +_Second ditto_ (_keeping it down_). "Hech, mon, it's whuskey!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: EXCUSABLE WRATH + +_Drover_ (_exhausted with his struggles_). "Whit are ye wouf, woufan' +there, ye stupit ass! It wud be wis-eer like if ye gang awn hame, an' +bring a barrow!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A SOFT IMPEACHMENT + +_Sporting Saxon (mournfully, after three weeks' incessant down-pour)._ +"Does it always rain like this up here, Mr. McFuskey?" + +_His Guide, Philosopher, and Friendly Landlord (calmly)._ "Oo aye, it's +a-ye just a wee bit shooery."!!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH + +2 A.M. + +_Brown (who has taken a shooting-box in the Highlands, and has been +"celebrating" his first appearance in a kilt)._ "Worsht of these +ole-fashioned beshteads is, they take such a lot of climbin' into!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GUILDERSTEIN IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Mrs. G._ "We must leave this horrible place, dear. The keeper has just +told me there is disease on the moor. Good gracious, the boys might take +it!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A GREAT DRAWBACK + +_Dougal_ (_with all his native contempt for the Londoner_). "Aye, mon, +an' he's no a bad shot?" + +_Davie._ "'Deed an' he's a verra _guid_ shot." + +_Dougal._ "Hech! it's an awfu' peetie he's a Londoner!"] + + * * * * * + +NOTES FROM THE HIGHLANDS + +"_Jam satis terris,_" _&c._ + +_Alt-na-blashy._--The aqueous and igneous agencies seem to be combined +in these quarters, for since the rain we hear of a great increase of +burns. In default of the moors we fall back on the kitchen and the +cellar. I need hardly add that dry wines are almost exclusively used by +our party, and moist sugar is generally avoided. Dripping, too, is +discontinued, and everything that is likely to whet the appetite is at a +discount. + +_Drizzle-arich._--A Frenchman, soaked out of our bothy by the moisture +of the weather, was overheard to exclaim "_Après moi le déluge._" + +_Inverdreary._--Greatly to the indignation of their chief, several of +the "Children of the Mist", in this romantic but rainy region, have +assumed the garb of the Mackintoshes. + +_Loch Drunkie._--We have several partners in misery within hail, or life +would be fairly washed out of us. We make up parties alternately at our +shooting quarters when the weather allows of wading between them. +Inebriation, it is to be feared, must be on the increase, for few of us +who go out to dinner return without making a wet night of it. + +Meantime, the watering-places in our vicinity--in particular the Linns +o' Dun-Dreepie--are literally overflowing. + +It is asserted that even young horses are growing impatient of the +reins. + +Our greatest comfort is the weekly budget of dry humour from _Mr. +Punch_. + + * * * * * + +A DISAPPOINTING HOST.--_Sandy._ "A 'm tellt ye hev a new nebbur, +Donal'." _Donald._ "Aye." _Sandy._ "An' what like is he?" _Donald._ +"Weel, he's a curious laddie. A went to hev a bit talk wi' him th' ither +evenin', an' he offered me a glass o' whuskey, d'ye see? Weel, he was +poorin' it oot, an' A said to him 'Stop!'--_an' he stoppit!_ That's the +soort o' mon he is." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: AMBIGUITY + +SCENE--_A Highland Ferry_ + +_Tourist._ "But we paid you sixpence each as we came over, and you said +the same fare would bring us back." + +_Skipper._ "Well, well, and I telled ye nothing but the truth, an' it'll +be no more than the same fare I'm wantin' the noo for bringin' ye +back."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: AUGUST IN SCOTLAND + +_Bag Carrier (to Keeper)._ "What does the maister aye ask that body tae +shoot wi' him for? He canna hit a thing!" + +_Keeper._ "Dod, man, I daur say he wishes they was a' like him. The same +birds does him a' through the season!"] + + * * * * * + +KINREEN O' THE DEE; + +A PIOBRACH HEARD WAILING DOWN GLENTANNER ON THE EXILE OF THREE +GENERATIONS. + +[Illustration] + + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + + I'll blaw up my chanter, + I've rounded fu' weel, + To mony a ranter, + In mony a reel, + An' pour'd a' my heart i' the win'bag wi' glee: + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + For licht wis the laughter in bonny Kinreen, + An' licht wis the footfa' that glanced o'er the green, + An' licht ware the hearts a' an' lichtsome the eyne, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + + The auld hoose is bare noo, + A cauld hoose to me, + The hearth is nae mair noo, + The centre o' glee, + Nae mair for the bairnies the bield it has been, + Och hey, for bonny Kinreen! + The auld folk, the young folk, the wee anes, an' a', + A hunder years' hame birds are harried awa', + Are harried an' hameless, whatever winds blaw, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + Fareweel my auld pleugh lan', + I'll never mair pleugh it: + Fareweel my auld cairt an' + The auld yaud[C] that drew it. + Fareweel my auld kailyard, ilk bush an' ilk tree! + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Fareweel the auld braes, that my hand keepit green, + Fareweel the auld ways where we waunder'd unseen + Ere the star o' my hearth came to bonny Kinreen, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + The auld kirk looks up o'er + The dreesome auld dead, + Like a saint speakin' hope o'er + Some sorrowfu' bed. + Fareweel the auld kirk, an' fareweel the kirk green, + They tell o' a far better hame than Kinreen! + The place we wad cling to--puir simple auld fules, + O' our births an' our bridals, oor blesses an' dools, + Whare oor wee bits o' bairnies lie cauld i' the mools.[D] + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + I aft times hae wunder'd + If deer be as dear, + As sweet ties o' kindred, + To peasant or peer; + As the tie to the hames o' the land born be, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + The heather that blossoms unkent o' the moor, + Wad dee in his lordship's best greenhoose, I'm sure, + To the wunder o' mony a fairy land flure. + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + Though little the thing be, + Oor ain we can ca'; + That little we cling be, + The mair that it's sma'; + Though puir wis oor hame, an' thogh wild wis the scene, + 'Twas the hame o' oor hearts: it was bonnie Kinreen. + An yet we maun leave it, baith grey head an bairn; + Leave it to fatten the deer o' Cock-Cairn, + O' Pannanich wuds an' o' Morven o' Gairn. + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Sae Fareweel for ever, Kinreen of the Dee! + +[Footnote C: Mare.] + +[Footnote D: Earth.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CANNY! + +_Sportsman._ "That's a tough old fellow, Jemmy!" + +_Keeper._ "Aye, sir, a grand bird to send to your freens!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: EXPERTO CREDE + +_Tourist_ (_on approaching hostelry_). "What will you have, coachman?" + +_Driver._ "A wee drap whuskey, sir, thank you." + +_Tourist._ "All right I'll get down and send it out to you." + +_Driver._ "Na, na, gie me the saxpence. They'll gie you an unco sma' +gless!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A LAMENT FROM THE NORTH + +"And then the weather's been so bad, Donald!" + +"Ou ay, sir. Only three fine days--and twa of them snappit up by the +Sawbath!"] + + * * * * * + +TWO ON A TOUR + +"Can you tell me which is Croft Lochay?" + +The smith leant on his pitchfork--he had been up at the hay--and eyed +Gwendolen and myself with friendly interest. + +"Ye'll be the gentry from London Mistress McDiarmat is expectin'?" + +"And which is the way to her house?" + +"Well", said the smith, shading his eyes as he peered up at the Ben, "ye +can't see it rightly from here, as it lies behind yon knowe. It's a +whole year whatever since I hev not been up myself; but if you follow +the burn----" + +I glanced at Gwen and saw that she shared my satisfaction. To cross the +edge of civilisation had for months past been our hearts' desire; and to +have achieved a jumping-off place only approachable by a burn exceeded +our wildest ambitions. + +We thanked the smith, and set off on our expedition up the mountain +side. + +"We twa hae paidlit in the burn", sang Gwendolen as she skipped like a +goat from stone to stone. "O Jack, isn't it too primitive and +delightful!" + +"Rather", said I, inhaling great draughts of the mountain air. + +"Aren't you hungry?" + +"Rather", I repeated. "Wonder what there'll be to eat." + +"Oh, I don't care what it is. Anything will be delicious. Is that the +house, do you think?" + +I looked up and saw above us a low white-washed shanty covered with +thatch which was kept in its place by a network of laths. A few heavy +stones were evidently designed to keep the roof from blowing off in +winter storms. + +"No", said Gwen. "That must be the cowhouse byre, don't you call it?" + +"I'm not so sure", said I. + +While we were still uncertain, a figure came to the door and bade us +welcome. + +"Come in, come in. Ye'll be tired with the travelling, and ye'll like to +see the rooms." + +We acquiesced, and Mistress McDiarmat led the way into the cowhouse. + +"Shoo!" she cried as she opened the door of the bedroom. "Get away, +Speckle! The hens _will_ lay their bit egg on the bed, sir." + +"What fresh eggs we shall get!" cried Gwen, delighted with this fresh +proof of rusticity and with the Gaelic gutturals with which Mistress +McDiarmat emphasized her remarks to Speckle. + +The "other end" was furnished with two hard chairs, a table and a bed. + +"Fancy a bed in the dining-room and hens in your bed!" said Gwen, in the +highest of spirits. "And here comes tea! Eggs and bacon--Ah! how lovely +they smell, and how much nicer than horrid, stodgy dinners! And +oatcakes--and jelly--and the lightest feathery scones! O Jack, isn't it +heavenly?" + +"Rather", I agreed, beginning the meal with tremendous gusto. The eggs +and bacon disappeared in the twinkling of an eye, and then we fell to on +the light feathery scones. "Wish we hadn't wasted a fortnight's time +and money in ruinous Highland hotels. Wonder what Schiehallion thinks of +hot baths and late dinners, not to speak of waiters and wine-lists." + +"I suppose", remarked Gwendolen, "one _could_ get a bath at the +Temperance Inn we passed on the road?" + +"Baths!" cried I. "Why, my dear, one only has to go and sit under the +neighbouring waterfall." Gwen did not laugh, and looking up I saw she +had stopped in the middle of a scone on which she had embarked with +great appetite. + +"Try an oat-cake", I suggested. + +"No, thanks", said Gwen. + +"A little more jelly?" + +Gwen shook her head. + +I finished my meal in silence and pulled out my pipe. + +"Going to smoke in here?" asked Gwen. + +"It's raining outside, my dear." + +"Oh, very well. But remember this is my bedroom. I decline to sleep with +hens." + +I put the pipe away and prepared for conversation. + +"Can't you sit still?" asked Gwen after a long pause. + +"This chair is very hard, dear." + +"So is mine." + +"Don't you think we might sit on the bed?" + +"Certainly not. I shouldn't sleep a wink if we disarranged the clothes, +and only an expert can re-make a chaff bed." + +"Wish we had something to read", I remarked, after another long pause. + +"Do you expect a circulating library on the top of Ben-y-Gloe?" + +I began to realise that Gwen was no longer in a conversational mood, and +made no further efforts to break the silence. Half-an-hour later Gwen +came across the room and laid her hand on my shoulder. "What are you +reading, dear?" she asked. + +"I find we can get a train from Struan to-morrow afternoon which catches +the London connection at Perth when the train's not more than two hours +late." + +"We can't risk that. Isn't there a train in the morning?" + +"It would mean leaving this at five." + +"So much the better. O Jack, if I eat another meal like that it will be +fatal. To think we shall be back in dear old Chelsea to-morrow!" + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ORIGIN OF THE HIGHLAND SCHOTTISCHE + + "This is the way they tread the hay, tread the hay, tread the hay; + This is the way they tread the hay, tread the hay in Scotland!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GROUSE SHOOTING LATE IN THE SEASON. +JOLLY, VERY! + +"Come along, old fellow! Here's a point!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: DEER-STALKING MADE EASY. A HINT TO +LUSTY SPORTSMEN] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: SOONER OR LATER + +_Old Gent._ "When is the steamer due here?" + +_Highland Pier-Master._ "Various. Sometimes sooner, +sometimes earlier, an' even sometimes before that, too."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "HARMLESS" + +_Cockney Sporting Gent._ "But I think it's a 'en!" + +_Sandy (his keeper)._ "Shoot, man, shoot! She'll be no +muckle the waur o' ye!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PLEASANT + +_Friend (to novice at salmon fishing)._ "I say, old boy, mind how you +wade; there are some tremendous holes, fourteen or fifteen feet deep."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration:AN IMPORTANT DETAIL + +_Our latest Millionaire_ (_to Gillie, who has brought him within +close range of the finest stag in the forest_). "I say, Mac, confound +it all, _which eye do you use_?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _English Tourist (in the far North, miles from anywhere)._ +"Do you mean to say that you and your family live here +all the winter? Why, what do you do when any of you +are ill? You can never get a doctor!" + +_Scotch Shepherd._ "Nae, sir. We've just to dee a natural +death!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: SCENE--A ROADSIDE INN IN A MOORLAND +DISTRICT, SCOTLAND + +(_The Captain and Gamekeeper call in to have some Refreshment_) + +_Landlady_ (_enters in fear_). "Eh, sir, yer gun's no loaded +is't? for a never would bide in a hoose whaur the wur a +loaded gun in a' m'life." + +_Captain_ (_composedly_). "Oh, we'll soon put that all right--have +you got a cork?" + + [_Exit Landlady and brings a cork, which the Captain + carefully sticks in the muzzle of the gun, and assures + her it is all right now_-- + + +_Landlady_ (_relieved_). "Ou, aye! it's a' right noo, but it +wasna safe afore, ye ken."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "A MONARCH OF THE GLEN" + +_Transatlantic Millionaire (surveying one of his deer-forests)._ +"Ha! look there! I see _three excursionists_! Send 'em to +the----!" + +_Gigantic Gillie (and chucker-out)._ "If you please, Mr. +Dollers, they're _excisemen_!" + +_T. M._ "I don't care _who_ they are! Send 'em to +the----!" + +_G. G._ "Yes, Mr. Dollers." + + [_Proceeds to carry out order._ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Sportsman (who declines to be told where to go and +what to do by his gillie), after an arduous stalk in the +blazing sun, at last manages to crawl within close range of +those "brown specks" he discovered miles distant on the +hill-side!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PROMISING! + +_Tourist._ "Have you any decent cigars?" + +_Highland Grocer._ "Decent cigars? Ay, here are decent +cigars enough." + +_Tourist._ "Are they Havanahs, or Manillas?" + +_Highland Grocer._ "They're just from Kircaldy!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "THE MISS" + +_Gillie._ "Eh, mon! But it's fortunate there's beef in Aberdeen!"] + + * * * * * + +MR. BRIGGS IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_By_ JOHN LEECH + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs, feeling that his heart is in the Highlands +a-chasing the deer, starts for the North.] + +[Illustration: Before going out, Mr. Briggs and his friends have a +quiet chat about deer-stalking generally. He listens with much +interest to some pleasing anecdotes about the little incidents +frequently met with--such as balls going through caps--toes being shot +off!--occasionally being gored by the antlers of infuriate stags, &c., +&c., &c.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs, previous to going through his course of +deer-stalking, assists the forester in getting a hart or two for the +house. Donald is requesting our friend to hold the animal down by the +horns. + + [N.B. The said animal is as strong as a bull, and uses his legs like +a race-horse. + +] + +[Illustration: The deer are driven for Mr. Briggs. He has an excellent +place, but what with waiting by himself so long, the murmur of the +stream, the beauty of the scene, and the novelty of the situation, he +falls asleep, and while he takes his forty winks, the deer pass!] + +[Illustration: As the wind is favourable, the deer are driven again.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs is suddenly face to face with the monarch of +the glen! He is so astonished that he omits to fire his rifle.] + +[Illustration: To-day he goes out for a stalk, and Donald shows Mr. +Briggs the way!] + +[Illustration: After a good deal of climbing, our friend gets to the top +of Ben-something-or-other, and the forester looks out to see if there +are any deer on the hills. Yes! several hinds, and perhaps the finest +hart that ever was seen.] + +[Illustration: To get at him, they are obliged to go a long way round. +Before they get down, the shower, peculiar to the country, overtakes +them, so they "shelter a-wee."] + +[Illustration: With extraordinary perseverance they come within shot of +"the finest hart." Mr. B. is out of breath, afraid of slipping, and +wants to blow his nose (quite out of the question), otherwise he is +tolerably comfortable.] + +[Illustration: After aiming for a quarter of an hour, Mr. B. fires both +his barrels--and--misses!!!! _Tableau_--The forester's anguish] + +[Illustration: The royal hart Mr. Briggs did NOT hit.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs has another day's stalking, and his rifle +having gone off sooner than he expected, he kills a stag. As it is his +first, he is made free of the forest by the process customary on the +hills!--] + +[Illustration: And returns home in triumph. He is a little knocked up, +but after a nap, will, no doubt, go through the broad-sword dance in the +evening as usual.] + +[Illustration: MR. BRIGGS GROUSE SHOOTING + +9 A.M. His arrival on the moor.--Mr. Briggs says that the fine bracing +air makes him so vigorous that he shall never be beat. He also +facetiously remarks that he is on "his native heath", and that his "name +is Macgregor!" + + [_The result of the day's sport will be communicated by electric + telegraph._ + +] + + * * * * * + +SKETCHES FROM SCOTLAND + +AT THE DRUMQUHIDDER HIGHLAND GATHERING. + + SCENE--_A meadow near Drumquhidder, South Perthshire, where the + annual Highland Games are being held. The programme being a long + one, there are generally three events being contested in various + parts of the ground at the same time. On the benches immediately + below the Grand Stand are seated two Drumquhidder worthies_, MR. + PARRITCH _and_ MR. HAVERS, _with_ MRS. McTAVISH _and her niece, two + acquaintances from Glasgow, to whom they are endeavouring--not + altogether successfully--to make themselves agreeable_. + +_Mr. Havers_ (_in allusion to the dozen or so of drags, landaus, and +waggonettes on the ground_). There's a number o' machines hier the day, +Messis McTarvish, an' a wonderfu' crood; there'll be a bit scarceness +ower on yon side, but a gey many a'thegither. I conseeder we're jest +awfu' forrtunate in the day an' a'. + + [_Mrs. McTavish assents, but without enthusiasm._ + +_Mr. Parritch._ I've jist ben keekin into the Refraishmen' Tent. It's an +awfu' peety they're no pairmeetin' ony intoaxicans--naethin' but +non-alcohoalic liquors an' sic like, an' the hawm-sawndwiches no verra +tender. (_With gallantry._) What do ye say, noo, Messis McTarvish--wull +ye no come an' tak' a bite wi' me? + +_Mrs. McTavish (distantly)._ Ah'm no feelin' able for't jist the noo, +Mester Pairritch. + +_Mr. Parr._ Ye'll hae a boatle o' leemonade at my expense? Ye'll no? +Then ye wull, Mess Rawse. (_With relief, as Miss Rose declines also._) +Aweel, I jist thocht I'd pit the quaistion. (_To a friend of his, who +joins them._) An' hoo's a' wi' ye, Mester McKerrow? Ye're a member o' +the Cawmittee, I obsairve, sae I'll hae to keck up a bet row wi' ye. + +_Mr. McKerrow (unconcernedly)._ Then ye'll jist to hae to keck it doon +again. What's wrang the noo? + +_Mr. Parr._ I'd like to ask ye if ye conseeder it fair or jest to +charrge us tippence every time we'd go aff the groon? Man, it's jist an +extoartion. + +_Mr. McKerr._ I'm no responsible for't; but, if I'd ben there, I'd ha' +chairged ye twa shellins; sae ye'd better say nae mair aboot the +maitter. + + [_Mr. Parritch does not pursue the subject._ + +_Mr. Havers (as a detachment of the Black Watch Highlanders conclude an +exhibition of musical drill)._ Ye'll be the baiter o' haeing the Block +Wetch hier the day. Man, they gie us a colour! It's verra pretty hoo +nicely they can pairforrm the drill.... An' noo them sojers is gaun to +rin a bet race amang theirsels. This'll be an extry cawmpeteetion, I +doot. (_As the race is being run._) It's no a verra suitable dress for +rinnin'--the spleughan--or "sporran", is it?--hairrts them tairible. + +_Mr. McKerr. (contradictiously)._ The sporran does na hairrt them at a'. + +_Mr. Havers._ Man, it's knockin' against them at every stride they tak'. +(_His attention wanders to a Highland Fling, which three small boys are +dancing on a platform opposite._) He's an awfu' bonnie dauncer that wee +laddie i' the meddle! + +_Mr. McKerr._ Na sae awfu' bonnie, he luiks tae much at his taes. Yon on +the richt is the laddie o' the lote! He disna move his boady at a'.... +This'll be the Half Mile Handicap they're stairting for down yonder. +It'll gae to Jock Alister--him in the blue breeks. + +_Mr. Parr._ Yon grup-luikin' tyke? I canna thenk it. + +_Mr. Havers._ Na, it'll be yon bald-heided man in broon. He's verra +enthusiastic. He's ben rinnin' in a' the races, I obsairve. "Smeth" did +ye say his neem was? (_To Miss Rose, "pawkily"._) Ye'll hae an +affaictionate regaird for that neem, I'm thenking, Mess Rawse? + +_Miss Rose (with maidenly displeasure)._ 'Deed, an I'm no unnerstanding +why ye should thenk ony sic a thing! + +_Mr. Havers (abashed)._ I beg your pairrdon. I don't know hoo it was I +gethered Smeth was your ain neem. (_Miss Rose shakes her head._) No? +Then maybe ye'll be acquaint with a Mester Alexawnder Smeth fro' +Paisley? (_Miss Rose is not, nor apparently desires to be, and Mr. +Havers returns to the foot-race._) The baldheid's leadin' them a', I +tellt ye he'd----Na, he's gien up! it'll be the little block fellow, +he's peckin' up tairible! + +_Mr. Parr._ 'Twull no be him. Yon lang chap has an easy jobe o't. Ye'll +see he'll jist putt a spairrt on at yon faur poast--he's comin' on +noo--he's.... Losh! he's only thirrd after a'; he didna putt the spairrt +on sune eneugh; that was the gran' fau't he made! + +_Mr. Havers._ They'll be begenning the wrustling oot yon in the +centre....(_As the competitors grip._) Losh! that's no the way to +wrustle; they shouldna left the ither up; they're no allowed to threp! + +_Mr. McKerr._ That's jist the game, I'm telling ye; ye know naething at +a' aboot it! + +[Illustration: "That's jist the game, I'm telling ye; ye know naething +at a' aboot it!"] + +_Mr. Havers._ I'd sthruggle baiter'n that mysel', it's no great +wrustling at a', merely bairrns' play! + +_Mr. McKerr (as a corpulent elderly gentleman appears, in very pink +tights)._ Ye'll see some science noo, for hier's McBannock o' +Balwhuskie, the chawmpion. + +_Mr. Havers (disenchanted)._ Wull yon be him in the penk breeks. Man, +but he's awfu' stoot for sic wark! + +_Mr. McKerr._ The wecht of him's no easy put doon. The rest are boys to +him. + +_Mr. Parr._ I doot the little dairk fellow'll hae him ... it's a gey +sthruggle. + +_Mr. McKerr._ He's not doon yet. Wull ye bait sexpence against +McBannock, Mester Pairritch? + +_Mr. Parr. (promptly)._ Aye, wull I--na, he's got the dairk mon doon. I +was jist mindin' the sword-daunce, sae the bait's aff. (_Three men in +full Highland costume step upon the platform and stand, proud and +impassive, fronting the grand stand, while the judges walk round them, +making careful notes of their respective points._) What wull _they_ be +aboot? + +_Mr. McKerr._ It'll be the prize for the mon who's the best dressed +Hielander at his ain expense. I'm thenkin' they'll find it no verra easy +to come to a deceesion. + +_Mr. Parr._ Deed, it's no sae deeficult; 'twill be the mon in the +centre, sure as deith! + +_Mr. Havers._ Ye say that because he has a' them gowd maidles hing on +his jocket! + +_Mr. Parr_. (_loftily_). I pay no attention to the maidles at a'. I'm +sayin' that Dougal Macrae is the best dressed Hielander o' the three. + +_Mr. Havers._ It'll no be Macrae at a'. Jock McEwan, that's furthest +west, 'll be the mon. + +_Mr. Parr._ (_dogmatically_). It'll be Macrae, I'm tellin' ye. He has +the nicest kelt on him that iver I sa'! + +_Mr. Havers._ It's no the _kelt_ that diz it, 'tis jist the way they pit +it on. An' Macrae'll hae his tae faur doon, a guid twa enches too low, +it is. + +_Mr. Parr._ Ye're a' wrang, the kelt is on richt eneugh! + +_Mr. Havers._ I know fine hoo a kelt should be pit an, though I'm no +Hielander mysel', and I'll ask ye, Mess Rawse, if Dougal Macrae's kelt +isn't too lang; it's jist losin his knees a' thegither, like a lassie he +looks in it! + + [_Miss Rose declines, with some stiffness, to express an opinion on + so delicate a point._ + +_Mr. Parr. (recklessly)._ I'll pit a sexpence on Macrae wi' ye, come +noo! + +_Mr. Havers._ Na, na, pit cawmpetent jedges on to deceede, and they'll +be o' my opeenion; but I'll no bait wi' ye. + +_Mr. Parr. (his blood up)._ Then I'll hae a sexpence on 't wi you, +Mester McKerrow! + +_Mr. McKerr._ Nay, I'm for Macrae mysel'.... An' we're baith in the +richt o't too, for they've jist gien him the bit red flag--that means +he's got firsst prize. + +_Mr. Parr. (to Mr. Havers, with reproach)._ Man, if ye'd hed the speerit +o' your opeenions, I'd ha' won sexpence aff ye by noo! + +_Mr. Havers (obstinately)._ I canna thenk but that Macrae's kelt was too +lang--prize or no prize. I'll be telling him when I see him that he +looked like a lassie in it. + +_Mr. Parr. (with concern)._ I wouldna jist advise ye to say ony sic a +thing to him. These Hielanders are awfu' prood; and he micht tak' it gey +ill fro' ye! + +_Mr. Havers._ I see nae hairrm mysel' in jist tellin' him, in a +pleesant, daffin-like way, that he looked like a lassie in his kelt. But +there's nae tellin' hoo ye may offend some fowk; an' I'm thenking it's +no sae verra prawbable that I'll hae the oaportunity o' saying onything +aboot the maitter to him. + + * * * * * + +AWKWARD FOR HIM.--_Tam._ "I'm sayin', man, my cairt o' hay's fa'en ower. +Will ye gie 's a haund up wi' 't?" _Jock._ "'Deed will I. But ye'll be +in nae hurry till I get tae the end o' the raw?" _Tam._ "Ou no. I'm in +nae hurry, but I doot my faither 'll be wearyin'." _Jock._ "An' whaur's +yer faither?" _Tam._ "He's in below the hay!" + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "MISTAKEN IDENTITY" + +SCENE--_Northern Meeting at Inverness._ PERSONS REPRESENTED--Ian Gorm +_and_ Dougald Mohr, _gillies_. Mr. Smith, _of London_. + +_First Gillie._ "Wull yon be the MacWhannel, Ian Gorm?" + +_Second ditto._ "No!! Hes nae-um is Muster Smuth! And he ahl-ways wears +the kult--and it is foohl that you aar, Tougalt Mohr!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: (LOCH) FYNE GRAMMAR + +(_A Sad Fact for the School Board_) + +_Tugal._ "Dud ye'll ever see the _I-oo-na_ any more before?" + +_Tonal._ "Surely I was." + +_Tugal._ "Ay, ay! Maybe you was never on poard too, after thus----" + +_Tonal._ "I dud."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: NON BEN (LOMOND) TROVATO. + +_Rory (fresh from the hills)._ "Hech, mon! Ye're loassin' a' yer +watter!!" + +_Aungus._ "Haud yer tongue, ye feul! Ett's latt oot to stoap the laddies +frae ridin' ahint!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "NOTHING LIKE LEATHER" + +_Bookseller_ (_to Lanarkshire country gentleman who had brought his back +numbers to be bound_). "Would you like them done in 'Russia' or +'Morocco,' sir?" + +_Old Gentleman._ "Na, never maind aboot Rooshy or Moroccy. I'll just hae +'em boond in Glasgy here!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE TROUBLES OF STALKING + +_Irate Gillie_ (_on discovering in the distance, for the third time that +morning, a "brute of a man" moving about in his favourite bit of +"forest"_). "Oh! deil take the people! Come awa', Muster Brown, sir; +_it's just Peekadilly!!!_"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A FALLEN ASS + +_Indignant Gillie_ (_to Jones, of London, who has by mistake killed a +hind_). "I thoucht ony fule ken't it was the stags that had the horns!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: BONCHIENIE + +_Young Lady Tourist_ (_caressing the hotel terrier, Bareglourie, N.B._). +"Oh, Binkie is his name! He seems inclined to be quite friendly with +me." + +_Waiter._ "Oo, aye, miss, he's no vera parteec'lar wha he taks oop wi!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "CANNY" + +_First North Briton._ "'T's a fine day, this?" + +_Second ditto._ "No ill, ava." + +_First ditto._ "Ye'll be travellin'?" + +_Second ditto._ "Weel, maybe I'm no." + +_First ditto._ "Gaun t'Aberdeen, maybe?" + +_Second ditto._ "Ye're no faur aff't!!" + + [_Mutually satisfied, each goes his respective way_ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE PURCHASING LIMIT + +_Mr. Steinsen_ (_our latest millionaire--after his third fruitless +stalk_). "Now, look here, you rascal! if you can't have the brutes +tamer, I'm hanged if I don't sack you!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GROWING POPULARITY OF THE HIGHLANDS + +_Mrs. Smith_ (_of Brixton_). "Lor', Mr. Brown, I 'ardly knoo yer! Only +think of our meetin' _'ere_, this year, instead of dear old Margit! An' +I suppose that's the costume you go _salmon-stalking_ in?"] + + * * * * * + +MORE SKETCHES FROM SCOTLAND + +ON A CALLANDER CHAR-A-BANC. + + SCENE--_In front of the Trossachs Hotel. The few passengers bound + for Callander have been sitting for several minutes on the coach + "Fitz-James" in pelting rain, resignedly wondering when the driver + will consider them sufficiently wet to start._ + +_The Head Boots (to the driver)._ There's another to come yet; he'll no +be lang now. (_The cause of the delay comes down the hotel steps, and +surveys the vehicle and its occupants with a surly scowl._) Up with ye, +sir, plenty of room on the second seats. + +_The Surly Passenger._ And have all the umbrellas behind dripping on my +hat! No, thank you, I'm going in front. (_He mounts, and takes up the +apron._) Here, driver, just look at this apron--it's sopping wet! + +_The Driver (tranquilly)._ Aye, I'm thinking it wull ha' got a bet +domp. + +[Illustration: "Ou aye, ye can get inside the boot if ye've a mind to +it."] + +_The Surly P._ Well, I'm not going to have this over me. Haven't you got +a _dry_ one somewhere? + +_The Driver._ There'll be dry ones at Collander. + +_The Surly P. (with a snort)._ At Callander! Much good that is! (_With +crushing sarcasm._) If I'm to keep dry on this concern, it strikes me +I'd better get inside the boot at once! + +_The Driver (with the air of a man who is making a concession)._ Ou aye, +ye can get inside the boot if ye've a mind to it. + + [_The coach starts, and is presently stopped at a corner to take up + a male and a female passenger, who occupy the seats immediately + behind the Surly Passenger._ + +_The Female P. (enthusiastically, to her companion)._ There's dear old +Mrs. Macfarlane, come out to see the last of us! Look at her standing +out there in the garden, all in the rain. That's what I always say about +the Scotch--they _are_ warm-hearted! + + [_She waves her hand in farewell to some distant object._ + +_Her Companion. That_ ain't her; that's an old apple-tree in the garden +_you_'re waving to. _She's_ keeping indoors--and shows her sense too. + +_The Female P. (disgusted)._ Well, I _do_ think after our being at the +farm a fortnight and all, she _might_----But that's Scotch all _over_, +that is; get all they can out of you, and then, for anything _they_ +care----! + +_The Surly P._ I don't know whether you are aware of it, ma'am, but that +umbrella of yours is sending a constant trickle down the back of my +neck, which is _most_ unpleasant! + +_The Female P._ I'm sorry to hear it, sir, but it's no worse for you +than it is for me. I've got somebody else's umbrella dripping down _my_ +back, and _I_ don't complain. + +_The Surly P._ I _do_, ma'am, for, being in front, I haven't even the +poor consolation of feeling that my umbrella is a nuisance to anybody. + +_A Sardonic P. (in the rear, politely)._ On the contrary, sir, I find it +a most pleasing object to contemplate. Far more picturesque, I don't +doubt, than any scenery it may happen to conceal. + +_A Chatty P. (to the driver; not because he cares, but simply for the +sake of conversation)._ What fish do you catch in that river there? + +_The Driver (with an effort)._ There'll be troots, an', maybe, a pairrch +or two. + +_The Chatty P._ Perch? Ah, that's rather like a goldfish in shape, eh? + +_Driver (cautiously)._ Aye, it would be that. + +_Chatty P._ Only considerably bigger, of course. + +_Driver (evasively)._ Pairrch is no a verra beg fesh. + +_Chatty P._ But bigger than goldfish. + +_Driver (more confidently)._ Ou aye, they'll be begger than goldfesh. + +_Chatty P. (persistently)._ You've seen goldfish--know what they're +like, eh? + +_Driver (placidly)._ I canna say I do. + + [_They pass a shooting party with beaters._ + +_Chatty P. (as before)._ What are they going to shoot? + +_Driver._ They'll jist be going up to the hells for a bet grouse +drivin'. + +_A Lady P._ I wonder why they carry those poles with the red and yellow +flags. I suppose they're to warn tourists to keep out of range when they +begin firing at the butts. I know they _have_ butts up on the moor, +because I've seen them. Just look at those birds running after that man +throwing grain for them. Would those be _grouse_? + +_Driver._ Ye'll no find grouse so tame as that, mem; they'll jist be +phaysants. + +_The Lady P._ Poor dear things! why, they're as tame as chickens. It +_does_ seem so cruel to kill them! + +_Her Comp._ Well, but they kill chickens, occasionally. + +_The Lady P._ Not with a horrid gun; and, besides, that's such a totally +different thing. + +_The Chatty P._ What do you call that mountain, driver, eh? + +_Driver._ Yon hell? I'm no minding its name. + +_The Surly P._ You don't seem very ready in pointing out the objects of +interests on the route, I must say. + +_Driver (modestly)._ There'll be them on the corch that know as much +aboot it as myself. (_After a pause--to vindicate his character as a +cicerone._) Did ye nottice a bit building at the end of the loch over +yonder? + +_The Surly P._ No, I didn't. + +_Driver._ Ye might ha' seen it, had ye looked. + + [_He relapses into a contented silence._ + +_Chatty P._ Anything remarkable about the building? + +_Driver._ It was no the building that's remairkable. (_After a severe +struggle with his own reticence._) It was jist the spoat. 'Twas there +_Roderick Dhu_ fought _Fitz-James_ after convoying him that far on his +way. + + [_The Surly Passenger snorts as though he didn't consider this + information._ + +_The Lady P. (who doesn't seem to be up in her "Lady of the Lake"). +Fitz-James who?_ + +_Her Comp._ I fancy he's the man who owns this line of coaches. There's +his name on the side of this one. + +_The Lady P._ And I saw _Roderick Dhu's_ on another coach. I _thought_ +it sounded familiar, somehow. He must be the _rival_ proprietor, I +suppose. I wonder if they've made it up yet. + +_The Driver (to the Surly Passenger, with another outburst of +communicativeness)._ Yon stoan is called "Sawmson's Putting Stoan." He +hurrled it up to the tope of the hell, whaur it's bided ever sence. + + [_The Surly Passenger receives this information with an incredulous + grunt._ + +_The Lady P._ What a magnificent old ruin that is across the valley, +some ancient castle, evidently; they can't build like that nowadays! + +_The Driver._ That's the Collander Hydropawthec, mem; burrnt doon two or +three years back. + +_The Lady P. (with a sense of the irony of events)._ _Burnt_ down! A +Hydropathic! Fancy! + +_Male P. (as they enter Callander and pass a trim villa)._ There, +_that's_ Mr. Figgis's place. + +_His Comp._ What--_that_? Why, it's quite a _bee-yutiful_ place, with +green venetians, and a conservatory, and a croaky lawn, and everything! +Fancy all that belonging to _him!_ It's well to be a grocer--in _these_ +parts, seemingly! + +_Male P._ Ah, _we_ ought to come up and start business here; it 'ud be +better than being in the Caledonian Road! + + [_They meditate for the remainder of the journey upon the caprices + of Fortune with regard to grocery profits in Caledonia and the + Caledonian Road respectively._ + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "MEN WERE DECEIVERS EVER" + +_Mr. Punch_ is at present in the Highlands "a-chasing the deer." + +_Mrs. Punch_ is at home, and has promised all her friends haunches of +venison as soon as they arrive!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "DESIRABLE" + +_Saxon Passenger (on Highland coach)._ "Of course you're well acquainted +with the country round about here. Do you know 'Glen Accron'?" + +_Driver._ "Aye, weel." + +_Saxon Passenger (who had just bought the estate)._ "What sort of a +place is it?" + +_Driver._ "Weel, if ye saw the deil tethered on't, ye'd just say 'Puir +brute'!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ISOLATION!--OFF THE ORKNEYS + +_Southern Tourist._ "'Get any newspapers here?" + +_Orcadian Boatman._ "Ou aye, when the steamer comes. If it's fine, +she'll come ance a week; but when it's stormy, i' winter, we dinna catch +a glint o' her for three months at a time." + +_S. T._ "Then you'll not know what's goin' on in London!" + +_O. B._ "Na--but ye see ye're just as ill aff i' London as we are, for +ye dinna ken what's gaun on here!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ON THE MOORS + +_The Laird's Brother-in-law (from London)._ "It's very strange, Lachlan! +I'm having no luck!--and yet I seem to see two birds in place of one? +That was surely very strong whiskey your master gave me at lunch?" + +_Keeper._ "Maybe aye and maybe no--the whuskey was goot; but any way ye +dinna manage to hit the richt bird o' the twa!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A POOR ADVERTISEMENT + +_Tourist._ "I suppose you feel proud to have such a distinguished man +staying in your house?" + +_Host of the "Drumdonnachie Arms."_ "'Deed no! A body like that does us +mair hairm than guid; his appearance is nae credit tae oor +commissariat!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GENEROSITY + +_Noble Lord (whose rifle has brought to a scarcely untimely end a very +consumptive-looking fallow deer)._ "Tut--t, t, t, t, tut! O, I say, +Stubbs!"--(_to his keeper_)--"you shouldn't have let me kill such a +poor, little, sickly, scraggy thing as this, you know! It positively +isn't fit for human food! Ah! look here, now! I'll tell you what. You +and McFarlin may have this buck between you!!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: TRAVELLER TOO BONÂ FIDE + +_Dusty Pedestrian._ "I should like a glass of beer, missis, please----" + +_Landlady._ "Hae ye been trevellin' by rell?" + +_Pedestrian._ "No, I've been walking--fourteen miles." + +_Landlady._ "Na, na, nae drink will ony yin get here, wha's been +pleesure-seekin' o' the Sawbath day!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +He goes on board the _Iona_. The only drawback to his perfect enjoyment +is the jealousy caused among all the gentlemen by the ladies clustering +round him on all occasions.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PREHISTORIC PEEPS + +There were often unforeseen circumstances which gave to the Highland +stalking of those days an added zest!] + + * * * * * + +THE PLEASURES OF TRAVEL + +(_By Ane that has kent them_) + +[Illustration] + + 'Tis a great thing, the Traivel; I'll thank ye tae find + Its equal for openin' the poors o' the mind. + It mak's a man polished, an' gies him, ye ken, + Sic a graun' cosmypollitan knowledge o' men! + + I ne'er was a stay-at-hame callant ava, + I aye must be rantin' an' roamin' awa', + An' far hae I wandered, an' muckle hae seen + O' the ways o' the warl' wi' ma vara ain een. + + I've been tae Kingskettle wi' Wullie an' Jeames, + I've veesited Anster an' Elie an' Wemyss, + I've walked tae Kirkca'dy an' Cupar an' Crail, + An' I aince was awa' tae Dundee wi' the rail. + + Losh me, sir! The wonnerfu' things that I saw! + The kirks wi' their steeples, sae bonny an' braw + An' publics whauriver ye turned wi' yer ee-- + 'Tis jist a complete eddication, Dundee! + + Theer's streets--be the hunner! An' shops be the score! + Theer's bakers an' grocers an' fleshers galore! + An' milliners' winders a' flauntin' awa' + Wi' the last o' the fashions frae Lunnon an' a'. + + An' eh, sic a thrang, sir! I saw in a minnit + Mair folk than the toun o' Kinghorn will hae in it + I wadna hae thocht that the hail o' creation + Could boast at ae time sic a vast population! + + Ma word, sir! It gars ye clap haun' tae yer broo + An' wunner what's Providence after the noo + That he lets sic a swarm o' they cratur's be born + Wham naebody kens aboot here in Kinghorn. + + What?--Leeberal minded?--Ye canna but be + When ye've had sic a graun' eddication as me. + For oh, theer is naethin' like traivel, ye ken, + For growin' acquent wi' the natur' o' men. + + * * * * * + +"FALLS OF FOYERS."--A correspondent writes:--"I have seen a good many +letters in the _Times_, headed 'The Falls of the Foyers.' Here and +abroad I have seen many Foyers, and only fell down once. This was at the +Théâtre Francais, where the Foyer is kept highly polished, or used to be +so. If the Foyers are carpeted or matted, there need be no 'Falls.' + + Yours, + + COMMON SENSE." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "WINGED" + +_First Gael._ "What's the matter, Tonal?" + +_Second ditto (who had been out with Old Briggs)._ "Matter! Hur legs is +full o' shoots".] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH AT THE HIGHLAND GAMES + +Shows the natives how to "put the stone."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: AN ARTIST SCAMP IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Artist (entering)._ "My good woman, if you'll allow me, I'll just paint +that bedstead of yours." + +_Cottager (with bob-curtsey)._ "Thank ye, sir, I' sure it's very kind of +ye--but dinna ye think that little one over yonder wants it more?"] + + * * * * * + +EN ÉCOSSE + +_À Monsieur Punch_ + +DEAR MISTER,--I come of to make a little voyage in Scotland. Ah, the +beautiful country of Sir Scott, Sir Wallace, and Sir Burns! I am gone to +render visit to one of my english friends, a charming boy--_un charmant +garçon_--and his wife, a lady very instructed and very spiritual, and +their childs. I adore them, the dear little english childs, who have the +cheeks like some roses, and the hairs like some flax, as one says in +your country, all buckled--_bouclés_, how say you? + +I go by the train of night--in french one says "_le sleeping_"--to +Edimbourg, and then to Calendar, where I attend to find a coach--in +french one says "_un mail_" or "_un fourinhand_." _Nom d'une pipe_, it +is one of those ridicule carriages, called in french "_un breack_" and +in english a char-à-banc--that which the english pronounce +"_tcherribaingue_"--which attends us at the going out of the station! Eh +well, in voyage one must habituate himself to all! But a such carriage +discovered--_découverte_--seems to me well unuseful in a country where +he falls of rain without cease. + +Before to start I demand of all the world some _renseignements_ on the +scottish climate, and all the world responds me, "All-days of the rain." +By consequence I procure myself some impermeable vestments, one +mackintosch coat, one mackintosch cape of Inverness, one mackintosch +covering of voyage, one south-western hat, some umbrellas, some gaiters, +and many pairs of boots very thick--not boots of town, but veritable +"shootings." + +I arrive at Edimbourg by a morning of the most sads; the sky grey, the +earth wet, the air humid. Therefore I propose to myself to search at +Calender a place at the interior, _et voilà_--and see there--the +_breack_ has no interior! There is but that which one calls a "boot", +and me, Auguste, can I to lie myself there at the middle of the +baggages? Ah no! Thus I am forced to endorse--_endosser_--my impermeable +vestments and to protect myself the head by my south-western hat. Then, +holding firmly the most strong of my umbrellas, I say to the coacher, +"He goes to fall of the rain, is it not?" He makes a sign of head of not +to comprehend. Ah, for sure, he is scottish! I indicate the sky and my +umbrella, and I say "Rain?" and then he comprehends. "_Eh huile_", he +responds to me, "_ah canna sé, mébi huile no hé meukl the dé_." I write +this phonetically, for I comprehend not the scottish language. What +droll of conversation! Him comprehends not the english; me I comprehend +not the scottish. + +But I essay of new, "How many has he of it from here to the lake?" +_C'est inutile_--it is unuseful. I say, "Distance?" He comprehends. +"_Mébi oui taque toua hours_", says he; "_beutt yile no fache yoursel, +its no sé lang that yile bi ouishinn yoursel aoua_." _Quelle +langue_--what language, even to write phonetically! I comprehend one +sole word, "hours." Some hours! _Sapristi!_ I say, "Hours?" He says +"_Toua_" all together, a monosyllable. _Sans aucune doute ça veut dire_ +"twelve"--_douze_. Twelve hours on a _breack_ in a such climate! Ah, no! +_C'est trop fort_--it is too strong! "Hold", I cry myself, "attend, I +descend, I go not!" It is true that I see not how I can to descend, for +I am _entouré_--how say you? of voyagers. We are five on a bench, of the +most narrows, and me I am at the middle. And the bench before us is also +complete, and we touch him of the knees. And my neighbours carry on the +knees all sorts of packets, umbrellas, canes, sacks of voyage, &c. _Il +n'y a pas moyen_--he has not there mean. And the coacher says me "_Na, +na, monne, yile no ghitt doun, yile djest baïd ouar yer sittinn._" Then +he mounts to his place, and we part immediately. _Il va tomber de la +pluie! Douze heures! Mon Dieu, quel voyage!_ + + Agree, &c., + + AUGUSTE. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ZEAL + +_Saxon Tourist._ "Been at the kirk?" + +_Celt._ "Aye." + +_Saxon T._ "How far is it?" + +_Celt._ "Daur say it'll be fourteen mile." + +_Saxon T._ "Fourteen miles!!" + +_Celt._ "Aye, aw'm awfu' fond o' the preachin'"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THRIFT + +_Peebles Body (to townsman who was supposed to be in London on a +visit)._ "E--eh Mac! ye're sune hame again!" + +_Mac._ "E--eh, it's just a ruinous place, that! Mun, a had na' been +the-erre abune twa hoours when--_bang_--went _saxpence!!!_"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A SATISFACTORY SOLUTION + +"I fear, Duncan, that friend of mine does not seem overly safe with his +gun." + +"No, sir. But I'm thinkin' it'll be all right if you wass to go wan side +o' him and Mr. John the ither. He canna shoot baith o' ye!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "VITA FUMUS" + +_Tonal._ "Whar'll ye hae been till, Tugal?" + +_Tugal._ "At ta McTavishes' funeral----" + +_Tonal._ "An' is ta Tavish deed?" + +_Tugal._ "Deed is he!!" + +_Tonal._ "Losh, mon! Fowk are aye deein' noo that never used to dee +afore!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PRECAUTIONS + +_Saxon Angler (to his keeper)._ "You seem in a great hurry with your +clip! I haven't seen a sign of a fish yet--not a rise!" + +_Duncan._ "'Deed, sir, I wisna a botherin' mysel' aboot the fush; but +seein' you wis new to the business, I had a thocht it widna be lang +afore you were needin' a left oot o' the watter yoursel'!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: HIS POUND OF FLESH + +_Financier (tenant of our forest, after a week's unsuccessful +stalking)._ "Now, look here, my man. I bought and paid for ten stags. If +the brutes can't be shot, you'll have to trap them! I've promised the +venison, and I mean to have it!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: SCRUPULOUS + +_Shepherd._ "O, Jims, mun! Can ye no gie a whustle on tha ram'lin' brute +o' mine? I daurna mysel'; it's just fast-day in oor parish!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "THE LAND OF LORN" + +_It has drizzled incessantly, for a fortnight, since the Smiths came +down to their charming villa at Braebogie, in Argyleshire._ + +_Keeper (who has come up to say the boat is ready on the loch, if +"they're for fushin' the day")._ "Eh! I should na wonder if this weather +tur-rns ta rain!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: LOCAL + +SUNDAY MORNING + +_Tourist (staying at the Glenmulctem Hotel--dubiously)._ "Can +I--ah--have a boat?" + +_Boatman._ "Oo--aye!" + +_Tourist._ "But I thought you--ah--never broke the--aw--Sabbath in +Scotland?" + +_Boatman._ "Aweel, ye ken the Sawbath disna' come doon to the loch--it +just staps at the hottle!"] + + * * * * * + +EN ÉCOSSE (ENCORE) + +_À Monsieur Punch_ + +DEAR MISTER,--I have spoken you of my departure from Calendar on the +_breack_. Eh, well, he rained not of the whole of the whole--_du tout +du tout! Il faisait un temps superbe_--he was making a superb time, the +route was well agreeable, and the voyage lasted but two hours, and not +twelve. What droll of idea! In Scottish _twa_ is two, not twelve. I was +so content to arrive so quick, and without to be wetted that I gave the +coacher a good to-drink--_un bon pourboire_--though before to start all +the voyagers had paid him a "tipp", that which he called a "driver's +fee." Again what droll of idea! To give the to-drink before to start, +and each one the same--six pennys. + +My friend encountered me and conducted me to his house, where I have +passed fifteen days, a sojourn of the most agreeables. And all the time +almost not one sole drop of rain! _J'avais beau_--I had fine--to buy all +my impermeable vestments, I carry them never. One sole umbrella suffices +me, and I open him but two times. And yet one says that the Scotland is +a rainy country. It is perhaps a season _tout à fait_--all to +fact--exceptional. But fifteen days almost without rain! One would +believe himself at the border of the Mediterranean, absolutely at the +South. And I have eaten of the "porridg", me Auguste! _Partout_ I essay +the dish of the country. I take at first a spoonful pure and simple. _Oh +la, la!_ My friend offers me of the cream. It is well. Also of the salt. +_Quelle idée!_ But no, before me I perceive a dish of _confiture_, that +which the Scottish call "marmaladde." _A la bonne heure!_ With some +marmaladde, some cream, and much of sugar, I find that the "porridg" is +enough well, for I taste him no more. + +One day we make an ascension, and we see many grouses. Only we can not +to shoot, for it is not yet the season of the huntings. It is but a hill +that we mount. The name appears me to be french, but bad written. "Ben +Venue", that is to say, "_Bienvenu_"--_soyez le bienvenu_. She is one of +the first of the Scottish hills, and she says "welcome" in french. It is +a pretty idea, and a politeness very amiable towards my country. I +salute the hospitable Scotland and I thank her. It is a great country, +of brave men, of charming women--ah, I recall to myself some eyes so +beautiful, some forms so attracting!--of ravishing landscapes, and, at +that epoch there, of a climate so delicious. She has one sole and one +great defect. The best Scottish hotels cost very dear, and, my faith, +the two or three that I visited are not great thing like +comfortable--_ne sont pas grand'chose comme comfortable!_ + +One day we make a little excursion on the Lake of Lomond. The lake is +well beautiful, and the steamboat is excellent. But in one certain +hotel, in descending from a _breack_, and before to embark, we take the +"lunch." We bargain not, we ask not even the price, we eat at the _table +d'hôte_ like all the world in Swiss, in France, even in Germany, when +there is but one half hour before the departure of the train or of the +boat. _Oh la, la!_ I have eaten in the spanish hotels, on the steamboats +of the italian lakes, even in the _restaurants--mon Dieu!_--of the +english railways, but never, never--_au grand jamais_--have I eaten a +_déjeuner_ like that! One dish I shall forget never; some exterior green +leaves of lettuce, without oil or vinegar, which they called a "salad." +_Parbleu_--by blue! In all the history of the world there has been but +one man who would have could to eat her with pleasure--Nabuchodonosor! + + Agree, &c., + + AUGUSTE. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "CANNY" + +_Sister._ "Why, Charles, you've got raw whiskey here!" + +_Charles._ "Well, it's hardly worth while to bring water. We can always +find that as we go along--when we want it."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CAUTIOUS + +_Visitor (at out-of-the-way inn in the North)._ "Do you know anything +about salmon-poaching in this neighbourhood?" + +_Landlady (whose son is not above suspicion)._--"Eh--no, sir. Maybe it's +a new style of cooking as we haven't heard of in these parts, as you +see, sir, we only do our eggs that way; and"--(_brightening up_)--"if +you like 'em, I can get you a dish at once!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A DECIDED OPINION + +_Proprietor of shootings ("in the course of conversation")._ "Yes, but +you know, Sandy, it's difficult to choose between the Scylla of a shy +tenant, and the Charybdis of----" + +_Sandy (promptly)._ "Aweel! Gie me the siller, an' anybuddy that likes +may hae the tither!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Chappie (after missing his fourth stag, explains)._ +"Aw--fact is, the--aw--waving grass was in my way." + +_Old Stalker._ "Hoot, mon, wad he hae me bring out a scythe?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Our artist catches it again this winter in the +Highlands.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A FINE HEAD (BUT NOT OF THE RIGHT SORT OF CATTLE) Perkins +has paid a mint of money for his shooting, and has had bad luck all the +season. To-day, however, he gets a shot, only--it turns out to be at a +cow!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A "SCENE" IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Ill-used husband_ (_under the bed_). "Aye! Ye may crack me, and ye may +thrash me, but ye canna break my manly sperrit. I'll na come oot!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +He is at present on a boating excursion, and describes the motion as +extremely pleasant, and has no dread of sea-sickness.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "GAME" IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Captain Jinks._ "Birds plentiful, I hope, Donald?" + +_Donald._ "Tousans, sir--in tousans." + +_Captain J._ "Any zebras?" + +_Donald_ (_anxious to please_). "Is't zebras? They're in tousans, too." + +_Captain J._ "And gorillas, no doubt?" + +_Donald._ "Well, noo an' then we see ane or twa--just like yerself."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES'S ADVENTURES IN THE HIGHLANDS + +Lavinia takes a siesta,] + +[Illustration: And the frightful situation she finds herself in at the +end of it.] + +[Illustration: Lavinia arrives at a waterfall, and asks its name. The +shepherd (not understanding English) informs her in Gaelic that it is +called (as Lavinia supposes) "Vicharoobashallochoggilnabo." Lavinia +thinks it a very pretty name.] + +[Illustration: A bright idea strikes the shepherd, and before Lavinia +can remonstrate, he transports her, in the usual manner, to the other +side.] + +[Illustration: MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES + +She comes suddenly on a strange structure--apparently a native fort, and +is just going to sketch it, when a savage of gigantic stature, and armed +to the teeth, starts from an ambush, and menaces her in Gaelic!] + + * * * * * + +TWENTY HOURS AFTER + +EUSTON, 8 P.M. + + I'm sick of this sweltering weather. + Phew! ninety degrees in the shade! + I long for the hills and the heather, + I long for the kilt and the plaid; + I long to escape from this hot land + Where there isn't a mouthful of air, + And fly to the breezes of Scotland-- + It's never too stuffy up there. + + For weeks I have sat in pyjamas, + And found even these were _de trop_, + And envied the folk of Bahamas + Who dress in a feather or so; + But now there's an end to my grilling, + My Inferno's a thing of the past; + Hurrah! there's the whistle a-shrilling-- + We are off to the Highlands at last! + +CALLANDER, 4 P.M. + + The dull leaden skies are all clouded + In the gloom of a sad weeping day, + The desolate mountains are shrouded + In palls of funereal grey; + 'Mid the skirl of the wild wintry weather + The torrents descend in a sheet + As we shiver all huddled together + In the reek of the smouldering peat. + + A plague on the Highlands! to think of + The heat that but lately we banned; + Oh! what would we give for a blink of + The bright sunny side of the Strand! + To think there are folk that still revel + In Summer, and fling themselves down, + In the Park, or St. James? What the d---- + Possessed us to hurry from town? + + * * * * * + +"OUT OF TUNE AND HARSH."--_First Elder_ (_at the Kirk "Skellin'"_). "Did +ye hear Dougal? More snorin' in the sermon?" + +_Second Elder_, "Parefec'ly disgracefu'! He's waukened 's a'!" + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: OVERHEARD IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_First Chieftain._ "I say, old chap, what a doose of a bore these games +are!" + +_Second Chieftain._ "Ah, but, my dear boy, it is this sort of thing that +has made us Scotchmen _what we are!!_"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "SERMONS IN STONES" + +_Tourist_ (_of an inquiring and antiquarian turn_). "Now I suppose, +farmer, that large cairn of stones has some history?" + +_Highland Farmer._ "Ooh, aye, that buig o' stanes has a gran' history +whatever!" + +_Tourist_ (_eagerly_). "Indeed! I should like to----What is the +legend----?" + +_Farmer._ "Just a gran' history!" (_Solemnly._) "It took a' ma cairts +full and horses sax months to gather them aff he land and pit them +ther-r-re!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: JETSAM AND FLOTSAM + +Smith being shut out from the Continent this year, takes a cottage ornée +on Dee-Side. Scotland. The children are sent up first. The house is +described as "conveniently furnished"--they find it so!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: IN THE WILDS OF THE NORTH. + +_Hungry Saxon_ (_just arrived, with equally hungry family_). "Well, +now--er--what can you give us for dinner, as soon as we've had a wash?" + +_Scotch Lassie._ "Oh, jist onything!" + +_H. S._ (_rubbing his hands in anticipation_). "Ah! Now we'll have a +nice juicy steak." + +_Lassie._ "A--weel. We'll be haein' some steak here maybe by the boat i' +the morn's morn!" + +_H. S._ (_a little crestfallen_). "Oh--well--chops then. We'll say +mutton chops." + +_Lassie._ "Oh, ay, but we've no been killin' a sheep the day!" + + [_Ends up with boiled eggs, and vows to remain at home for the future._ + +] + + * * * * * + +THE DUKE OF ATHOLL'S SHILLING (1851) + +The _North British Mail_ assures us that the Duke of Atholl exacts one +shilling a head from every person taking a walk in his ground at +Dunkeld. This is rather dear; but the impost would be insupportable if +his Grace insisted upon also showing himself for the money. + +A HIGHLAND CORONACH + +_Or Lament over the Acts and State of the Duke of Atholl._ + +After Scott. + + He has shut up the mountain, + He has locked up the forest, + He has bunged up the fountain, + When our need was the sorest; + The traveller stirring + To the North, may dogs borrow; + But the Duke gives no hearing, + No pass--but to sorrow. + + The hand of the tourist + Grasps the carpet-bag grimly, + But a face of the dourest + Frowns through the Glen dimly. + The autumn winds, rushing, + Stir a kilt of the queerest, + Duke and gillies come crushing + Where pleasure is nearest! + + Queer foot on the corrie, + Oddly loving to cumber-- + Give up this odd foray, + Awake from your slumber! + Take your ban from the mountain, + Take your lock from the river, + Take your bolt from the fountain, + Now at once, and for ever! + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: The sad fate of our only ham.--The pursuit.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A RARA MONGRELLIS + +_Tourist._ "Your dog appears to be deaf, as he pays no attention to me." + +_Shepherd._ "Na, na, sir. She's a varra wise dog, for all tat. But she +only speaks Gaelic."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "IN FOR IT" + +_Innocent Tourist._ "No fish to be caught in Loch Fine now? And how do +you support yourself?" + +_Native._ "Whiles she carries parcels, and whiles she raws people in ta +poat, and whiles a shentleman 'ull give her a saxpence or a shillin'!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A BLANK DAY + +_The Keeper_ (_to Brown, who rents the forest_). "Doon wi' ye! Doon wi' +ye! Get ahint a stang!" + +_Brown_ (_out of temper--he had been "stalking" about all the morning, +and missed several times_). "Yes, it's all very well to say 'Get behind +a stone.' But show me one!--show me one!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Mr. Punch passes a night at McGillie Cullum Castle.] + +[Illustration: The Laird, as a delicate compliment, serenades him.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A BAD SEASON + +_Sportsman._ "I can assure you, what with the rent of the moor, and my +expenses, and 'what not,' the birds have cost me--ah--a sovereign +apiece!!" + +_Keeper._ "A' weel, sir! 'Deed it's a maircy ye didna kill na mair o' +'em!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CANDID + +_Sportsman._ "Boy, you've been at this whiskey!" + +_Boy_ (_who has brought the luncheon-basket_). "Na! The cooark wadna +come oot!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "UNCO CANNY" + +_Noble Sportsman._ "Missed, eh?" + +_Cautious Keeper._ "Weel, a' wadna gang quite sae faur as to say that; +but a' doot ye hay'na _exactly_ hit."] + + * * * * * + +THE SONG OF THE SCOTCH TOURIST + + Those Scotch hotels! Those Scotch hotels + Are fit for princes and for swells; + But their high charges don't agree + With humbler travellers like me. + + Twelve shillings daily for my board + Is more than I can well afford, + For this includes nor ale nor wine, + Whereof I drink some when I dine. + + Bad sherry's charged at eight-and-six, + A price that in my gizzard sticks: + And if I want a pint of port, + A crown is what I'm pilfer'd for 't. + + For service, too, I have to pay, + Two shillings, as a rule, per day: + Yet always, when I leave the door, + The boots and waiter beg for more. + + So, till a fortune I can spend, + Abroad my autumn steps I'll bend; + Far cheaper there, experience tells, + Is living than at Scotch hotels! + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A VERY DIFFERENT MATTER + +_Southern Lord_ (_staying at Highland castle_). "Thank you so much. +I--ah--weally enjoy your music. I think of having a piper at my own +place." + +_Sandy the piper._ "An' fat kin' o' a piper would your lordship be +needin'?" + +_Southern Lord._ "Oh, certainly a good piper like yourself, Sandy." + +_Sandy_ (_sniffing_). "Och! Inteet!--Ye might easily fin' a lord like +your lordship, but it's nae sae easy to fin' a piper like me whatever!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + +THE END + +BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., PRINTERS, LONDON AND TONBRIDGE. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Punch in the Highlands, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS *** + +***** This file should be named 37882-8.txt or 37882-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/8/8/37882/ + +Produced by Neville Allen, Chris Curnow and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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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: Mr. Punch in the Highlands + +Author: Various + +Editor: J. A. Hammerton + +Illustrator: Charles Keene + and others + +Release Date: October 30, 2011 [EBook #37882] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS *** + + + + +Produced by Neville Allen, Chris Curnow and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<h1>MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS</h1> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_cover" id="Page_cover">[Cover]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 30%"> +<a href="images/i_cover.png"> +<img src="images/i_cover.png" width="100%" alt="Cover" /></a> +</div> + +<h3>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE.</h3> + +<p>Some pages of this work have been moved from the original sequence to enable +the contents to continue without interruption. The page numbering remains unaltered.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> + +<h3>PUNCH LIBRARY OF HUMOUR</h3> + +<h4>Edited by J. A. Hammerton</h4> + +<p>Designed to provide in a series of volumes, each complete in itself, the +cream of our national humour, contributed by the masters of comic +draughtsmanship and the leading wits of the age to "Punch", from its +beginning in 1841 to the present day.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 30%"> +<a href="images/i_002b.png"> +<img src="images/i_002b.png" width="100%" alt="Dog in highland dress" /></a> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_003.png"> +<img src="images/i_003.png" width="100%" alt="THRIFT" /></a> +<h3>THRIFT</h3> +<p><i>Highlander (he had struck his foot against a "stane").</i> "Phew-ts!—e-eh +what a ding ma puir buit wad a gotten if a'd had it on!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p> + +<h2>MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS</h2> + +<table summary="contributors"> +<tr> +<td> + +AS PICTURED BY<br /><br /> +<br /> +CHARLES KEENE,<br /> +JOHN LEECH,<br /> +GEORGE DU MAURIER,<br /> +W. RALSTON,<br /> +L. RAVEN-HILL,<br /> +J. BERNARD PARTRIDGE,<br /> +E. T. REED,<br /> +G. D. ARMOUR,<br /> +CECIL ALDIN,<br /> + A. S. BOYD,<br /> +ETC.<br /> +</td> +<td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 30%"> +<a href="images/i_004a.png"> +<img src="images/i_004a.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. P. in the moumtains" /></a> +</div> +</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<center><i>WITH 140 ILLUSTRATIONS</i><br /> +<br /> +PUBLISHED BY ARRANGEMENT WITH THE PROPRIETORS OF "PUNCH"<br /> +<br /> +THE EDUCATIONAL BOOK CO. LTD.<br /> +</center> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p><hr /> + +<h3>THE PUNCH LIBRARY OF HUMOUR</h3> + +<center> +<i>Twenty-five volumes, crown 8vo. 192 pages<br /> +fully illustrated</i><br /> +<br /> +LIFE IN LONDON<br /> +<br /> +COUNTRY LIFE<br /> +<br /> +IN THE HIGHLANDS<br /> +<br /> +SCOTTISH HUMOUR<br /> +<br /> +IRISH HUMOUR<br /> +<br /> +COCKNEY HUMOUR<br /> +<br /> +IN SOCIETY<br /> +<br /> +AFTER DINNER STORIES<br /> +<br /> +IN BOHEMIA<br /> +<br /> +AT THE PLAY<br /> +<br /> +MR. PUNCH AT HOME<br /> +<br /> +ON THE CONTINONG<br /> +<br /> +RAILWAY BOOK<br /> +<br /> +AT THE SEASIDE<br /> +<br /> +MR. PUNCH AFLOAT<br /> +<br /> +IN THE HUNTING FIELD<br /> +<br /> +MR. PUNCH ON TOUR<br /> +<br /> +WITH ROD AND GUN<br /> +<br /> +MR. PUNCH AWHEEL<br /> +<br /> +BOOK OF SPORTS<br /> +<br /> +GOLF STORIES<br /> +<br /> +IN WIG AND GOWN<br /> +<br /> +ON THE WARPATH<br /> +<br /> +BOOK OF LOVE<br /> +<br /> +WITH THE CHILDREN<br /> +</center> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 30%"> +<a href="images/i_005.png"> +<img src="images/i_005.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. P. with dog." /></a> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p> + +<h2>NORTHWARD HO!</h2> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 20%"> +<a href="images/i_006.png"> +<img src="images/i_006.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. P. with shot bird." /></a> +</div> + +<p><span class="smcap">Scotsmen</span>—Highlanders and Lowlanders—have furnished Mr. Punch with many +of his happiest jokes. Despite the curious tradition which the Cockney +imbibes with his mother's milk as to the sterility of Scotland in +humour, the Scots are not only the cause of humour in others but there +are occasions when they prove themselves not entirely bereft of the +faculty which, with his charming egoism, the Cockney supposes to be his +own exclusive birthright. Indeed, we have it on the authority of Mr. +Spielmann, the author of "The History of <i>Punch</i>", that "of the accepted +jokes from unattached contributors (to Punch), it is a notable fact that +at least 75 per cent. comes from north of the Tweed." As a very +considerable proportion of these Scottish jokes make fun of the national +characteristics of the Scot, it is clear that Donald has the supreme +gift of being able to laugh at himself. It should be noted, however, +that Mr. Punch's most celebrated Scottish joke ("Bang went saxpence"), +which we give on page 153, was no invention, but merely the record of an +actual conversation overheard by an Englishman!</p> + +<p>In the present volume the purpose has been not so much to bring together +a representative collection of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> the Scottish humour that has appeared in +<i>Punch</i>, but to illustrate the intercourse of the "Sassenach" with the +Highlander, chiefly as a visitor bent on sport, and incidentally to +illustrate some of the humours of Highland life. Perhaps the distinction +between Highlander and Lowlander has not been very rigidly kept, but +that need trouble none but the pedants, who are notoriously lacking in +the sense of humour, and by that token ought not to be peeping into +these pages.</p> + +<p>Of all Mr. Punch's contributors, we may say, without risk of being +invidious, that Charles Keene was by far the happiest in the portrayal +of Scottish character. His Highland types are perhaps somewhat closer to +the life than his Lowlanders, but all are invariably touched off with +the kindliest humour, and never in any way burlesqued. If his work +overshadows that of the other humorous artists past and present +represented in this volume, it is for the reason stated; yet it will be +found that from the days of John Leech to those of Mr. Raven-Hill, <span class="smcap">Mr. +Punch's</span> artists have seldom been more happily inspired than when they +have sought to depict Highland life and the lighter side of sport and +travel north of the Tweed.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p> +<br /><br /> +<h2>MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS</h2> +<br /><br /> +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>"SPORTING NOTES"</h2> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 30%"> +<a href="images/i_008.png"> +<img src="images/i_008.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. P on a shoot." /></a> +</div> + +<p>The following are the notes we have received from our Sporting +Contributor. I wish we could say they were a fair equivalent for the +notes he has received from <i>us</i>, to say nothing of that new Henry's +patent double central-fire breech-loader, with all the latest +improvements, and one of Mr. Benjamin's heather-mixture suits. Such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> as +they are we print them, with the unsatisfactory consolation that if the +notes are bad they are like the sport and the birds. Of all these it may +be said that "bad is the best."</p> + +<p><i>North and South Uist.</i>—The awfully hard weather—the natives call it +"soft" here—having rendered the chances of winged game out of the +question, the sportsmen who have rented the shootings are glad to try +the chances of the game, sitting, and have confined themselves to the +whist from which the islands take their name. Being only two, they are +reduced to double dummy. As the rental of the Uist Moors is £400, they +find the points come rather high—so far.</p> + +<p><i>Harris.</i>—In spite of repeated inquiries, the proprietress of the +island was not visible. Her friend, Mrs. Gamp, now here on a visit, +declares she saw Mrs. H. very recently, but was quite unable to give me +any information as to shootings, except the shootings of her own corns.</p> + +<p><i>Fifeshire.</i>—The renters of the Fife shootings generally have been +seriously considering the feasibility of combining with those of the +once well-stocked Drum Moor in Aberdeenshire, to get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> up something like +a band—of hope, that a bag may be made some day. Thus far, the only +bags made have been those of the proprietors of the shootings, who have +bagged heavy rentals.</p> + +<p><i>Rum.</i>—I call the island a gross-misnomer, as there is nothing to drink +in it but whiskey, which, with the adjacent "Egg", may be supposed to +have given rise to the neighbouring "Mull"—hot drinks being the natural +resource of both natives and visitors in such weather as we've had ever +since I crossed the Tweed. I have seen one bird—at least so the gilly +says—after six tumblers, but to me it had all the appearance of a +brace.</p> + +<p><i>Skye.</i>—Birds wild. Sportsmen, ditto. Sky a gloomy grey—your +correspondent and the milk at the hotel at Corrieverrieslushin alike +sky-blue.</p> + +<p><i>Cantire.</i>—Can't you? Try tramping the moors for eight hours after a +pack of preternaturally old birds that know better than let you get +within half a mile of their tails. Then see if you can't tire. I beg +your pardon, but if you knew what it was to make jokes under my present +circumstances, you'd give it up, or do worse. If I should not turn up +shortly, and you hear of an inquest on a young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> man, in one of +Benjamin's heather-mixture suits, with a Henry's central-fire +breech-loader, and a roll of new notes in his possession, found hanging +wet through, in his braces in some remote Highland shieling—break it +gently to the family of</p> + +<p class="author">Your Sporting Contributor.</p> + +<hr /> + +<h2>A PIBROCH FOR BREAKFAST.</h2> +<div class="poem w26"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2">Hech, ho, the Highland laddie!</p> +<p class="i2">Hech, ho, the Finnon haddie!</p> +<p class="i8">Breeks awa',</p> +<p class="i8">Heck, the braw,</p> +<p class="i2">Ho, the bonnie tartan plaidie!</p> +<p class="i8">Hech, the laddie,</p> +<p class="i8">Ho, the haddie,</p> +<p class="i2">Hech, ho, the cummer's caddie,</p> +<p class="i8">Dinna forget</p> +<p class="i8">The bannocks het,</p> +<p class="i2">Gin ye luve your Highland laddie.</p> +</div></div> + +<hr /> + +<p>The Member for Sark writes from the remote Highlands of Scotland, where +he has been driving past an interminable series of lochs, to inquire +where the keys are kept? He had better apply to the local authorities in +the Isle of Man. They have a whole House of Keys. Possibly those the +hon. Member is concerned about may be found among them.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_010.png"> +<img src="images/i_010.png" width="100%" alt="ON THE HILLS" /></a> +<h3>ON THE HILLS</h3> +<p><i>Deer Stalker (old hand, and fond of it).</i> "Isn't it exciting? Keep +cool!"</p> +<p> [<i>Jones isn't used to it, and, not having moved for the last half-hour, +his excitement has worn off. He's wet through, and sinking fast in the +boggy ground, and speechless with cold. So he doesn't answer.</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p> + +<h2>MR. BUGGLE'S FIRST STAG</h2> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_012a.png"> +<img src="images/i_012a.png" width="100%" alt="STAG LAY PRONE" /></a> +<h3>1) AT THE FIRST SHOT MR BUGGLE'S FIRST STAG LAY PRONE.</h3> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_012b.png"> +<img src="images/i_012b.png" width="100%" alt="ELATED WITH SUCCESS" /></a> +<h3>2) ELATED WITH SUCCESS MR B. RUSHED UP AND SEATED HIMSELF +ASTRIDE HIS VICTIM.</h3> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_013a.png"> +<img src="images/i_013a.png" width="100%" alt="IT WAS ONLY SLIGHTLY STUNNED" /></a> +<h3>3) BUT ALAS IT WAS ONLY SLIGHTLY STUNNED, AND PROMPTLY +ROSE TO THE OCCASION.</h3> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_013b.png"> +<img src="images/i_013b.png" width="100%" alt="SO DID MR B." /></a> +<h3>4) SO DID MR B.</h3> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_014a.png"> +<img src="images/i_014a.png" width="100%" alt="LAW OF GRAVITY PROVED TOO STRONG" /></a> +<h3>5) THE LAW OF GRAVITY PROVED TOO STRONG WHEN A LUCKY SHOT +FROM THE KEEPER</h3> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_014b.png"> +<img src="images/i_014b.png" width="100%" alt="A SATISFACTORY FOOTING ONCE MORE" /></a> +<h3>6) PLACED MATTERS UPON A SATISFACTORY FOOTING ONCE MORE.</h3> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p> + +<h2>MY ONLY SHOT AT A CORMORANT.</h2> +<table summary="shooting at a cormorant"> +<tr> +<td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 90%"> +<a href="images/i_016a.png"> +<img src="images/i_016a.png" width="100%" alt="Here she comes" /></a> +<h3>Here she comes!</h3> +</div> +</td><td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 90%"> +<a href="images/i_016b.png"> +<img src="images/i_016b.png" width="100%" alt="There she goes" /></a> +<h3>There she goes!</h3> +</div> +</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p> + +<h2>FULL STOP IN THE DAWDLE FROM THE NORTH.</h2> + +<center><i>(Leaves from the Highland Journal of Toby, M.P.)</i></center> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 25%"> +<a href="images/i_017.png"> +<img src="images/i_017.png" width="100%" alt="Cartoon dog" title="" /></a> +</div> +<p>"Here's a go", I said, turning to Sark, after carefully looking round +the station to see if we really were back at Oban, having a quarter of +an hour ago started (as we supposed) on our journey, already fifteen +minutes late.</p> + +<p>"Well, if you put it in that way", he said, "I should call it an entire +absence of go. I thought it was a peculiarly jolting train. Never passed +over so many points in the same time in my life."</p> + +<p>"Looks as if we should miss train at Stirling", I remark, anxiously. "If +so, we can't get on from Carlisle to Woodside to-night."</p> + +<p>"Oh, that'll be all right," said Sark, airy to the last; "we'll make it +up as we go along."</p> + +<p>Again sort of faint bluish light, which I had come to recognise as a +smile, feebly flashed over <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>cadaverous countenance of the stranger in +corner seat.</p> + +<p>Certainly no hurry in getting off. More whistling, more waving of green +flag. Observed that natives who had come to see friends off had quietly +waited on platform. Train evidently expected back. Now it had returned +they said good-bye over again to friends. Train deliberately steams out +of station thirty-five minutes late. Every eight or ten miles stopped at +roadside station. No one got in or got out. After waiting five or six +minutes, to see if any one would change his mind, train crawled out +again. Performance repeated few miles further on with same result.</p> + +<div class="figright" style="width: 20%"> +<a href="images/i_018.png"> +<img src="images/i_018.png" width="100%" alt="Cartoon dog" /></a> +</div> + +<p>"Don't put your head out of the window and ask questions", Sark +remonstrated, as I banged down the window. "I never did it since I heard +a story against himself John Bright used to tell with great glee. +Travelling homeward one day in a particularly slow train, it stopped an +unconscionably long time at Oldham. Finally, losing all patience, he +leaned out of the window, and in his most magisterial manner said, 'Is +it intended that this train shall move on to-night?' The porter +addressed, not knowing the great man, tartly replied, 'Put in thy big +white yedd, and mebbe the train'll start.'"</p> + +<p>Due at Loch Awe 1.32; half-past one when we strolled into Connel Ferry +station, sixteen miles short of that point. Two more stations before we +reach Loch Awe.</p> + +<p>"Always heard it was a far cry to Loch Awe", said Sark, undauntedly +determined to regard matters cheerfully. </p> + +<p>"You haven't come to the hill yet", said a sepulchral voice in the +corner.</p> + +<p>"What hill?" I asked.</p> + +<p>"Oh, you'll see soon enough. It's where we usually get out and walk. If +there are on board the train any chums of the guard or driver, they are +expected to lend a shoulder to help the train up."</p> + +<p>Ice once broken, stranger became communicative. Told us his melancholy +story. Had been a W.S. in Edinburgh. Five years ago, still in prime of +life, bought a house at Oban; obliged to go to Edinburgh once, sometimes +twice, a week. Only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> thrice in all that time had train made junction +with Edinburgh train at Stirling. Appetite failed; flesh fell away; +spirits went down to water level. Through looking out of window on +approaching Stirling, in hope of seeing South train waiting, eyes put on +that gaze of strained anxiety that had puzzled me. Similarly habit +contracted of involuntarily jerking up right hand with gesture designed +to arrest departing train.</p> + +<p>"Last week, coming north from Edinburgh", said the hapless passenger, +"we were two hours late at Loch Awe. 'A little late to-day, aren't we?' +I timidly observed to the guard. 'Ou aye! we're a bit late,' he said. +'Ye see, we had a lot of rams, and we couldna' get baith them and you up +the hill; so we left ye at Tyndrum, and ran the rams through first, and +then came back for ye.'"</p> + +<p>Fifty minutes late at Killin Junction. So far from making up time lost +at Oban, more lost at every wayside station.</p> + +<p>"I hope we shan't miss the train at Stirling?" I anxiously inquired of +guard.</p> + +<p>"Weel, no", said he, looking at his watch. "I dinna think ye'll hae +managed that yet."</p> + +<p>This spoken in soothing tones, warm from the kindly Scottish heart. +Hadn't yet finally lost chance of missing train at Stirling that should +enable us to keep our tryst at Woodside. But no need for despair. A +little more dawdling and it would be done.</p> + +<p>Done it was. When we reached Stirling, porters complacently announced +English mail had left quarter of an hour ago. As for stationmaster, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> +was righteously indignant with inconsiderate travellers who showed +disposition to lament their loss.</p> + +<p>"Good night", said cadaverous fellow-passenger, feebly walking out of +darkling station. "Hope you'll get a bed somewhere. Having been going up +and down line for five years, I keep a bedroom close by. Cheaper in the +end. I shall get on in the morning."</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="smcap">Mere Invention.</span>—Up the Highlands way there is, in wet weather, a +handsome cataract, the name whereof is spelt anyhow you like, but is +pronounced "Fyres." There is not much water in hot weather, and then art +assists nature, and a bucket or so of the fluid is thrown over for the +delectation of tourists. One of them, observing this arrangement, said +that the proprietor</p> + +<blockquote><p>"Began to pail his ineffectual Fyres." </p></blockquote> + +<p>[This story is quite false, which would be of no consequence, but that +every Scottish tourist knows it to be false. Our contributor should +really be more careful.]</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_019.png"> +<img src="images/i_019.png" width="100%" alt="Where is the lunch basket" /></a> +<p>"Where can that confounded fellow have got to with the lunch basket?"</p> +</div> + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_020.png"> +<img src="images/i_020.png" width="100%" alt="Here he is" /></a> +<p>Here he is, remarking confidentially, that that "ginger-peer is apout the +pest he ever tasted."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_022.png"> +<img src="images/i_022.png" width="100%" alt="whose whiskies do you keep" /></a> +<p><i>Cockney Sportsman.</i> "Haw—young woman, whose whiskies do +you keep here?"</p> +<p><i>Highland Lassie.</i> "We only keep McPherson's, sir."</p> +<p><i>C. S.</i> "McPherson? Haw—who the deuce is McPherson?"</p> +<p><i>H. L.</i> "My brother, sir."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_023.png"> +<img src="images/i_023.png" width="100%" alt="the stag nearly finished him" /></a> +<p>During Mr. Spoffin's visit to the Highlands, he found a +difficulty in approaching his game—so invented a method of simplifying +matters. His "make-up", however, was so realistic, that the jealous old +stag nearly finished him!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 40%"> +<a href="images/i_024.png"> +<img src="images/i_024.png" width="100%" alt="HIS IDEA OF IT" /></a> +<h3>HIS IDEA OF IT</h3> +<p><i>Native.</i> "Is 't no a daft-like place this tae be takin' a view? There's +no naething tae be seen for the trees. Noo, if ye was tae gang tae the +tap o' Knockcreggan, that wad set ye fine! Ye can see <i>five coonties</i> +frae there!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 40%"> +<a href="images/i_026.png"> +<img src="images/i_026.png" width="100%" alt="TOURING IN THE HIGHLANDS" /></a> +<h3>TOURING IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p>"Hullo, Sandy! Why haven't you cleaned my carriage, as I told you last +night?"</p> +<p>"Hech, sir, what for would it need washing? It will be just the same +when you'll be using it again!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_027.png"> +<img src="images/i_027.png" width="100%" alt="Highland dancer" /></a> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p> + +<h2>FROM OUR BILIOUS CONTRIBUTOR.</h2> + +<center><i>To</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Punch.</span></center> + +<p><span class="smcap">My dear sir</span>, +<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p> + +<p>Embarking at Bannavie very early in the morning—<i>diluculo surgere +saluberrimum est</i>, but it is also particularly disagreeable—I was upon +the canal of the Caledonians, on my way to the capital of the Highlands. +This is the last voyage which, upon this occasion, I shall have the +pleasure of describing. The vessel was commanded by Captain Turner, who +is a remarkable meteorologist, and has emitted some wonderful weather +prophecies. Having had, moreover, much opportunity of observing +character, in his capacity of captain of boats chiefly used by tourists, +he is well acquainted with the inmost nature of the aristocracy and +their imitators. Being myself of an aristo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>cratic turn of mind (as well +as shape of body) it was refreshing to me to sit with him on the bridge +and speak of our titled friends.</p> + +<p>Fort Augustus, which we passed, is not called so from having been built +by the Roman Emperor of that name, quite the reverse. The next object of +interest is a thing called the Fall of Foyers, which latter word is +sounded like fires, and the announcement to Cockneys that they are going +to see the affair, leads them to expect something of a pyrotechnic +character. It is nothing of that sort. The steamboat is moored, you rush +on shore, and are instantly arrested by several pikemen—I do not mean +soldiers of a mediæval date, but fellows at a gate, who demand fourpence +apiece from everybody landing in those parts. Being in Scotland, this +naturally made me think I had come to Johnny Groat's house, but no such +thing, and I have no idea of the reason of this highway robbery, or why +a very dirty card should have been forced upon me in proof that I had +submitted. We were told to go up an ascending road, and then to climb a +dreadfully steep hill, and that then we should see something. For my own +part, I felt inclined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> to see everybody blowed first, but being +over-persuaded, I saw everybody blowed afterwards, for that hill is a +breather, I can tell you. However, I rushed up like a mounting deer, and +when at the top was told to run a little way down again. I did, and saw +the sight. You have seen the cataracts of the Nile? It's not like them. +You have seen a cataract in a party's eye. It's not like that. Foyers is +a very fine waterfall, and worthy of much better verses than some which +Mr. Burns addressed to it in his English style, which is vile. Still, +the waterfall at the Colosseum, Regent's Park, is a good one, and has +this advantage, that you can sit in a chair and look at it as long as +you like, whereas you walk a mile to Foyers, goaded by the sailors from +the vessel, who are perpetually telling you to make haste, and you are +allowed about three minutes and fourteen seconds to gaze upon the scene, +when the sailors begin to goad you back again, frightening you with +hints that the captain will depart without you. Precious hot you come on +board, with a recollection of a mass of foam falling into an abyss. That +is not the way to see Foyers, and I hereby advise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> all tourists who are +going to stop at Inverness, to drive over from thence, take their time +at the noble sight, and do the pier-beggars out of their fourpences.</p> + +<p>The stately towers of the capital of the Highlands are seen on our +right. A few minutes more, and we are moored. Friendly voices hail us, +and also hail a vehicle. We are borne away. There is news for us. We are +forthwith—even in that carriage, were it possible—to induct ourselves +into the black tr × ws × rs of refined life and the white cravat of +graceful sociality, and to accompany our host to the dinner of the +Highland railwaymen. <i>We</i> rail. We have not come six hundred miles to +dress for dinner. Our host is of a different opinion, and being a host +in himself, conquers our single-handed resistance. We attend the dinner, +and find ourselves among Highland chieftains plaided and plumed in their +"tartan array." (Why doesn't Horatio MacCulloch, noble artist and +Highland-man, come to London and be <i>our</i> tartan R.A.?) We hear wonders +of the new line, which is to save folks the trouble of visiting the lost +tribe at Aberdeen, and is to take them direct from Inverness to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> Perth, +through wonderful scenery. We see a programme of toasts, to the number +of thirty-four, which of course involves sixty-eight speeches. There is +also much music by the volunteers—not, happily, by bag-pipers. We +calculate, on the whole, that the proceedings will be over about four in +the morning. Ha! ha! <i>Dremacky</i>. There is a <i>deus ex machiná</i> literally, +a driver on an engine, and he starts at ten. Numbers of the guests must +go with him. <i>Claymore!</i> We slash out the toasts without mercy—without +mercy on men set down to speak and who have spoiled their dinner by +thinking over their <i>impromptus</i>. But there is one toast which shall be +honoured, yea, with the Highland honours. <i>Mr. Punch's</i> health is +proposed. It is well that this handsome hall is built strongly, or the +Highland maidens should dance here no more. The shout goes up for <i>Mr. +Punch</i>.</p> + +<p>I believe that I have mentioned to you, once or twice, that I am an +admirable speaker, but upon this occasion I surpassed myself—I was in +fact, as the Covent Garden play-bills say, "unsurpassingly successful." +Your interests were safe in my hands. I believe that no person present +heard a syllable of what I said. It was this:</p> + +<blockquote><p>[It may have been, but as what our correspondent has been pleased +to send as his speech would occupy four columns, we prefer to leave +it to immortality in the excellent newspaper of which he sends us a +"cutting." We incline to think that he <i>was</i> weak enough to say +what he says he said, because he could not have invented and +written it out after a Highland dinner, and it was published next +morning. It is extremely egotistical, and not in the least +entertaining—<i>Ed.</i>] </p></blockquote> + +<p>Among the guests was a gentleman who owns the mare who will certainly +win the Cesarewitch. <i>I know this for a fact</i>, and I advise you to put +your money on <i>Lioness</i>. His health was proposed, and he returned thanks +with the soul of wit. I hope he recollects the hope expressed by the +proposer touching a certain saddling-bell. I thought it rather strong in +"Bible-loving Scotland", but to be sure, we were in the Highlands, which +are England, or at all events where the best English spoken in Scotland +is heard.</p> + +<p>We reached our house at an early hour, and I was lulled to a gentle +slumber by the sound of the river Ness. This comes out of Loch Ness, and +in the latest geographical work with which I am acquainted, namely, +"Geography Anatomiz'd, by Pat. Gordon, M.A.F.R.S. Printed for Andr. +Bell, at the Cross Keys and Bible in Cornhill, and R. Smith, under the +Royal Exchange, 1711", I read that "towards the north-west part of +<i>Murray</i> is the famous <i>Lough-Ness</i> which never freezeth, but retaineth +its natural heat, even in the extremest cold of winter, and in many +places this lake hath been sounded with a line of 500 fathom, but no +bottom can be found" (just as in the last rehearsal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> of the artisans' +play in the <i>Midsummer Night's Dream</i>), but I believe that recent +experiments have been more successful, and that though no lead plummet +would go so deep, a volume by a very particular friend of mine was +fastened to the line, and descended to the bottom in no time. I will +mention his name if he is not kind to my next work, but at present I +have the highest esteem and respect for him. I only show him that I know +this little anecdote.</p> + +<p>There were what are called Highland games to be solemnised in Inverness. +I resolved to attend them, and, if I saw fit, to join in them. But I was +informed by a Highland friend of mine, Laidle of Toddie, a laird much +respected, that all competitors must appear in the kilt. As my own +graceful proportions would look equally well in any costume, this +presented no difficulty, and I marched off to Mr. Macdougall, the great +Highland costumier, and after walking through a dazzling array of Gaelic +glories, I said, mildly, "Can you make me a Highland dress?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly, in a few hours", said Mr. Macdougall; but somehow I fancied +that he did not seem to think that I was displaying any vast amount of +sense.</p> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> +<p>"Then, please to make me one, very handsome", said I; "and send it home +to-night." And I was going out of the warehouse.</p> + +<p>"But, sir", said Mr. Macdougall, "do you belong to any clan, or what +tartan will you have?"</p> + +<p>"Mr. Macdougall", said I, "it may be that I do belong to a clan, or am +affiliated to one. It may be, that like Edward Waverley, I shall be +known hereafter as the friend of the sons (and daughters) of the +clan ——. It may be that if war broke out between that clan and another, +I would shout our war-cry, and, drawing my claymore, would walk into the +hostile clan like one o'clock. But at present that is a secret, and I +wear not the garb of any clan in particular. Please to make me up a +costume out of the garbs of several clans, but be sure you put the +brightest colours, as they suit my complexion."</p> + +<p>I am bound to say that though Mr. Macdougall firmly declined being party +to this arrangement, which he said would be inartistic, he did so with +the utmost courtesy. My opinion is, that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> thought I was a little +cracked. Many persons have thought that, but there is no foundation for +the suspicion.</p> + +<p>"You see, Mr. Macdougall", says I, "I am a Plantagenet by descent, and +one of my ancestors was hanged in the time of George the Second. Do +those facts suggest anything to you in the way of costume?"</p> + +<p>"The first does not", he said, "but the second may. A good many persons +had the misfortune to be hanged about the time you mention, and for the +same reason. I suppose your ancestor died for the Stuarts."</p> + +<p>"No, sir, he died for a steward. The unfortunate nobleman was most +iniquitously destroyed for shooting a plebeian of the name of Johnson, +for which reason I hate everybody of that name, from Ben downwards, and +will not have a Johnson's <i>Dictionary</i> in my house."</p> + +<p>"Then, sir", says Mr. Macdougall, "the case is clear. You can mark your +sense of the conduct of the sovereign who executed your respected +relative. You can assume the costume of his chief enemies. You can wear +the Stuart tartan."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Hm", says I. "I should look well in it, no doubt; but then I have no +hostility to the present House of Brunswick."</p> + +<p>"Why", says he, laughing; "Her Majesty dresses her own princes in the +Stuart tartan. I ought to know that."</p> + +<p>"Then that's settled", I replied.</p> + +<p>Ha! You would indeed have been proud of your contributor, had you seen +him splendidly arrayed in that gorgeous garb, and treading the heather +of Inverness High Street like a young mountaineer. He did not look then +like</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Epicurus Rotundus.</span></p> + +<p> <i>Inverness Castle.</i></p> + +<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label"><sup>[1]</sup></span></a> +We perfectly understand this advsnce towards civility as the writer +approaches the end of his journey. He is a superior kind of young man, +if not the genius he imagines himself.--<i>Ed.</i></p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="smcap">Notice to the Highlanders.</span>—Whereas Mr. Punch, through his "Bilious +Contributor", did on the 7th November, 1863, offer a prize of fifty +guineas to the best Highland player at Spellikins, in the games for +1873. And whereas Mr. Punch has had the money, with ten years' interest, +quite ready, and waiting to be claimed. And whereas no Highland player +at Spellikins appeared at the games of 1873. This to give notice that +Mr. Punch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> has irrevocably confiscated the money to his own sole and +peculiar use, and intends to use it in bribery at the next general +election. He begs to remark to the Highlands, in the words of his +ancestor, Robert Bruce, at Bannockburn—"There is a rose fallen from +your wreath!"<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor"><sup>[2]</sup></a></p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Punch.</span></p> + +<p>7th November, 1873.</p> + +<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label"><sup>[2]</sup></span></a>Of course the King said nothing so sweetly sentimental. +What he did say to Earl Randolph was, "Mind your eye, you great stupid +ass, or you'll have the English spears in your back directly." Nor did +the Earl reply, "My wreath shall bloom, or life shall fade. Follow, my +household!" but, with an amazing great curse, "I'll cook 'em. Come on, +you dawdling beggars, and fulfil the prophecies!" But so history is +written.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="smcap">More Revenge for Flodden.</span>—<i>Scene: a Scotch Hotel. Tourist (indignant at +his bill).</i> "Why, landlord, there must be some mistake there!" +<i>Landlord.</i> "Mistake? Aye, aye. That stupid fellow, the waiter, has just +charged you five shillings—too little."</p> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<p><span class="smcap">From the Moors.</span>—<i>Sportsman.</i> "Much rain Donald?" <i>Donald.</i> "A bit soft. +Just wet a' day, wi' showers between."</p> +<br /> +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_030.png"> +<img src="images/i_030.png" width="100%" alt="A PLEASANT PROSPECT" /></a> +<h3>A PLEASANT PROSPECT!</h3> +<p><i>English Tourist.</i> "I say, look here. How far is it to this Glenstarvit? +They told us it was only——"</p> +<p><i>Native.</i> "Aboot four miles."</p> +<p><i>Tourist</i> <i>(aghast)</i>. "All bog like this?"</p> +<p><i>Native.</i> "Eh—h—this is just naethin' till't!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_030.png"> +<img src="images/i_032.png" width="100%" alt="ANOTHER MISUNDERSTANDING" /></a> +<h3>ANOTHER MISUNDERSTANDING</h3> +<p><i>'Arry</i> <i>(on a Northern tour, with Cockney pronunciation)</i>. "Then I'll +'ave a bottle of aile."</p> +<p><i>Hostess of the Village Inn.</i> "<i>Ile</i>, sir? We've nane in the hoose, but +castor ile or paraffin. Wad ony o' them dae, sir?"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_034.png"> +<img src="images/i_034.png" width="100%" alt="THE WEIRD SISTERS" /></a> +<h3>THE WEIRD SISTERS</h3> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_036.png"> +<img src="images/i_036.png" width="100%" alt="DEER-STALKING MADE EASY" /></a> +<h3>DEER-STALKING MADE EASY</h3> +<center>The patent silent motor-crawler.</center> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 90%"> +<a href="images/i_037.png"> +<img src="images/i_037.png" width="100%" alt="ILLUSTRATED QUOTATIONS" /></a> +<h3>ILLUSTRATED QUOTATIONS</h3> +<p><i>(One so seldom finds an Artist who realises the poetic conception.)</i></p> +<p>"Is this the noble Moor...?"—<i>Othello</i>, Act IV., Scene 1.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_038.png"> +<img src="images/i_038.png" width="100%" alt="DRACONIAN" /></a> +<h3>DRACONIAN</h3> +<p><span class="smcap">Scene</span>.—<i>Police Court, North Highlands.</i></p> +<p><i>Accused.</i> "Put, Pailie, it's na provit!"</p> +<p><i>Bailie.</i> "Hoot toots, Tonal, and hear me speak! Aw'll only fine ye +ha'f-a-croon the day, because et's no varra well provit. But if ever ye +come before me again, ye'll no get aff under five shillin's, whether +et's provit or no!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_039.png"> +<img src="images/i_039.png" width="100%" alt="CUSTOMS OF YE ENGLYSHE IN 1849" /></a> +<h3>MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF YE ENGLYSHE IN 1849</h3> +<center>DEERE STALKYNGE IN YE HYGHLANDES</center> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_040.png"> +<img src="images/i_040.png" width="100%" alt="SHOOTING FROM A BUTT" /></a> +<h3>ONE OF THE ADVANTAGES OF SHOOTING FROM A BUTT</h3> +<p><i>Keeper (on moor rented by the latest South African millionaire, to +guest).</i> "Never mind the birds, sir. For onny sake, lie down! The +maister's gawn tae shoot!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_042.png"> +<img src="images/i_042.png" width="100%" alt="THE TWELFTH" /></a> +<h3>THE TWELFTH</h3> +<center><i>(Guilderstein in the Highlands)</i></center> +<p><i>Guild. (his first experience).</i> "I've been swindled! That confounded +agent said it was all drivin' on this moor, and look at it, all hills +and slosh! Not a decent carriage road within ten miles!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_044.png"> +<img src="images/i_044.png" width="100%" alt="THE MATERNAL INSTINCT" /></a> +<h3>THE MATERNAL INSTINCT</h3> +<p><i>The Master.</i> "I'm sayin', wumman, ha'e ye gotten the tickets?"</p> +<p><i>The Mistress.</i> "Tuts, haud your tongue aboot tickets. Let me count the +weans!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p> + +<table summary="cartoons"> +<tr> +<td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 70%"> +<a href="images/i_046a.png"> +<img src="images/i_046a.png" width="100%" alt="tip us the 'Ighland fling" /></a> +<p><i>The Irrepressible.</i> "Hi, Scotty, tip us the 'Ighland fling."</p> +</div> +</td> +<td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_046b.png"> +<img src="images/i_046b.png" width="100%" alt="Tipped" /></a> +<center><span class="smcap">Tipped</span>!</center> +</div> +</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<h3>"NEMO ME IMPUNE", &c.</h3> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_048.png"> +<img src="images/i_048.png" width="100%" alt="Return of the wounded" /></a> +<p>Return of the wounded and missing Popplewitz omitted to +send in after his day on the moors.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_050.png"> +<img src="images/i_050.png" width="100%" alt="RECRIMINATION" /></a> +<h3>RECRIMINATION</h3> +<p><i>Inhabitant of Uist.</i> "I say, they'll pe speaking fa-ar petter English +in Uist than in Styornaway."</p> +<p><i>Lass of the Lewis.</i> "Put in Styornaway they'll not pe caa-in' fush +'feesh,' whatefer!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_051.png"> +<img src="images/i_051.png" width="100%" alt="Missed again" /></a> +<h3>GUILDERSTEIN IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>Guilderstein.</i> "Missed again! And dat fellow, Hoggenheimer, comin'on +Monday too! Why did I not wire to Leadenhall for an 'aunch, as Betty +told me!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_052.png"> +<img src="images/i_052.png" width="100%" alt="Gie me a gude funeral" /></a> +<p><i>Juvenis.</i> "Jolly day we had last week at McFoggarty's wedding! Capital +champagne he gave us, and we did it justice, I can tell you--"</p> +<p><i>Senex</i> (who prefers whiskey). "Eh-h, mun, it's a' verra weel weddings +at ye-er time o' life. Gie me a gude funeral!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<h2>THE HIGHLAND GAMES AT MACJIGGITY</h2> + +<p>Whilst staying at MacFoozle Castle, my excellent host insisted that I +should accompany him to see the Highland games. The MacFoozle himself is +a typical Hielander, and appeared in a kilt and jelly-bag—philabeg, I +mean. Suggested to him that I should go, attired in pair of +bathing-drawers, Norfolk jacket, and Glengarry cap, but he, for some +inscrutable reason of his own, negatived the idea. Had half a mind to +dress in kilt myself, but finally decided against the national costume +as being too draughty.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> Arrived on ground, and found that "tossing the +caber" was in full progress. Braw laddies struggled, in turn, with +enormous tree trunk. The idea of the contest is, that whoever succeeds +in killing the greatest number of spectators by hurling the tree on to +them, wins the prize. Fancy these laddies had been hung too long, or +else they were particularly braw. Moved up to windward of them promptly.</p> + +<p>"Who is the truculent-looking villain with red whiskers?" I ask.</p> + +<p>"Hush!" says my host, in awed tones. "That is the MacGinger himself!"</p> + +<p>I grovel. Not that I have ever even heard his name before, but I don't +want to show my ignorance before the MacFoozle. The competition of +pipers was next in order, and I took to my heels and fled. Rejoined +MacFoozle half an hour later to witness the dancing. On a large raised +platform sat the judges, with the mighty MacGinger himself at their +head. Can't quite make out whether the dance is a Reel, a Strathspey, a +Haggis, or a Skirl—sure it is one or the other. Just as I ask for +information, amid a confusing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> whirl of arms and legs and "Hoots!" a +terrific crack is heard, and the platform, as though protesting at the +indignities heaped upon it, suddenly gives way, and in a moment, +dancers, pipers, and judges are hurled in a confused and struggling heap +to the ground. The MacGinger falls upon some bag-pipes, which emit +dismal groanings beneath his massive weight. This ends the dancing +prematurely, and a notice is immediately put up all round the grounds +that (to take its place) "There will be another competition of +bag-pipes." I read it, evaded the MacFoozle, and fled.</p> + +<hr /> + +<h2>SONG FOR A SCOTCH DUKE.</h2> + +<div class="poem w24"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i2">My harts in the Highlands shall have their hills clear,</p> +<p class="i2">My harts in the Highlands no serf shall come near—</p> +<p class="i2">I'll chase out the Gael to make room for the roe,</p> +<p class="i2">My harts in the Highlands were ever his foe.</p> +</div></div> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<center><span class="smcap">Things no Highlander can Understand.</span><br /><br /> + +Breaches of promise.</center> +<br /> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_054.png"> +<img src="images/i_054.png" width="100%" alt="HEBRIDEAN SPORT" /></a> +<h3>HEBRIDEAN SPORT</h3> +<p><i>Shooting Tenant (accounting for very large species of grouse which his +setter has just flushed).</i> "Capercailzie! By George!"</p> +<p><i>Under-keeper Neil.</i> "I'm after thinking, sir, you'll have killed Widow +McSwan's cochin cock. Ye see the crofters were forced to put him and the +hens away out here till the oats is ripe!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_056.png"> +<img src="images/i_056.png" width="100%" alt="LATEST FROM THE MOORS" /></a> +<h3>LATEST FROM THE MOORS</h3> +<p><i>Intelligent Foreigner.</i> "Tell me—zee 'Ilanders, do zay always wear zee +raw legs?"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p> + +<h2>A GROAN FROM A GILLIE</h2> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 40%"> +<a href="images/i_057.png"> +<img src="images/i_057.png" width="100%" alt="A GROAN FROM A GILLIE" /></a> +</div> + +<div class="poem w26"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Lasses shouldna' gang to shoot,</p> +<p class="i14">Na, na!</p> +<p class="i0">Gillies canna' help but hoot,</p> +<p class="i14">Ha, ha!</p> +<p class="i0">Yon douce bodies arena' fittin'</p> +<p class="i0">Wi' the gudeman's to be pittin',</p> +<p class="i0">Bide at hame and mind yere knittin'!</p> +<p class="i14">Hoot, awa'!</p> +<p class="i0">"Wimmen's Rechts" is vara weel,</p> +<p class="i14">Ooh, aye!</p> +<p class="i0">For hizzies wha've nae hearts to feel;</p> +<p class="i14">Forbye</p> +<p class="i0">Wimmen's Rechts is aiblins Wrang</p> +<p class="i2">When nat'ral weak maun ape the strang,</p> +<p class="i0">An' chaney cups wi' cau'drons gang,</p> +<p class="i14">Auch, fie!</p> +<p class="i0">Hennies shouldna' try to craw</p> +<p class="i14">Sae fast—</p> +<p class="i0">Their westlin' thrapples canna' blair</p> +<p class="i14">Sic a blast.</p> +<p class="i0">Leave to men-folk bogs and ferns,</p> +<p class="i0">An' pairtricks, muircocks, braes, and cairns;</p> +<p class="i0">And lasses! ye may mind the bairns—</p> +<p class="i14">That's best!</p> +</div></div> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Tonalt</span> (X) <i>his mark.</i></p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_058.png"> +<img src="images/i_058.png" width="100%" alt="A PRECISIAN" /></a> +<h3>A PRECISIAN</h3> +<p><i>Artist (affably).</i> "Fine morning." <i>Native.</i> "No' bad ava'."</p> +<p><i>Artist.</i> "Pretty scenery." <i>Native.</i> "Gey an' good."</p> +<p><i>Artist (pointing to St. Bannoch's, in the distance).</i> "What place is +that down at the bottom of the loch?"</p> +<p><i>Native.</i> "It's no at the bottom—it's at the fut!"</p> +<p><i>Artist (to himself).</i> "You past-participled Highlander!"</p> +<p> [<i>Drops the subject!</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p> + +<h2>THE THING TO DO IN SCOTLAND</h2> + +<center><i>(More Leaves from the Highland Journal of Toby, M.P.)</i></center> + +<p><i>Quiverfield, Haddingtonshire, Monday.</i>—You can't spend twenty-four +hours at Quiverfield without having borne in upon you the truth that the +only thing to do in Scotland is to play goff. (On other side of Tweed +they call it golf. Here we are too much in a hurry to get at the game to +spend time on unnecessary consonant.) The waters of what Victor Hugo +called "The First of the Fourth" lave the links at Quiverfield. Blue as +the Mediterranean they have been in a marvellous autumn, soon to lapse +into November. We can see the Bass Rock from the eighth hole, and can +almost hear the whirr of the balls skimming with swallow flight over the +links at North Berwick.</p> + +<p>Prince Arthur here to-day, looking fully ten years younger than when I +last saw him at Westminster. Plays through live-long day, and drives off +fourteen miles for dinner at Whittinghame, thinking no more of it than +if he were crossing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> Palace Yard. Our host, Waverley Pen, is happy in +possession of links at his park gates. All his own, for self and +friends. You step through the shrubbery, and there are the far-reaching +links; beyond them the gleaming waters of the Forth. Stroll out +immediately after breakfast to meet the attendant caddies; play goff +till half-past one; reluctantly break off for luncheon; go back to +complete the fearsome foursome; have tea brought out to save time; leave +off in bare time to dress for dinner; talk goff at dinner; arrange +matches after dinner; and the new morning finds the caddies waiting as +before.</p> + +<div class="figright" style="width: 30%"> +<a href="images/i_061.png"> +<img src="images/i_061.png" width="100%" alt="Fingen's finger" /></a> +<h3>Fingen's finger.</h3> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p> + +<p>Decidedly the only thing to do in Scotland is to play goff.</p> + +<p><i>Deeside, Aberdeenshire, Wednesday.</i>—Fingen, M.P., once told an abashed +House of Commons that he "owned a mountain in Scotland." Find, on +visiting him in his ancestral home, that he owns a whole range. Go up +one or two of them; that comparatively easy; difficulty presents itself +when we try to get down. Man and boy, Fingen has lived here fifty years; +has not yet acquired knowledge necessary to guide a party home after +ascending one of his mountains. Walking up in cool of afternoon, we +usually get home sore-footed and hungry about midnight.</p> + +<p>"Must be going now", says Fingen, M.P., when we have seen view from top +of mountain. "Just time to get down before dark. But I know short cut; +be there in a jiffy. Come along."</p> + +<p>We come along. At end of twenty minutes find ourselves in front of +impassable gorge.</p> + +<p>"Ha!" says Fingen, M.P., cheerily. "Must have taken wrong turn; better +go back and start again."</p> + +<p>All very well to say go back; but where were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> we? Fingen, M.P., knows; +wets his finger; holds it up.</p> + +<p>"Ha!" he says, with increased joyousness of manner; "the wind is blowing +that way, is it? Then we turn to the left."</p> + +<p>Another twenty minutes stumbling through aged heather. Path trends +downwards.</p> + +<p>"That's all right", says Fingen, M.P.; "must lead on to the road."</p> + +<p>Instead of which we nearly fall into a bubbling burn. Go back again; +make bee line up acclivity nearly as steep as side of house; find +ourselves again on top of mountain.</p> + +<p>"How lucky!" shouts Fingen, M.P., beaming with delight.</p> + +<p>As if we had been trying all this time to get to top of mountain instead +of to bottom!</p> + +<p>Wants to wet his finger again and try how the wind lies. We protest. Let +us be saved that at least. Fingen leads off in quite another direction. +By rocky pathway which threatens sprains; through bushes and brambles +that tear the clothes; by dangerous leaps from rock to rock he brings us +to apparently impenetrable hedge. We stare forlorn.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Ha!" says Fingen, M.P., more aggressively cheerful than ever. "The road +is on other side. Thought we would come upon it somewhere." Somehow or +other we crawl through.</p> + +<p>"Nothing like having an eye to the lay of country", says Fingen, M.P., +as we limp along the road. "It's a sort of instinct, you know. If I +hadn't been with you, you might have had to camp out all night on the +mountain."</p> + +<p>They don't play goff at Deeside. They bicycle. Down the long avenue with +spreading elm trees deftly trained to make triumphal arches, the +bicycles come and go. Whipsroom, M.P., thinks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> opportunity convenient +for acquiring the art of cycling. W. is got up with consummate art. Has +had his trousers cut short at knee in order to display ribbed stockings +of rainbow hue. Loose tweed-jacket, blood-red necktie, white felt hat +with rim turned down all round, combine to lend him air of a Drury Lane +bandit out of work. Determined to learn to ride the bicycle, but spends +most of the day on his hands and knees, or on his back. Looking down +avenue at any moment pretty sure to find W. either running into the iron +fence, coming off sideways, or bolting head first over the handles of +his bike. Get quite new views of him fore-shortened in all possible +ways, some that would be impossible to any but a man of his +determination.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_067.png"> +<img src="images/i_067.png" width="100%" alt="crack of the whip('s pate!)" /></a> +<h3>The crack of the whip('s pate!)</h3> +</div> + +<p>"Never had a man stay in the house", says Fingen, M.P., ruefully, "who +so cut up the lawn with his head, or indented the gravel with his elbows +and his knees."</p> + +<p>Evidently I was mistaken about goff. Cycling's the thing in Scotland.</p> + +<p><i>Goasyoucan, Inverness-shire, Saturday.</i>—Wrong again. Not goff nor +cycling is the thing to do in Scotland. It's stalking. Soon learn that +great truth at Goasyoucan. The hills that encircle the house densely +populated with stags. To-day three guns grassed nine, one a royal. This +the place to spend a happy day, crouching down among the heather +awaiting the fortuitous moment. Weather no object. Rain or snow out you +go, submissive to guidance and instruction of keeper; by comparison with +whose tyranny life of the ancient galley-slave was perfect freedom.</p> + +<p>Consummation of human delight this, to lie prone on your face amid the +wet heather, with the rain pattering down incessantly, or the snow +pitilessly falling, covering you up flake by flake as if it were a robin +and you a babe in the wood. Mustn't stir; mustn't speak; if you can +conveniently dispense with the operation, better not breathe. Sometimes, +after morning and greater part of afternoon thus cheerfully spent, you +may get a shot; even a stag. Also you may not; or, having attained the +first, may miss the latter. At any rate you have spent a day of +exhilarating delight.</p> + +<p>Stalking is evidently the thing to do in Scotland. It's a far cry to the +Highlands. Happily there is Arthur's Seat by Edinburgh town where +beginners can practise, and old hands may feign delight of early +triumphs.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_060.png"> +<img src="images/i_060.png" width="100%" alt="THE "IRREPRESSIBLE" AGAIN" /></a> +<h3>THE "IRREPRESSIBLE" AGAIN</h3> +<p><i>Gent in Knickerbockers.</i> "Rummy speakers them 'Ighlanders, 'Enery. When +we wos talking to one of the 'ands, did you notice 'im saying +'<i>nozzing</i>' for '<i>nothink</i>,' and '<i>she</i>' for '<i>e</i>'?"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_062.png"> +<img src="images/i_062.png" width="100%" alt="I've forgotten my flask" /></a> +<h3>"THE LAST STRAW"</h3> +<p>"Tired out, are you? Try a drop of brandy! Eh!—what!—confound——By +jingo, I've forgotten my flask!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_064.png"> +<img src="images/i_064.png" width="100%" alt="NOTHING LIKE MOUNTAIN AIR" /></a> +<h3>NOTHING LIKE MOUNTAIN AIR</h3> +<p><i>Tourist (who has been refreshing himself with the toddy of the +country).</i> "I shay, ole fler! Highlands seem to 'gree with you +wonerfly—annomishtake. Why, you look <span class="smcap">DOUBLE</span> the man already!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_066.png"> +<img src="images/i_066.png" width="100%" alt="HEIGHT OF BLISS" /></a> +<h3>THE HEIGHT OF BLISS</h3> +<p><i>Highland Shepherd.</i> "Fine toon, Glasco', I pelieve, and lots o' coot +meat there."</p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "Oh, yes, lots."</p> +<p><i>Highland Shepherd.</i> "An' drink, too?"</p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "Oh, yes."</p> +<p><i>Highland Shepherd (doubtingly).</i> "Ye'll get porter tae yir parrich?"</p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "Yes, if we like."</p> +<p><i>Highland Shepherd.</i> "Cra-ci-ous!"</p> +<p> [<i>Speechless with admiration.</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_068.png"> +<img src="images/i_068.png" width="100%" alt="TENACITY" /></a> +<h3>TENACITY</h3> +<p><i>First North Briton</i> <i>(on the Oban boat, in a rolling sea and dirty +weather)</i>. "Thraw it up, man, and ye'll feel a' the better!"</p> +<p><i>Second ditto</i> <i>(keeping it down)</i>. "Hech, mon, it's whuskey!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_070.png"> +<img src="images/i_070.png" width="100%" alt="EXCUSABLE WRATH" /></a> +<h3>EXCUSABLE WRATH</h3> +<p><i>Drover</i> <i>(exhausted with his struggles)</i>. "Whit are ye wouf, woufan' +there, ye stupit ass! It wud be wis-eer like if ye gang awn hame, an' +bring a barrow!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_071.png"> +<img src="images/i_071.png" width="100%" alt="A SOFT IMPEACHMENT" /></a> +<h3>A SOFT IMPEACHMENT</h3> +<p><i>Sporting Saxon (mournfully, after three weeks' incessant down-pour).</i> +"Does it always rain like this up here, Mr. McFuskey?"</p> +<p><i>His Guide, Philosopher, and Friendly Landlord (calmly).</i> "Oo aye, it's +a-ye just a wee bit shooery."!!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_072.png"> +<img src="images/i_072.png" width="100%" alt="ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH" /></a> +<h3>ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH</h3> +<center>2 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span></center> +<p><i>Brown (who has taken a shooting-box in the Highlands, and has been +"celebrating" his first appearance in a kilt).</i> "Worsht of these +ole-fashioned beshteads is, they take such a lot of climbin' into!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_073.png"> +<img src="images/i_073.png" width="100%" alt="there is disease on the moor" /></a> +<h3>GUILDERSTEIN IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>Mrs. G.</i> "We must leave this horrible place, dear. The keeper has just +told me there is disease on the moor. Good gracious, the boys might take +it!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_074.png"> +<img src="images/i_074.png" width="100%" alt="A GREAT DRAWBACK" /></a> +<h3>A GREAT DRAWBACK</h3> +<p><i>Dougal</i> <i>(with all his native contempt for the Londoner)</i>. "Aye, mon, +an' he's no a bad shot?"</p> +<p><i>Davie.</i> "'Deed an' he's a verra <i>guid</i> shot."</p> +<p><i>Dougal.</i> "Hech! it's an awfu' peetie he's a Londoner!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p> + +<h2>NOTES FROM THE HIGHLANDS</h2> + +<center>"<i>Jam satis terris,</i>" <i>&c.</i></center> + +<p><i>Alt-na-blashy.</i>—The aqueous and igneous agencies seem to be combined +in these quarters, for since the rain we hear of a great increase of +burns. In default of the moors we fall back on the kitchen and the +cellar. I need hardly add that dry wines are almost exclusively used by<a href="images/i_074.png"></a> +our party, and moist sugar is generally avoided. Dripping, too, is +discontinued, and everything that is likely to whet the appetite is at a +discount.</p> + +<p><i>Drizzle-arich.</i>—A Frenchman, soaked out of our bothy by the moisture +of the weather, was overheard to exclaim "<i>Après moi le déluge.</i>"</p> + +<p><i>Inverdreary.</i>—Greatly to the indignation of their chief, several of +the "Children of the Mist", in this romantic but rainy region, have +assumed the garb of the Mackintoshes.</p> + +<p><i>Loch Drunkie.</i>—We have several partners in misery within hail, or life +would be fairly washed out of us. We make up parties alternately at our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> +shooting quarters when the weather allows of wading between them. +Inebriation, it is to be feared, must be on the increase, for few of us +who go out to dinner return without making a wet night of it.</p> + +<p>Meantime, the watering-places in our vicinity—in particular the Linns +o' Dun-Dreepie—are literally overflowing.</p> + +<p>It is asserted that even young horses are growing impatient of the +reins.</p> + +<p>Our greatest comfort is the weekly budget of dry humour from <i>Mr. +Punch</i>.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="smcap">A Disappointing Host.</span>—<i>Sandy.</i> "A 'm tellt ye hev a new nebbur, +Donal'." <i>Donald.</i> "Aye." <i>Sandy.</i> "An' what like is he?" <i>Donald.</i> +"Weel, he's a curious laddie. A went to hev a bit talk wi' him th' ither +evenin', an' he offered me a glass o' whuskey, d'ye see? Weel, he was +poorin' it oot, an' A said to him 'Stop!'—<i>an' he stoppit!</i> That's the +soort o' mon he is."</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_076.png"> +<img src="images/i_076.png" width="100%" alt="AMBIGUITY" /></a> +<h3>AMBIGUITY</h3> +<p><span class="smcap">Scene</span>—<i>A Highland Ferry</i></p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "But we paid you sixpence each as we came over, and you said +the same fare would bring us back."</p> +<p><i>Skipper.</i> "Well, well, and I telled ye nothing but the truth, an' it'll +be no more than the same fare I'm wantin' the noo for bringin' ye +back."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_078.png"> +<img src="images/i_078.png" width="100%" alt="AUGUST IN SCOTLAND" /></a> +<h3>AUGUST IN SCOTLAND</h3> +<p><i>Bag Carrier (to Keeper).</i> "What does the maister aye ask that body tae +shoot wi' him for? He canna hit a thing!"</p> +<p><i>Keeper.</i> "Dod, man, I daur say he wishes they was a' like him. The same +birds does him a' through the season!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p> + +<h2>KINREEN O' THE DEE;</h2> + +<center>A PIOBRACH HEARD WAILING DOWN GLENTANNER ON THE EXILE OF THREE +GENERATIONS.</center> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 19%"> +<a href="images/i_079.png"> +<img src="images/i_079.png" width="100%" alt="piper playing pipes" /></a> +</div> + +<div class="poem w30"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i12">Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i12">Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i10">I'll blaw up my chanter,</p> +<p class="i12">I've rounded fu' weel,</p> +<p class="i10">To mony a ranter,</p> +<p class="i12">In mony a reel,</p> +<p class="i10">An' pour'd a' my heart i' the win'bag wi' glee:</p> +<p class="i12">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i0">For licht wis the laughter in bonny Kinreen,</p> +<p class="i0">An' licht wis the footfa' that glanced o'er the green,</p> +<p class="i0">An' licht ware the hearts a' an' lichtsome the eyne,</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i12">Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i12">Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i10">The auld hoose is bare noo,</p> +<p class="i12">A cauld hoose to me,</p> +<p class="i10">The hearth is nae mair noo,</p> +<p class="i12">The centre o' glee,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p> + +<p class="i0">Nae mair for the bairnies the bield it has been,</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, for bonny Kinreen!</p> +<p class="i0">The auld folk, the young folk, the wee anes, an' a',</p> +<p class="i0">A hunder years' hame birds are harried awa',</p> +<p class="i0">Are harried an' hameless, whatever winds blaw,</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i10">Fareweel my auld pleugh lan',</p> +<p class="i12">I'll never mair pleugh it:</p> +<p class="i10">Fareweel my auld cairt an'</p> +<p class="i12">The auld yaud<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor"><sup>[3]</sup></a> that drew it.</p> +<p class="i0">Fareweel my auld kailyard, ilk bush an' ilk tree!</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i0">Fareweel the auld braes, that my hand keepit green,</p> +<p class="i0">Fareweel the auld ways where we waunder'd unseen</p> +<p class="i0">Ere the star o' my hearth came to bonny Kinreen,</p> +<p class="i10">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i10">The auld kirk looks up o'er</p> +<p class="i12">The dreesome auld dead,</p> +<p class="i10">Like a saint speakin' hope o'er</p> +<p class="i12">Some sorrowfu' bed.</p> +<p class="i0">Fareweel the auld kirk, an' fareweel the kirk green,</p> +<p class="i0">They tell o' a far better hame than Kinreen!</p> +<p class="i0">The place we wad cling to—puir simple auld fules,</p> +<p class="i0">O' our births an' our bridals, oor blesses an' dools,</p> +<p class="i0">Whare oor wee bits o' bairnies lie cauld i' the mools.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor"><sup>[4]</sup></a></p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i10">I aft times hae wunder'd</p> +<p class="i12">If deer be as dear,</p> +<p class="i10">As sweet ties o' kindred,</p> +<p class="i12">To peasant or peer;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p> + +<p class="i0">As the tie to the hames o' the land born be,</p> +<p class="i12">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i0">The heather that blossoms unkent o' the moor,</p> +<p class="i0">Wad dee in his lordship's best greenhoose, I'm sure,</p> +<p class="i0">To the wunder o' mony a fairy land flure.</p> +<p class="i12">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i12">Though little the thing be,</p> +<p class="i12">Oor ain we can ca';</p> +<p class="i12">That little we cling be,</p> +<p class="i12">The mair that it's sma';</p> +<p class="i0">Though puir wis oor hame, an' thogh wild wis the scene,</p> +<p class="i0">'Twas the hame o' oor hearts: it was bonnie Kinreen.</p> +<p class="i0">An yet we maun leave it, baith grey head an bairn;</p> +<p class="i0">Leave it to fatten the deer o' Cock-Cairn,</p> +<p class="i0">O' Pannanich wuds an' o' Morven o' Gairn.</p> +<p class="i12">Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i12">Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i12">Kinreen o' the Dee!</p> +<p class="i6">Sae Fareweel for ever, Kinreen of the Dee!</p> +</div></div> +<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label"><sup>[3]</sup></span></a>Mare.</p> +<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label"><sup>[4]</sup></span></a>Earth.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_080.png"> +<img src="images/i_080.png" width="100%" alt="That's a tough old fellow" /></a> +<h3>CANNY!</h3> +<p><i>Sportsman.</i> "That's a tough old fellow, Jemmy!"</p> +<p><i>Keeper.</i> "Aye, sir, a grand bird to send to your freens!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_082.png"> +<img src="images/i_082.png" width="100%" alt="EXPERTO CREDE" /></a> +<h3>EXPERTO CREDE</h3> +<p><i>Tourist</i> <i>(on approaching hostelry)</i>. "What will you have, coachman?"</p> +<p><i>Driver.</i> "A wee drap whuskey, sir, thank you."</p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "All right I'll get down and send it out to you."</p> +<p><i>Driver.</i> "Na, na, gie me the saxpence. They'll gie you an unco sma' +gless!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_084.png"> +<img src="images/i_084.png" width="80%" alt="A LAMENT FROM THE NORTH" /></a> +<h3>A LAMENT FROM THE NORTH</h3> +<p>"And then the weather's been so bad, Donald!"</p> +<p>"Ou ay, sir. Only three fine days—and twa of them snappit up by the +Sawbath!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p> + +<h2>TWO ON A TOUR</h2> + +<p>"Can you tell me which is Croft Lochay?"</p> + +<p>The smith leant on his pitchfork—he had been up at the hay—and eyed +Gwendolen and myself with friendly interest.</p> + +<p>"Ye'll be the gentry from London Mistress McDiarmat is expectin'?"</p> + +<p>"And which is the way to her house?"</p> + +<p>"Well", said the smith, shading his eyes as he peered up at the Ben, "ye +can't see it rightly from here, as it lies behind yon knowe. It's a +whole year whatever since I hev not been up myself; but if you follow +the burn——"</p> + +<p>I glanced at Gwen and saw that she shared my satisfaction. To cross the +edge of civilisation had for months past been our hearts' desire; and to +have achieved a jumping-off place only approachable by a burn exceeded +our wildest ambitions.</p> + +<p>We thanked the smith, and set off on our expedition up the mountain +side.</p> + +<p>"We twa hae paidlit in the burn", sang Gwendolen as she skipped like a +goat from stone to stone. "O Jack, isn't it too primitive and +delightful!"</p> + +<p>"Rather", said I, inhaling great draughts of the mountain air.</p> + +<p>"Aren't you hungry?"</p> + +<p>"Rather", I repeated. "Wonder what there'll be to eat."</p> + +<p>"Oh, I don't care what it is. Anything will be delicious. Is that the +house, do you think?"</p> + +<p>I looked up and saw above us a low white-washed shanty covered with +thatch which was kept in its place by a network of laths. A few heavy +stones were evidently designed to keep the roof from blowing off in +winter storms.</p> + +<p>"No", said Gwen. "That must be the cowhouse byre, don't you call it?"</p> + +<p>"I'm not so sure", said I.</p> + +<p>While we were still uncertain, a figure came to the door and bade us +welcome.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> +<p>"Come in, come in. Ye'll be tired with the travelling, and ye'll like to +see the rooms."</p> + +<p>We acquiesced, and Mistress McDiarmat led the way into the cowhouse.</p> + +<p>"Shoo!" she cried as she opened the door of the bedroom. "Get away, +Speckle! The hens <i>will</i> lay their bit egg on the bed, sir."</p> + +<p>"What fresh eggs we shall get!" cried Gwen, delighted with this fresh +proof of rusticity and with the Gaelic gutturals with which Mistress +McDiarmat emphasized her remarks to Speckle.</p> + +<p>The "other end" was furnished with two hard chairs, a table and a bed.</p> + +<p>"Fancy a bed in the dining-room and hens in your bed!" said Gwen, in the +highest of spirits. "And here comes tea! Eggs and bacon—Ah! how lovely +they smell, and how much nicer than horrid, stodgy dinners! And +oatcakes—and jelly—and the lightest feathery scones! O Jack, isn't it +heavenly?"</p> + +<p>"Rather", I agreed, beginning the meal with tremendous gusto. The eggs +and bacon disappeared in the twinkling of an eye, and then we fell to on +the light feathery scones. "Wish we hadn't wasted a fortnight's time +and money in ruinous Highland hotels. Wonder what Schiehallion thinks of +hot baths and late dinners, not to speak of waiters and wine-lists."</p> + +<p>"I suppose", remarked Gwendolen, "one <i>could</i> get a bath at the +Temperance Inn we passed on the road?"</p> + +<p>"Baths!" cried I. "Why, my dear, one only has to go and sit under the +neighbouring waterfall." Gwen did not laugh, and looking up I saw she +had stopped in the middle of a scone on which she had embarked with +great appetite.</p> + +<p>"Try an oat-cake", I suggested.</p> + +<p>"No, thanks", said Gwen.</p> + +<p>"A little more jelly?"</p> + +<p>Gwen shook her head.</p> + +<p>I finished my meal in silence and pulled out my pipe.</p> + +<p>"Going to smoke in here?" asked Gwen.</p> + +<p>"It's raining outside, my dear."</p> + +<p>"Oh, very well. But remember this is my bedroom. I decline to sleep with +hens."</p> + +<p>I put the pipe away and prepared for conversation. </p> + +<p>"Can't you sit still?" asked Gwen after a long pause.</p> + +<p>"This chair is very hard, dear."</p> + +<p>"So is mine."</p> + +<p>"Don't you think we might sit on the bed?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly not. I shouldn't sleep a wink if we disarranged the clothes, +and only an expert can re-make a chaff bed."</p> + +<p>"Wish we had something to read", I remarked, after another long pause.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p> + +<p>"Do you expect a circulating library on the top of Ben-y-Gloe?"</p> + +<p>I began to realise that Gwen was no longer in a conversational mood, and +made no further efforts to break the silence. Half-an-hour later Gwen +came across the room and laid her hand on my shoulder. "What are you +reading, dear?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"I find we can get a train from Struan to-morrow afternoon which catches +the London connection at Perth when the train's not more than two hours +late."</p> + +<p>"We can't risk that. Isn't there a train in the morning?"</p> + +<p>"It would mean leaving this at five."</p> + +<p>"So much the better. O Jack, if I eat another meal like that it will be +fatal. To think we shall be back in dear old Chelsea to-morrow!"</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_086.png"> +<img src="images/i_086.png" width="100%" alt="tread the hay" /></a> +<h3>ORIGIN OF THE HIGHLAND SCHOTTISCHE</h3> +<p>"This is the way they tread the hay, tread the hay, tread the hay; +<br /> This is the way they tread the hay, tread the hay in Scotland!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_087.png"> +<img src="images/i_087.png" width="100%" alt="GROUSE SHOOTING" /></a> +<h3>GROUSE SHOOTING LATE IN THE SEASON. JOLLY, VERY!</h3> +<p>"Come along, old fellow! heres a point!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_088.png"> +<img src="images/i_088.png" width="100%" alt="DEER -STALKING MADE EASY" /></a> +<h3>DEER -STALKING MADE EASY. A HINT TO LUSTY SPORTSMAN.</h3> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_089.png"> +<img src="images/i_089.png" width="100%" alt="When is the steamer due here" /></a> +<h3>SOONER OR LATER</h3> +<p><i>Old Gent.</i> "When is the steamer due here?"</p> +<p><i>Highland Pier-Master.</i> "Various. Sometimes sooner, sometimes earlier, +an' even sometimes before that, too."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_090.png"> +<img src="images/i_090.png" width="100%" alt="HARMLESS" /></a> +<h3>HARMLESS</h3> +<p><i>Cockney Sporting Gent.</i> "But I think it's a 'en!"</p> +<p><i>Sandy (his keeper).</i> "Shoot, man, shoot! She'll be no muckle the waur o' ye!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_092.png"> +<img src="images/i_092.png" width="100%" alt="PLEASANT" /></a> +<h3>PLEASANT</h3> +<p><i>Friend (to novice at salmon fishing).</i> "I say, old boy, mind how you wade; +there are some tremendous holes, fourteen or fifteen feet deep."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_093.png"> +<img src="images/i_093.png" width="100%" alt="AN IMPORTANT DETAIL" /></a> +<h3>AN IMPORTANT DETAIL</h3> +<p><i>Our Latest Millionaire (to Gillie, who has brought him within close +range of the finest stag in the forest).</i> "I say, Mac, confound it all, +<i>which eye do you use?"</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_094.png"> +<img src="images/i_094.png" width="100%" alt="English tourist" /></a> +<p><i>English Tourist (in the far North, miles from anywhere).</i> +"Do you mean to say that you and your family live here all the winter? +Why, what do you do when any of you are ill? You can never get a doctor!"</p> +<p><i>Scotch Shepherd.</i> "Nae, sir. We've just to dee a natural death!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_095.png"> +<img src="images/i_095.png" width="100%" alt="A ROADSIDE INN" /></a> +<h3>SCENE--A ROADSIDE INN IN A MOORLAND DISTRICT, SCOTLAND.</h3> +<center><i>(The Captain and Gamekeeper call in to have some Refreshment)</i></center> +<br /><p><i>Landlady (enters in fear).</i> "Eh, sir, yer gun's no loaded is't? for a never would bide in a +hoose whaur the wur a loaded gun in a' m'life."</p> +<p><i>Captain (composedly),</i> "Oh we'll soon put that right--have you got a cork?"</p> +<p> [<i>Exit Landlady and brings a cork, which the Captain carefully sticks in the muzzle of the +gun, and assures her it is all right now--</i></p> +<p><i>Landlady (relieved).</i> "Ou, aye! it's a' right noo, but it wasna safe afore, +ye ken."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_096.png"> +<img src="images/i_096.png" width="100%" alt="MONARCH OF THE GLEN" /></a> +<h3>"A MONARCH OF THE GLEN"</h3> +<p><i>Transatlantic Millionaire (surveying one of his deer-forests).</i> +"Ha! look there! I see <i>three excursionists!</i> Send 'em to the----!"</p> +<p><i>Gigantic Gillie (and chucker-out).</i> "If you please, Mr. Dollers, +they're <i>excisemen!"</i></p> +<p><i>T.M.</i> "I don't care who they are! Send'em to the----!"</p> +<p><i>G.G.</i> "Yes, Mr. Dollers."</p> +<p> [Proceeds to carry out the order.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_097.png"> +<img src="images/i_097.png" width="100%" alt="brown specks" /></a> +<p>Sportsman (who declines to be told where to go and what to do by his gillie), after +an arduous stalk in the blazing sun, at last manages to crawl within close +range of those "brown specks" he dicovered miles distant on the hillside!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_098.png"> +<img src="images/i_098.png" width="100%" alt="PROMISING" /></a> +<h3>PROMISING!</h3> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "Have you any decent cigars?"</p> +<p><i>Highland Grocer.</i> "Decent cigars? Ay, here are decent cigars enough."</p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "Are they Havanahs, or Manillas?"</p> +<p><i>Highland Grocer.</i> "They're just from Kircaldy!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_100.png"> +<img src="images/i_100.png" width="100%" alt="THE MISS" /></a> +<h3>"THE MISS"</h3> +<p><i>Gillie.</i> "Eh, mon! But it's fortunate there's beef in Aberdeen!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p> + +<h2>MR. BRIGGS IN THE HIGHLANDS</h2> + +<center><i>By</i> <span class="smcap">John Leech</span></center> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_101.png"> +<img src="images/i_101.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. Briggs starts for the North" /></a> +<p>Mr. Briggs, feeling that his heart is in the Highlands +a-chasing the deer, starts for the North.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_102.png"></a> +<img src="images/i_102.png" width="100%" alt="chat about deer-stalking" /> +<p>Before going out, Mr. Briggs and his friends have a quiet +chat about deer-stalking generally. He listens with much interest to +some pleasing anecdotes about the little incidents frequently met +with—such as balls going through caps—toes being shot +off!—occasionally being gored by the antlers of infuriate stags, &c., +&c., &c.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_103.png"> +<img src="images/i_103.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. Briggs assists the forester" /></a> +<p>Mr. Briggs, previous to going through his course of +deer-stalking, assists the forester in getting a hart or two for the +house. Donald is requesting our friend to hold the animal down by the +horns.</p> +<p> [N.B. The said animal is as strong as a bull, and uses his legs like a +race-horse.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_104.png"> +<img src="images/i_104.png" width="100%" alt="deer are driven for Mr. Briggs" /></a> +<p>The deer are driven for Mr. Briggs. He has an excellent +place, but what with waiting by himself so long, the murmur of the +stream, the beauty of the scene, and the novelty of the situation, he +falls asleep, and while he takes his forty winks, the deer pass!</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_105a.png"> +<img src="images/i_105a.png" width="100%" alt="the deer are driven again" /></a> +<p>As the wind is favourable, the deer are driven again.</p> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_105b.png"> +<img src="images/i_105b.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. Briggs omits to fire his rifle" /></a> +<p>Mr. Briggs is suddenly face to face with the monarch of +the glen! He is so astonished that he omits to fire his rifle.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_106a.png"> +<img src="images/i_106a.png" width="100%" alt="To-day he goes out for a stalk" /></a> +<p>To-day he goes out for a stalk, and Donald shows Mr. +Briggs the way!</p> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_106b.png"> +<img src="images/i_106b.png" width="100%" alt="the finest hart that ever was seen" /></a> +<p>After a good deal of climbing, our friend gets to the top +of Ben-something-or-other, and the forester looks out to see if there +are any deer on the hills. Yes! several hinds, and perhaps the finest +hart that ever was seen.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_107a.png"> +<img src="images/i_107a.png" width="100%" alt="obliged to go a long way round" /></a> +<p>To get at him, they are obliged to go a long way round. +Before they get down, the shower, peculiar to the country, overtakes +them, so they "shelter a-wee."</p> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_107b.png"> +<img src="images/i_107b.png" width="100%" alt="they come within shot" /></a> +<p>With extraordinary perseverance they come within shot of +"the finest hart." Mr. B. is out of breath, afraid of slipping, and +wants to blow his nose (quite out of the question), otherwise he is +tolerably comfortable.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_108.png"> +<img src="images/i_108.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. B. fires both barrels" /></a> +<p>After aiming for a quarter of an hour, Mr. B. fires both +his barrels—and—misses!!!! <i>Tableau</i>—The forester's anguish</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 70%"> +<a href="images/i_109.png"> +<img src="images/i_109.png" width="100%" alt="The royal hart" /></a> +<center>The royal hart Mr. Briggs did <span class="smcap">NOT</span> hit.</center> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_110.png"> +<img src="images/i_110.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. Briggs kills a stag" /></a> +<p>Mr. Briggs has another day's stalking, and his rifle +having gone off sooner than he expected, he kills a stag. As it is his +first, he is made free of the forest by the process customary on the +hills!—</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_111.png"> +<img src="images/i_111.png" width="100%" alt="returns home in triumph" /></a> +<p>And returns home in triumph. He is a little knocked up, +but after a nap, will, no doubt, go through the broad-sword dance in the +evening as usual.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 75%"> +<a href="images/i_112.png"> +<img src="images/i_112.png" width="100%" alt="MR. BRIGGS GROUSE SHOOTING" /></a> +<h3>MR. BRIGGS GROUSE SHOOTING</h3> +<p>9 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> His arrival on the moor.—Mr. Briggs says that the fine bracing +air makes him so vigorous that he shall never be beat. He also +facetiously remarks that he is on "his native heath", and that his "name +is Macgregor!"</p> +<p> [<i>The result of the day's sport will be communicated by electric +telegraph.</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p> + +<h2>SKETCHES FROM SCOTLAND</h2> + +<center><span class="smcap">At the Drumquhidder Highland Gathering.</span></center> + +<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Scene</span>—<i>A meadow near Drumquhidder, South Perthshire, where the +annual Highland Games are being held. The programme being a long +one, there are generally three events being contested in various +parts of the ground at the same time. On the benches immediately +below the Grand Stand are seated two Drumquhidder worthies</i>, <span class="smcap">Mr. +Parritch</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Mr. Havers</span>, <i>with</i> <span class="smcap">Mrs. McTavish</span> <i>and her niece, two +acquaintances from Glasgow, to whom they are endeavouring—not +altogether successfully—to make themselves agreeable</i>. </p></blockquote> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers</i> <i>(in allusion to the dozen or so of drags, landaus, and +waggonettes on the ground)</i>. There's a number o' machines hier the day, +Messis McTarvish, an' a wonderfu' crood; there'll be a bit scarceness +ower on yon side, but a gey many a'thegither. I conseeder we're jest +awfu' forrtunate in the day an' a'.</p> + +<p class="author">[<i>Mrs. McTavish assents, but without enthusiasm.</i></p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parritch.</i> I've jist ben keekin into the Refraishmen' Tent. It's an +awfu' peety they're no pairmeetin' ony intoaxicans—naethin' but +non-alcohoalic liquors an' sic like, an' the hawm-sawndwiches no verra +tender. <i>(With gallantry.)</i> What do ye say, noo, Messis McTarvish—wull +ye no come an' tak' a bite wi' me?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Mrs. McTavish (distantly).</i> Ah'm no feelin' able for't jist the noo, +Mester Pairritch.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> Ye'll hae a boatle o' leemonade at my expense? Ye'll no? +Then ye wull, Mess Rawse. <i>(With relief, as Miss Rose declines also.)</i> +Aweel, I jist thocht I'd pit the quaistion. <i>(To a friend of his, who +joins them.)</i> An' hoo's a' wi' ye, Mester McKerrow? Ye're a member o' +the Cawmittee, I obsairve, sae I'll hae to keck up a bet row wi' ye.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerrow (unconcernedly).</i> Then ye'll jist to hae to keck it doon +again. What's wrang the noo?</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> I'd like to ask ye if ye conseeder it fair or jest to +charrge us tippence every time we'd go aff the groon? Man, it's jist an +extoartion.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> I'm no responsible for't; but, if I'd ben there, I'd ha' +chairged ye twa shellins; sae ye'd better say nae mair aboot the +maitter.</p> + +<p class="author">[<i>Mr. Parritch does not pursue the subject.</i></p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers (as a detachment of the Black Watch Highlanders conclude an +exhibition of musical drill).</i> Ye'll be the baiter o' haeing the Block +Wetch hier the day. Man, they gie us a colour! It's verra<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> pretty hoo +nicely they can pairforrm the drill....An' noo them sojers is gaun to +rin a bet race amang theirsels. This'll be an extry cawmpeteetion, I +doot. <i>(As the race is being run.)</i> It's no a verra suitable dress for +rinnin'—the spleughan—or "sporran", is it?—hairrts them tairible.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr (contradictiously).</i> The sporran does na hairrt them at a'.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> Man, it's knockin' against them at every stride they tak'. +<i>(His attention wanders to a Highland Fling, which three small boys are +dancing on a platform opposite.)</i> He's an awfu' bonnie dauncer that wee +laddie i' the meddle!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> Na sae awfu' bonnie, he luiks tae much at his taes. Yon on +the richt is the laddie o' the lote! He disna move his boady at a'.... +This'll be the Half Mile Handicap they're stairting for down yonder. +It'll gae to Jock Alister—him in the blue breeks.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> Yon grup-luikin' tyke? I canna thenk it.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> Na, it'll be yon bald-heided man in broon. He's verra +enthusiastic. He's ben rinnin' in a' the races, I obsairve. "Smeth" did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> +ye say his neem was? <i>(To Miss Rose, "pawkily.")</i> Ye'll hae an +affaictionate regaird for that neem, I'm thenking, Mess Rawse?</p> + +<p><i>Miss Rose (with maidenly displeasure).</i> 'Deed, an I'm no unnerstanding +why ye should thenk ony sic a thing!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers (abashed).</i> I beg your pairrdon. I don't know hoo it was I +gethered Smeth was your ain neem. <i>(Miss Rose shakes her head.)</i> No? +Then maybe ye'll be acquaint with a Mester Alexawnder Smeth fro' +Paisley? <i>(Miss Rose is not, nor apparently desires to be, and Mr. +Havers returns to the foot-race.)</i> The baldheid's leadin' them a', I +tellt ye he'd——Na, he's gien up! it'll be the little block fellow, +he's peckin' up tairible!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> 'Twull no be him. Yon lang chap has an easy jobe o't. Ye'll +see he'll jist putt a spairrt on at yon faur poast—he's comin' on +noo—he's.... Losh! he's only thirrd after a'; he didna putt the spairrt +on sune eneugh; that was the gran' fau't he made!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> They'll be begenning the wrustling oot yon in the +centre....<i>(As the competitors grip.)</i> Losh! that's no the way to +wrustle; they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> shouldna left the ither up; they're no allowed to threp!</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_121.png"> +<img src="images/i_121.png" width="100%" alt="That's jist the game" /></a> +<p>That's jist the game, I'm telling ye; ye know naething at +a' aboot it!</p> +</div> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> "That's jist the game, I'm telling ye; ye know naething +at a' aboot it!"</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> I'd sthruggle baiter'n that mysel', it's no great +wrustling at a', merely bairrns' play!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr. (As a corpulent elderly gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> appears, in very pink +tights).</i> Ye'll see some science noo, for hier's McBannock o' +Balwhuskie, the chawmpion.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers (disenchanted).</i> Wull yon be him in the penk breeks. Man, +but he's awfu' stoot for sic wark!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> The wecht of him's no easy put doon. The rest are boys to +him.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> I doot the little dairk fellow'll hae him ... it's a gey +sthruggle.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> He's not doon yet. Wull ye bait sexpence against +McBannock, Mester Pairritch?</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr. (promptly).</i> Aye, wull I—na, he's got the dairk mon doon. I +was jist mindin' the sword-daunce, sae the bait's aff. <i>(Three men in +full Highland costume step upon the platform and stand, proud and +impassive, fronting the grand stand, while the judges walk round them, +making careful notes of their respective points.)</i> What wull <i>they</i> be +aboot?</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> It'll be the prize for the mon who's the best dressed +Hielander at his ain expense. I'm thenkin' they'll find it no verra easy +to come to a deceesion.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> Deed, it's no sae deeficult; 'twill be the mon in the +centre, sure as deith!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> Ye say that because he has a' them gowd maidles hing on +his jocket!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr</i>. <i>(loftily)</i>. I pay no attention to the maidles at a'. I'm +sayin' that Dougal Macrae is the best dressed Hielander o' the three.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> It'll no be Macrae at a'. Jock McEwan, that's furthest +west, 'll be the mon.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> <i>(dogmatically)</i>. It'll be Macrae, I'm tellin' ye. He has +the nicest kelt on him that iver I sa'!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> It's no the <i>kelt</i> that diz it, 'tis jist the way they pit +it on. An' Macrae'll hae his tae faur doon, a guid twa enches too low, +it is.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr.</i> Ye're a' wrang, the kelt is on richt eneugh!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> I know fine hoo a kelt should be pit an, though I'm no +Hielander mysel', and I'll ask ye, Mess Rawse, if Dougal Macrae's kelt +isn't too lang; it's jist losin his knees a' thegither, like a lassie he +looks in it!</p> + +<p> [<i>Miss Rose declines, with some stiffness, to express an opinion on so +delicate a point.</i></p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr. (recklessly).</i> I'll pit a sexpence on Macrae wi' ye, come +noo!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> Na, na, pit cawmpetent jedges on to deceede, and they'll +be o' my opeenion; but I'll no bait wi' ye.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr. (his blood up).</i> Then I'll hae a sexpence on 't wi you, +Mester McKerrow!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. McKerr.</i> Nay, I'm for Macrae mysel'.... An' we're baith in the +richt o't too, for they've jist gien him the bit red flag—that means +he's got firsst prize.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr. (to Mr. Havers, with reproach).</i> Man, if ye'd hed the speerit +o' your opeenions, I'd ha' won sexpence aff ye by noo!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers (obstinately).</i> I canna thenk but that Macrae's kelt was too +lang—prize or no prize.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> I'll be telling him when I see him that he +looked like a lassie in it.</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Parr. (with concern).</i> I wouldna jist advise ye to say ony sic a +thing to him. These Hielanders are awfu' prood; and he micht tak' it gey +ill fro' ye!</p> + +<p><i>Mr. Havers.</i> I see nae hairrm mysel' in jist tellin' him, in a +pleesant, daffin-like way, that he looked like a lassie in his kelt. But +there's nae tellin' hoo ye may offend some fowk; an' I'm thenking it's +no sae verra prawbable that I'll hae the oaportunity o' saying onything +aboot the maitter to him.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="smcap">Awkward for Him.</span>—<i>Tam.</i> "I'm sayin', man, my cairt o' hay's fa'en ower. +Will ye gie 's a haund up wi' 't?" <i>Jock.</i> "'Deed will I. But ye'll be +in nae hurry till I get tae the end o' the raw?" <i>Tam.</i> "Ou no. I'm in +nae hurry, but I doot my faither 'll be wearyin'." <i>Jock.</i> "An' whaur's +yer faither?" <i>Tam.</i> "He's in below the hay!"</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_114.png"> +<img src="images/i_114.png" width="100%" alt="MISTAKEN IDENTITY" /></a> +<h3>"MISTAKEN IDENTITY"</h3> +<center><span class="smcap">Scene</span>—<i>Northern Meeting at Inverness.</i></center><br /> +<p><span class="smcap">Persons Represented</span>—Ian Gorm +<i>and</i> Dougald Mohr, <i>gillies</i>. Mr. Smith, <i>of London</i>.</p><br /> +<p><i>First Gillie.</i> "Wull yon be the MacWhannel, Ian Gorm?"</p> +<p><i>Second ditto.</i> "No!! Hes nae-um is Muster Smuth! And he ahl-ways wears +the kult—and it is foohl that you aar, Tougalt Mohr!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_116.png"> +<img src="images/i_116.png" width="100%" alt="FYNE GRAMMAR" /></a> +<h3>(LOCH) FYNE GRAMMAR</h3> +<center><i>(A Sad Fact for the School Board)</i></center> +<p><i>Tugal.</i> "Dud ye'll ever see the <i>I-oo-na</i> any more before?"</p> +<p><i>Tonal.</i> "Surely I was."</p> +<p><i>Tugal.</i> "Ay, ay! Maybe you was never on poard too, after thus——"</p> +<p><i>Tonal.</i> "I dud."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_118.png"> +<img src="images/i_118.png" width="100%" alt="Haud yer tongue" /></a> +<h3>NON BEN (LOMOND) TROVATO.</h3> +<p><i>Rory (fresh from the hills).</i> "Hech, mon! Ye're loassin' a' yer +watter!!"</p> +<p><i>Aungus.</i> "Haud yer tongue, ye feul! Ett's latt oot to stoap the laddies +frae ridin' ahint!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<img src="images/i_120.png" width="100%" alt="NOTHING LIKE LEATHER" /> +<h3>"NOTHING LIKE LEATHER"</h3> +<p><i>Bookseller</i> <i>(to Lanarkshire country gentleman who had brought his back +numbers to be bound)</i>. "Would you like them done in 'Russia' or +'Morocco,' sir?"</p> +<p><i>Old Gentleman.</i> "Na, never maind aboot Rooshy or Moroccy. I'll just hae +'em boond in Glasgy here!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_122.png"> +<img src="images/i_122.png" width="100%" alt="TROUBLES OF STALKING" /></a> +<h3>THE TROUBLES OF STALKING</h3> +<p><i>Irate Gillie</i> <i>(on discovering in the distance, for the third time that +morning, a "brute of a man" moving about in his favourite bit of +"forest")</i>. "Oh! deil take the people! Come awa', Muster Brown, sir; +<i>it's just Peekadilly!!!</i>"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_124.png"> +<img src="images/i_124.png" width="100%" alt="A FALLEN ASS" title="" /></a> +<h3>A FALLEN ASS</h3> +<p><i>Indignant Gillie</i> <i>(to Jones, of London, who has by mistake killed a +hind)</i>. "I thoucht ony fule ken't it was the stags that had the horns!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_125.png"> +<img src="images/i_125.png" width="100%" alt="BONCHIENIE" /></a> +<h3>BONCHIENIE</h3> +<p><i>Young Lady Tourist</i> <i>(caressing the hotel terrier, Bareglourie, N.B.)</i>. +"Oh, Binkie is his name! He seems inclined to be quite friendly with +me."</p> +<p><i>Waiter.</i> "Oo, aye, miss, he's no vera parteec'lar wha he taks oop wi!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_126.png"> +<img src="images/i_126.png" width="100%" alt="CANNY" /></a> +<h3>"CANNY"</h3> +<p><i>First North Briton.</i> "'T's a fine day, this?"</p> +<p><i>Second ditto.</i> "No ill, ava."</p> +<p><i>First ditto.</i> "Ye'll be travellin'?"</p> +<p><i>Second ditto.</i> "Weel, maybe I'm no."</p> +<p><i>First ditto.</i> "Gaun t'Aberdeen, maybe?"</p> +<p><i>Second ditto.</i> "Ye're no faur aff't!!"</p> +<p> [<i>Mutually satisfied, each goes his respective way</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_128.png"> +<img src="images/i_128.png" width="100%" alt=" PURCHASING LIMIT" /></a> +<h3>THE PURCHASING LIMIT</h3> +<p><i>Mr. Steinsen</i> <i>(our latest millionaire—after his third fruitless +stalk)</i>. "Now, look here, you rascal! if you can't have the brutes +tamer, I'm hanged if I don't sack you!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_130.png"> +<img src="images/i_130.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. Brown, I 'ardly knoo yer" /></a> +<h3>GROWING POPULARITY OF THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>Mrs. Smith</i> <i>(of Brixton)</i>. "Lor', Mr. Brown, I 'ardly knoo yer! Only +think of our meetin' <i>'ere</i>, this year, instead of dear old Margit! An' +I suppose that's the costume you go <i>salmon-stalking</i> in?"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p> + +<h2>MORE SKETCHES FROM SCOTLAND</h2> + +<center><span class="smcap">On a Callander Char-a-banc.</span></center> + +<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Scene</span>—<i>In front of the Trossachs Hotel. The few passengers bound +for Callander have been sitting for several minutes on the coach +"Fitz-James" in pelting rain, resignedly wondering when the driver +will consider them sufficiently wet to start.</i> </p></blockquote> + +<p><i>The Head Boots (to the driver).</i> There's another to come yet; he'll no +be lang now. <i>(The cause of the delay comes down the hotel steps, and +surveys the vehicle and its occupants with a surly scowl.)</i> Up with ye, +sir, plenty of room on the second seats.</p> + +<p><i>The Surly Passenger.</i> And have all the umbrellas behind dripping on my +hat! No, thank you, I'm going in front. <i>(He mounts, and takes up the +apron.)</i> Here, driver, just look at this apron—it's sopping wet!</p> + +<p><i>The Driver (tranquilly).</i> Aye, I'm thinking it wull ha' got a bet +domp.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>The Surly P.</i> Well, I'm not going to have this over me. Haven't you got +a <i>dry</i> one somewhere?</p> + +<p><i>The Driver.</i> There'll be dry ones at Collander.</p> + +<p><i>The Surly P. (with a snort).</i> At Callander! Much good that is! <i>(With +crushing sarcasm.</i>) If I'm to keep dry on this concern, it strikes me +I'd better get inside the boot at once!</p> + +<p><i>The Driver (with the air of a man who is making a concession).</i> Ou aye, +ye can get inside the boot if ye've a mind to it.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_132.png"> +<img src="images/i_132.png" width="100%" alt="ye can get inside the boot" /></a> +<p>"Ou aye, ye can get inside the boot if ye've a mind to it."</p> +</div> + +<blockquote>[<i>The coach starts, and is presently stopped at a corner to take up a +male and a female passenger, who occupy the seats immediately behind the +Surly Passenger.</i></blockquote> + +<p><i>The Female P. (enthusiastically, to her companion).</i> There's dear old +Mrs. Macfarlane, come out to see the last of us! Look at her standing +out there in the garden, all in the rain. That's what I always say about +the Scotch—they <i>are</i> warm-hearted!</p> + +<p> [<i>She waves her hand in farewell to some distant object.</i></p> + +<p><i>Her Companion. That</i> ain't her; that's an old apple-tree in the garden +<i>you</i>'re waving to. <i>She's</i> keeping indoors—and shows her sense too.</p> + +<p><i>The Female P. (disgusted).</i> Well, I <i>do</i> think after our being at the +farm a fortnight and all, she <i>might</i>——But that's Scotch all <i>over</i>, +that is; get all they can out of you, and then, for anything <i>they</i> +care——!</p> + +<p><i>The Surly P.</i> I don't know whether you are aware of it, ma'am, but that +umbrella of yours is sending a constant trickle down the back of my +neck, which is <i>most</i> unpleasant!</p> + +<p><i>The Female P.</i> I'm sorry to hear it, sir, but it's no worse for you +than it is for me. I've got somebody else's umbrella dripping down <i>my</i> +back, and <i>I</i> don't complain.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>The Surly P.</i> I <i>do</i>, ma'am, for, being in front, I haven't even the +poor consolation of feeling that my umbrella is a nuisance to anybody.</p> + +<p><i>A Sardonic P. (in the rear, politely).</i> On the contrary, sir, I find it +a most pleasing object to contemplate. Far more picturesque, I don't +doubt, than any scenery it may happen to conceal.</p> + +<p><i>A Chatty P. (to the driver; not because he cares, but simply for the +sake of conversation).</i> What fish do you catch in that river there?</p> + +<p><i>The Driver (with an effort).</i> There'll be troots, an', maybe, a pairrch +or two.</p> + +<p><i>The Chatty P.</i> Perch? Ah, that's rather like a goldfish in shape, eh?</p> + +<p><i>Driver (cautiously).</i> Aye, it would be that.</p> + +<p><i>Chatty P.</i> Only considerably bigger, of course.</p> + +<p><i>Driver (evasively).</i> Pairrch is no a verra beg fesh.</p> + +<p><i>Chatty P.</i> But bigger than goldfish.</p> + +<p><i>Driver (more confidently).</i> Ou aye, they'll be begger than goldfesh.</p> + +<p><i>Chatty P. (persistently).</i> You've seen goldfish—know what they're +like, eh?</p> + +<p><i>Driver (placidly).</i> I canna say I do.</p> + +<p> [<i>They pass a shooting party with beaters.</i></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Chatty P. (as before).</i> What are they going to shoot?</p> + +<p><i>Driver.</i> They'll jist be going up to the hells for a bet grouse +drivin'.</p> + +<p><i>A Lady P.</i> I wonder why they carry those poles with the red and yellow +flags. I suppose they're to warn tourists to keep out of range when they +begin firing at the butts. I know they <i>have</i> butts up on the moor, +because I've seen them. Just look at those birds running after that man +throwing grain for them. Would those be <i>grouse</i>?</p> + +<p><i>Driver.</i> Ye'll no find grouse so tame as that, mem; they'll jist be +phaysants.</p> + +<p><i>The Lady P.</i> Poor dear things! why, they're as tame as chickens. It +<i>does</i> seem so cruel to kill them!</p> + +<p><i>Her Comp.</i> Well, but they kill chickens, occasionally.</p> + +<p><i>The Lady P.</i> Not with a horrid gun; and, besides, that's such a totally +different thing.</p> + +<p><i>The Chatty P.</i> What do you call that mountain, driver, eh?</p> + +<p><i>Driver.</i> Yon hell? I'm no minding its name.</p> + +<p><i>The Surly P.</i> You don't seem very ready in pointing out the objects of +interests on the route, I must say.</p> + +<p><i>Driver (modestly).</i> There'll be them on the corch that know as much +aboot it as myself. <i>(After a pause—to vindicate his character as a +cicerone.)</i> Did ye nottice a bit building at the end of the loch over +yonder?</p> + +<p><i>The Surly P.</i> No, I didn't.</p> + +<p><i>Driver.</i> Ye might ha' seen it, had ye looked.</p> + +<p> [<i>He relapses into a contented silence.</i></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Chatty P.</i> Anything remarkable about the building?</p> + +<p><i>Driver.</i> It was no the building that's remairkable. <i>(After a severe +struggle with his own reticence.)</i> It was jist the spoat. 'Twas there +<i>Roderick Dhu</i> fought <i>Fitz-James</i> after convoying him that far on his +way.</p> + +<p> [<i>The Surly Passenger snorts as though he didn't consider this +information.</i></p> + +<p><i>The Lady P. (who doesn't seem to be up in her "Lady of the Lake"). +Fitz-James who?</i></p> + +<p><i>Her Comp.</i> I fancy he's the man who owns this line of coaches. There's +his name on the side of this one.</p> + +<p><i>The Lady P.</i> And I saw <i>Roderick Dhu's</i> on another coach. I <i>thought</i> +it sounded familiar, somehow. He must be the <i>rival</i> proprietor, I +suppose. I wonder if they've made it up yet.</p> + +<p><i>The Driver (to the Surly Passenger, with another outburst of +communicativeness).</i> Yon stoan is called "Sawmson's Putting Stoan." He +hurrled it up to the tope of the hell, whaur it's bided ever sence.</p> + +<p> [<i>The Surly Passenger receives this information with an incredulous +grunt.</i></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>The Lady P.</i> What a magnificent old ruin that is across the valley, +some ancient castle, evidently; they can't build like that nowadays!</p> + +<p><i>The Driver.</i> That's the Collander Hydropawthec, mem; burrnt doon two or +three years back.</p> + +<p><i>The Lady P. (with a sense of the irony of events).</i> <i>Burnt</i> down! A +Hydropathic! Fancy!</p> + +<p><i>Male P. (as they enter Callander and pass a trim villa).</i> There, +<i>that's</i> Mr. Figgis's place.</p> + +<p><i>His Comp.</i> What—<i>that</i>? Why, it's quite a <i>bee-yutiful</i> place, with +green venetians, and a conservatory, and a croaky lawn, and everything! +Fancy all that belonging to <i>him</i>! It's well to be a grocer—in <i>these</i> +parts, seemingly!</p> + +<p><i>Male P.</i> Ah, <i>we</i> ought to come up and start business here; it 'ud be +better than being in the Caledonian Road!</p> + +<p> [<i>They meditate for the remainder of the journey upon the caprices of +Fortune with regard to grocery profits in Caledonia and the Caledonian +Road respectively.</i></p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_134.png"> +<img src="images/i_134.png" width="100%" alt="MEN WERE DECEIVERS EVER" /></a> +<h3>"MEN WERE DECEIVERS EVER"</h3> +<p><i>Mr. Punch</i> is at present in the Highlands "a-chasing the deer."</p> +<p><i>Mrs. Punch</i> is at home, and has promised all her friends haunches of +venison as soon as they arrive!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_135.png"> +<img src="images/i_135.png" width="100%" alt="DESIRABLE" /></a> +<h3>"DESIRABLE"</h3> +<p><i>Saxon Passenger (on Highland coach).</i> "Of course you're well acquainted +with the country round about here. Do you know 'Glen Accron'?"</p> +<p><i>Driver.</i> "Aye, weel."</p> +<p><i>Saxon Passenger (who had just bought the estate).</i> "What sort of a +place is it?"</p> +<p><i>Driver.</i> "Weel, if ye saw the deil tethered on't, ye'd just say 'Puir +brute'!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_136.png"> +<img src="images/i_136.png" width="100%" alt="OFF THE ORKNEYS" /></a> +<h3>ISOLATION!—OFF THE ORKNEYS</h3> +<p><i>Southern Tourist.</i> "'Get any newspapers here?"</p> +<p><i>Orcadian Boatman.</i> "Ou aye, when the steamer comes. If it's fine, +she'll come ance a week; but when it's stormy, i' winter, we dinna catch +a glint o' her for three months at a time."</p> +<p><i>S. T.</i> "Then you'll not know what's goin' on in London!"</p> +<p><i>O. B.</i> "Na—but ye see ye're just as ill aff i' London as we are, for +ye dinna ken what's gaun on here!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_138.png"> +<img src="images/i_138.png" width="100%" alt="ON THE MOORS" /></a> +<h3>ON THE MOORS</h3> +<p><i>The Laird's Brother-in-law (from London).</i> "It's very strange, Lachlan! +I'm having no luck!—and yet I seem to see two birds in place of one? +That was surely very strong whiskey your master gave me at lunch?"</p> +<p><i>Keeper.</i> "Maybe aye and maybe no—the whuskey was goot; but any way ye +dinna manage to hit the richt bird o' the twa!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_140.png"> +<img src="images/i_140.png" width="100%" alt="A POOR ADVERTISEMENT" /></a> +<h3>A POOR ADVERTISEMENT</h3> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "I suppose you feel proud to have such a distinguished man +staying in your house?"</p> +<p><i>Host of the "Drumdonnachie Arms."</i> "'Deed no! A body like that does us +mair hairm than guid; his appearance is nae credit tae oor commissariat!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_141.png"> +<img src="images/i_141.png" width="100%" alt="GENEROSITY" /></a> +<h3>GENEROSITY</h3> +<p><i>Noble Lord (whose rifle has brought to a scarcely untimely end a very +consumptive-looking fallow deer).</i> "Tut—t, t, t, t, tut! O, I say, +Stubbs!"—<i>(to his keeper)</i>—"you shouldn't have let me kill such a +poor, little, sickly, scraggy thing as this, you know! It positively +isn't fit for human food! Ah! look here, now! I'll tell you what. You +and McFarlin may have this buck between you!!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_142.png"> +<img src="images/i_142.png" width="100%" alt="TRAVELLER TOO BONÂ FIDE" /></a> +<h3>TRAVELLER TOO BONÂ FIDE</h3> +<p><i>Dusty Pedestrian.</i> "I should like a glass of beer, missis, please——"</p> +<p><i>Landlady.</i> "Hae ye been trevellin' by rell?"</p> +<p><i>Pedestrian.</i> "No, I've been walking—fourteen miles."</p> +<p><i>Landlady.</i> "Na, na, nae drink will ony yin get here, wha's been +pleesure-seekin' o' the Sawbath day!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_144.png"> +<img src="images/i_144.png" width="100%" alt="IN THE HIGHLANDS" /></a> +<h3>MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p>He goes on board the <i>Iona</i>. The only drawback to his perfect enjoyment +is the jealousy caused among all the gentlemen by the ladies clustering +round him on all occasions.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_146.png"> +<img src="images/i_146.png" width="100%" alt="PREHISTORIC PEEPS" /></a> +<h3>PREHISTORIC PEEPS</h3> +<p>There were often unforeseen circumstances which gave to the Highland +stalking of those days an added zest!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span></p> + +<h2>THE PLEASURES OF TRAVEL</h2> + +<center><i>(By Ane that has kent them)</i></center> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 15%"> +<a href="images/i_147.png"> +<img src="images/i_147.png" width="100%" alt="cartoon" /></a> +</div> + +<div class="poem w30"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">'Tis a great thing, the Traivel;<br /> I'll thank ye tae find</p> +<p class="i0">Its equal for openin' the poors o' the mind.</p> +<p class="i0">It mak's a man polished, an' gies him, ye ken,</p> +<p class="i0">Sic a graun' cosmypollitan knowledge o' men!</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">I ne'er was a stay-at-hame callant ava,</p> +<p class="i0">I aye must be rantin' an' roamin' awa',</p> +<p class="i0">An' far hae I wandered, an' muckle hae seen</p> +<p class="i0">O' the ways o' the warl' wi' ma vara ain een.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">I've been tae Kingskettle wi' Wullie an' Jeames,</p> +<p class="i0">I've veesited Anster an' Elie an' Wemyss,</p> +<p class="i0">I've walked tae Kirkca'dy an' Cupar an' Crail,</p> +<p class="i0">An' I aince was awa' tae Dundee wi' the rail.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Losh me, sir! The wonnerfu' things that I saw!</p> +<p class="i0">The kirks wi' their steeples, sae bonny an' braw</p> +<p class="i0">An' publics whauriver ye turned wi' yer ee—</p> +<p class="i0">'Tis jist a complete eddication, Dundee!</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Theer's streets—be the hunner! An' shops be the score!</p> +<p class="i0">Theer's bakers an' grocers an' fleshers galore!</p> +<p class="i0">An' milliners' winders a' flauntin' awa'</p> +<p class="i0">Wi' the last o' the fashions frae Lunnon an' a'.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span></p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">An' eh, sic a thrang, sir! I saw in a minnit</p> +<p class="i0">Mair folk than the toun o' Kinghorn will hae in it.</p> +<p class="i0">I wadna hae thocht that the hail o' creation</p> +<p class="i0">Could boast at ae time sic a vast population!</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Ma word, sir! It gars ye clap haun' tae yer broo</p> +<p class="i0">An' wunner what's Providence after the noo</p> +<p class="i0">That he lets sic a swarm o' they cratur's be born</p> +<p class="i0">Wham naebody kens aboot here in Kinghorn.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">What?—Leeberal minded?—Ye canna but be</p> +<p class="i0">When ye've had sic a graun' eddication as me.</p> +<p class="i0">For oh, theer is naethin' like traivel, ye ken,</p> +<p class="i0">For growin' acquent wi' the natur' o' men.</p> +</div></div> + +<hr /> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Falls of Foyers.</span>"—A correspondent writes:—"I have seen a good many +letters in the <i>Times</i>, headed 'The Falls of the Foyers.' Here and +abroad I have seen many Foyers, and only fell down once. This was at the +Théâtre Francais, where the Foyer is kept highly polished, or used to be +so. If the Foyers are carpeted or matted, there need be no 'Falls.'"</p> + +<p class="regards">Yours,</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Common Sense.</span>"</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_148.png"> +<img src="images/i_148.png" width="100%" alt="WINGED" /></a> +<h3>"WINGED"</h3> +<p><i>First Gael.</i> "What's the matter, Tonal?"</p> +<p><i>Second ditto (who had been out with Old Briggs).</i> "Matter! Hur legs is +full o' shoots".</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_150.png"> +<img src="images/i_150.png" width="100%" alt="THE HIGHLAND GAMES" /></a> +<h3>MR. PUNCH AT THE HIGHLAND GAMES</h3> +<center>Shows the natives how to "put the stone."</center> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 70%"> +<a href="images/i_151.png"> +<img src="images/i_151.png" width="100%" alt="I'll paint that bedstead" /></a> +<h3>AN ARTIST SCAMP IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>Artist (entering).</i> "My good woman, if you'll allow me, I'll just paint +that bedstead of yours."</p> +<p><i>Cottager (with bob-curtsey).</i> "Thank ye, sir, I' sure it's very kind of +ye—but dinna ye think that little one over yonder wants it more?"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<h2>EN ÉCOSSE</h2> + +<center><i>À Monsieur Punch</i></center> + +<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mister</span>,—I come of to make a little voyage in Scotland. Ah, the +beautiful country of Sir Scott, Sir Wallace, and Sir Burns! I am gone to +render visit to one of my english friends, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> charming boy—<i>un charmant +garçon</i>—and his wife, a lady very instructed and very spiritual, and +their childs. I adore them, the dear little english childs, who have the +cheeks like some roses, and the hairs like some flax, as one says in +your country, all buckled—<i>bouclés</i>, how say you?</p> + +<p>I go by the train of night—in french one says "<i>le sleeping</i>"—to +Edimbourg, and then to Calendar, where I attend to find a coach—in +french one says "<i>un mail</i>" or "<i>un fourinhand</i>." <i>Nom d'une pipe</i>, it +is one of those ridicule carriages, called in french "<i>un breack</i>" and +in english a char-à-banc—that which the english pronounce +"<i>tcherribaingue</i>"—which attends us at the going out of the station! Eh +well, in voyage one must habituate himself to all! But a such carriage +discovered—<i>découverte</i>—seems to me well unuseful in a country where +he falls of rain without cease.</p> + +<p>Before to start I demand of all the world some <i>renseignements</i> on the +scottish climate, and all the world responds me, "All-days of the rain." +By consequence I procure myself some impermeable vestments, one +mackintosch coat, one mackintosch cape of Inverness, one mackintosch +covering of voyage, one south-western hat, some umbrellas, some gaiters, +and many pairs of boots very thick—not boots of town, but veritable +"shootings."</p> + +<p>I arrive at Edimbourg by a morning of the most sads; the sky grey, the +earth wet, the air humid. Therefore I propose to myself to search at +Calender a place at the interior, <i>et voilà</i>—and see there—the +<i>breack</i> has no interior! There is but that which one calls a "boot", +and me, Auguste, can I to lie myself there at the middle of the +baggages? Ah no! Thus I am forced to endorse—<i>endosser</i>—my impermeable +vestments and to protect myself the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> head by my south-western hat. Then, +holding firmly the most strong of my umbrellas, I say to the coacher, +"He goes to fall of the rain, is it not?" He makes a sign of head of not +to comprehend. Ah, for sure, he is scottish! I indicate the sky and my +umbrella, and I say "Rain?" and then he comprehends. "<i>Eh huile</i>", he +responds to me, "<i>ah canna sé, mébi huile no hé meukl the dé</i>." I write +this phonetically, for I comprehend not the scottish language. What +droll of conversation! Him comprehends not the english; me I comprehend +not the scottish.</p> + +<p>But I essay of new, "How many has he of it from here to the lake?" +<i>C'est inutile</i>—it is unuseful. I say, "Distance?" He comprehends. +"<i>Mébi oui taque toua hours</i>", says he; "<i>beutt yile no fache yoursel, +its no sé lang that yile bi ouishinn yoursel aoua</i>." <i>Quelle +langue</i>—what language, even to write phonetically! I comprehend one +sole word, "hours." Some hours! <i>Sapristi!</i> I say, "Hours?" He says +"<i>Toua</i>" all together, a monosyllable. <i>Sans aucune doute ça veut dire</i> +"twelve"—<i>douze</i>. Twelve hours on a <i>breack</i> in a such climate! Ah, no! +<i>C'est trop fort</i>—it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> too strong! "Hold", I cry myself, "attend, I +descend, I go not!" It is true that I see not how I can to descend, for +I am <i>entouré</i>—how say you? of voyagers. We are five on a bench, of the +most narrows, and me I am at the middle. And the bench before us is also +complete, and we touch him of the knees. And my neighbours carry on the +knees all sorts of packets, umbrellas, canes, sacks of voyage, &c. <i>Il +n'y a pas moyen</i>—he has not there mean. And the coacher says me "<i>Na, +na, monne, yile no ghitt doun, yile djest baïd ouar yer sittinn.</i>" Then +he mounts to his place, and we part immediately. <i>Il va tomber de la +pluie! Douze heures! Mon Dieu, quel voyage!</i></p> + +<p class="regards">Agree, &c.,</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Auguste.</span></p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_152.png"> +<img src="images/i_152.png" width="100%" alt="ZEAL" /></a> +<h3>ZEAL</h3> +<p><i>Saxon Tourist.</i> "Been at the kirk?"</p> +<p><i>Celt.</i> "Aye."</p> +<p><i> Saxon T.</i> "How far is it?"</p> +<p><i>Celt.</i> "Daur say it'll be fourteen mile."</p> +<p><i>Saxon T.</i> "Fourteen miles!!"</p> +<p><i>Celt.</i> "Aye, aw'm awfu' fond o' the preachin'"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_154.png"> +<img src="images/i_154.png" width="100%" alt="THRIFT" /></a> +<h3>THRIFT</h3> +<p><i>Peebles Body (to townsman who was supposed to be in London on a +visit).</i> "E—eh Mac! ye're sune hame again!"</p> +<p><i>Mac.</i> "E—eh, it's just a ruinous place, that! Mun, a had na' been +the-erre abune twa hoours when—<i>bang</i>—went <i>saxpence</i>!!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_155.png"> +<img src="images/i_155.png" width="100%" alt="A SATISFACTORY SOLUTION" /></a> +<h3>A SATISFACTORY SOLUTION</h3> +<p>"I fear, Duncan, that friend of mine does not seem overly safe with his +gun."</p> +<p>"No, sir. But I'm thinkin' it'll be all right if you wass to go wan side +o' him and Mr. John the ither. He canna shoot baith o' ye!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_156.png"> +<img src="images/i_156.png" width="100%" alt="VITA FUMUS" title="" /></a> +<h3>"VITA FUMUS"</h3> +<p><i>Tonal.</i> "Whar'll ye hae been till, Tugal?"</p> +<p><i>Tugal.</i> "At ta McTavishes' funeral——"</p> +<p><i>Tonal.</i> "An' is ta Tavish deed?"</p> +<p><i>Tugal.</i> "Deed is he!!"</p> +<p><i>Tonal.</i> "Losh, mon! Fowk are aye deein' noo that never used to dee +afore!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_157.png"> +<img src="images/i_157.png" width="100%" alt="PRECAUTIONS" /></a> +<h3>PRECAUTIONS</h3> +<p><i>Saxon Angler (to his keeper).</i> "You seem in a great hurry with your +clip! I haven't seen a sign of a fish yet—not a rise!"</p> +<p><i>Duncan.</i> "'Deed, sir, I wisna a botherin' mysel' aboot the fush; but +seein' you wis new to the business, I had a thocht it widna be lang +afore you were needin' a left oot o' the watter yoursel'!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_158.png"> +<img src="images/i_158.png" width="100%" alt="HIS POUND OF FLESH" /></a> +<h3>HIS POUND OF FLESH</h3> +<p><i>Financier (tenant of our forest, after a week's unsuccessful +stalking).</i> "Now, look here, my man. I bought and paid for ten stags. If +the brutes can't be shot, you'll have to trap them! I've promised the +venison, and I mean to have it!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_160.png"> +<img src="images/i_160.png" width="100%" alt="SCRUPULOUS" /></a> +<h3>SCRUPULOUS</h3> +<p><i>Shepherd.</i> "O, Jims, mun! Can ye no gie a whustle on tha ram'lin' brute +o' mine? I daurna mysel'; it's just fast-day in oor parish!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_162.png"> +<img src="images/i_162.png" width="100%" alt="THE LAND OF LORN" /></a> +<h3>"THE LAND OF LORN"</h3> +<p><i>It has drizzled incessantly, for a fortnight, since the Smiths came +down to their charming villa at Braebogie, in Argyleshire.</i></p> +<p><i>Keeper (who has come up to say the boat is ready on the loch, if +"they're for fushin' the day").</i> "Eh! I should na wonder if this weather +tur-rns ta rain!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_163.png"> +<img src="images/i_163.png" width="100%" alt="LOCAL" /></a> +<h3>LOCAL</h3> +<center><span class="smcap">Sunday Morning</span></center><br /> +<p><i>Tourist (staying at the Glenmulctem Hotel—dubiously).</i> "Can +I—ah—have a boat?"</p> +<p><i>Boatman.</i> "Oo—aye!"</p> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "But I thought you—ah—never broke the—aw—Sabbath in +Scotland?"</p> +<p><i>Boatman.</i> "Aweel, ye ken the Sawbath disna' come doon to the loch—it +just staps at the hottle!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<h2>EN ÉCOSSE (ENCORE)</h2> + +<center><i>À Monsieur Punch</i></center> + +<p><span class="smcap">Dear Mister</span>,—I have spoken you of my departure from Calendar on the +<i>breack</i>. Eh, well, he rained not of the whole of the whole—<i>du tout<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> +du tout! Il faisait un temps superbe</i>—he was making a superb time, the +route was well agreeable, and the voyage lasted but two hours, and not +twelve. What droll of idea! In Scottish <i>twa</i> is two, not twelve. I was +so content to arrive so quick, and without to be wetted that I gave the +coacher a good to-drink—<i>un bon pourboire</i>—though before to start all +the voyagers had paid him a "tipp", that which he called a "driver's +fee." Again what droll of idea! To give the to-drink before to start, +and each one the same—six pennys.</p> + +<p>My friend encountered me and conducted me to his house, where I have +passed fifteen days, a sojourn of the most agreeables. And all the time +almost not one sole drop of rain! <i>J'avais beau</i>—I had fine—to buy all +my impermeable vestments, I carry them never. One sole umbrella suffices +me, and I open him but two times. And yet one says that the Scotland is +a rainy country. It is perhaps a season <i>tout à fait</i>—all to +fact—exceptional. But fifteen days almost without rain! One would +believe himself at the border of the Mediterranean, absolutely at the +South. And I have eaten of the "porridg", me Auguste! <i>Partout</i> I essay +the dish of the country. I take at first a spoonful pure and simple. <i>Oh +la, la!</i> My friend offers me of the cream. It is well. Also of the salt. +<i>Quelle idée!</i> But no, before me I perceive a dish of <i>confiture</i>, that +which the Scottish call "marmaladde." <i>A la bonne heure!</i> With some +marmaladde, some cream, and much of sugar, I find that the "porridg" is +enough well, for I taste him no more.</p> + +<p>One day we make an ascension, and we see many grouses. Only we can not +to shoot, for it is not yet the season of the huntings. It is but a hill +that we mount. The name appears me to be french, but bad written. "Ben +Venue", that is to say, "<i>Bienvenu</i>"—<i>soyez le bienvenu</i>. She is one of +the first of the Scottish hills, and she says "welcome" in french. It is +a pretty idea, and a politeness very amiable towards my country. I +salute the hospitable Scotland and I thank her. It is a great country, +of brave men, of charming women—ah, I recall to myself some eyes so +beautiful, some forms so attracting!—of ravishing landscapes, and, at +that epoch there, of a climate so delicious. She has one sole and one +great defect. The best Scottish hotels cost very dear, and, my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> faith, +the two or three that I visited are not great thing like +comfortable—<i>ne sont pas grand'chose comme comfortable</i>!</p> + +<p>One day we make a little excursion on the Lake of Lomond. The lake is +well beautiful, and the steamboat is excellent. But in one certain +hotel, in descending from a <i>breack</i>, and before to embark, we take the +"lunch." We bargain not, we ask not even the price, we eat at the <i>table +d'hôte</i> like all the world in Swiss, in France, even in Germany, when +there is but one half hour before the departure of the train or of the +boat. <i>Oh la, la!</i> I have eaten in the spanish hotels, on the steamboats +of the italian lakes, even in the <i>restaurants—mon Dieu!</i>—of the +english railways, but never, never—<i>au grand jamais</i>—have I eaten a +<i>déjeuner</i> like that! One dish I shall forget never; some exterior green +leaves of lettuce, without oil or vinegar, which they called a "salad." +<i>Parbleu</i>—by blue! In all the history of the world there has been but +one man who would have could to eat her with pleasure—Nabuchodonosor!</p> + +<p class="regards">Agree, &c.,</p> + +<p class="author"><span class="smcap">Auguste.</span></p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_164.png"> +<img src="images/i_164.png" width="100%" alt="CANNY" /></a> +<h3>"CANNY"</h3> +<p><i>Sister.</i> "Why, Charles, you've got raw whiskey here!"</p> +<p><i>Charles.</i> "Well, it's hardly worth while to bring water. We can always +find that as we go along—when we want it."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_166.png"> +<img src="images/i_166.png" width="100%" alt="CAUTIOUS" /></a> +<h3>CAUTIOUS</h3> +<p><i>Visitor (at out-of-the-way inn in the North).</i> "Do you know anything +about salmon-poaching in this neighbourhood?"</p> +<p><i>Landlady (whose son is not above suspicion).</i>—"Eh—no, sir. Maybe it's +a new style of cooking as we haven't heard of in these parts, as you +see, sir, we only do our eggs that way; and"—<i>(brightening up)</i>—"if +you like 'em, I can get you a dish at once!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_167.png"> +<img src="images/i_167.png" width="100%" alt="A DECIDED OPINION" /></a> +<h3>A DECIDED OPINION</h3> +<p><i>Proprietor of shootings ("in the course of conversation").</i> "Yes, but +you know, Sandy, it's difficult to choose between the Scylla of a shy +tenant, and the Charybdis of——"</p> +<p><i>Sandy (promptly).</i> "Aweel! Gie me the siller, an' anybuddy that likes +may hae the tither!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_168.png"> +<img src="images/i_168.png" width="100%" alt="missing his fourth stag" /></a> +<p><i>Chappie (after missing his fourth stag, explains).</i> +"Aw—fact is, the—aw—waving grass was in my way."</p> +<p><i>Old Stalker.</i> "Hoot, mon, wad he hae me bring out a scythe?"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_169.png"> +<img src="images/i_169.png" width="100%" alt="Cartoon" /></a> +<p>Our artist catches it again this winter in the Highlands.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_170.png"> +<img src="images/i_170.png" width="80%" alt="A FINE HEAD" /></a> +<h3>A FINE HEAD (BUT NOT OF THE RIGHT SORT OF CATTLE)</h3> +<p>Perkins has paid a mint of money for his shooting, and has had bad luck all the +season. To-day, however, he gets a shot, only—it turns out to be at a cow!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_171.png"> +<img src="images/i_171.png" width="100%" alt="A "SCENE" IN THE HIGHLANDS" /></a> +<h3>A "SCENE" IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>Ill-used husband</i> <i>(under the bed)</i>. "Aye! Ye may crack me, and ye may +thrash me, but ye canna break my manly sperrit. I'll na come oot!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_172.png"> +<img src="images/i_172.png" width="100%" alt="IN THE HIGHLANDS" /></a> +<h3>MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p>He is at present on a boating excursion, and describes the motion as +extremely pleasant, and has no dread of sea-sickness.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_174.png"> +<img src="images/i_174.png" width="100%" alt=""GAME" IN THE HIGHLANDS" /></a> +<h3>"GAME" IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>Captain Jinks.</i> "Birds plentiful, I hope, Donald?"</p> +<p><i>Donald.</i> "Tousans, sir—in tousans."</p> +<p><i>Captain J.</i> "Any zebras?"</p> +<p><i>Donald</i> <i>(anxious to please)</i>. "Is't zebras? They're in tousans, too."</p> +<p><i>Captain J.</i> "And gorillas, no doubt?"</p> +<p><i>Donald.</i> "Well, noo an' then we see ane or twa—just like yerself."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p> + +<h2>MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES'S ADVENTURES IN THE HIGHLANDS</h2> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_175a.png"> +<img src="images/i_175a.png" width="100%" alt="takes a siesta" /></a> +<center>Lavinia takes a siesta,</center> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_175b.png"> +<img src="images/i_175b.png" width="100%" alt="the frightful situation" /></a> +<p>And the frightful situation she finds herself in at the +end of it.</p> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_176a.png"> +<img src="images/i_176a.png" width="100%" alt="arrives at a waterfall" /></a> +<p>Lavinia arrives at a waterfall, and asks its name. The +shepherd (not understanding English) informs her in Gaelic that it is +called (as Lavinia supposes) "Vicharoobashallochoggilnabo." Lavinia +thinks it a very pretty name.</p> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<img src="images/i_176b.png" width="100%" alt="A bright idea" /> +<p>A bright idea strikes the shepherd, and before Lavinia +can remonstrate, he transports her, in the usual manner, to the other +side.</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_177.png"> +<img src="images/i_177.png" width="100%" alt="MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES" /></a> +<h3>MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES</h3> +<p>She comes suddenly on a strange structure—apparently a native fort, and +is just going to sketch it, when a savage of gigantic stature, and armed +to the teeth, starts from an ambush, and menaces her in Gaelic!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<h2>TWENTY HOURS AFTER</h2> + +<center><span class="smcap">Euston, 8 P.M.</span></center> + +<div class="poem w26"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">I'm sick of this sweltering weather.</p> +<p class="i2">Phew! ninety degrees in the shade!</p> +<p class="i0">I long for the hills and the heather,</p> +<p class="i2">I long for the kilt and the plaid;</p> +<p class="i0">I long to escape from this hot land</p> +<p class="i2">Where there isn't a mouthful of air,</p> +<p class="i0">And fly to the breezes of Scotland—</p> +<p class="i2">It's never too stuffy up there.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">For weeks I have sat in pyjamas,</p> +<p class="i2">And found even these were <i>de trop</i>,</p> +<p class="i0">And envied the folk of Bahamas</p> +<p class="i2">Who dress in a feather or so;</p> +<p class="i0">But now there's an end to my grilling,</p> +<p class="i2">My Inferno's a thing of the past;</p> +<p class="i0">Hurrah! there's the whistle a-shrilling—</p> +<p class="i2">We are off to the Highlands at last!</p> +</div></div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p> + +<center><span class="smcap">Callander, 4 p.m.</span></center> + +<div class="poem w26"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">The dull leaden skies are all clouded</p> +<p class="i2">In the gloom of a sad weeping day,</p> +<p class="i0">The desolate mountains are shrouded</p> +<p class="i2">In palls of funereal grey;</p> +<p class="i0">'Mid the skirl of the wild wintry weather</p> +<p class="i2">The torrents descend in a sheet</p> +<p class="i0">As we shiver all huddled together</p> +<p class="i2">In the reek of the smouldering peat.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">A plague on the Highlands! to think of</p> +<p class="i2">The heat that but lately we banned;</p> +<p class="i0">Oh! what would we give for a blink of</p> +<p class="i2">The bright sunny side of the Strand!</p> +<p class="i0">To think there are folk that still revel</p> +<p class="i2">In Summer, and fling themselves down,</p> +<p class="i0">In the Park, or St. James? What the d——</p> +<p class="i2">Possessed us to hurry from town?</p> +</div></div> + +<hr /> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Out of Tune and Harsh.</span>"—<i>First Elder</i> <i>(at the Kirk "Skellin'")</i>. "Did +ye hear Dougal? More snorin' in the sermon?"</p> + +<p><i>Second Elder</i>, "Parefec'ly disgracefu'! He's waukened 's a'!"</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_178.png"> +<img src="images/i_178.png" width="100%" alt="OVERHEARD IN THE HIGHLANDS" /></a> +<h3>OVERHEARD IN THE HIGHLANDS</h3> +<p><i>First Chieftain.</i> "I say, old chap, what a doose of a bore these games +are!"</p> +<p><i>Second Chieftain.</i> "Ah, but, my dear boy, it is this sort of thing that +has made us Scotchmen <i>what we are</i>!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_179.png"> +<img src="images/i_179.png" width="100%" alt="SERMONS IN STONES" /></a> +<h3>"SERMONS IN STONES"</h3> +<p><i>Tourist</i> <i>(of an inquiring and antiquarian turn)</i>. "Now I suppose, +farmer, that large cairn of stones has some history?"</p> +<p><i>Highland Farmer.</i> "Ooh, aye, that buig o' stanes has a gran' history +whatever!"</p> +<p><i>Tourist</i> <i>(eagerly)</i>. "Indeed! I should like to—— What is the +legend——?"</p> +<p><i>Farmer.</i> "Just a gran' history!" <i>(Solemnly.)</i> "It took a' ma cairts +full and horses sax months to gather them aff he land and pit them +ther-r-re!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_180.png"> +<img src="images/i_180.png" width="100%" alt="JETSAM AND FLOTSAM" /></a> +<h3>JETSAM AND FLOTSAM</h3> +<p>Smith being shut out from the Continent this year, takes a cottage ornée +on Dee-Side. Scotland. The children are sent up first. The house is +described as "conveniently furnished"—they find it so!</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_182.png"> +<img src="images/i_182.png" width="100%" alt="WILDS OF THE NORTH" /></a> +<h3>IN THE WILDS OF THE NORTH.</h3> +<p><i>Hungry Saxon</i> <i>(just arrived, with equally hungry family)</i>. "Well, +now—er—what can you give us for dinner, as soon as we've had a wash?"</p> +<p><i>Scotch Lassie.</i> "Oh, jist onything!"</p> +<p><i>H. S.</i> <i>(rubbing his hands in anticipation)</i>. "Ah! Now we'll have a +nice juicy steak."</p> +<p><i>Lassie.</i> "A—weel. We'll be haein' some steak here maybe by the boat i' +the morn's morn!"</p> +<p><i>H. S.</i> <i>(a little crestfallen)</i>. "Oh—well—chops then. We'll say +mutton chops."</p> +<p><i>Lassie.</i> "Oh, ay, but we've no been killin' a sheep the day!"</p> +<p> [<i>Ends up with boiled eggs, and vows to remain at home for the future.</i></p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p> + +<h2>THE DUKE OF ATHOLL'S SHILLING (1851)</h2> + +<p>The <i>North British Mail</i> assures us that the Duke of Atholl exacts one +shilling a head from every person taking a walk in his ground at +Dunkeld. This is rather dear; but the impost would be insupportable if +his Grace insisted upon also showing himself for the money.</p> + +<h3>A HIGHLAND CORONACH</h3> + +<center><i>Or Lament over the Acts and State of the Duke of Atholl.</i><br /><br /> + +After Scott.</center> + +<div class="poem w26"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">He has shut up the mountain,</p> +<p class="i0">He has locked up the forest,</p> +<p class="i0">He has bunged up the fountain,</p> +<p class="i0">When our need was the sorest;</p> +<p class="i0">The traveller stirring</p> +<p class="i0">To the North, may dogs borrow;</p> +<p class="i0">But the Duke gives no hearing,</p> +<p class="i0">No pass—but to sorrow.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">The hand of the tourist</p> +<p class="i0">Grasps the carpet-bag grimly,</p> +<p class="i0">But a face of the dourest</p> +<p class="i0">Frowns through the Glen dimly.</p> +<p class="i0">The autumn winds, rushing,</p> +<p class="i0">Stir a kilt of the queerest,</p> +<p class="i0">Duke and gillies come crushing</p> +<p class="i0">Where pleasure is nearest!</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Queer foot on the corrie,</p> +<p class="i0">Oddly loving to cumber—</p> +<p class="i0">Give up this odd foray,</p> +<p class="i0">Awake from your slumber!</p> +<p class="i0">Take your ban from the mountain,</p> +<p class="i0">Take your lock from the river,</p> +<p class="i0">Take your bolt from the fountain,</p> +<p class="i0">Now at once, and for ever!</p> +</div></div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_184.png"> +<img src="images/i_184.png" width="100%" alt="The pursuit" title="" /></a> +<center>The sad fate of our only ham.—The pursuit.</center> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_185.png"> +<img src="images/i_185.png" width="100%" alt="A RARA MONGRELLIS" /></a> +<h3>A RARA MONGRELLIS</h3> +<p><i>Tourist.</i> "Your dog appears to be deaf, as he pays no attention to me."</p> +<p><i>Shepherd.</i> "Na, na, sir. She's a varra wise dog, for all tat. But she +only speaks Gaelic."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 50%"> +<a href="images/i_186.png"> +<img src="images/i_186.png" width="100%" alt="IN FOR IT" /></a> +<h3>"IN FOR IT"</h3> +<p><i>Innocent Tourist.</i> "No fish to be caught in Loch Fine now? And how do +you support yourself?"</p> +<p><i>Native.</i> "Whiles she carries parcels, and whiles she raws people in ta +poat, and whiles a shentleman 'ull give her a saxpence or a shillin'!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_187.png"> +<img src="images/i_187.png" width="100%" alt="A BLANK DAY" /></a> +<h3>A BLANK DAY</h3> +<p><i>The Keeper</i> <i>(to Brown, who rents the forest)</i>. "Doon wi' ye! Doon wi' +ye! Get ahint a stang!"</p> +<p><i>Brown</i> <i>(out of temper—he had been "stalking" about all the morning, +and missed several times)</i>. "Yes, it's all very well to say 'Get behind +a stone.' But show me one!—show me one!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p> + +<table summary="cartoons"> +<tr> +<td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 85%"> +<a href="images/i_188a.png"> +<img src="images/i_188a.png" width="100%" alt="Mr. Punch passes a night" /></a> +</div> +</td> +<td> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 70%"> +<a href="images/i_188b.png"> +<img src="images/i_188b.png" width="100%" alt="The Laird serenades him" /></a> +</div> +</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td> +<p>Mr. Punch passes a night at<br /> McGillie Cullum Castle.</p> +</td> +<td> +<p>The Laird, as a delicate compliment, serenades him.</p> +</td> +</tr> +</table> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_189.png"> +<img src="images/i_189.png" width="100%" alt="A BAD SEASON" /></a> +<h3>A BAD SEASON</h3> +<p><i>Sportsman.</i> "I can assure you, what with the rent of the moor, and my +expenses, and 'what not,' the birds have cost me—ah—a sovereign +apiece!!"</p> +<p><i>Keeper.</i> "A' weel, sir! 'Deed it's a maircy ye didna kill na mair o' +'em!!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_190.png"> +<img src="images/i_190.png" width="100%" alt="CANDID" /></a> +<h3>CANDID</h3> +<p><i>Sportsman.</i> "Boy, you've been at this whiskey!"</p> +<p><i>Boy</i> <i>(who has brought the luncheon-basket)</i>. "Na! The cooark wadna +come oot!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_191.png"> +<img src="images/i_191.png" width="100%" alt="UNCO CANNY" /></a> +<h3>"UNCO CANNY"</h3> +<p><i>Noble Sportsman.</i> "Missed, eh?"</p> +<p><i>Cautious Keeper.</i> "Weel, a' wadna gang quite sae faur as to say that; +but a' doot ye hay'na <i>exactly</i> hit."</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<h2>THE SONG OF THE SCOTCH TOURIST</h2> + +<div class="poem w26"><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Those Scotch hotels! Those Scotch hotels</p> +<p class="i0">Are fit for princes and for swells;</p> +<p class="i0">But their high charges don't agree</p> +<p class="i0">With humbler travellers like me.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Twelve shillings daily for my board</p> +<p class="i0">Is more than I can well afford,</p> +<p class="i0">For this includes nor ale nor wine,</p> +<p class="i0">Whereof I drink some when I dine.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">Bad sherry's charged at eight-and-six,</p> +<p class="i0">A price that in my gizzard sticks:</p> +<p class="i0">And if I want a pint of port,</p> +<p class="i0">A crown is what I'm pilfer'd for 't.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">For service, too, I have to pay,</p> +<p class="i0">Two shillings, as a rule, per day:</p> +<p class="i0">Yet always, when I leave the door,</p> +<p class="i0">The boots and waiter beg for more.</p> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<p class="i0">So, till a fortune I can spend,</p> +<p class="i0">Abroad my autumn steps I'll bend;</p> +<p class="i0">Far cheaper there, experience tells,</p> +<p class="i0">Is living than at Scotch hotels!</p> +</div></div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 80%"> +<a href="images/i_192.png"> +<img src="images/i_192.png" width="80%" alt="DIFFERENT MATTER" /></a> +<h3>A VERY DIFFERENT MATTER</h3> +<p><i>Southern Lord</i> <i>(staying at Highland castle)</i>. "Thank you so much. +I—ah—weally enjoy your music. I think of having a piper at my own +place."</p> +<p><i>Sandy the piper.</i> "An' fat kin' o' a piper would your lordship be +needin'?"</p> +<p><i>Southern Lord.</i> "Oh, certainly a good piper like yourself, Sandy."</p> +<p><i>Sandy</i> <i>(sniffing)</i>. "Och! Inteet!—Ye might easily fin' a lord like +your lordship, but it's nae sae easy to fin' a piper like me whatever!"</p> +</div> + +<hr /> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 60%"> +<a href="images/i_193.png"> +<img src="images/i_193.png" width="100%" alt="Mr P in Highland Dress" /></a> +</div> + +<h3>THE END</h3> + +<center>BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., PRINTERS, LONDON AND TONBRIDGE.</center> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Punch in the Highlands, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. 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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: Mr. Punch in the Highlands + +Author: Various + +Editor: J. A. Hammerton + +Illustrator: Charles Keene + and others + +Release Date: October 30, 2011 [EBook #37882] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS *** + + + + +Produced by Neville Allen, Chris Curnow and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + + PUNCH LIBRARY OF HUMOUR + + Edited by J. A. Hammerton + +Designed to provide in a series of volumes, each complete in itself, the +cream of our national humour, contributed by the masters of comic +draughtsmanship and the leading wits of the age to "Punch", from its +beginning in 1841 to the present day. + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +[Illustration] + +[Illustration: THRIFT + +_Highlander (he had struck his foot against a "stane")._ "Phew-ts!--e-eh +what a ding ma puir buit wad a gotten if a'd had it on!!"] + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +[Illustration] + +AS PICTURED BY + +CHARLES KEENE, JOHN LEECH, GEORGE DU MAURIER, W. RALSTON, L. RAVEN-HILL, +J. BERNARD PARTRIDGE, E. T. REED, G. D. ARMOUR, CECIL ALDIN, A. S. BOYD, +ETC. + +_WITH 140 ILLUSTRATIONS_ + +PUBLISHED BY ARRANGEMENT WITH THE PROPRIETORS OF "PUNCH" + +THE EDUCATIONAL BOOK CO. LTD. + + * * * * * + +The Punch Library of Humour + +_Twenty-five volumes, crown 8vo, 192 pages +fully illustrated_ + + LIFE IN LONDON + COUNTRY LIFE + IN THE HIGHLANDS + SCOTTISH HUMOUR + IRISH HUMOUR + COCKNEY HUMOUR + IN SOCIETY + AFTER DINNER STORIES + IN BOHEMIA + AT THE PLAY + MR. PUNCH AT HOME + ON THE CONTINONG + RAILWAY BOOK + AT THE SEASIDE + MR. PUNCH AFLOAT + IN THE HUNTING FIELD + MR. PUNCH ON TOUR + WITH ROD AND GUN + MR. PUNCH AWHEEL + BOOK OF SPORTS + GOLF STORIES + IN WIG AND GOWN + ON THE WARPATH + BOOK OF LOVE + WITH THE CHILDREN + +[Illustration] + + * * * * * + +NORTHWARD HO! + +SCOTSMEN--Highlanders and Lowlanders--have furnished Mr. Punch with many +of his happiest jokes. Despite the curious tradition which the Cockney +imbibes with his mother's milk as to the sterility of Scotland in +humour, the Scots are not only the cause of humour in others but there +are occasions when they prove themselves not entirely bereft of the +faculty which, with his charming egoism, the Cockney supposes to be his +own exclusive birthright. Indeed, we have it on the authority of Mr. +Spielmann, the author of "The History of _Punch_", that "of the accepted +jokes from unattached contributors (to Punch), it is a notable fact that +at least 75 per cent. comes from north of the Tweed." As a very +considerable proportion of these Scottish jokes make fun of the national +characteristics of the Scot, it is clear that Donald has the supreme +gift of being able to laugh at himself. It should be noted, however, +that Mr. Punch's most celebrated Scottish joke ("Bang went saxpence"), +which we give on page 153, was no invention, but merely the record of an +actual conversation overheard by an Englishman! + +In the present volume the purpose has been not so much to bring together +a representative collection of the Scottish humour that has appeared in +_Punch_, but to illustrate the intercourse of the "Sassenach" with the +Highlander, chiefly as a visitor bent on sport, and incidentally to +illustrate some of the humours of Highland life. Perhaps the distinction +between Highlander and Lowlander has not been very rigidly kept, but +that need trouble none but the pedants, who are notoriously lacking in +the sense of humour, and by that token ought not to be peeping into +these pages. + +Of all Mr. Punch's contributors, we may say, without risk of being +invidious, that Charles Keene was by far the happiest in the portrayal +of Scottish character. His Highland types are perhaps somewhat closer to +the life than his Lowlanders, but all are invariably touched off with +the kindliest humour, and never in any way burlesqued. If his work +overshadows that of the other humorous artists past and present +represented in this volume, it is for the reason stated; yet it will be +found that from the days of John Leech to those of Mr. Raven-Hill. MR. +PUNCH'S artists have seldom been more happily inspired than when they +have sought to depict Highland life and the lighter side of sport and +travel north of the Tweed. + + * * * * * + +MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +SPORTING NOTES + +[Illustration] + +The following are the notes we have received from our Sporting +Contributor. I wish we could say they were a fair equivalent for the +notes he has received from _us_, to say nothing of that new Henry's +patent double central-fire breech-loader, with all the latest +improvements, and one of Mr. Benjamin's heather-mixture suits. Such as +they are we print them, with the unsatisfactory consolation that if the +notes are bad they are like the sport and the birds. Of all these it may +be said that "bad is the best." + +_North and South Uist._--The awfully hard weather--the natives call it +"soft" here--having rendered the chances of winged game out of the +question, the sportsmen who have rented the shootings are glad to try +the chances of the game, sitting, and have confined themselves to the +whist from which the islands take their name. Being only two, they are +reduced to double dummy. As the rental of the Uist Moors is L400, they +find the points come rather high--so far. + +_Harris._--In spite of repeated inquiries, the proprietress of the +island was not visible. Her friend, Mrs. Gamp, now here on a visit, +declares she saw Mrs. H. very recently, but was quite unable to give me +any information as to shootings, except the shootings of her own corns. + +_Fifeshire._--The renters of the Fife shootings generally have been +seriously considering the feasibility of combining with those of the +once well-stocked Drum Moor in Aberdeenshire, to get up something like +a band--of hope, that a bag may be made some day. Thus far, the only +bags made have been those of the proprietors of the shootings, who have +bagged heavy rentals. + +_Rum._--I call the island a gross-misnomer, as there is nothing to drink +in it but whiskey, which, with the adjacent "Egg", may be supposed to +have given rise to the neighbouring "Mull"--hot drinks being the natural +resource of both natives and visitors in such weather as we've had ever +since I crossed the Tweed. I have seen one bird--at least so the gilly +says--after six tumblers, but to me it had all the appearance of a +brace. + +_Skye._--Birds wild. Sportsmen, ditto. Sky a gloomy grey--your +correspondent and the milk at the hotel at Corrieverrieslushin alike +sky-blue. + +_Cantire._--Can't you? Try tramping the moors for eight hours after a +pack of preternaturally old birds that know better than let you get +within half a mile of their tails. Then see if you can't tire. I beg +your pardon, but if you knew what it was to make jokes under my present +circumstances, you'd give it up, or do worse. If I should not turn up +shortly, and you hear of an inquest on a young man, in one of +Benjamin's heather-mixture suits, with a Henry's central-fire +breech-loader, and a roll of new notes in his possession, found hanging +wet through, in his braces in some remote Highland shieling--break it +gently to the family of + + Your Sporting Contributor. + + * * * * * + +A PIBROCH FOR BREAKFAST. + + Hech, ho, the Highland laddie! + Hech, ho, the Finnon haddie! + Breeks awa', + Heck, the braw, + Ho, the bonnie tartan plaidie! + Hech, the laddie, + Ho, the haddie, + Hech, ho, the cummer's caddie, + Dinna forget + The bannocks het, + Gin ye luve your Highland laddie. + + * * * * * + +The Member for Sark writes from the remote Highlands of Scotland, where +he has been driving past an interminable series of lochs, to inquire +where the keys are kept? He had better apply to the local authorities in +the Isle of Man. They have a whole House of Keys. Possibly those the +hon. Member is concerned about may be found among them. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ON THE HILLS + +_Deer Stalker (old hand, and fond of it)._ "Isn't it exciting? Keep +cool!" + + [_Jones isn't used to it, and, not having moved for the last half-hour, + his excitement has worn off. He's wet through, and sinking fast in the + boggy ground, and speechless with cold. So he doesn't answer._ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: 1) MR. BUGGLE'S FIRST STAG. + +AT THE FIRST SHOT MR BUGGLE'S FIRST STAG LAY PRONE.] + +[Illustration: 2) ELATED WITH SUCCESS MR B. RUSHED UP AND SEATED HIMSELF +ASTRIDE HIS VICTIM] + +[Illustration: 3) BUT ALAS IT WAS ONLY SLIGHTLY STUNNED, AND PROMPTLY +ROSE TO THE OCCASION.] + +[Illustration: 4) SO DID MR B.] + +[Illustration: 5) THE LAW OF GRAVITY PROVED TOO STRONG WHEN A LUCKY SHOT +FROM THE KEEPER] + +[Illustration: 6) PLACED MATTERS UPON A SATISFACTORY FOOTING ONCE MORE.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MY ONLY SHOT AT A CORMORANT. + +Here she comes!] + +[Illustration: There she goes!] + + * * * * * + +FULL STOP IN THE DAWDLE FROM THE NORTH. + +(_Leaves from the Highland Journal of Toby, M.P._) + +"Here's a go", I said, turning to Sark, after carefully looking round +the station to see if we really were back at Oban, having a quarter of +an hour ago started (as we supposed) on our journey, already fifteen +minutes late. + +[Illustration] + +"Well, if you put it in that way", he said, "I should call it an entire +absence of go. I thought it was a peculiarly jolting train. Never passed +over so many points in the same time in my life." + +"Looks as if we should miss train at Stirling", I remark, anxiously. "If +so, we can't get on from Carlisle to Woodside to-night." + +"Oh, that'll be all right", said Sark, airy to the last; "we'll make it +up as we go along." + +Again sort of faint bluish light, which I had come to recognise as a +smile, feebly flashed over cadaverous countenance of the stranger in +corner seat. + +Certainly no hurry in getting off. More whistling, more waving of green +flag. Observed that natives who had come to see friends off had quietly +waited on platform. Train evidently expected back. Now it had returned +they said good-bye over again to friends. Train deliberately steams out +of station thirty-five minutes late. Every eight or ten miles stopped at +roadside station. No one got in or got out. After waiting five or six +minutes, to see if any one would change his mind, train crawled out +again. Performance repeated few miles further on with same result. + +[Illustration] + +"Don't put your head out of the window and ask questions", Sark +remonstrated, as I banged down the window. "I never did it since I heard +a story against himself John Bright used to tell with great glee. +Travelling homeward one day in a particularly slow train, it stopped an +unconscionably long time at Oldham. Finally, losing all patience, he +leaned out of the window, and in his most magisterial manner said, 'Is +it intended that this train shall move on to-night?' The porter +addressed, not knowing the great man, tartly replied, 'Put in thy big +white yedd, and mebbe the train'll start.'" + +Due at Loch Awe 1.32; half-past one when we strolled into Connel Ferry +station, sixteen miles short of that point. Two more stations before we +reach Loch Awe. + +"Always heard it was a far cry to Loch Awe", said Sark, undauntedly +determined to regard matters cheerfully. + +"You haven't come to the hill yet", said a sepulchral voice in the +corner. + +"What hill?" I asked. + +"Oh, you'll see soon enough. It's where we usually get out and walk. If +there are on board the train any chums of the guard or driver, they are +expected to lend a shoulder to help the train up." + +Ice once broken, stranger became communicative. Told us his melancholy +story. Had been a W.S. in Edinburgh. Five years ago, still in prime of +life, bought a house at Oban; obliged to go to Edinburgh once, sometimes +twice, a week. Only thrice in all that time had train made junction +with Edinburgh train at Stirling. Appetite failed; flesh fell away; +spirits went down to water level. Through looking out of window on +approaching Stirling, in hope of seeing South train waiting, eyes put on +that gaze of strained anxiety that had puzzled me. Similarly habit +contracted of involuntarily jerking up right hand with gesture designed +to arrest departing train. + +"Last week, coming north from Edinburgh", said the hapless passenger, +"we were two hours late at Loch Awe. 'A little late to-day, aren't we?' +I timidly observed to the guard. 'Ou aye! we're a bit late,' he said. +'Ye see, we had a lot of rams, and we couldna' get baith them and you up +the hill; so we left ye at Tyndrum, and ran the rams through first, and +then came back for ye.'" + +Fifty minutes late at Killin Junction. So far from making up time lost +at Oban, more lost at every wayside station. + +"I hope we shan't miss the train at Stirling?" I anxiously inquired of +guard. + +"Weel, no", said he, looking at his watch. "I dinna think ye'll hae +managed that yet." + +This spoken in soothing tones, warm from the kindly Scottish heart. +Hadn't yet finally lost chance of missing train at Stirling that should +enable us to keep our tryst at Woodside. But no need for despair. A +little more dawdling and it would be done. + +Done it was. When we reached Stirling, porters complacently announced +English mail had left quarter of an hour ago. As for stationmaster, he +was righteously indignant with inconsiderate travellers who showed +disposition to lament their loss. + +"Good night", said cadaverous fellow-passenger, feebly walking out of +darkling station. "Hope you'll get a bed somewhere. Having been going up +and down line for five years, I keep a bedroom close by. Cheaper in the +end. I shall get on in the morning." + + * * * * * + +MERE INVENTION.--Up the Highlands way there is, in wet weather, a +handsome cataract, the name whereof is spelt anyhow you like, but is +pronounced "Fyres." There is not much water in hot weather, and then art +assists nature, and a bucket or so of the fluid is thrown over for the +delectation of tourists. One of them, observing this arrangement, said +that the proprietor + + "Began to pail his ineffectual Fyres." + +[This story is quite false, which would be of no consequence, but that +every Scottish tourist knows it to be false. Our contributor should +really be more careful.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "Where can that confounded fellow have got to with the +lunch-basket?"] + +[Illustration: Here he is, remarking, confidentially, that "that +ginger-peer is apout the pest he ever tasted."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Cockney Sportsman._ "Haw--young woman, whose whiskies do +you keep here?" + +_Highland Lassie._ "We only keep McPherson's, sir." + +_C. S._ "McPherson? Haw--who the deuce is McPherson?" + +_H. L._ "My brother, sir."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: During Mr. Spoffin's visit to the Highlands, he found a +difficulty in approaching his game--so invented a method of simplifying +matters. His "make-up", however, was so realistic, that the jealous old +stag nearly finished him!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: HIS IDEA OF IT + +_Native._ "Is 't no a daft-like place this tae be takin' a view? There's +no naething tae be seen for the trees. Noo, if ye was tae gang tae the +tap o' Knockcreggan, that wad set ye fine! Ye can see _five coonties_ +frae there!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: TOURING IN THE HIGHLANDS + +"Hullo, Sandy! Why haven't you cleaned my carriage, as I told you last +night?" + +"Hech, sir, what for would it need washing? It will be just the same +when you'll be using it again!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + + * * * * * + +FROM OUR BILIOUS CONTRIBUTOR. + +_To_ MR. PUNCH. + +MY DEAR SIR,[A] + +Embarking at Bannavie very early in the morning--_diluculo surgere +saluberrimum est_, but it is also particularly disagreeable--I was upon +the canal of the Caledonians, on my way to the capital of the Highlands. +This is the last voyage which, upon this occasion, I shall have the +pleasure of describing. The vessel was commanded by Captain Turner, who +is a remarkable meteorologist, and has emitted some wonderful weather +prophecies. Having had, moreover, much opportunity of observing +character, in his capacity of captain of boats chiefly used by tourists, +he is well acquainted with the inmost nature of the aristocracy and +their imitators. Being myself of an aristocratic turn of mind (as well +as shape of body) it was refreshing to me to sit with him on the bridge +and speak of our titled friends. + +[Footnote A: We perfectly understand this advance towards civility as +the writer approaches the end of his journey. He is a superior kind of +young man, if not the genius he imagines himself.--_Ed._] + +Fort Augustus, which we passed, is not called so from having been built +by the Roman Emperor of that name, quite the reverse. The next object of +interest is a thing called the Fall of Foyers, which latter word is +sounded like fires, and the announcement to Cockneys that they are going +to see the affair, leads them to expect something of a pyrotechnic +character. It is nothing of that sort. The steamboat is moored, you rush +on shore, and are instantly arrested by several pikemen--I do not mean +soldiers of a mediaeval date, but fellows at a gate, who demand fourpence +apiece from everybody landing in those parts. Being in Scotland, this +naturally made me think I had come to Johnny Groat's house, but no such +thing, and I have no idea of the reason of this highway robbery, or why +a very dirty card should have been forced upon me in proof that I had +submitted. We were told to go up an ascending road, and then to climb a +dreadfully steep hill, and that then we should see something. For my own +part, I felt inclined to see everybody blowed first, but being +over-persuaded, I saw everybody blowed afterwards, for that hill is a +breather, I can tell you. However, I rushed up like a mounting deer, and +when at the top was told to run a little way down again. I did, and saw +the sight. You have seen the cataracts of the Nile? It's not like them. +You have seen a cataract in a party's eye. It's not like that. Foyers is +a very fine waterfall, and worthy of much better verses than some which +Mr. Burns addressed to it in his English style, which is vile. Still, +the waterfall at the Colosseum, Regent's Park, is a good one, and has +this advantage, that you can sit in a chair and look at it as long as +you like, whereas you walk a mile to Foyers, goaded by the sailors from +the vessel, who are perpetually telling you to make haste, and you are +allowed about three minutes and fourteen seconds to gaze upon the scene, +when the sailors begin to goad you back again, frightening you with +hints that the captain will depart without you. Precious hot you come on +board, with a recollection of a mass of foam falling into an abyss. That +is not the way to see Foyers, and I hereby advise all tourists who are +going to stop at Inverness, to drive over from thence, take their time +at the noble sight, and do the pier-beggars out of their fourpences. + +The stately towers of the capital of the Highlands are seen on our +right. A few minutes more, and we are moored. Friendly voices hail us, +and also hail a vehicle. We are borne away. There is news for us. We are +forthwith--even in that carriage, were it possible--to induct ourselves +into the black tr x ws x rs of refined life and the white cravat of +graceful sociality, and to accompany our host to the dinner of the +Highland railwaymen. _We_ rail. We have not come six hundred miles to +dress for dinner. Our host is of a different opinion, and being a host +in himself, conquers our single-handed resistance. We attend the dinner, +and find ourselves among Highland chieftains plaided and plumed in their +"tartan array." (Why doesn't Horatio MacCulloch, noble artist and +Highland-man, come to London and be _our_ tartan R.A.?) We hear wonders +of the new line, which is to save folks the trouble of visiting the lost +tribe at Aberdeen, and is to take them direct from Inverness to Perth, +through wonderful scenery. We see a programme of toasts, to the number +of thirty-four, which of course involves sixty-eight speeches. There is +also much music by the volunteers--not, happily, by bag-pipers. We +calculate, on the whole, that the proceedings will be over about four in +the morning. Ha! ha! _Dremacky_. There is a _deus ex machina_ literally, +a driver on an engine, and he starts at ten. Numbers of the guests must +go with him. _Claymore!_ We slash out the toasts without mercy--without +mercy on men set down to speak and who have spoiled their dinner by +thinking over their _impromptus_. But there is one toast which shall be +honoured, yea, with the Highland honours. _Mr. Punch's_ health is +proposed. It is well that this handsome hall is built strongly, or the +Highland maidens should dance here no more. The shout goes up for _Mr. +Punch_. + +I believe that I have mentioned to you, once or twice, that I am an +admirable speaker, but upon this occasion I surpassed myself--I was in +fact, as the Covent Garden play-bills say, "unsurpassingly successful." +Your interests were safe in my hands. I believe that no person present +heard a syllable of what I said. It was this: + + [It may have been, but as what our correspondent has been pleased + to send as his speech would occupy four columns, we prefer to leave + it to immortality in the excellent newspaper of which he sends us a + "cutting." We incline to think that he _was_ weak enough to say + what he says he said, because he could not have invented and + written it out after a Highland dinner, and it was published next + morning. It is extremely egotistical, and not in the least + entertaining--_Ed._] + +Among the guests was a gentleman who owns the mare who will certainly +win the Cesarewitch. _I know this for a fact_, and I advise you to put +your money on _Lioness_. His health was proposed, and he returned thanks +with the soul of wit. I hope he recollects the hope expressed by the +proposer touching a certain saddling-bell. I thought it rather strong in +"Bible-loving Scotland", but to be sure, we were in the Highlands, which +are England, or at all events where the best English spoken in Scotland +is heard. + +We reached our house at an early hour, and I was lulled to a gentle +slumber by the sound of the river Ness. This comes out of Loch Ness, and +in the latest geographical work with which I am acquainted, namely, +"Geography Anatomiz'd, by Pat. Gordon, M.A.F.R.S. Printed for Andr. +Bell, at the Cross Keys and Bible in Cornhill, and R. Smith, under the +Royal Exchange, 1711", I read that "towards the north-west part of +_Murray_ is the famous _Lough-Ness_ which never freezeth, but retaineth +its natural heat, even in the extremest cold of winter, and in many +places this lake hath been sounded with a line of 500 fathom, but no +bottom can be found" (just as in the last rehearsal of the artisans' +play in the _Midsummer Night's Dream_), but I believe that recent +experiments have been more successful, and that though no lead plummet +would go so deep, a volume by a very particular friend of mine was +fastened to the line, and descended to the bottom in no time. I will +mention his name if he is not kind to my next work, but at present I +have the highest esteem and respect for him. I only show him that I know +this little anecdote. + +There were what are called Highland games to be solemnised in Inverness. +I resolved to attend them, and, if I saw fit, to join in them. But I was +informed by a Highland friend of mine, Laidle of Toddie, a laird much +respected, that all competitors must appear in the kilt. As my own +graceful proportions would look equally well in any costume, this +presented no difficulty, and I marched off to Mr. Macdougall, the great +Highland costumier, and after walking through a dazzling array of Gaelic +glories, I said, mildly, "Can you make me a Highland dress?" + +"Certainly, in a few hours", said Mr. Macdougall; but somehow I fancied +that he did not seem to think that I was displaying any vast amount of +sense. + +"Then, please to make me one, very handsome", said I; "and send it home +to-night." And I was going out of the warehouse. + +"But, sir", said Mr. Macdougall, "do you belong to any clan, or what +tartan will you have?" + +"Mr. Macdougall", said I, "it may be that I do belong to a clan, or am +affiliated to one. It may be, that like Edward Waverley, I shall be +known hereafter as the friend of the sons (and daughters) of the +clan ----. It may be that if war broke out between that clan and another, +I would shout our war-cry, and, drawing my claymore, would walk into the +hostile clan like one o'clock. But at present that is a secret, and I +wear not the garb of any clan in particular. Please to make me up a +costume out of the garbs of several clans, but be sure you put the +brightest colours, as they suit my complexion." + +I am bound to say that though Mr. Macdougall firmly declined being party +to this arrangement, which he said would be inartistic, he did so with +the utmost courtesy. My opinion is, that he thought I was a little +cracked. Many persons have thought that, but there is no foundation for +the suspicion. + +"You see, Mr. Macdougall", says I, "I am a Plantagenet by descent, and +one of my ancestors was hanged in the time of George the Second. Do +those facts suggest anything to you in the way of costume?" + +"The first does not", he said, "but the second may. A good many persons +had the misfortune to be hanged about the time you mention, and for the +same reason. I suppose your ancestor died for the Stuarts." + +"No, sir, he died for a steward. The unfortunate nobleman was most +iniquitously destroyed for shooting a plebeian of the name of Johnson, +for which reason I hate everybody of that name, from Ben downwards, and +will not have a Johnson's _Dictionary_ in my house." + +"Then, sir", says Mr. Macdougall, "the case is clear. You can mark your +sense of the conduct of the sovereign who executed your respected +relative. You can assume the costume of his chief enemies. You can wear +the Stuart tartan." + +"Hm", says I. "I should look well in it, no doubt; but then I have no +hostility to the present House of Brunswick." + +"Why", says he, laughing; "Her Majesty dresses her own princes in the +Stuart tartan. I ought to know that." + +"Then that's settled", I replied. + +Ha! You would indeed have been proud of your contributor, had you seen +him splendidly arrayed in that gorgeous garb, and treading the heather +of Inverness High Street like a young mountaineer. He did not look then +like + + EPICURUS ROTUNDUS. + + _Inverness Castle._ + + * * * * * + +NOTICE TO THE HIGHLANDERS.--Whereas Mr. Punch, through his "Bilious +Contributor", did on the 7th November, 1863, offer a prize of fifty +guineas to the best Highland player at Spellikins, in the games for +1873. And whereas Mr. Punch has had the money, with ten years' interest, +quite ready, and waiting to be claimed. And whereas no Highland player +at Spellikins appeared at the games of 1873. This to give notice that +Mr. Punch has irrevocably confiscated the money to his own sole and +peculiar use, and intends to use it in bribery at the next general +election. He begs to remark to the Highlands, in the words of his +ancestor, Robert Bruce, at Bannockburn--"There is a rose fallen from +your wreath!"[B] + + PUNCH. + + 7th November, 1873. + +[Footnote B: Of course the King said nothing so sweetly sentimental. +What he did say to Earl Randolph was, "Mind your eye, you great stupid +ass, or you'll have the English spears in your back directly." Nor did +the Earl reply, "My wreath shall bloom, or life shall fade. Follow, my +household!" but, with an amazing great curse, "I'll cook 'em. Come on, +you dawdling beggars, and fulfil the prophecies!" But so history is +written.] + + * * * * * + +MORE REVENGE FOR FLODDEN.--_Scene: a Scotch Hotel. Tourist (indignant at +his bill)._ "Why, landlord, there must be some mistake there!" +_Landlord._ "Mistake? Aye, aye. That stupid fellow, the waiter, has just +charged you five shillings--too little." + + * * * * * + +FROM THE MOORS.--_Sportsman._ "Much rain Donald?" _Donald._ "A bit soft. +Just wet a' day, wi' showers between." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A PLEASANT PROSPECT! + +_English Tourist._ "I say, look here. How far is it to this Glenstarvit? +They told us it was only----" + +_Native._ "Aboot four miles." + +_Tourist_ (_aghast_). "All bog like this?" + +_Native._ "Eh--h--this is just naethin' till't!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ANOTHER MISUNDERSTANDING + +_'Arry_ (_on a Northern tour, with Cockney pronunciation_). "Then I'll +'ave a bottle of aile." + +_Hostess of the Village Inn._ "_Ile_, sir? We've nane in the hoose, but +castor ile or paraffin. Wad ony o' them dae, sir?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE WEIRD SISTERS] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: DEER-STALKING MADE EASY + +The patent silent motor-crawler.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ILLUSTRATED QUOTATIONS + +(_One so seldom finds an Artist who realises the poetic conception._) + +"Is this the noble Moor ...?"--_Othello_, Act IV., Scene 1.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: DRACONIAN + +SCENE.--_Police Court, North Highlands._ + +_Accused._ "Put, Pailie, it's na provit!" + +_Bailie._ "Hoot toots, Tonal, and hear me speak! Aw'll only fine ye +ha'f-a-croon the day, because et's no varra well provit. But if ever ye +come before me again, ye'll no get aff under five shillin's, whether +et's provit or no!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF YE ENGLYSHE IN 1849 + +DEERE STALKYNGE IN YE HYGHLANDES] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ONE OF THE ADVANTAGES OF SHOOTING FROM A BUTT + +_Keeper (on moor rented by the latest South African millionaire, to +guest)._ "Never mind the birds, sir. For onny sake, lie down! The +maister's gawn tae shoot!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE TWELFTH + +(_Guilderstein in the Highlands_) + +_Guild. (His first experience)._ "I've been swindled! That confounded +agent said it was all drivin' on this moor, and look at it, all hills +and slosh! Not a decent carriage road within ten miles!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE MATERNAL INSTINCT + +_The Master._ "I'm sayin', wumman, ha'e ye gotten the tickets?" + +_The Mistress._ "Tuts, haud your tongue aboot tickets. Let me count the +weans!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "NEMO ME IMPUNE", &c. + +_The Irrepressible._ "Hi, Scotty, tip us the 'Ighland fling." + +TIPPED!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Return of the wounded and missing Popplewitz omitted to +send in after his day on the moors.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: RECRIMINATION + +_Inhabitant of Uist._ "I say, they'll pe speaking fa-ar petter English +in Uist than in Styornaway." + +_Lass of the Lewis._ "Put in Styornaway they'll not pe caa-in' fush +'feesh,' whatefer!"] + + * * * * * + +THE HIGHLAND GAMES AT MACJIGGITY + +Whilst staying at MacFoozle Castle, my excellent host insisted that I +should accompany him to see the Highland games. The MacFoozle himself is +a typical Hielander, and appeared in a kilt and jelly-bag--philabeg, I +mean. Suggested to him that I should go, attired in pair of +bathing-drawers, Norfolk jacket, and Glengarry cap, but he, for some +inscrutable reason of his own, negatived the idea. Had half a mind to +dress in kilt myself, but finally decided against the national costume +as being too draughty. Arrived on ground, and found that "tossing the +caber" was in full progress. Braw laddies struggled, in turn, with +enormous tree trunk. The idea of the contest is, that whoever succeeds +in killing the greatest number of spectators by hurling the tree on to +them, wins the prize. Fancy these laddies had been hung too long, or +else they were particularly braw. Moved up to windward of them promptly. + +"Who is the truculent-looking villain with red whiskers?" I ask. + +"Hush!" says my host, in awed tones. "That is the MacGinger himself!" + +I grovel. Not that I have ever even heard his name before, but I don't +want to show my ignorance before the MacFoozle. The competition of +pipers was next in order, and I took to my heels and fled. Rejoined +MacFoozle half an hour later to witness the dancing. On a large raised +platform sat the judges, with the mighty MacGinger himself at their +head. Can't quite make out whether the dance is a Reel, a Strathspey, a +Haggis, or a Skirl--sure it is one or the other. Just as I ask for +information, amid a confusing whirl of arms and legs and "Hoots!" a +terrific crack is heard, and the platform, as though protesting at the +indignities heaped upon it, suddenly gives way, and in a moment, +dancers, pipers, and judges are hurled in a confused and struggling heap +to the ground. The MacGinger falls upon some bag-pipes, which emit +dismal groanings beneath his massive weight. This ends the dancing +prematurely, and a notice is immediately put up all round the grounds +that (to take its place) "There will be another competition of +bag-pipes." I read it, evaded the MacFoozle, and fled. + + * * * * * + +SONG FOR A SCOTCH DUKE. + + My harts in the Highlands shall have their hills clear, + My harts in the Highlands no serf shall come near-- + I'll chase out the Gael to make room for the roe, + My harts in the Highlands were ever his foe. + + * * * * * + +THINGS NO HIGHLANDER CAN UNDERSTAND. + +Breaches of promise. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GUILDERSTEIN IN THE HIGHLANDS + +Guilderstein. "Missed again! And dat fellow, Hoggenheimer, comin'on +Monday too! Why did I not wire to Leadenhall for an 'aunch, as Betty +told me!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Juvenis. "Jolly day we had last week at McFoggarty's +wedding! Capital champagne he gave us, and we did it justice, I can tell +you--" + +Senex (who prefers whiskey). "Eh-h, mun, it's a' verra weel weddings at +ye-er time o' life. Gie me a gude funeral!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: HEBRIDEAN SPORT + +_Shooting Tenant (accounting for very large species of grouse which his +setter has just flushed)._ "Capercailzie! By George!" + +_Under-keeper Neil._ "I'm after thinking, sir, you'll have killed Widow +McSwan's cochin cock. Ye see the crofters were forced to put him and the +hens away out here till the oats is ripe!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: LATEST FROM THE MOORS + +_Intelligent Foreigner._ "Tell me--zee 'Ilanders, do zay always wear zee +raw legs?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + +A GROAN FROM A GILLIE + + Lasses shouldna' gang to shoot, + Na, na! + Gillies canna' help but hoot, + Ha, ha! + Yon douce bodies arena' fittin' + Wi' the gudeman's to be pittin', + Bide at hame and mind yere knittin'! + Hoot, awa'! + "Wimmen's Rechts" is vara weel, + Ooh, aye! + For hizzies wha've nae hearts to feel; + Forbye + Wimmen's Rechts is aiblins Wrang + When nat'ral weak maun ape the strang, + An' chaney cups wi' cau'drons gang, + Auch, fie! + Hennies shouldna' try to craw + Sae fast-- + Their westlin' thrapples canna' blair + Sic a blast. + Leave to men-folk bogs and ferns, + An' pairtricks, muircocks, braes, and cairns; + And lasses! ye may mind the bairns-- + That's best! + + TONALT (X) _his mark._ + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A PRECISIAN + +_Artist (affably)._ "Fine morning." _Native._ "No' bad ava'." + +_Artist._ "Pretty scenery." _Native._ "Gey an' good." + +_Artist (pointing to St. Bannoch's, in the distance)._ "What place is +that down at the bottom of the loch?" + +_Native._ "It's no at the bottom--it's at the fut!" + +_Artist (to himself)._ "You past-participled Highlander!" + + [_Drops the subject!_ +] + + * * * * * + +THE THING TO DO IN SCOTLAND + +(_More Leaves from the Highland Journal of Toby, M.P._) + +_Quiverfield, Haddingtonshire, Monday._--You can't spend twenty-four +hours at Quiverfield without having borne in upon you the truth that the +only thing to do in Scotland is to play goff. (On other side of Tweed +they call it golf. Here we are too much in a hurry to get at the game to +spend time on unnecessary consonant.) The waters of what Victor Hugo +called "The First of the Fourth" lave the links at Quiverfield. Blue as +the Mediterranean they have been in a marvellous autumn, soon to lapse +into November. We can see the Bass Rock from the eighth hole, and can +almost hear the whirr of the balls skimming with swallow flight over the +links at North Berwick. + +Prince Arthur here to-day, looking fully ten years younger than when I +last saw him at Westminster. Plays through live-long day, and drives off +fourteen miles for dinner at Whittinghame, thinking no more of it than +if he were crossing Palace Yard. Our host, Waverley Pen, is happy in +possession of links at his park gates. All his own, for self and +friends. You step through the shrubbery, and there are the far-reaching +links; beyond them the gleaming waters of the Forth. Stroll out +immediately after breakfast to meet the attendant caddies; play goff +till half-past one; reluctantly break off for luncheon; go back to +complete the fearsome foursome; have tea brought out to save time; leave +off in bare time to dress for dinner; talk goff at dinner; arrange +matches after dinner; and the new morning finds the caddies waiting as +before. + +[Illustration: Fingen's finger.] + +Decidedly the only thing to do in Scotland is to play goff. + +_Deeside, Aberdeenshire, Wednesday._--Fingen, M.P., once told an abashed +House of Commons that he "owned a mountain in Scotland." Find, on +visiting him in his ancestral home, that he owns a whole range. Go up +one or two of them; that comparatively easy; difficulty presents itself +when we try to get down. Man and boy, Fingen has lived here fifty years; +has not yet acquired knowledge necessary to guide a party home after +ascending one of his mountains. Walking up in cool of afternoon, we +usually get home sore-footed and hungry about midnight. + +"Must be going now", says Fingen, M.P., when we have seen view from top +of mountain. "Just time to get down before dark. But I know short cut; +be there in a jiffy. Come along." + +We come along. At end of twenty minutes find ourselves in front of +impassable gorge. + +"Ha!" says Fingen, M.P., cheerily. "Must have taken wrong turn; better +go back and start again." + +All very well to say go back; but where were we? Fingen, M.P., knows; +wets his finger; holds it up. + +"Ha!" he says, with increased joyousness of manner; "the wind is blowing +that way, is it? Then we turn to the left." + +Another twenty minutes stumbling through aged heather. Path trends +downwards. + +"That's all right", says Fingen, M.P.; "must lead on to the road." + +Instead of which we nearly fall into a bubbling burn. Go back again; +make bee line up acclivity nearly as steep as side of house; find +ourselves again on top of mountain. + +"How lucky!" shouts Fingen, M.P., beaming with delight. + +As if we had been trying all this time to get to top of mountain instead +of to bottom! + +Wants to wet his finger again and try how the wind lies. We protest. Let +us be saved that at least. Fingen leads off in quite another direction. +By rocky pathway which threatens sprains; through bushes and brambles +that tear the clothes; by dangerous leaps from rock to rock he brings us +to apparently impenetrable hedge. We stare forlorn. + +[Illustration: The crack of the whip('s pate!)] + +"Ha!" says Fingen, M.P., more aggressively cheerful than ever. "The road +is on other side. Thought we would come upon it somewhere." Somehow or +other we crawl through. + +"Nothing like having an eye to the lay of country", says Fingen, M.P., +as we limp along the road. "It's a sort of instinct, you know. If I +hadn't been with you, you might have had to camp out all night on the +mountain." + +They don't play goff at Deeside. They bicycle. Down the long avenue with +spreading elm trees deftly trained to make triumphal arches, the +bicycles come and go. Whipsroom, M.P., thinks opportunity convenient +for acquiring the art of cycling. W. is got up with consummate art. Has +had his trousers cut short at knee in order to display ribbed stockings +of rainbow hue. Loose tweed-jacket, blood-red necktie, white felt hat +with rim turned down all round, combine to lend him air of a Drury Lane +bandit out of work. Determined to learn to ride the bicycle, but spends +most of the day on his hands and knees, or on his back. Looking down +avenue at any moment pretty sure to find W. either running into the iron +fence, coming off sideways, or bolting head first over the handles of +his bike. Get quite new views of him fore-shortened in all possible +ways, some that would be impossible to any but a man of his +determination. + +"Never had a man stay in the house", says Fingen, M.P., ruefully, "who +so cut up the lawn with his head, or indented the gravel with his elbows +and his knees." + +Evidently I was mistaken about goff. Cycling's the thing in Scotland. + +_Goasyoucan, Inverness-shire, Saturday._--Wrong again. Not goff nor +cycling is the thing to do in Scotland. It's stalking. Soon learn that +great truth at Goasyoucan. The hills that encircle the house densely +populated with stags. To-day three guns grassed nine, one a royal. This +the place to spend a happy day, crouching down among the heather +awaiting the fortuitous moment. Weather no object. Rain or snow out you +go, submissive to guidance and instruction of keeper; by comparison with +whose tyranny life of the ancient galley-slave was perfect freedom. + +Consummation of human delight this, to lie prone on your face amid the +wet heather, with the rain pattering down incessantly, or the snow +pitilessly falling, covering you up flake by flake as if it were a robin +and you a babe in the wood. Mustn't stir; mustn't speak; if you can +conveniently dispense with the operation, better not breathe. Sometimes, +after morning and greater part of afternoon thus cheerfully spent, you +may get a shot; even a stag. Also you may not; or, having attained the +first, may miss the latter. At any rate you have spent a day of +exhilarating delight. + +Stalking is evidently the thing to do in Scotland. It's a far cry to the +Highlands. Happily there is Arthur's Seat by Edinburgh town where +beginners can practise, and old hands may feign delight of early +triumphs. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE "IRREPRESSIBLE" AGAIN + +_Gent in Knickerbockers._ "Rummy speakers them 'Ighlanders, 'Enery. When +we wos talking to one of the 'ands, did you notice 'im saying +'_nozzing_' for '_nothink_,' and '_she_' for '_e_'?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "THE LAST STRAW" + +"Tired out, are you? Try a drop of brandy! Eh!--what!--confound----By +jingo, I've forgotten my flask!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: NOTHING LIKE MOUNTAIN AIR + +_Tourist (who has been refreshing himself with the toddy of the +country)._ "I shay, ole fler! Highlands seem to 'gree with you +wonerfly--annomishtake. Why, you look DOUBLE the man already!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE HEIGHT OF BLISS + +_Highland Shepherd._ "Fine toon, Glasco', I pelieve, and lots o' coot +meat there." + +_Tourist._ "Oh, yes, lots." + +_Highland Shepherd._ "An' drink, too?" + +_Tourist._ "Oh, yes." + +_Highland Shepherd (doubtingly)._ "Ye'll get porter tae yir parrich?" + +_Tourist._ "Yes, if we like." + +_Highland Shepherd._ "Cra-ci-ous!" + + [_Speechless with admiration._ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: TENACITY + +_First North Briton_ (_on the Oban boat, in a rolling sea and dirty +weather_). "Thraw it up, man, and ye'll feel a' the better!" + +_Second ditto_ (_keeping it down_). "Hech, mon, it's whuskey!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: EXCUSABLE WRATH + +_Drover_ (_exhausted with his struggles_). "Whit are ye wouf, woufan' +there, ye stupit ass! It wud be wis-eer like if ye gang awn hame, an' +bring a barrow!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A SOFT IMPEACHMENT + +_Sporting Saxon (mournfully, after three weeks' incessant down-pour)._ +"Does it always rain like this up here, Mr. McFuskey?" + +_His Guide, Philosopher, and Friendly Landlord (calmly)._ "Oo aye, it's +a-ye just a wee bit shooery."!!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH + +2 A.M. + +_Brown (who has taken a shooting-box in the Highlands, and has been +"celebrating" his first appearance in a kilt)._ "Worsht of these +ole-fashioned beshteads is, they take such a lot of climbin' into!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GUILDERSTEIN IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Mrs. G._ "We must leave this horrible place, dear. The keeper has just +told me there is disease on the moor. Good gracious, the boys might take +it!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A GREAT DRAWBACK + +_Dougal_ (_with all his native contempt for the Londoner_). "Aye, mon, +an' he's no a bad shot?" + +_Davie._ "'Deed an' he's a verra _guid_ shot." + +_Dougal._ "Hech! it's an awfu' peetie he's a Londoner!"] + + * * * * * + +NOTES FROM THE HIGHLANDS + +"_Jam satis terris,_" _&c._ + +_Alt-na-blashy._--The aqueous and igneous agencies seem to be combined +in these quarters, for since the rain we hear of a great increase of +burns. In default of the moors we fall back on the kitchen and the +cellar. I need hardly add that dry wines are almost exclusively used by +our party, and moist sugar is generally avoided. Dripping, too, is +discontinued, and everything that is likely to whet the appetite is at a +discount. + +_Drizzle-arich._--A Frenchman, soaked out of our bothy by the moisture +of the weather, was overheard to exclaim "_Apres moi le deluge._" + +_Inverdreary._--Greatly to the indignation of their chief, several of +the "Children of the Mist", in this romantic but rainy region, have +assumed the garb of the Mackintoshes. + +_Loch Drunkie._--We have several partners in misery within hail, or life +would be fairly washed out of us. We make up parties alternately at our +shooting quarters when the weather allows of wading between them. +Inebriation, it is to be feared, must be on the increase, for few of us +who go out to dinner return without making a wet night of it. + +Meantime, the watering-places in our vicinity--in particular the Linns +o' Dun-Dreepie--are literally overflowing. + +It is asserted that even young horses are growing impatient of the +reins. + +Our greatest comfort is the weekly budget of dry humour from _Mr. +Punch_. + + * * * * * + +A DISAPPOINTING HOST.--_Sandy._ "A 'm tellt ye hev a new nebbur, +Donal'." _Donald._ "Aye." _Sandy._ "An' what like is he?" _Donald._ +"Weel, he's a curious laddie. A went to hev a bit talk wi' him th' ither +evenin', an' he offered me a glass o' whuskey, d'ye see? Weel, he was +poorin' it oot, an' A said to him 'Stop!'--_an' he stoppit!_ That's the +soort o' mon he is." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: AMBIGUITY + +SCENE--_A Highland Ferry_ + +_Tourist._ "But we paid you sixpence each as we came over, and you said +the same fare would bring us back." + +_Skipper._ "Well, well, and I telled ye nothing but the truth, an' it'll +be no more than the same fare I'm wantin' the noo for bringin' ye +back."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: AUGUST IN SCOTLAND + +_Bag Carrier (to Keeper)._ "What does the maister aye ask that body tae +shoot wi' him for? He canna hit a thing!" + +_Keeper._ "Dod, man, I daur say he wishes they was a' like him. The same +birds does him a' through the season!"] + + * * * * * + +KINREEN O' THE DEE; + +A PIOBRACH HEARD WAILING DOWN GLENTANNER ON THE EXILE OF THREE +GENERATIONS. + +[Illustration] + + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + + I'll blaw up my chanter, + I've rounded fu' weel, + To mony a ranter, + In mony a reel, + An' pour'd a' my heart i' the win'bag wi' glee: + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + For licht wis the laughter in bonny Kinreen, + An' licht wis the footfa' that glanced o'er the green, + An' licht ware the hearts a' an' lichtsome the eyne, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + + The auld hoose is bare noo, + A cauld hoose to me, + The hearth is nae mair noo, + The centre o' glee, + Nae mair for the bairnies the bield it has been, + Och hey, for bonny Kinreen! + The auld folk, the young folk, the wee anes, an' a', + A hunder years' hame birds are harried awa', + Are harried an' hameless, whatever winds blaw, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + Fareweel my auld pleugh lan', + I'll never mair pleugh it: + Fareweel my auld cairt an' + The auld yaud[C] that drew it. + Fareweel my auld kailyard, ilk bush an' ilk tree! + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Fareweel the auld braes, that my hand keepit green, + Fareweel the auld ways where we waunder'd unseen + Ere the star o' my hearth came to bonny Kinreen, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + The auld kirk looks up o'er + The dreesome auld dead, + Like a saint speakin' hope o'er + Some sorrowfu' bed. + Fareweel the auld kirk, an' fareweel the kirk green, + They tell o' a far better hame than Kinreen! + The place we wad cling to--puir simple auld fules, + O' our births an' our bridals, oor blesses an' dools, + Whare oor wee bits o' bairnies lie cauld i' the mools.[D] + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + I aft times hae wunder'd + If deer be as dear, + As sweet ties o' kindred, + To peasant or peer; + As the tie to the hames o' the land born be, + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + The heather that blossoms unkent o' the moor, + Wad dee in his lordship's best greenhoose, I'm sure, + To the wunder o' mony a fairy land flure. + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! &c. + + Though little the thing be, + Oor ain we can ca'; + That little we cling be, + The mair that it's sma'; + Though puir wis oor hame, an' thogh wild wis the scene, + 'Twas the hame o' oor hearts: it was bonnie Kinreen. + An yet we maun leave it, baith grey head an bairn; + Leave it to fatten the deer o' Cock-Cairn, + O' Pannanich wuds an' o' Morven o' Gairn. + Och hey, Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Kinreen o' the Dee! + Sae Fareweel for ever, Kinreen of the Dee! + +[Footnote C: Mare.] + +[Footnote D: Earth.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CANNY! + +_Sportsman._ "That's a tough old fellow, Jemmy!" + +_Keeper._ "Aye, sir, a grand bird to send to your freens!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: EXPERTO CREDE + +_Tourist_ (_on approaching hostelry_). "What will you have, coachman?" + +_Driver._ "A wee drap whuskey, sir, thank you." + +_Tourist._ "All right I'll get down and send it out to you." + +_Driver._ "Na, na, gie me the saxpence. They'll gie you an unco sma' +gless!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A LAMENT FROM THE NORTH + +"And then the weather's been so bad, Donald!" + +"Ou ay, sir. Only three fine days--and twa of them snappit up by the +Sawbath!"] + + * * * * * + +TWO ON A TOUR + +"Can you tell me which is Croft Lochay?" + +The smith leant on his pitchfork--he had been up at the hay--and eyed +Gwendolen and myself with friendly interest. + +"Ye'll be the gentry from London Mistress McDiarmat is expectin'?" + +"And which is the way to her house?" + +"Well", said the smith, shading his eyes as he peered up at the Ben, "ye +can't see it rightly from here, as it lies behind yon knowe. It's a +whole year whatever since I hev not been up myself; but if you follow +the burn----" + +I glanced at Gwen and saw that she shared my satisfaction. To cross the +edge of civilisation had for months past been our hearts' desire; and to +have achieved a jumping-off place only approachable by a burn exceeded +our wildest ambitions. + +We thanked the smith, and set off on our expedition up the mountain +side. + +"We twa hae paidlit in the burn", sang Gwendolen as she skipped like a +goat from stone to stone. "O Jack, isn't it too primitive and +delightful!" + +"Rather", said I, inhaling great draughts of the mountain air. + +"Aren't you hungry?" + +"Rather", I repeated. "Wonder what there'll be to eat." + +"Oh, I don't care what it is. Anything will be delicious. Is that the +house, do you think?" + +I looked up and saw above us a low white-washed shanty covered with +thatch which was kept in its place by a network of laths. A few heavy +stones were evidently designed to keep the roof from blowing off in +winter storms. + +"No", said Gwen. "That must be the cowhouse byre, don't you call it?" + +"I'm not so sure", said I. + +While we were still uncertain, a figure came to the door and bade us +welcome. + +"Come in, come in. Ye'll be tired with the travelling, and ye'll like to +see the rooms." + +We acquiesced, and Mistress McDiarmat led the way into the cowhouse. + +"Shoo!" she cried as she opened the door of the bedroom. "Get away, +Speckle! The hens _will_ lay their bit egg on the bed, sir." + +"What fresh eggs we shall get!" cried Gwen, delighted with this fresh +proof of rusticity and with the Gaelic gutturals with which Mistress +McDiarmat emphasized her remarks to Speckle. + +The "other end" was furnished with two hard chairs, a table and a bed. + +"Fancy a bed in the dining-room and hens in your bed!" said Gwen, in the +highest of spirits. "And here comes tea! Eggs and bacon--Ah! how lovely +they smell, and how much nicer than horrid, stodgy dinners! And +oatcakes--and jelly--and the lightest feathery scones! O Jack, isn't it +heavenly?" + +"Rather", I agreed, beginning the meal with tremendous gusto. The eggs +and bacon disappeared in the twinkling of an eye, and then we fell to on +the light feathery scones. "Wish we hadn't wasted a fortnight's time +and money in ruinous Highland hotels. Wonder what Schiehallion thinks of +hot baths and late dinners, not to speak of waiters and wine-lists." + +"I suppose", remarked Gwendolen, "one _could_ get a bath at the +Temperance Inn we passed on the road?" + +"Baths!" cried I. "Why, my dear, one only has to go and sit under the +neighbouring waterfall." Gwen did not laugh, and looking up I saw she +had stopped in the middle of a scone on which she had embarked with +great appetite. + +"Try an oat-cake", I suggested. + +"No, thanks", said Gwen. + +"A little more jelly?" + +Gwen shook her head. + +I finished my meal in silence and pulled out my pipe. + +"Going to smoke in here?" asked Gwen. + +"It's raining outside, my dear." + +"Oh, very well. But remember this is my bedroom. I decline to sleep with +hens." + +I put the pipe away and prepared for conversation. + +"Can't you sit still?" asked Gwen after a long pause. + +"This chair is very hard, dear." + +"So is mine." + +"Don't you think we might sit on the bed?" + +"Certainly not. I shouldn't sleep a wink if we disarranged the clothes, +and only an expert can re-make a chaff bed." + +"Wish we had something to read", I remarked, after another long pause. + +"Do you expect a circulating library on the top of Ben-y-Gloe?" + +I began to realise that Gwen was no longer in a conversational mood, and +made no further efforts to break the silence. Half-an-hour later Gwen +came across the room and laid her hand on my shoulder. "What are you +reading, dear?" she asked. + +"I find we can get a train from Struan to-morrow afternoon which catches +the London connection at Perth when the train's not more than two hours +late." + +"We can't risk that. Isn't there a train in the morning?" + +"It would mean leaving this at five." + +"So much the better. O Jack, if I eat another meal like that it will be +fatal. To think we shall be back in dear old Chelsea to-morrow!" + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ORIGIN OF THE HIGHLAND SCHOTTISCHE + + "This is the way they tread the hay, tread the hay, tread the hay; + This is the way they tread the hay, tread the hay in Scotland!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GROUSE SHOOTING LATE IN THE SEASON. +JOLLY, VERY! + +"Come along, old fellow! Here's a point!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: DEER-STALKING MADE EASY. A HINT TO +LUSTY SPORTSMEN] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: SOONER OR LATER + +_Old Gent._ "When is the steamer due here?" + +_Highland Pier-Master._ "Various. Sometimes sooner, +sometimes earlier, an' even sometimes before that, too."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "HARMLESS" + +_Cockney Sporting Gent._ "But I think it's a 'en!" + +_Sandy (his keeper)._ "Shoot, man, shoot! She'll be no +muckle the waur o' ye!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PLEASANT + +_Friend (to novice at salmon fishing)._ "I say, old boy, mind how you +wade; there are some tremendous holes, fourteen or fifteen feet deep."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration:AN IMPORTANT DETAIL + +_Our latest Millionaire_ (_to Gillie, who has brought him within +close range of the finest stag in the forest_). "I say, Mac, confound +it all, _which eye do you use_?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _English Tourist (in the far North, miles from anywhere)._ +"Do you mean to say that you and your family live here +all the winter? Why, what do you do when any of you +are ill? You can never get a doctor!" + +_Scotch Shepherd._ "Nae, sir. We've just to dee a natural +death!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: SCENE--A ROADSIDE INN IN A MOORLAND +DISTRICT, SCOTLAND + +(_The Captain and Gamekeeper call in to have some Refreshment_) + +_Landlady_ (_enters in fear_). "Eh, sir, yer gun's no loaded +is't? for a never would bide in a hoose whaur the wur a +loaded gun in a' m'life." + +_Captain_ (_composedly_). "Oh, we'll soon put that all right--have +you got a cork?" + + [_Exit Landlady and brings a cork, which the Captain + carefully sticks in the muzzle of the gun, and assures + her it is all right now_-- + + +_Landlady_ (_relieved_). "Ou, aye! it's a' right noo, but it +wasna safe afore, ye ken."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "A MONARCH OF THE GLEN" + +_Transatlantic Millionaire (surveying one of his deer-forests)._ +"Ha! look there! I see _three excursionists_! Send 'em to +the----!" + +_Gigantic Gillie (and chucker-out)._ "If you please, Mr. +Dollers, they're _excisemen_!" + +_T. M._ "I don't care _who_ they are! Send 'em to +the----!" + +_G. G._ "Yes, Mr. Dollers." + + [_Proceeds to carry out order._ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Sportsman (who declines to be told where to go and +what to do by his gillie), after an arduous stalk in the +blazing sun, at last manages to crawl within close range of +those "brown specks" he discovered miles distant on the +hill-side!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PROMISING! + +_Tourist._ "Have you any decent cigars?" + +_Highland Grocer._ "Decent cigars? Ay, here are decent +cigars enough." + +_Tourist._ "Are they Havanahs, or Manillas?" + +_Highland Grocer._ "They're just from Kircaldy!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "THE MISS" + +_Gillie._ "Eh, mon! But it's fortunate there's beef in Aberdeen!"] + + * * * * * + +MR. BRIGGS IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_By_ JOHN LEECH + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs, feeling that his heart is in the Highlands +a-chasing the deer, starts for the North.] + +[Illustration: Before going out, Mr. Briggs and his friends have a +quiet chat about deer-stalking generally. He listens with much +interest to some pleasing anecdotes about the little incidents +frequently met with--such as balls going through caps--toes being shot +off!--occasionally being gored by the antlers of infuriate stags, &c., +&c., &c.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs, previous to going through his course of +deer-stalking, assists the forester in getting a hart or two for the +house. Donald is requesting our friend to hold the animal down by the +horns. + + [N.B. The said animal is as strong as a bull, and uses his legs like +a race-horse. + +] + +[Illustration: The deer are driven for Mr. Briggs. He has an excellent +place, but what with waiting by himself so long, the murmur of the +stream, the beauty of the scene, and the novelty of the situation, he +falls asleep, and while he takes his forty winks, the deer pass!] + +[Illustration: As the wind is favourable, the deer are driven again.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs is suddenly face to face with the monarch of +the glen! He is so astonished that he omits to fire his rifle.] + +[Illustration: To-day he goes out for a stalk, and Donald shows Mr. +Briggs the way!] + +[Illustration: After a good deal of climbing, our friend gets to the top +of Ben-something-or-other, and the forester looks out to see if there +are any deer on the hills. Yes! several hinds, and perhaps the finest +hart that ever was seen.] + +[Illustration: To get at him, they are obliged to go a long way round. +Before they get down, the shower, peculiar to the country, overtakes +them, so they "shelter a-wee."] + +[Illustration: With extraordinary perseverance they come within shot of +"the finest hart." Mr. B. is out of breath, afraid of slipping, and +wants to blow his nose (quite out of the question), otherwise he is +tolerably comfortable.] + +[Illustration: After aiming for a quarter of an hour, Mr. B. fires both +his barrels--and--misses!!!! _Tableau_--The forester's anguish] + +[Illustration: The royal hart Mr. Briggs did NOT hit.] + +[Illustration: Mr. Briggs has another day's stalking, and his rifle +having gone off sooner than he expected, he kills a stag. As it is his +first, he is made free of the forest by the process customary on the +hills!--] + +[Illustration: And returns home in triumph. He is a little knocked up, +but after a nap, will, no doubt, go through the broad-sword dance in the +evening as usual.] + +[Illustration: MR. BRIGGS GROUSE SHOOTING + +9 A.M. His arrival on the moor.--Mr. Briggs says that the fine bracing +air makes him so vigorous that he shall never be beat. He also +facetiously remarks that he is on "his native heath", and that his "name +is Macgregor!" + + [_The result of the day's sport will be communicated by electric + telegraph._ + +] + + * * * * * + +SKETCHES FROM SCOTLAND + +AT THE DRUMQUHIDDER HIGHLAND GATHERING. + + SCENE--_A meadow near Drumquhidder, South Perthshire, where the + annual Highland Games are being held. The programme being a long + one, there are generally three events being contested in various + parts of the ground at the same time. On the benches immediately + below the Grand Stand are seated two Drumquhidder worthies_, MR. + PARRITCH _and_ MR. HAVERS, _with_ MRS. McTAVISH _and her niece, two + acquaintances from Glasgow, to whom they are endeavouring--not + altogether successfully--to make themselves agreeable_. + +_Mr. Havers_ (_in allusion to the dozen or so of drags, landaus, and +waggonettes on the ground_). There's a number o' machines hier the day, +Messis McTarvish, an' a wonderfu' crood; there'll be a bit scarceness +ower on yon side, but a gey many a'thegither. I conseeder we're jest +awfu' forrtunate in the day an' a'. + + [_Mrs. McTavish assents, but without enthusiasm._ + +_Mr. Parritch._ I've jist ben keekin into the Refraishmen' Tent. It's an +awfu' peety they're no pairmeetin' ony intoaxicans--naethin' but +non-alcohoalic liquors an' sic like, an' the hawm-sawndwiches no verra +tender. (_With gallantry._) What do ye say, noo, Messis McTarvish--wull +ye no come an' tak' a bite wi' me? + +_Mrs. McTavish (distantly)._ Ah'm no feelin' able for't jist the noo, +Mester Pairritch. + +_Mr. Parr._ Ye'll hae a boatle o' leemonade at my expense? Ye'll no? +Then ye wull, Mess Rawse. (_With relief, as Miss Rose declines also._) +Aweel, I jist thocht I'd pit the quaistion. (_To a friend of his, who +joins them._) An' hoo's a' wi' ye, Mester McKerrow? Ye're a member o' +the Cawmittee, I obsairve, sae I'll hae to keck up a bet row wi' ye. + +_Mr. McKerrow (unconcernedly)._ Then ye'll jist to hae to keck it doon +again. What's wrang the noo? + +_Mr. Parr._ I'd like to ask ye if ye conseeder it fair or jest to +charrge us tippence every time we'd go aff the groon? Man, it's jist an +extoartion. + +_Mr. McKerr._ I'm no responsible for't; but, if I'd ben there, I'd ha' +chairged ye twa shellins; sae ye'd better say nae mair aboot the +maitter. + + [_Mr. Parritch does not pursue the subject._ + +_Mr. Havers (as a detachment of the Black Watch Highlanders conclude an +exhibition of musical drill)._ Ye'll be the baiter o' haeing the Block +Wetch hier the day. Man, they gie us a colour! It's verra pretty hoo +nicely they can pairforrm the drill.... An' noo them sojers is gaun to +rin a bet race amang theirsels. This'll be an extry cawmpeteetion, I +doot. (_As the race is being run._) It's no a verra suitable dress for +rinnin'--the spleughan--or "sporran", is it?--hairrts them tairible. + +_Mr. McKerr. (contradictiously)._ The sporran does na hairrt them at a'. + +_Mr. Havers._ Man, it's knockin' against them at every stride they tak'. +(_His attention wanders to a Highland Fling, which three small boys are +dancing on a platform opposite._) He's an awfu' bonnie dauncer that wee +laddie i' the meddle! + +_Mr. McKerr._ Na sae awfu' bonnie, he luiks tae much at his taes. Yon on +the richt is the laddie o' the lote! He disna move his boady at a'.... +This'll be the Half Mile Handicap they're stairting for down yonder. +It'll gae to Jock Alister--him in the blue breeks. + +_Mr. Parr._ Yon grup-luikin' tyke? I canna thenk it. + +_Mr. Havers._ Na, it'll be yon bald-heided man in broon. He's verra +enthusiastic. He's ben rinnin' in a' the races, I obsairve. "Smeth" did +ye say his neem was? (_To Miss Rose, "pawkily"._) Ye'll hae an +affaictionate regaird for that neem, I'm thenking, Mess Rawse? + +_Miss Rose (with maidenly displeasure)._ 'Deed, an I'm no unnerstanding +why ye should thenk ony sic a thing! + +_Mr. Havers (abashed)._ I beg your pairrdon. I don't know hoo it was I +gethered Smeth was your ain neem. (_Miss Rose shakes her head._) No? +Then maybe ye'll be acquaint with a Mester Alexawnder Smeth fro' +Paisley? (_Miss Rose is not, nor apparently desires to be, and Mr. +Havers returns to the foot-race._) The baldheid's leadin' them a', I +tellt ye he'd----Na, he's gien up! it'll be the little block fellow, +he's peckin' up tairible! + +_Mr. Parr._ 'Twull no be him. Yon lang chap has an easy jobe o't. Ye'll +see he'll jist putt a spairrt on at yon faur poast--he's comin' on +noo--he's.... Losh! he's only thirrd after a'; he didna putt the spairrt +on sune eneugh; that was the gran' fau't he made! + +_Mr. Havers._ They'll be begenning the wrustling oot yon in the +centre....(_As the competitors grip._) Losh! that's no the way to +wrustle; they shouldna left the ither up; they're no allowed to threp! + +_Mr. McKerr._ That's jist the game, I'm telling ye; ye know naething at +a' aboot it! + +[Illustration: "That's jist the game, I'm telling ye; ye know naething +at a' aboot it!"] + +_Mr. Havers._ I'd sthruggle baiter'n that mysel', it's no great +wrustling at a', merely bairrns' play! + +_Mr. McKerr (as a corpulent elderly gentleman appears, in very pink +tights)._ Ye'll see some science noo, for hier's McBannock o' +Balwhuskie, the chawmpion. + +_Mr. Havers (disenchanted)._ Wull yon be him in the penk breeks. Man, +but he's awfu' stoot for sic wark! + +_Mr. McKerr._ The wecht of him's no easy put doon. The rest are boys to +him. + +_Mr. Parr._ I doot the little dairk fellow'll hae him ... it's a gey +sthruggle. + +_Mr. McKerr._ He's not doon yet. Wull ye bait sexpence against +McBannock, Mester Pairritch? + +_Mr. Parr. (promptly)._ Aye, wull I--na, he's got the dairk mon doon. I +was jist mindin' the sword-daunce, sae the bait's aff. (_Three men in +full Highland costume step upon the platform and stand, proud and +impassive, fronting the grand stand, while the judges walk round them, +making careful notes of their respective points._) What wull _they_ be +aboot? + +_Mr. McKerr._ It'll be the prize for the mon who's the best dressed +Hielander at his ain expense. I'm thenkin' they'll find it no verra easy +to come to a deceesion. + +_Mr. Parr._ Deed, it's no sae deeficult; 'twill be the mon in the +centre, sure as deith! + +_Mr. Havers._ Ye say that because he has a' them gowd maidles hing on +his jocket! + +_Mr. Parr_. (_loftily_). I pay no attention to the maidles at a'. I'm +sayin' that Dougal Macrae is the best dressed Hielander o' the three. + +_Mr. Havers._ It'll no be Macrae at a'. Jock McEwan, that's furthest +west, 'll be the mon. + +_Mr. Parr._ (_dogmatically_). It'll be Macrae, I'm tellin' ye. He has +the nicest kelt on him that iver I sa'! + +_Mr. Havers._ It's no the _kelt_ that diz it, 'tis jist the way they pit +it on. An' Macrae'll hae his tae faur doon, a guid twa enches too low, +it is. + +_Mr. Parr._ Ye're a' wrang, the kelt is on richt eneugh! + +_Mr. Havers._ I know fine hoo a kelt should be pit an, though I'm no +Hielander mysel', and I'll ask ye, Mess Rawse, if Dougal Macrae's kelt +isn't too lang; it's jist losin his knees a' thegither, like a lassie he +looks in it! + + [_Miss Rose declines, with some stiffness, to express an opinion on + so delicate a point._ + +_Mr. Parr. (recklessly)._ I'll pit a sexpence on Macrae wi' ye, come +noo! + +_Mr. Havers._ Na, na, pit cawmpetent jedges on to deceede, and they'll +be o' my opeenion; but I'll no bait wi' ye. + +_Mr. Parr. (his blood up)._ Then I'll hae a sexpence on 't wi you, +Mester McKerrow! + +_Mr. McKerr._ Nay, I'm for Macrae mysel'.... An' we're baith in the +richt o't too, for they've jist gien him the bit red flag--that means +he's got firsst prize. + +_Mr. Parr. (to Mr. Havers, with reproach)._ Man, if ye'd hed the speerit +o' your opeenions, I'd ha' won sexpence aff ye by noo! + +_Mr. Havers (obstinately)._ I canna thenk but that Macrae's kelt was too +lang--prize or no prize. I'll be telling him when I see him that he +looked like a lassie in it. + +_Mr. Parr. (with concern)._ I wouldna jist advise ye to say ony sic a +thing to him. These Hielanders are awfu' prood; and he micht tak' it gey +ill fro' ye! + +_Mr. Havers._ I see nae hairrm mysel' in jist tellin' him, in a +pleesant, daffin-like way, that he looked like a lassie in his kelt. But +there's nae tellin' hoo ye may offend some fowk; an' I'm thenking it's +no sae verra prawbable that I'll hae the oaportunity o' saying onything +aboot the maitter to him. + + * * * * * + +AWKWARD FOR HIM.--_Tam._ "I'm sayin', man, my cairt o' hay's fa'en ower. +Will ye gie 's a haund up wi' 't?" _Jock._ "'Deed will I. But ye'll be +in nae hurry till I get tae the end o' the raw?" _Tam._ "Ou no. I'm in +nae hurry, but I doot my faither 'll be wearyin'." _Jock._ "An' whaur's +yer faither?" _Tam._ "He's in below the hay!" + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "MISTAKEN IDENTITY" + +SCENE--_Northern Meeting at Inverness._ PERSONS REPRESENTED--Ian Gorm +_and_ Dougald Mohr, _gillies_. Mr. Smith, _of London_. + +_First Gillie._ "Wull yon be the MacWhannel, Ian Gorm?" + +_Second ditto._ "No!! Hes nae-um is Muster Smuth! And he ahl-ways wears +the kult--and it is foohl that you aar, Tougalt Mohr!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: (LOCH) FYNE GRAMMAR + +(_A Sad Fact for the School Board_) + +_Tugal._ "Dud ye'll ever see the _I-oo-na_ any more before?" + +_Tonal._ "Surely I was." + +_Tugal._ "Ay, ay! Maybe you was never on poard too, after thus----" + +_Tonal._ "I dud."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: NON BEN (LOMOND) TROVATO. + +_Rory (fresh from the hills)._ "Hech, mon! Ye're loassin' a' yer +watter!!" + +_Aungus._ "Haud yer tongue, ye feul! Ett's latt oot to stoap the laddies +frae ridin' ahint!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "NOTHING LIKE LEATHER" + +_Bookseller_ (_to Lanarkshire country gentleman who had brought his back +numbers to be bound_). "Would you like them done in 'Russia' or +'Morocco,' sir?" + +_Old Gentleman._ "Na, never maind aboot Rooshy or Moroccy. I'll just hae +'em boond in Glasgy here!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE TROUBLES OF STALKING + +_Irate Gillie_ (_on discovering in the distance, for the third time that +morning, a "brute of a man" moving about in his favourite bit of +"forest"_). "Oh! deil take the people! Come awa', Muster Brown, sir; +_it's just Peekadilly!!!_"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A FALLEN ASS + +_Indignant Gillie_ (_to Jones, of London, who has by mistake killed a +hind_). "I thoucht ony fule ken't it was the stags that had the horns!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: BONCHIENIE + +_Young Lady Tourist_ (_caressing the hotel terrier, Bareglourie, N.B._). +"Oh, Binkie is his name! He seems inclined to be quite friendly with +me." + +_Waiter._ "Oo, aye, miss, he's no vera parteec'lar wha he taks oop wi!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "CANNY" + +_First North Briton._ "'T's a fine day, this?" + +_Second ditto._ "No ill, ava." + +_First ditto._ "Ye'll be travellin'?" + +_Second ditto._ "Weel, maybe I'm no." + +_First ditto._ "Gaun t'Aberdeen, maybe?" + +_Second ditto._ "Ye're no faur aff't!!" + + [_Mutually satisfied, each goes his respective way_ + +] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THE PURCHASING LIMIT + +_Mr. Steinsen_ (_our latest millionaire--after his third fruitless +stalk_). "Now, look here, you rascal! if you can't have the brutes +tamer, I'm hanged if I don't sack you!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GROWING POPULARITY OF THE HIGHLANDS + +_Mrs. Smith_ (_of Brixton_). "Lor', Mr. Brown, I 'ardly knoo yer! Only +think of our meetin' _'ere_, this year, instead of dear old Margit! An' +I suppose that's the costume you go _salmon-stalking_ in?"] + + * * * * * + +MORE SKETCHES FROM SCOTLAND + +ON A CALLANDER CHAR-A-BANC. + + SCENE--_In front of the Trossachs Hotel. The few passengers bound + for Callander have been sitting for several minutes on the coach + "Fitz-James" in pelting rain, resignedly wondering when the driver + will consider them sufficiently wet to start._ + +_The Head Boots (to the driver)._ There's another to come yet; he'll no +be lang now. (_The cause of the delay comes down the hotel steps, and +surveys the vehicle and its occupants with a surly scowl._) Up with ye, +sir, plenty of room on the second seats. + +_The Surly Passenger._ And have all the umbrellas behind dripping on my +hat! No, thank you, I'm going in front. (_He mounts, and takes up the +apron._) Here, driver, just look at this apron--it's sopping wet! + +_The Driver (tranquilly)._ Aye, I'm thinking it wull ha' got a bet +domp. + +[Illustration: "Ou aye, ye can get inside the boot if ye've a mind to +it."] + +_The Surly P._ Well, I'm not going to have this over me. Haven't you got +a _dry_ one somewhere? + +_The Driver._ There'll be dry ones at Collander. + +_The Surly P. (with a snort)._ At Callander! Much good that is! (_With +crushing sarcasm._) If I'm to keep dry on this concern, it strikes me +I'd better get inside the boot at once! + +_The Driver (with the air of a man who is making a concession)._ Ou aye, +ye can get inside the boot if ye've a mind to it. + + [_The coach starts, and is presently stopped at a corner to take up + a male and a female passenger, who occupy the seats immediately + behind the Surly Passenger._ + +_The Female P. (enthusiastically, to her companion)._ There's dear old +Mrs. Macfarlane, come out to see the last of us! Look at her standing +out there in the garden, all in the rain. That's what I always say about +the Scotch--they _are_ warm-hearted! + + [_She waves her hand in farewell to some distant object._ + +_Her Companion. That_ ain't her; that's an old apple-tree in the garden +_you_'re waving to. _She's_ keeping indoors--and shows her sense too. + +_The Female P. (disgusted)._ Well, I _do_ think after our being at the +farm a fortnight and all, she _might_----But that's Scotch all _over_, +that is; get all they can out of you, and then, for anything _they_ +care----! + +_The Surly P._ I don't know whether you are aware of it, ma'am, but that +umbrella of yours is sending a constant trickle down the back of my +neck, which is _most_ unpleasant! + +_The Female P._ I'm sorry to hear it, sir, but it's no worse for you +than it is for me. I've got somebody else's umbrella dripping down _my_ +back, and _I_ don't complain. + +_The Surly P._ I _do_, ma'am, for, being in front, I haven't even the +poor consolation of feeling that my umbrella is a nuisance to anybody. + +_A Sardonic P. (in the rear, politely)._ On the contrary, sir, I find it +a most pleasing object to contemplate. Far more picturesque, I don't +doubt, than any scenery it may happen to conceal. + +_A Chatty P. (to the driver; not because he cares, but simply for the +sake of conversation)._ What fish do you catch in that river there? + +_The Driver (with an effort)._ There'll be troots, an', maybe, a pairrch +or two. + +_The Chatty P._ Perch? Ah, that's rather like a goldfish in shape, eh? + +_Driver (cautiously)._ Aye, it would be that. + +_Chatty P._ Only considerably bigger, of course. + +_Driver (evasively)._ Pairrch is no a verra beg fesh. + +_Chatty P._ But bigger than goldfish. + +_Driver (more confidently)._ Ou aye, they'll be begger than goldfesh. + +_Chatty P. (persistently)._ You've seen goldfish--know what they're +like, eh? + +_Driver (placidly)._ I canna say I do. + + [_They pass a shooting party with beaters._ + +_Chatty P. (as before)._ What are they going to shoot? + +_Driver._ They'll jist be going up to the hells for a bet grouse +drivin'. + +_A Lady P._ I wonder why they carry those poles with the red and yellow +flags. I suppose they're to warn tourists to keep out of range when they +begin firing at the butts. I know they _have_ butts up on the moor, +because I've seen them. Just look at those birds running after that man +throwing grain for them. Would those be _grouse_? + +_Driver._ Ye'll no find grouse so tame as that, mem; they'll jist be +phaysants. + +_The Lady P._ Poor dear things! why, they're as tame as chickens. It +_does_ seem so cruel to kill them! + +_Her Comp._ Well, but they kill chickens, occasionally. + +_The Lady P._ Not with a horrid gun; and, besides, that's such a totally +different thing. + +_The Chatty P._ What do you call that mountain, driver, eh? + +_Driver._ Yon hell? I'm no minding its name. + +_The Surly P._ You don't seem very ready in pointing out the objects of +interests on the route, I must say. + +_Driver (modestly)._ There'll be them on the corch that know as much +aboot it as myself. (_After a pause--to vindicate his character as a +cicerone._) Did ye nottice a bit building at the end of the loch over +yonder? + +_The Surly P._ No, I didn't. + +_Driver._ Ye might ha' seen it, had ye looked. + + [_He relapses into a contented silence._ + +_Chatty P._ Anything remarkable about the building? + +_Driver._ It was no the building that's remairkable. (_After a severe +struggle with his own reticence._) It was jist the spoat. 'Twas there +_Roderick Dhu_ fought _Fitz-James_ after convoying him that far on his +way. + + [_The Surly Passenger snorts as though he didn't consider this + information._ + +_The Lady P. (who doesn't seem to be up in her "Lady of the Lake"). +Fitz-James who?_ + +_Her Comp._ I fancy he's the man who owns this line of coaches. There's +his name on the side of this one. + +_The Lady P._ And I saw _Roderick Dhu's_ on another coach. I _thought_ +it sounded familiar, somehow. He must be the _rival_ proprietor, I +suppose. I wonder if they've made it up yet. + +_The Driver (to the Surly Passenger, with another outburst of +communicativeness)._ Yon stoan is called "Sawmson's Putting Stoan." He +hurrled it up to the tope of the hell, whaur it's bided ever sence. + + [_The Surly Passenger receives this information with an incredulous + grunt._ + +_The Lady P._ What a magnificent old ruin that is across the valley, +some ancient castle, evidently; they can't build like that nowadays! + +_The Driver._ That's the Collander Hydropawthec, mem; burrnt doon two or +three years back. + +_The Lady P. (with a sense of the irony of events)._ _Burnt_ down! A +Hydropathic! Fancy! + +_Male P. (as they enter Callander and pass a trim villa)._ There, +_that's_ Mr. Figgis's place. + +_His Comp._ What--_that_? Why, it's quite a _bee-yutiful_ place, with +green venetians, and a conservatory, and a croaky lawn, and everything! +Fancy all that belonging to _him!_ It's well to be a grocer--in _these_ +parts, seemingly! + +_Male P._ Ah, _we_ ought to come up and start business here; it 'ud be +better than being in the Caledonian Road! + + [_They meditate for the remainder of the journey upon the caprices + of Fortune with regard to grocery profits in Caledonia and the + Caledonian Road respectively._ + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "MEN WERE DECEIVERS EVER" + +_Mr. Punch_ is at present in the Highlands "a-chasing the deer." + +_Mrs. Punch_ is at home, and has promised all her friends haunches of +venison as soon as they arrive!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "DESIRABLE" + +_Saxon Passenger (on Highland coach)._ "Of course you're well acquainted +with the country round about here. Do you know 'Glen Accron'?" + +_Driver._ "Aye, weel." + +_Saxon Passenger (who had just bought the estate)._ "What sort of a +place is it?" + +_Driver._ "Weel, if ye saw the deil tethered on't, ye'd just say 'Puir +brute'!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ISOLATION!--OFF THE ORKNEYS + +_Southern Tourist._ "'Get any newspapers here?" + +_Orcadian Boatman._ "Ou aye, when the steamer comes. If it's fine, +she'll come ance a week; but when it's stormy, i' winter, we dinna catch +a glint o' her for three months at a time." + +_S. T._ "Then you'll not know what's goin' on in London!" + +_O. B._ "Na--but ye see ye're just as ill aff i' London as we are, for +ye dinna ken what's gaun on here!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ON THE MOORS + +_The Laird's Brother-in-law (from London)._ "It's very strange, Lachlan! +I'm having no luck!--and yet I seem to see two birds in place of one? +That was surely very strong whiskey your master gave me at lunch?" + +_Keeper._ "Maybe aye and maybe no--the whuskey was goot; but any way ye +dinna manage to hit the richt bird o' the twa!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A POOR ADVERTISEMENT + +_Tourist._ "I suppose you feel proud to have such a distinguished man +staying in your house?" + +_Host of the "Drumdonnachie Arms."_ "'Deed no! A body like that does us +mair hairm than guid; his appearance is nae credit tae oor +commissariat!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: GENEROSITY + +_Noble Lord (whose rifle has brought to a scarcely untimely end a very +consumptive-looking fallow deer)._ "Tut--t, t, t, t, tut! O, I say, +Stubbs!"--(_to his keeper_)--"you shouldn't have let me kill such a +poor, little, sickly, scraggy thing as this, you know! It positively +isn't fit for human food! Ah! look here, now! I'll tell you what. You +and McFarlin may have this buck between you!!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: TRAVELLER TOO BONA FIDE + +_Dusty Pedestrian._ "I should like a glass of beer, missis, please----" + +_Landlady._ "Hae ye been trevellin' by rell?" + +_Pedestrian._ "No, I've been walking--fourteen miles." + +_Landlady._ "Na, na, nae drink will ony yin get here, wha's been +pleesure-seekin' o' the Sawbath day!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +He goes on board the _Iona_. The only drawback to his perfect enjoyment +is the jealousy caused among all the gentlemen by the ladies clustering +round him on all occasions.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PREHISTORIC PEEPS + +There were often unforeseen circumstances which gave to the Highland +stalking of those days an added zest!] + + * * * * * + +THE PLEASURES OF TRAVEL + +(_By Ane that has kent them_) + +[Illustration] + + 'Tis a great thing, the Traivel; I'll thank ye tae find + Its equal for openin' the poors o' the mind. + It mak's a man polished, an' gies him, ye ken, + Sic a graun' cosmypollitan knowledge o' men! + + I ne'er was a stay-at-hame callant ava, + I aye must be rantin' an' roamin' awa', + An' far hae I wandered, an' muckle hae seen + O' the ways o' the warl' wi' ma vara ain een. + + I've been tae Kingskettle wi' Wullie an' Jeames, + I've veesited Anster an' Elie an' Wemyss, + I've walked tae Kirkca'dy an' Cupar an' Crail, + An' I aince was awa' tae Dundee wi' the rail. + + Losh me, sir! The wonnerfu' things that I saw! + The kirks wi' their steeples, sae bonny an' braw + An' publics whauriver ye turned wi' yer ee-- + 'Tis jist a complete eddication, Dundee! + + Theer's streets--be the hunner! An' shops be the score! + Theer's bakers an' grocers an' fleshers galore! + An' milliners' winders a' flauntin' awa' + Wi' the last o' the fashions frae Lunnon an' a'. + + An' eh, sic a thrang, sir! I saw in a minnit + Mair folk than the toun o' Kinghorn will hae in it + I wadna hae thocht that the hail o' creation + Could boast at ae time sic a vast population! + + Ma word, sir! It gars ye clap haun' tae yer broo + An' wunner what's Providence after the noo + That he lets sic a swarm o' they cratur's be born + Wham naebody kens aboot here in Kinghorn. + + What?--Leeberal minded?--Ye canna but be + When ye've had sic a graun' eddication as me. + For oh, theer is naethin' like traivel, ye ken, + For growin' acquent wi' the natur' o' men. + + * * * * * + +"FALLS OF FOYERS."--A correspondent writes:--"I have seen a good many +letters in the _Times_, headed 'The Falls of the Foyers.' Here and +abroad I have seen many Foyers, and only fell down once. This was at the +Theatre Francais, where the Foyer is kept highly polished, or used to be +so. If the Foyers are carpeted or matted, there need be no 'Falls.' + + Yours, + + COMMON SENSE." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "WINGED" + +_First Gael._ "What's the matter, Tonal?" + +_Second ditto (who had been out with Old Briggs)._ "Matter! Hur legs is +full o' shoots".] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH AT THE HIGHLAND GAMES + +Shows the natives how to "put the stone."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: AN ARTIST SCAMP IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Artist (entering)._ "My good woman, if you'll allow me, I'll just paint +that bedstead of yours." + +_Cottager (with bob-curtsey)._ "Thank ye, sir, I' sure it's very kind of +ye--but dinna ye think that little one over yonder wants it more?"] + + * * * * * + +EN ECOSSE + +_A Monsieur Punch_ + +DEAR MISTER,--I come of to make a little voyage in Scotland. Ah, the +beautiful country of Sir Scott, Sir Wallace, and Sir Burns! I am gone to +render visit to one of my english friends, a charming boy--_un charmant +garcon_--and his wife, a lady very instructed and very spiritual, and +their childs. I adore them, the dear little english childs, who have the +cheeks like some roses, and the hairs like some flax, as one says in +your country, all buckled--_boucles_, how say you? + +I go by the train of night--in french one says "_le sleeping_"--to +Edimbourg, and then to Calendar, where I attend to find a coach--in +french one says "_un mail_" or "_un fourinhand_." _Nom d'une pipe_, it +is one of those ridicule carriages, called in french "_un breack_" and +in english a char-a-banc--that which the english pronounce +"_tcherribaingue_"--which attends us at the going out of the station! Eh +well, in voyage one must habituate himself to all! But a such carriage +discovered--_decouverte_--seems to me well unuseful in a country where +he falls of rain without cease. + +Before to start I demand of all the world some _renseignements_ on the +scottish climate, and all the world responds me, "All-days of the rain." +By consequence I procure myself some impermeable vestments, one +mackintosch coat, one mackintosch cape of Inverness, one mackintosch +covering of voyage, one south-western hat, some umbrellas, some gaiters, +and many pairs of boots very thick--not boots of town, but veritable +"shootings." + +I arrive at Edimbourg by a morning of the most sads; the sky grey, the +earth wet, the air humid. Therefore I propose to myself to search at +Calender a place at the interior, _et voila_--and see there--the +_breack_ has no interior! There is but that which one calls a "boot", +and me, Auguste, can I to lie myself there at the middle of the +baggages? Ah no! Thus I am forced to endorse--_endosser_--my impermeable +vestments and to protect myself the head by my south-western hat. Then, +holding firmly the most strong of my umbrellas, I say to the coacher, +"He goes to fall of the rain, is it not?" He makes a sign of head of not +to comprehend. Ah, for sure, he is scottish! I indicate the sky and my +umbrella, and I say "Rain?" and then he comprehends. "_Eh huile_", he +responds to me, "_ah canna se, mebi huile no he meukl the de_." I write +this phonetically, for I comprehend not the scottish language. What +droll of conversation! Him comprehends not the english; me I comprehend +not the scottish. + +But I essay of new, "How many has he of it from here to the lake?" +_C'est inutile_--it is unuseful. I say, "Distance?" He comprehends. +"_Mebi oui taque toua hours_", says he; "_beutt yile no fache yoursel, +its no se lang that yile bi ouishinn yoursel aoua_." _Quelle +langue_--what language, even to write phonetically! I comprehend one +sole word, "hours." Some hours! _Sapristi!_ I say, "Hours?" He says +"_Toua_" all together, a monosyllable. _Sans aucune doute ca veut dire_ +"twelve"--_douze_. Twelve hours on a _breack_ in a such climate! Ah, no! +_C'est trop fort_--it is too strong! "Hold", I cry myself, "attend, I +descend, I go not!" It is true that I see not how I can to descend, for +I am _entoure_--how say you? of voyagers. We are five on a bench, of the +most narrows, and me I am at the middle. And the bench before us is also +complete, and we touch him of the knees. And my neighbours carry on the +knees all sorts of packets, umbrellas, canes, sacks of voyage, &c. _Il +n'y a pas moyen_--he has not there mean. And the coacher says me "_Na, +na, monne, yile no ghitt doun, yile djest baid ouar yer sittinn._" Then +he mounts to his place, and we part immediately. _Il va tomber de la +pluie! Douze heures! Mon Dieu, quel voyage!_ + + Agree, &c., + + AUGUSTE. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: ZEAL + +_Saxon Tourist._ "Been at the kirk?" + +_Celt._ "Aye." + +_Saxon T._ "How far is it?" + +_Celt._ "Daur say it'll be fourteen mile." + +_Saxon T._ "Fourteen miles!!" + +_Celt._ "Aye, aw'm awfu' fond o' the preachin'"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: THRIFT + +_Peebles Body (to townsman who was supposed to be in London on a +visit)._ "E--eh Mac! ye're sune hame again!" + +_Mac._ "E--eh, it's just a ruinous place, that! Mun, a had na' been +the-erre abune twa hoours when--_bang_--went _saxpence!!!_"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A SATISFACTORY SOLUTION + +"I fear, Duncan, that friend of mine does not seem overly safe with his +gun." + +"No, sir. But I'm thinkin' it'll be all right if you wass to go wan side +o' him and Mr. John the ither. He canna shoot baith o' ye!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "VITA FUMUS" + +_Tonal._ "Whar'll ye hae been till, Tugal?" + +_Tugal._ "At ta McTavishes' funeral----" + +_Tonal._ "An' is ta Tavish deed?" + +_Tugal._ "Deed is he!!" + +_Tonal._ "Losh, mon! Fowk are aye deein' noo that never used to dee +afore!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: PRECAUTIONS + +_Saxon Angler (to his keeper)._ "You seem in a great hurry with your +clip! I haven't seen a sign of a fish yet--not a rise!" + +_Duncan._ "'Deed, sir, I wisna a botherin' mysel' aboot the fush; but +seein' you wis new to the business, I had a thocht it widna be lang +afore you were needin' a left oot o' the watter yoursel'!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: HIS POUND OF FLESH + +_Financier (tenant of our forest, after a week's unsuccessful +stalking)._ "Now, look here, my man. I bought and paid for ten stags. If +the brutes can't be shot, you'll have to trap them! I've promised the +venison, and I mean to have it!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: SCRUPULOUS + +_Shepherd._ "O, Jims, mun! Can ye no gie a whustle on tha ram'lin' brute +o' mine? I daurna mysel'; it's just fast-day in oor parish!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "THE LAND OF LORN" + +_It has drizzled incessantly, for a fortnight, since the Smiths came +down to their charming villa at Braebogie, in Argyleshire._ + +_Keeper (who has come up to say the boat is ready on the loch, if +"they're for fushin' the day")._ "Eh! I should na wonder if this weather +tur-rns ta rain!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: LOCAL + +SUNDAY MORNING + +_Tourist (staying at the Glenmulctem Hotel--dubiously)._ "Can +I--ah--have a boat?" + +_Boatman._ "Oo--aye!" + +_Tourist._ "But I thought you--ah--never broke the--aw--Sabbath in +Scotland?" + +_Boatman._ "Aweel, ye ken the Sawbath disna' come doon to the loch--it +just staps at the hottle!"] + + * * * * * + +EN ECOSSE (ENCORE) + +_A Monsieur Punch_ + +DEAR MISTER,--I have spoken you of my departure from Calendar on the +_breack_. Eh, well, he rained not of the whole of the whole--_du tout +du tout! Il faisait un temps superbe_--he was making a superb time, the +route was well agreeable, and the voyage lasted but two hours, and not +twelve. What droll of idea! In Scottish _twa_ is two, not twelve. I was +so content to arrive so quick, and without to be wetted that I gave the +coacher a good to-drink--_un bon pourboire_--though before to start all +the voyagers had paid him a "tipp", that which he called a "driver's +fee." Again what droll of idea! To give the to-drink before to start, +and each one the same--six pennys. + +My friend encountered me and conducted me to his house, where I have +passed fifteen days, a sojourn of the most agreeables. And all the time +almost not one sole drop of rain! _J'avais beau_--I had fine--to buy all +my impermeable vestments, I carry them never. One sole umbrella suffices +me, and I open him but two times. And yet one says that the Scotland is +a rainy country. It is perhaps a season _tout a fait_--all to +fact--exceptional. But fifteen days almost without rain! One would +believe himself at the border of the Mediterranean, absolutely at the +South. And I have eaten of the "porridg", me Auguste! _Partout_ I essay +the dish of the country. I take at first a spoonful pure and simple. _Oh +la, la!_ My friend offers me of the cream. It is well. Also of the salt. +_Quelle idee!_ But no, before me I perceive a dish of _confiture_, that +which the Scottish call "marmaladde." _A la bonne heure!_ With some +marmaladde, some cream, and much of sugar, I find that the "porridg" is +enough well, for I taste him no more. + +One day we make an ascension, and we see many grouses. Only we can not +to shoot, for it is not yet the season of the huntings. It is but a hill +that we mount. The name appears me to be french, but bad written. "Ben +Venue", that is to say, "_Bienvenu_"--_soyez le bienvenu_. She is one of +the first of the Scottish hills, and she says "welcome" in french. It is +a pretty idea, and a politeness very amiable towards my country. I +salute the hospitable Scotland and I thank her. It is a great country, +of brave men, of charming women--ah, I recall to myself some eyes so +beautiful, some forms so attracting!--of ravishing landscapes, and, at +that epoch there, of a climate so delicious. She has one sole and one +great defect. The best Scottish hotels cost very dear, and, my faith, +the two or three that I visited are not great thing like +comfortable--_ne sont pas grand'chose comme comfortable!_ + +One day we make a little excursion on the Lake of Lomond. The lake is +well beautiful, and the steamboat is excellent. But in one certain +hotel, in descending from a _breack_, and before to embark, we take the +"lunch." We bargain not, we ask not even the price, we eat at the _table +d'hote_ like all the world in Swiss, in France, even in Germany, when +there is but one half hour before the departure of the train or of the +boat. _Oh la, la!_ I have eaten in the spanish hotels, on the steamboats +of the italian lakes, even in the _restaurants--mon Dieu!_--of the +english railways, but never, never--_au grand jamais_--have I eaten a +_dejeuner_ like that! One dish I shall forget never; some exterior green +leaves of lettuce, without oil or vinegar, which they called a "salad." +_Parbleu_--by blue! In all the history of the world there has been but +one man who would have could to eat her with pleasure--Nabuchodonosor! + + Agree, &c., + + AUGUSTE. + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "CANNY" + +_Sister._ "Why, Charles, you've got raw whiskey here!" + +_Charles._ "Well, it's hardly worth while to bring water. We can always +find that as we go along--when we want it."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CAUTIOUS + +_Visitor (at out-of-the-way inn in the North)._ "Do you know anything +about salmon-poaching in this neighbourhood?" + +_Landlady (whose son is not above suspicion)._--"Eh--no, sir. Maybe it's +a new style of cooking as we haven't heard of in these parts, as you +see, sir, we only do our eggs that way; and"--(_brightening up_)--"if +you like 'em, I can get you a dish at once!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A DECIDED OPINION + +_Proprietor of shootings ("in the course of conversation")._ "Yes, but +you know, Sandy, it's difficult to choose between the Scylla of a shy +tenant, and the Charybdis of----" + +_Sandy (promptly)._ "Aweel! Gie me the siller, an' anybuddy that likes +may hae the tither!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: _Chappie (after missing his fourth stag, explains)._ +"Aw--fact is, the--aw--waving grass was in my way." + +_Old Stalker._ "Hoot, mon, wad he hae me bring out a scythe?"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Our artist catches it again this winter in the +Highlands.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A FINE HEAD (BUT NOT OF THE RIGHT SORT OF CATTLE) Perkins +has paid a mint of money for his shooting, and has had bad luck all the +season. To-day, however, he gets a shot, only--it turns out to be at a +cow!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A "SCENE" IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Ill-used husband_ (_under the bed_). "Aye! Ye may crack me, and ye may +thrash me, but ye canna break my manly sperrit. I'll na come oot!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MR. PUNCH IN THE HIGHLANDS + +He is at present on a boating excursion, and describes the motion as +extremely pleasant, and has no dread of sea-sickness.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "GAME" IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_Captain Jinks._ "Birds plentiful, I hope, Donald?" + +_Donald._ "Tousans, sir--in tousans." + +_Captain J._ "Any zebras?" + +_Donald_ (_anxious to please_). "Is't zebras? They're in tousans, too." + +_Captain J._ "And gorillas, no doubt?" + +_Donald._ "Well, noo an' then we see ane or twa--just like yerself."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES'S ADVENTURES IN THE HIGHLANDS + +Lavinia takes a siesta,] + +[Illustration: And the frightful situation she finds herself in at the +end of it.] + +[Illustration: Lavinia arrives at a waterfall, and asks its name. The +shepherd (not understanding English) informs her in Gaelic that it is +called (as Lavinia supposes) "Vicharoobashallochoggilnabo." Lavinia +thinks it a very pretty name.] + +[Illustration: A bright idea strikes the shepherd, and before Lavinia +can remonstrate, he transports her, in the usual manner, to the other +side.] + +[Illustration: MISS LAVINIA BROUNJONES + +She comes suddenly on a strange structure--apparently a native fort, and +is just going to sketch it, when a savage of gigantic stature, and armed +to the teeth, starts from an ambush, and menaces her in Gaelic!] + + * * * * * + +TWENTY HOURS AFTER + +EUSTON, 8 P.M. + + I'm sick of this sweltering weather. + Phew! ninety degrees in the shade! + I long for the hills and the heather, + I long for the kilt and the plaid; + I long to escape from this hot land + Where there isn't a mouthful of air, + And fly to the breezes of Scotland-- + It's never too stuffy up there. + + For weeks I have sat in pyjamas, + And found even these were _de trop_, + And envied the folk of Bahamas + Who dress in a feather or so; + But now there's an end to my grilling, + My Inferno's a thing of the past; + Hurrah! there's the whistle a-shrilling-- + We are off to the Highlands at last! + +CALLANDER, 4 P.M. + + The dull leaden skies are all clouded + In the gloom of a sad weeping day, + The desolate mountains are shrouded + In palls of funereal grey; + 'Mid the skirl of the wild wintry weather + The torrents descend in a sheet + As we shiver all huddled together + In the reek of the smouldering peat. + + A plague on the Highlands! to think of + The heat that but lately we banned; + Oh! what would we give for a blink of + The bright sunny side of the Strand! + To think there are folk that still revel + In Summer, and fling themselves down, + In the Park, or St. James? What the d---- + Possessed us to hurry from town? + + * * * * * + +"OUT OF TUNE AND HARSH."--_First Elder_ (_at the Kirk "Skellin'"_). "Did +ye hear Dougal? More snorin' in the sermon?" + +_Second Elder_, "Parefec'ly disgracefu'! He's waukened 's a'!" + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: OVERHEARD IN THE HIGHLANDS + +_First Chieftain._ "I say, old chap, what a doose of a bore these games +are!" + +_Second Chieftain._ "Ah, but, my dear boy, it is this sort of thing that +has made us Scotchmen _what we are!!_"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "SERMONS IN STONES" + +_Tourist_ (_of an inquiring and antiquarian turn_). "Now I suppose, +farmer, that large cairn of stones has some history?" + +_Highland Farmer._ "Ooh, aye, that buig o' stanes has a gran' history +whatever!" + +_Tourist_ (_eagerly_). "Indeed! I should like to----What is the +legend----?" + +_Farmer._ "Just a gran' history!" (_Solemnly._) "It took a' ma cairts +full and horses sax months to gather them aff he land and pit them +ther-r-re!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: JETSAM AND FLOTSAM + +Smith being shut out from the Continent this year, takes a cottage ornee +on Dee-Side. Scotland. The children are sent up first. The house is +described as "conveniently furnished"--they find it so!] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: IN THE WILDS OF THE NORTH. + +_Hungry Saxon_ (_just arrived, with equally hungry family_). "Well, +now--er--what can you give us for dinner, as soon as we've had a wash?" + +_Scotch Lassie._ "Oh, jist onything!" + +_H. S._ (_rubbing his hands in anticipation_). "Ah! Now we'll have a +nice juicy steak." + +_Lassie._ "A--weel. We'll be haein' some steak here maybe by the boat i' +the morn's morn!" + +_H. S._ (_a little crestfallen_). "Oh--well--chops then. We'll say +mutton chops." + +_Lassie._ "Oh, ay, but we've no been killin' a sheep the day!" + + [_Ends up with boiled eggs, and vows to remain at home for the future._ + +] + + * * * * * + +THE DUKE OF ATHOLL'S SHILLING (1851) + +The _North British Mail_ assures us that the Duke of Atholl exacts one +shilling a head from every person taking a walk in his ground at +Dunkeld. This is rather dear; but the impost would be insupportable if +his Grace insisted upon also showing himself for the money. + +A HIGHLAND CORONACH + +_Or Lament over the Acts and State of the Duke of Atholl._ + +After Scott. + + He has shut up the mountain, + He has locked up the forest, + He has bunged up the fountain, + When our need was the sorest; + The traveller stirring + To the North, may dogs borrow; + But the Duke gives no hearing, + No pass--but to sorrow. + + The hand of the tourist + Grasps the carpet-bag grimly, + But a face of the dourest + Frowns through the Glen dimly. + The autumn winds, rushing, + Stir a kilt of the queerest, + Duke and gillies come crushing + Where pleasure is nearest! + + Queer foot on the corrie, + Oddly loving to cumber-- + Give up this odd foray, + Awake from your slumber! + Take your ban from the mountain, + Take your lock from the river, + Take your bolt from the fountain, + Now at once, and for ever! + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: The sad fate of our only ham.--The pursuit.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A RARA MONGRELLIS + +_Tourist._ "Your dog appears to be deaf, as he pays no attention to me." + +_Shepherd._ "Na, na, sir. She's a varra wise dog, for all tat. But she +only speaks Gaelic."] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "IN FOR IT" + +_Innocent Tourist._ "No fish to be caught in Loch Fine now? And how do +you support yourself?" + +_Native._ "Whiles she carries parcels, and whiles she raws people in ta +poat, and whiles a shentleman 'ull give her a saxpence or a shillin'!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A BLANK DAY + +_The Keeper_ (_to Brown, who rents the forest_). "Doon wi' ye! Doon wi' +ye! Get ahint a stang!" + +_Brown_ (_out of temper--he had been "stalking" about all the morning, +and missed several times_). "Yes, it's all very well to say 'Get behind +a stone.' But show me one!--show me one!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Mr. Punch passes a night at McGillie Cullum Castle.] + +[Illustration: The Laird, as a delicate compliment, serenades him.] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A BAD SEASON + +_Sportsman._ "I can assure you, what with the rent of the moor, and my +expenses, and 'what not,' the birds have cost me--ah--a sovereign +apiece!!" + +_Keeper._ "A' weel, sir! 'Deed it's a maircy ye didna kill na mair o' +'em!!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: CANDID + +_Sportsman._ "Boy, you've been at this whiskey!" + +_Boy_ (_who has brought the luncheon-basket_). "Na! The cooark wadna +come oot!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: "UNCO CANNY" + +_Noble Sportsman._ "Missed, eh?" + +_Cautious Keeper._ "Weel, a' wadna gang quite sae faur as to say that; +but a' doot ye hay'na _exactly_ hit."] + + * * * * * + +THE SONG OF THE SCOTCH TOURIST + + Those Scotch hotels! Those Scotch hotels + Are fit for princes and for swells; + But their high charges don't agree + With humbler travellers like me. + + Twelve shillings daily for my board + Is more than I can well afford, + For this includes nor ale nor wine, + Whereof I drink some when I dine. + + Bad sherry's charged at eight-and-six, + A price that in my gizzard sticks: + And if I want a pint of port, + A crown is what I'm pilfer'd for 't. + + For service, too, I have to pay, + Two shillings, as a rule, per day: + Yet always, when I leave the door, + The boots and waiter beg for more. + + So, till a fortune I can spend, + Abroad my autumn steps I'll bend; + Far cheaper there, experience tells, + Is living than at Scotch hotels! + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: A VERY DIFFERENT MATTER + +_Southern Lord_ (_staying at Highland castle_). "Thank you so much. +I--ah--weally enjoy your music. I think of having a piper at my own +place." + +_Sandy the piper._ "An' fat kin' o' a piper would your lordship be +needin'?" + +_Southern Lord._ "Oh, certainly a good piper like yourself, Sandy." + +_Sandy_ (_sniffing_). "Och! Inteet!--Ye might easily fin' a lord like +your lordship, but it's nae sae easy to fin' a piper like me whatever!"] + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + +THE END + +BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LD., PRINTERS, LONDON AND TONBRIDGE. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Punch in the Highlands, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. 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