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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54083 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54083)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketch-Book of the North, by George Eyre-Todd
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Sketch-Book of the North
-
-Author: George Eyre-Todd
-
-Illustrator: A. S. Boyd
- A. Monro
- S. Reid
- Harrington Mann
-
-Release Date: January 31, 2017 [EBook #54083]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCH-BOOK OF THE NORTH ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Cathy Maxam, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SKETCH-BOOK OF THE NORTH
-
-
-
-
-_OTHER WORKS BY GEORGE EYRE-TODD._
-
-
- Byways of the Scottish Border.
- Anne of Argyle.
- Vignettes of the North.
- Four Months of Bohemia.
- Scotland Picturesque and Traditional.
-
-
-_Also, Edited by the same_,
-
- The Abbotsford Series of Scottish Poets. 7 Vols.
- Ancient Scots Ballads, with their Traditional Airs.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- SKETCH-BOOK
- OF THE
- NORTH
-
- BY
- GEORGE EYRE-TODD
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY A. S. BOYD, A. MONRO, S. REID
- AND HARRINGTON MANN
-
-
- _Fifth Thousand_
-
-
- EDINBURGH AND LONDON
- OLIPHANT, ANDERSON & FERRIER
- 1903
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- A ROMAN ROAD 1
- THE BLACK DOUGLAS 8
- IN THE SHADOW OF ST GILES’ 16
- A WEAVING VILLAGE 23
- WHERE THE CLANS FELL 30
- TAM O’ SHANTER’S RIDE 37
- AN OLD TULIP GARDEN 45
- BY THE BLASTED HEATH 52
- AMONG THE GALLOWAY BECKS 59
- IN KILT AND PLAID 66
- AT THE FOOT OF BEN LEDI 74
- CADZOW FOREST 81
- A FISHER TOWN 88
- A LOCH-SIDE SUNDAY 95
- THE GLEN OF GLOOM 103
- ACROSS BUTE 110
- WITH A CAST OF FLIES 118
- FROM A FIELD-GATE 125
- SCHOOL-DAYS 133
- A LOCH-SIDE STRATH 140
- A HIGHLAND REEL 147
- AN ARRAN RIDE 154
- BY A WESTERN FIRTH 161
- AN ISLAND PICNIC 168
- TENNIS IN THE NORTH 176
- THROUGH THE PASS 183
- A HIGHLAND MORNING 190
- TILL DEATH US PART 198
- A FOREST WEDDING 205
- LOCH LOMOND ICE-BOUND 212
- HALLOWMAS EVE 220
- HOGMANAY 228
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- SIGNAL OF DEATH (_see p. 10_) _A. Monro_ _Frontispiece_
-
- _facing page_
- THOUGHTS OF HOME _A. Monro_ 4
- THE WEB RETURNED _A. S. Boyd_ 28
- THE DEATH OF KEPPOCH _Harrington Mann_ 32
- ON THE BLASTED HEATH _A. Monro_ 58
- JEANIE _A. S. Boyd_ 60
- THROWING THE HAMMER _A. S. Boyd_ 72
- MASSACRE OF GLENCOE _A. Monro_ 108
- THE GENTLE ART _S. Reid_ 120
- FORBIDDEN WATERS _S. Reid_ 136
- MURRAY’S CURSE _A. Monro_ 144
- ARCHIE _A. S. Boyd_ 170
- “SERVE!” _S. Reid_ 180
- THE LAST HOUR _A. S. Boyd_ 204
- SEVEN MILES OF ICE _S. Reid_ 216
- TRONGATE OF ST MUNGO _S. Reid_ 232
-
-
-
-
-A ROMAN ROAD.
-
-
-Still and soft with the mild radiance of early spring the afternoon
-sunshine sleeps upon the rich country, moor and woodland and meadow,
-that stretches away southward towards the Border. The top of a
-ruined tower far off rises grey amid the shadowy woods, and a river,
-like a shining serpent, gleams in blue windings through the russet
-valley-land, while the smoke of an ancient Border town hangs in the
-distance, like an amber haze, above the side of its narrow strath.
-Northward, too, league upon league, sweep the rich pasture-lands of
-another river valley. The red roofs of more than one peaceful hamlet
-glow warm there among the bowering road-avenues of ancient trees. And
-afar at the foot of the purple mountain to the west lies the grey
-sequestered abbey of the Bruce.
-
-North and south upon that rich landscape history marks with a crimson
-stain the field of many a battle; and though peace and silence sleep
-upon it to-day in the sunshine, hardly is there hamlet or meadow in
-sight whose name does not recall some struggle of bygone times. Across
-these hills a hundred and forty years ago Prince Charles Edward led the
-last raid of the clans, and before his time the battlefields of Douglas
-and Percy, of Cumberland and Liddesdale, carry the mind back into the
-mists of antiquity, out of which looms the sullen splendour of more
-classic arms.
-
-Here, straight as a swan-flight along the ridge of the watershed,
-commanding the country for miles upon either side, still runs the
-ancient highway of Imperial Rome. From the golden milestone of Augustus
-in the Capitol, in a line scarce broken by the blue straits of the
-sea, ran hither the path of that ancient Power. Of old, along these
-far-stretching arteries came pulsing in tidal waves the iron blood of
-the stern heart beating far away in the south. From the wooded valleys
-below, the awed inhabitants doubtless long ago looked up and wondered,
-as the dark masses of the legions came rolling along these hills.
-
-Tide after tide, like the rising sea, they rolled to break upon the
-Grampian barriers of the North. Here rode Agricola, his face set
-towards the dark and mist-wrapt mountains beyond the Forth, eager
-to add by their conquest the word “Britannicus” to his name. Here by
-his side, it is probable, rode the courtly Tacitus, his son-in-law,
-to describe to future ages the Scotland of that time, “lashed,” as he
-knew it, “by the billows of a prodigious sea.” Southward here, stern
-and intent, once sped the swift couriers bearing to Rome tidings of
-that great battle at Mons Grampus, where the bodies of ten thousand
-Caledonians slain barred the northward march of the Roman general.
-Southward, again, along this road it is almost certain has passed the
-majesty of a Roman Emperor himself. For in the year 211 the Emperor
-Severus, ill and angry, leaving fifty thousand dead among the unsubdued
-mountains of the North, was borne out of Scotland by the remnant of his
-army, to die of chagrin at York. And here, long ago, by his flickering
-watch-fire at night, the Roman sentinel, perhaps, has let his thoughts
-wander again sadly to his home by the yellow Tiber two thousand miles
-away, to the vine-clad cot where the dark-eyed sister of his boyhood,
-the little Livia or Tessa, would be ripening now like the olives, with
-no one to care for and protect her.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Fifteen hundred years ago, however, the last yellow-haired captives had
-been carried south to whet the wonder of the populace in the triumph of
-a Roman general. Fifteen hundred years ago the power of the Imperial
-city had begun to wane, and the tide of her conquest ebbed along these
-hills. The eagles of the empire swept southward to defend their own
-eyrie upon the Palatine, and here, along the highways they had made,
-died the tramp of the departing legions. The tides of later wars, it
-is true, have flowed and ebbed across the Border. Saxon and Norman,
-both in turn, have set their faces towards the North. But later nations
-kept lower paths, and, untrodden here along the hill-tops, like the
-great Roman Empire itself, this chariot-way of the Cæsars has looked
-down upon them all. Forsaken, indeed, and altogether lonely it is now.
-Torn by the rains of fifteen centuries, and overgrown with the tangle
-of a thousand years, the roadway that rang to the hoofs of Agricola
-is haunted to-day by the timid hare, while overhead, where the sun
-glittered once on the golden eagles of the legions, grey wood-doves
-flutter now among the trees. But, strongly marked by its moss-grown
-ramparts, it still bears witness to the might of its makers, and,
-affording no text for the sad _Sic transit gloria mundi_, it remains a
-Roman defiance to time, like the defiance of all true greatness--_Non
-omnis moriar_.
-
-Greater benefits than these roads of stone did the Roman bring to
-the lands he conquered. The tread of the victorious legions it was
-that broke the dark slumber of Europe, and in the onward march of
-the western nations the footsteps of the Cæsars echo yet upon the
-earth. Rome, it is true, ploughed her empire with the sword, but in
-the furrows she sowed the seeds of her own greatness; and these seeds
-since then have grown to many a stately tree. Fallen, it may be, is the
-splendour of the “city upon seven hills”; but east and north and west
-of her rise the younger empires of her sons. Augustus from his gilded
-Capitol no longer rules the world, and the gleam of the steel-clad
-legions no longer flashes along these old forsaken highways among the
-hills; but the earth is listening yet, spell-bound, to the strains of
-the Latin lyre, and wherever to this hour there is eloquence in the
-west, there flourishes the living glory of the Roman tongue.
-
-To-day, with the coming of spring in the air, there are symbols enough
-on every hand of the great Past that is _not_ dead. The bole of the
-giant beech-tree here, it is true, has itself long since ceased to
-put forth leaves; but, springing upward from its strength, a hundred
-branches are spreading aloft the promise of the budding year. The dry
-brown spires of foxglove that stand six feet high in the coppice near,
-dropped months ago their purple splendours; but thick already about
-their roots the green tufts of their seedlings are pushing up through
-rich mould and warm leaf-drifts of bygone autumn to fill the place anon
-with tenfold glory. From the gnarled roots of the ancient thorn-hedge
-hangs many a yellow tress of withered fern; yet the life of the fallen
-fronds is, even now, stirring underground, and from the brown knobs
-there before long will rise the greenery of another year. Already, here
-and there, in sunny nooks, a spray of the prickly whin has burst into
-blossom of bright gold. A little longer, and the mossy crannies of the
-ruined dyke will be purple with the dim wood-violet. And soon, in the
-steep corner of the immemorial pasture that runs up there under the
-edge of the wood, the deep sward will be tufted with creamy clusters of
-the pale primrose.
-
-A pleasant spot it is to linger in, even on this early spring day, for
-the sunshine falls warm in the mossy hollow of the road, and rampart
-and thicket overhead are a shelter from the wind. Resting on the dry
-branch of a fallen pine, one can gaze away southward over the landscape
-that the Romans saw; and, fingering through a pocket volume of some
-old Augustan singer, it is possible to realise something of the iron
-thought that stirred them to become masters of the world.
-
-
-
-
-THE BLACK DOUGLAS.
-
-
-Under the great eastern oriel at Melrose, where the high altar of the
-abbey once stood, lies buried the heart of King Robert the Bruce.
-Elsewhere, far off at Dunfermline, in Fife, the body of the Scots King
-was entombed. Some seventy years ago, when workmen in that ancient
-Scottish capital were repairing the ruined church, they came upon a
-marble monument, broken and defaced. Digging below, amid the mould
-of the sepulchre, they found the skeleton of a tall man. Fragments
-of cloth-of-gold lay about it, and the breast-bone had been sawn
-through; and by these signs the workmen knew that they had found the
-resting-place of the King. There, as one who was present has said,
-after the silence and darkness of five centuries, was seen the head
-that had planned and changed the destinies of Scotland; there lay
-the dry bone of the arm that on the eve of Bannockburn had at one
-blow slain the fierce De Bohun. But the Bruce’s heart, embalmed and
-cased in silver, bearing its own strange romantic story, lies apart
-in the Border Abbey. Around the place of its rest, in that fallen and
-mouldering fane, lie the race that took from the heart their armorial
-cognisance--the lords of the great house of Douglas.
-
-Hot and stirring was the Douglas blood, and hardly a battlefield of
-the Middle Ages in Scotland but was stained with some of its best.
-Derived far back amid the mists of antiquity, none could tell how the
-race arose, and it was wont to be a boast with the house that none
-could point to its “first mean man.” There is a tower in Yarrow by
-the Douglas (_dhu glas_, black water) Burn which is said to have been
-the stronghold of “the Good Lord James”; and amid the fastnesses of
-Cairntable in Lanark there is another Douglas Water and Douglas Castle.
-From one of these, no doubt, in ancient Scots fashion, the family
-took its name; but when that happened, and what the story was of its
-early days, must remain a tale untold. The house’s mediæval greatness
-began, however, with the rise of Robert the Bruce, and from that time
-onwards its deeds mark with stain or blazon every page of Scottish
-history. Lords of the broad Scottish Border, east and west, their
-hands were sometimes stronger than the King’s. At one time a Douglas
-could ride to the field with twenty thousand spears at his back, and
-the gallop of the Douglas steeds sometimes was terrible alike on the
-causeway of Edinburgh and on the moorland marches of Northumberland.
-Douglas Earls and Knights fought as leaders through all the wars of
-David Bruce. A dead Douglas in 1388 won the famous fight with Hotspur
-on the moonlit field of Otterbourne. At Shrewsbury, in the days of
-Robert III., Henry IV. of England himself ran close to being hewn in
-pieces by the Earl of Douglas; and for gallantry on the battlefields of
-France this same great Earl was invested by the French King with the
-Dukedom of Touraine. The fame of Scottish chivalry for three hundred
-years was blown abroad under the Douglas name; for courtesies and blows
-alike were exchanged by the race on many battlefields besides those
-of the northern Borderland. Not that dark deeds are lacking in their
-history. Dark deeds belonged to their times. But in the tilting-yard
-or on the tented field were to be met no fairer foes. Nor was their
-heroism all of the sword-and-buckler order, or confined to one sex.
-The finest thing recorded of the race, after all, was done by a woman.
-On that dark February night in 1437, when James I. was murdered in the
-Blackfriars Abbey at Perth, when the noise and clashing was heard as of
-men in armour, and the torches of the coming assassins in the garden
-below cast up great flashes of light against the windows of the King’s
-chamber, was it not a Catherine Douglas who, for lack of a bolt, thrust
-her own fair arm into the staples of the door?
-
-The fortunes of the family culminated in the reign of James II.
-Whatever its origin had been, in that reign the race had attained an
-eminence more dazzling, perhaps, than that of any subject before or
-since. Earls of Douglas and Wigton, Lords of Bothwell, Galloway, and
-Annandale, Dukes of Touraine, Lords of Longueville, and Marshals of
-France, they had inter-married more than once with the Scottish Royal
-House itself. Members of the family also held the Earldoms of Angus,
-Ormond, and Moray. What wonder that they lifted haughty heads, and
-began to look askance at the Royal power? Then it was that the Stuart
-King stooped to treachery, and then was done the darkest deed that
-ever sullied the Stuart name.
-
-Already, in the boyhood of James, a youthful Earl of Douglas and his
-brother had been betrayed and slain by the King’s Ministers. For this
-transaction, however, the King was in no way to blame. The young Earl
-was his guest in the Castle of Edinburgh, and when at the treacherous
-feast the black bull’s head, the sign of death, was placed upon their
-table, James had wept piteously and begged hard for the lives of his
-friends. It was later, when another Earl was lord upon the Border, that
-the King made murder his resource. For this act, it must be said, James
-had strong provocation. Douglas had been honoured by him, had been made
-Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom, and had abused that honour. He had
-flouted the King’s authority, and slain the King’s friends, and, having
-been commanded by letter to deliver up to James’s representative the
-person of a subject unjustly imprisoned by him, he delivered him up
-“wanting the head.” Finally, with two great Earls of the North, he had
-entered into an open league against the King. All this, however, cannot
-palliate the King’s resource, cannot absolve the tragic scene in
-that little supper-chamber in the Castle of Stirling. There the great
-Earl was under the protection of the King’s hospitality, when James,
-bursting into rage at his taunts and at his refusal to abandon the
-treasonous compact, suddenly cried, “By Heaven, my Lord, if you will
-not break the league, this shall!” and, drawing his dagger, stabbed
-Douglas to the heart.
-
-This deed brought the family fortunes to a climax, and for three years
-Scotland was blackened by the raging of the Douglas Wars. From Berwick
-to Inverness the country was wasted by the struggles of the partisans.
-Stirling and Elgin were burned, and, amid famine and pestilence, the
-troubles of the wars of Edward seemed come again on Scotland: so great
-had grown the power of these Border lords. At last, however, the King
-and the Earl came face to face. Each led an army of forty thousand men,
-and only the small river Carron ran between them. By the combat of the
-morrow, it seemed, would be known whether James Stuart or James Douglas
-should wear the Scottish crown. But the Earl’s heart was seen to fail,
-and on the morrow, when he awoke, he found his camp deserted. Of all
-his host of the previous day not a hundred followers remained. Nothing
-was left him but flight; and, turning his back, as a Douglas had never
-done before, he made his way to England. Twenty years later, having
-been captured by one of his own vassals in a petty skirmish on the
-Border, he was sent to end his days as a monk in the Fifeshire Abbey of
-Lindores.
-
-Thus ended the great line of the Earls of Douglas, a race whose history
-for three hundred years had been the history of Scotland, and whose
-foot had twice, at least, been set upon the step even of the throne.
-From the house’s latter days of turbulence and ambition there is
-pleasure in turning back to those earlier years when the Good Lord
-James rode at the Bruce’s saddle-bow, and the patriotism of groaning
-Scotland rallied round the coupled names of Douglas and the King. No
-later deed can dim the lustre of those years, and nothing in history
-can outshine the last scene in the life of the Knight who strove to
-carry the Bruce’s heart to the Holy Land. Himself hemmed round by the
-Moors on that Spanish plain, in his effort, it is said, to succour a
-friend, the Earl took from his neck the casket containing the King’s
-heart. “Pass first in fight,” he cried, “as thou wert wont to do!
-Douglas will follow thee, or die!” Then, throwing the casket far among
-the enemy, he rushed forward to the place where it fell, and was there
-slain. Well would it have been for the race of Douglas had they ever
-remained true as that ancestor to the service of their King!
-
-
-
-
-IN THE SHADOW OF ST GILES’.
-
-
-Night in Edinburgh! The traveller may have seen the sun set over
-the lagoons of Venice; he may have watched the moon rise behind the
-Acropolis of Athens; but he has seen nothing finer or more inspiring
-than is shown him by the sparkle of the frosty stars in this grey
-metropolis of Scotland. From the terraced pavement of Princes Street,
-that unmatched boulevard of the modern city, looking across the dark
-chasm where once surged the waters of the North Loch, he sees the
-form of the Old Town rise, from Holyrood Palace low in the eastern
-meadows to the castled rock high at the western end, a dark mass all
-against the southern sky. Yellow lines of light mark the modern bridges
-spanning the abyss below, and windows still glowing--dim loopholes in
-the perilously high old houses beyond--bespeak the inhabitants there
-not yet all asleep. But these are forgotten in the witchery of the
-sight, when the clouds part, and the silvery starlight is shaken down
-upon the ancient city; when behind the broken sky-line of roofs and
-gables the clear moon comes up, and hangs, a lustrous jewel, among the
-pinnacles of St Giles’.
-
-Nor is it only the magic of the sight that stirs strange pulses in the
-blood. Standing at night in the Roman Coliseum, it seems still possible
-to hear majestic echoes of an older world. But the Scotsman under the
-shadow of “high Dunedin” is moved, as nowhere else, by memories of old
-glory and old sorrow. Here to a Scottish heart the past comes back.
-Here sighed the fatal sweetness of Rizzio’s lute. Here rang the wild
-clan-music of Lochiel. Among these old walls, however, something more
-is to be remembered than the deeds of high fame. Ever and again, it
-is true, amid the gloom of half-forgotten centuries, there is caught
-the glitter of some historic pageant. Out of the silence about the
-Cathedral one seems to catch the chime of fuming censers and the roll
-of coronation litanies, with, perchance, the sonorous accents of a
-Gavin Douglas, poet-bishop of Dunkeld; and one thrills again to hear
-the boom of the Castle cannon as the Fourth James rides gallantly
-away to his death. But behind all this a more tender interest touches
-the heart. What of the real inner life of those centuries bygone--the
-loves and sorrows, burning once, and poignant as ours are to-day, which
-have passed out of sight among the years, and been forgotten? Of some
-of these, indeed, Sir Walter Scott has written the story on the dark
-curtain of the past with a pen of fire. But for countless others there
-is not even the poor consolation of a recorded name. Occasionally,
-however, amid the seething of history, or in some half-remembered old
-song, a reference occurs, and a glimpse all too brief is had into some
-tender and mournful story. And so one sees that, behind the glitter
-of a Stuart chivalry, of brave and splendid deeds before the world,
-sometimes there lay a shadow, the sigh of a breaking heart, the stain
-of unavailing tears.
-
-Who knows the early history of that Lady of Loch Leven, mother of the
-Regent Murray? Grimly enough she is painted by Scott in her old age as
-the keeper of Queen Mary. Yet assuredly once she was lovely and young,
-and had strange beatings of heart as she listened to the whispers of
-her Royal lover, that all too gallant James V. What was their parting
-like, when the parting came? Was there the last touch of regretful
-hands, a remorseful caress from the royal lips, a passionate farewell?
-Or was there only the cruel news by alien mouths that her place was
-filled by another, that she had been forsaken? No one can tell us now.
-
-Then what of the Lady Anne Campbell of Argyle, at one time betrothed
-to Charles II.? The youthful Prince, aged twenty, had been crowned
-gorgeously, after the ancient manner of the Scottish Kings, at Scone.
-But King only in name, with England still under the iron rule of
-Cromwell, and only a faction in Scotland devoted to his cause, his
-immediate fortunes were entirely in the hands of the Scottish leader,
-the crafty, covenanting Marquis of Argyle. Reaching ever higher in
-ambition, and dazzled by the weird vision of the race of MacCallum
-More mounting the throne, Argyle proposed that Charles should marry
-his daughter. Needy and reckless, and eager to attach Argyle to the
-Royalist cause by the golden bands of hope, the King pretended consent.
-Alas for the Lady Anne! What maiden could keep still her heart when
-wooed by so royal a lover? For wooing there must have been, to keep
-up the pretence of betrothal, and how was the maiden to know that
-those words and looks, and, it may have been, those warmer caresses,
-were all no more than a diplomacy? And when the crash came, with
-Cromwell’s defeat of the covenanting army at Dunbar, and the revelation
-that she had given up her all and had been deceived--how bitter, how
-cruel the discovery! The contemporary Kirkton relates circumstantially
-that “so grievous was the disappointment to the young lady, that of a
-gallant young gentlewoman, she lost her spirit, and turned absolutely
-distracted.”
-
-Then there is a pitiful little song, unprinted and all but
-forgotten,[A] sung to a quavering, pathetic old tune, and relating in
-quaint ballad fashion something of the story of one Jeanie Cameron,
-an adherent of Prince Charles Edward in the rebellion of 1745. It
-narrates how the maiden, having fallen sick, not without a suspicion
-of its being heart-sickness, and all cures of the leeches failing, was
-prescribed “ae bricht blink o’ the Young Pretender.” So she sate her
-down and wrote the Prince “a very long letter, stating who were his
-friends and who were his foes.” This letter she had closed, and was
-just “sealing with a ring,” when, as used to happen in ballad story,
-“ope flew the door, and in came her King.” Poor young lady!--
-
- She prayed to the saints and angels to defend her,
- And sank i’ the arms o’ the Young Pretender.
- Rare, oh, rare! bonnie Jeanie Cameron!
-
-Nor is this pretty romance merely an invention of the poet’s brain.
-One of the family by whom the song has been preserved happened, it
-seems, in the latter part of last century, to be buying snuff in a
-shop in Edinburgh, when a beggar came in. Nothing was said before the
-stranger; but the shopkeeper, as if it were an accustomed dole, handed
-the beggar a groat. Afterwards, in reply to a remark of his customer
-as to the delicacy of the beggar’s hand which had received the coin,
-the shopkeeper revealed the fact that the recipient of his charity was
-no man, but a woman, and no other than Jeanie Cameron, a follower of
-the Chevalier. Her story, so far as he knew it, was sad enough. She
-had followed the Prince to France, hoping, no doubt, poor thing! to
-resume there something of the place she had believed herself to hold
-in his affections. Alas! it was only to find herself, like so many
-others, forgotten, cast off, an encumbrance to a broken man. And then,
-with who can tell how heavy a heart, she made her way home, only to
-discover that her family had shut their door upon her, and cut her
-adrift. So, for these many years, she had wandered about forlorn and
-lonely, supported by a few charitable bourgeois in the streets of
-Edinburgh--she who could look back upon the day when she had loved and
-been loved by a Stuart Prince.[B]
-
- [A] It has now been included in “Ancient Scots Ballads with
- their Traditional Airs.” Glasgow: Bayley & Ferguson, 1894.
-
- [B] This account of the latter days of “Mrs Jean Cameron”
- finds corroboration in a footnote to the second volume of
- Chambers’s “Traditions of Edinburgh.”
-
-Such are some of the stories which find no place in history, but whose
-consciousness sheds a tragic and tender interest about this grey old
-capital of the North. Who will say that they are not as well worth
-thought as the trumpetings of herald pursuivants and the clash of
-warlike arms?
-
-
-
-
-A WEAVING VILLAGE.
-
-
-Out of the way, in this quiet hollow of the Ayrshire hills, something
-remains yet of the life of a hundred years ago. Elsewhere the puffing
-of steam may have taken the place of toil by hand, but here in the long
-summer days, from morning till night, the click-clack of the looms is
-still to be heard, and within every second window up the length of the
-village street, the dusty frames are to be seen moving regularly to and
-fro. Pots of geranium and fuchsia are set sometimes in these windows,
-and through the narrow doorways the cottage gardens can be seen behind,
-carefully kept, and ablaze just now with wallflower borders and
-pansies. Sadly, however, is the place decayed from its prosperity of
-old. Little traffic comes now to the wide, empty street. The carrier’s
-waggon is an object of interest when it puts in an appearance. The
-baker’s van may be the only vehicle of an afternoon; and twice a week
-only comes the flesher’s cart. Butcher meat, it is to be feared, is
-but seldom seen on some of the village tables; and, when work is more
-than usually scarce, many must put up with but “muslin-broth.” Here and
-there a roofless ruin, breaking the regular line of dwellings, tells of
-a decaying industry. In the sunny inn-door at the head of the village
-the brown retriever may rouse himself, once in the afternoon, to
-inspect the credentials of some vagrant terrier; and, but for the faint
-click-clack of the looms all day, and the appearance, once in a while,
-of a woman with a pair of stoups to draw water at the village well, the
-place might seem asleep.
-
-Yet a hearty trade once throve on the spot. Every house had its loom
-going, sometimes two; and there was always work in plenty. Weavers’
-wives could go to kirk then in black-beaded bonnets and flowered
-Paisley shawls, and the Relief Kirk minister got his stipend of eighty
-pounds a year nearly always paid. In those times the carrier’s cart
-used to have business in the village every day; merchants from Glasgow
-came bidding against each other for work in a hurry; and four of the
-weavers at once have been known to have sons at college studying for
-the ministry. Those were the days when the village kept a watchful
-eye upon the religious and political movements of the country. Before
-the Stamp Duty was removed from newspapers, the weavers subscribed in
-clubs and took out their weekly sheet, which was passed from shop to
-shop, read and digested, and thoroughly threshed out in the door-step
-debates, when a knot of neighbours would gather between the spells of
-work. In this way the great Reform Bill was fully discussed and settled
-here long before it passed the House of Commons; and the absorbing
-question of the Disruption, which gave birth to the Free Church, was
-thoroughly argued and thought out on its merits.
-
-True to the traditions of their craft, of course, most of the weavers
-were the reddest of Radicals, and the progress of the Chartist movement
-excited the keenest interest among them. The work at the looms was to a
-great extent mechanical, and while they pushed the treadles and pulled
-the shuttles to and fro, the weavers had time to think; and shrewd
-thinkers and able debaters many of them became, ready at the hustings
-with questions on the Corn Laws, the freeing of the slaves, and the
-Irish grievances, which were apt to put a political candidate to some
-trouble. He had not their advantage of the daily “argufying” and the
-Saturday night debates at the village inn. There was a tradition that
-in the room where this club met, the poet Burns had once spent an
-evening, and the fact lent an additional zest to his song, which they
-never tired of quoting,--“A man’s a man for a’ that.”
-
- A king can mak’ a belted knight,
- A marquis, duke, and a’ that;
- But an honest man’s aboon his might,
- Guid faith he maunna fa’ that.
-
-The industry of the village has died hard. Amid decaying trade the
-weavers kept to their looms, and many a pinch was suffered before one
-after another laid down his shuttle. Their feelings are not difficult
-to understand. As boys they had played about the village well. As young
-men they had wandered with their sweethearts--that delicious time--down
-the woodland roads around. Memories had grown about them and their old
-homes during the long years of work. In the kirkyard not far off lay
-the ashes of mother or wife or child. But the merchants had ceased to
-come to the village, and it was a weary walk for the poor weavers to
-carry their webs all the way to Glasgow, to hawk them from warehouse
-to warehouse, and sometimes to have the choice at last of accepting a
-ruinous price for them, or of taking them home again.
-
-It was after a bootless errand of this sort that old John Gilmour was
-returning to the village one night in late October some forty-three
-years back. Honest soul, through all his straits he had never owed
-a neighbour a penny. That night, however, his affairs had come to a
-critical pass, and the morrow held a black look-out for him. His web
-was still on his back, not an offer having been got for it in town,
-though he knew the workmanship to be his best. Upon its sale he had
-depended to pay for the winter’s coals, and the necessaries of the
-morrow; for on the day previous the last of his carefully guarded
-savings had been spent. Moreover, his wife and he were growing old,
-and could hardly look forward to increased energy for work. And he was
-bringing home bad news. Their second son (the eldest had run away to
-sea eleven years before) had broken down in his attempt to teach, and,
-at the same time, push his way through the Divinity Hall, and had been
-ordered by the doctor to stop work for the winter altogether. How was
-the old man to break all this disastrous news to his wife? The web was
-heavy, but his heart was heavier.
-
-He had reached the fork of the road close by the old disused graveyard
-of the parish, and was thinking a little bitterly of the reward that
-remained to him from his long life of hard work, and of how quiet and
-far from care those were who lay on the other side of the low dyke
-under the green sod, when a hackney carriage came up behind, and the
-driver stopped to ask the way to ----.
-
-“Keep the left road,” said the old man, and was resuming his walk, when
-a bearded face appeared at the carriage window.
-
-“That seems a heavy bundle you are carrying. Are you going my way?”
-
-Once inside, the old weaver found his companion looking at him intently.
-
-“You have had a long walk this day, surely? Have you no son to carry so
-heavy a load for you?”
-
-Ay, he had two sons, Gilmour said: but one was lost at sea, and the
-other was struggling at college.
-
-“You live alone, then?” asked the questioner, tremulously.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-No, thank God! he had a kind wife at home, who had been his consolation
-through many a dark hour.
-
-“Thank God!” echoed the younger man.
-
-The carriage rolled on and entered the village. The weaver pointed to
-his house, and they stopped there. The stranger helped him out with his
-web, and entered the house with him.
-
-“It’s just the web back, guidwife,” he said. “But dinna look sae queer
-like. I’se warrant I’ll sell it the morn. An’ here’s a gentleman has
-helpit me on the road. Hae ye onything i’ the hoose to offer him?”
-
-But the wife was not thinking of the web or the distress of the morrow.
-Her eyes were on the stranger, and the corners of her lips were
-twitching curiously. He had not spoken, but as he removed his hat she
-sprang towards him.
-
-“It’s Willie!” she cried; “it’s Willie!” And her arms were about his
-neck, and, half laughing and half crying, she buried her face on his
-breast.
-
-It was Willie. He was the first who came back to the village from the
-gold-fields of Ballarat.
-
-
-
-
-WHERE THE CLANS FELL.
-
-
-What richer picture could the eye desire than this sunlit glory of
-harvest colour amid the Highland mountains? The narrow sea-loch itself
-below gleams blue as melted sapphire under the radiant and stainless
-sky; around it, on the rising slopes, the corn-fields, rough with
-fruitful stooks, spread their yellow ripeness in the sun; amid them
-shine patches of fresh soft green where the second clover has been cut;
-while above hang the sheltering woods, like dark brown shadows; and,
-over all, the surrounding hills, bloom-spread as for a banquet of the
-gods, raise their purple stain against the blue. Only far off, above
-the dim mountains of amethyst in the North, lies a white argosy of
-clouds, like some convoy of home-bound India-men becalmed on a summer
-sea.
-
-There has been no sound for an hour but the whisper of the warm autumn
-wind that the farmer loves for winnowing his grain, the drone of
-a velvety bee sometimes in the blue depth of a hare-bell, and the
-crackle of the black broom-pods bursting in the heat. The furry brown
-rabbits that pop prudently out of sight in the mossy bank are silent as
-shadows; the red squirrel that runs along the dyke top and disappears
-up a tree makes no chatter; and even the shy speckled mavis that bobs
-bright-eyed across the path is voiceless, for among the birds this is
-the silent month.
-
-Less and less, as the narrow road rises through the fir woods, grows
-the bit of blue loch seen far behind under the branches, and the little
-clachan in the warm hollow over the brow of the hill is shut from
-the world on every side by the deep and silent forests of fragrant
-pine. Wayside flowers are seeding on the time-darkened thatch of
-these sequestered dwellings. There, with branches of narrow pods, the
-wallflower clings; and the spikes of the field-mustard ripen beside
-the golden bullets of the ox-eyed daisy. On a chair at the door of one
-of the cottages an ancient granny is sunning herself, counting with
-feeble fingers the stitches on her glancing knitting wires. A frail old
-body she is, set here, neat and comfortable, by some loving hand, to
-enjoy, it may be, the sunshine of her last autumn on earth. Withered
-and wrinkled are her old cheeks with the cares of many a winter, and
-it seems difficult to recall the day when she was a ripe-lipped,
-merry reaper in the corn-fields; but under her clean, white mutch the
-grey old eyes are undimmed yet as they watch, heedful and lovingly,
-the movements of the little maid tottering about her knee. Where are
-her thoughts as she sits there alone, hour after hour, in the silent
-sunshine? Is she back in the dusk among the sweet-scented hay-ricks,
-listening with fluttering heart to the whispers of her rustic lover?
-Is it a sunny doorway where she sits crooning for happiness over the
-baby on her knee? the little one that is all her own--and his. Or is it
-a winter night as she kneels in the flickering light by the bedside,
-feeling the rough, loving hand relax its grasp, while she sees the
-shadow pass across the wistful face, and knows with breaking heart that
-she is alone? These are the peaceful scenes of peasant life; alas, that
-they should ever be darkened by the shadow of the sword!
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Granny can speak no English, or she might have something to say of the
-great disaster that befell the clans on the moor close by in her
-father’s time. For not far beyond the little clachan the road emerges
-on the open heath, and there, where the paths cross, lies the great,
-grey boulder on which the terrible duke stood to survey the field just
-before the battle. Not even then was he aware how nearly his birthday
-carousals of the night before, at Nairn, had been surprised and turned
-into another slaughter of Prestonpans. So perilously sometimes does the
-sword of Damocles tremble over an unconscious head. His troops, well
-rested and provisioned, were fresh as that April morning itself, while
-the poor clansmen in the boggy hollow to the right, divided in their
-councils, and famishing for treacherous lack of bread, were exhausted
-by the fruitless twenty-four mile surprise march of the night. Yet
-they came on, these clansmen, half an hour later, like lions; plunging
-through the bog, sword in hand, in the face of the regulars’ terrific
-blaze of musketry, cutting Cumberland’s first line to pieces, and
-rushing on the second line to be blown to atoms at sword’s length.
-
-The yellow corn is being shorn to-day where the clans were mowed down
-then. Here was spilt the best blood of the Highlands. Close by, the
-brave Keppoch, crying out as he charged alone before the eyes of his
-immovable Macdonalds that the children of his tribe had forsaken him,
-threw his sword in the air as a bullet went into his heart. Wounded, at
-the tall tree to the west fell Cameron of Lochiel; and in the little
-valley beyond, the defeated Prince Charles, as he fled, paused a moment
-to bid his army a bitter farewell. The road here at the corn-field’s
-edge dips a little yet, where the fatal bog once lay, and ten yards
-to the left still springs the Dead Men’s Well, to which so many poor
-fellows crawled during the awful succeeding night to allay the tortures
-of their thirst before they died. Here the gigantic MacGillivray,
-leader that day of the clan M’Intosh, fell dead as, with his last
-strength, he bore to the spring a little wounded boy whom he had heard
-at his side moaning for water.
-
-A better fate the bravery of these men deserved, misguided though they
-might be; for the victors gave no quarter to wounded or prisoners,
-and the soul shudders yet at thought of the horrors that followed the
-battle. It was not enough that disabled men should be clubbed and
-shot, and barns full of them burned to ashes; but to this day in many
-a quiet glen lie the remains of hamlets ruined in cold blood, and
-tales are told of the dark vengeance taken by the victorious soldiery
-upon defenceless women, little children, and old men. Well was it,
-perhaps, for those who had fallen that they lay here at rest under the
-heather--they could not know the cruel fate of wife or child. To other
-lips was left the wail for “Drummossie; oh, Drummossie!” At rest they
-were, these hot and valiant hearts, plaided and plumed as warriors wish
-to lie, in their long bivouac under the open heaven. Not the first nor
-the last of their race, either, were they to fall, scarred with the
-wounds of war; for, less than a mile away, under the lichened cairns of
-Clava, do not the ashes rest of the chiefs their ancestors, slain in
-some long-forgotten battle of the past, and waiting, like these, for
-the sound of the last _réveille_?
-
-Here, on each side of the road, can still be made out the trenches
-where the dead were buried, according to their tartans it is said; and,
-while the rest of the moor is purple with heather, these sunken places
-alone are green. On the edge of the corn-field rises a stone, inscribed
-“Field of the English; they were buried here”; and at the end of each
-trench on the moor stands a rude slab bearing the name of its tribe. A
-singular pathos attends two of these stones, on which is written, not
-M’Intosh or Stewart or Fraser, but “Mixed Clans.”
-
-Round the oval moorland of the battle rise thick fir-woods now, dark
-and mournful. Sometimes the winds of the equinox, as they roar through
-these, recall the deadly rolling musketry of long ago. But the air
-to-day scarcely whispers in the tree-tops, and sunshine and silence
-sleep upon the resting-place of the gallant dead. Only some fair,
-white-clad girls, who have come up from Inverness to read the battle
-inscription on the great boulder-cairn, are plucking a spray of heather
-from the Camerons’ grave.
-
-
-
-
-TAM O’ SHANTER’S RIDE.
-
-
-Never is a man more conscious of his manhood than when, with bridle in
-hand and a good horse under him, he takes the road at a gallop. As his
-steed stretches out and the hoof-beats quicken, as the milestones fly
-past and the cool air rushes in his face, he casts care to the winds,
-his pulse beats stronger, he rejoices to breathe and to live. The pride
-and the pleasure of this experience have ever appealed to the poets,
-and the ringing of horse-hoofs echoes through the verse of all ages--in
-the warrior chants of Israel; through the sounding Virgilian lines;
-to the reverberating rhythm of the “Ride from Ghent to Aix.” But the
-maddest, most riotous gallop of all is, perhaps, that of the grey mare
-Meg and her master from Ayr to the Shanter farm.
-
-Burns was never more fortunate in his subject than when thus fulfilling
-his promise of providing a legend for “Alloway’s auld haunted kirk.” He
-did not, it is true, with the nice precision of the Augustan laureate,
-trim his verse to a mechanical imitation of sound; but the wild rush
-and deftness of the movement of the poem, the quick succession of
-humour on pathos, scene upon scene, the ludicrous, the startling, the
-horrible, carry away the breath, and suggest more vividly than any mere
-measuring rhythm the mad daring of that midnight ride.
-
-There is a little, old-fashioned, deep-thatched inn still standing
-where the street leads southwards out of Ayr. Under its low,
-brown-raftered roof it is yet easy to imagine how the veritable hero,
-Tam, may have sat with his cronies “fast by the ingle, bleezing
-finely,” while “the night drave on wi’ sangs and clatter,” and the
-storm outside hurled itself fruitlessly against the little deep-set
-window. It would need all the liquor he had imbibed to fortify the
-carouser for that fourteen-mile ride into Carrick. A midnight hurricane
-of rain and wind would be no pleasant encounter on that lonely road,
-to say nothing of the eerie spots to be passed, and at least one
-point more than a trifle dangerous. But Tam o’ Shanter was a stout
-Ayrshire farmer, and, moreover, he was accustomed to face worse ragings
-than those of the elements; so it may be supposed that, when he had
-hiccupped a last goodbye to his friends, and, leaving the warm lights
-of the inn streaming into the street behind him, galloped off into the
-blackness of the night, it was with no stronger regret than that he
-must go so soon. Half a mile to his right, as he bucketed southward
-along the narrow road, he could hear the ocean thundering its diapason
-on the broad beach of sand, and at the places where he crossed the open
-country its spray would strike his cheek and fly inland with the foam
-from Maggie’s bit. Sometimes, when the way lay through belts of beech
-and oak woods, the branches would roar and shriek overhead as they
-strove with maniac arms against the tempest.
-
-The old road to Maybole, and that which Tam o’ Shanter took, ran a
-little nearer the sea than the one which did duty in Burns’ time, and
-still serves its purpose; and about a mile out of Ayr it crosses the
-small stream at the ford where “in the snaw the chapman smoored.” Here,
-on the newer road, a curious adventure is said to have befallen the
-poet’s father. There was formerly no bridge across this stream; and the
-legend runs that William Burnes, a few hours before the birth of his
-son, in riding to Ayr for an attendant, found the water much swollen,
-and was requested by an old woman on the farther side to carry her
-across. Notwithstanding his haste he did this; and a little later, on
-returning home with the attendant, he was surprised to find the woman
-seated by his own fireside. It is said that when the child was born it
-was placed in the gipsy’s lap, and she, glancing into its palm, made a
-prophecy which the poet has turned in one of his verses:--
-
- He’ll hae misfortunes great and sma’,
- But aye a heart aboon them a’;
- He’ll be a credit till us a’--
- We’ll a’ be prood o’ Robin.
-
-If all gipsy predictions were as well fulfilled as this concerning the
-poet, the dark-skinned race assuredly would be far sought and courted.
-
-A few strides beyond the stream his grey mare had to carry Tam past a
-dark, uncanny spot--“the cairn whare hunters fand the murdered bairn.”
-It was covered then with trees, and one of them still stands marking
-the place. To the left of the old road here, and hard by the newer
-highway, lies the humble cottage, of one storey, where Robert Burns was
-born. It has been considerably altered since then, having been used
-until recently as an alehouse, and further accommodation having been
-added at either end. But enough of the interior remains untouched to
-allow of its original aspect being realised. The house is the usual
-“but and ben,” built of natural stones and clay, and neatly whitewashed
-and thatched. In the “but,” the apartment to the left on entering from
-the road, there is little alteration; and it was here, in the recessed
-bed in the wall, that the poet first saw light. The plain deal dresser,
-with dish-rack above, remains the same, and the small, square, deep-set
-window still looks out behind, over the fields his father cultivated.
-An old mahogany press with drawers still stands next the bed; the
-floor is paved with irregular flags; and the open fireplace, with
-roomy, projecting chimney, occupies the gable. An extra door has been
-driven through the south-east corner to allow the profane crowd to pass
-through, and a larger window has been opened towards the road that they
-may see to scratch their names in the visitors’ book; but the rest of
-the apartment, towards the back, is little changed, if at all, since
-the eventful night when “Januar’ winds blew hansel in on Robin.”
-
-The hour of his ride was too dark, however, for the galloping farmer to
-see so far over the fields. A weirder sight was in store for him.
-
-A few hundred yards farther on, when, by a well which is still flowing,
-he had passed the thorn, now vanished, where “Mungo’s mither hanged
-hersel,” just as the road plunged down along the woody banks of Doon,
-there, a little to his left,
-
- glimmering through the groaning trees
- Kirk Alloway seemed in a bleeze.
-
-The grey walls of the little kirk are standing yet among the graves,
-though the last rafters of the ruined roof were carried off long
-since to be carved into mementos. The tombs of Lord Alloway’s family
-occupy one end of the interior, and a partition wall has been built
-dividing off that portion, but otherwise the place remains unchanged.
-The bell still hangs above the eastern gable, and under it remains the
-little window with a thick mullion, the “winnock bunker” in which the
-astonished farmer, sitting on his mare, and looking through another
-opening in the side wall, saw the queer musician ensconced.
-
-A more eerie spot on a stormy night could hardly be imagined, the
-trees shrieking and groaning around, the Doon roaring in the darkness
-far below, while the thunder crashed overhead, and the lurid glare
-of lightning ever and again lit up the ruin. But with the unearthly
-accessories of warlocks and witches, corpse-lights and open coffins,
-with the screech of the pipes, and grotesque contortions of the
-dancers, the place must pass comparison in horror. Yet, inspired by
-“bold John Barleycorn,” the farmer stared eagerly in on the revels,
-till, fairly forgetting himself in the height of his admiration, he
-must shout out “Weel dune, Cutty Sark!” Then, in a moment, as every
-reader is aware, the lights went out, the pipes stopped, and the
-wrathful revellers streamed after him like angry bees. A few bounds of
-his mare down that narrow, winding, and rather dangerous road would
-carry Tam to the bridge, and the clatter of terrified Maggie’s hoofs
-as she plunged off desperately through the trees seems to echo in the
-hollow way yet. All the world knows how she carried her master in
-safety across the keystone of the bridge at the cost of her own grey
-tail. The feat was no easy one, for the single arch (still spanning the
-river there) was high and steep and narrow.
-
-Beyond the Doon the old road rises inland, bowered high with ash and
-saugh trees, to the open country; and Tam, pale and sober no doubt, but
-breathing freer, had still twelve long miles before him to the far side
-of Kirkoswald in Carrick, where sat his wife--
-
- Gathering her brows like gathering storm,
- Nursing her wrath to keep it warm.
-
-
-
-
-AN OLD TULIP GARDEN.
-
-
-A quiet, sunny nook in the hollow it is, this square old garden with
-its gravelled walks and high stone walls; a sheltered retreat left
-peaceful here, under the overhanging woods, when the stream of the
-world’s traffic turned off into another channel. The grey stone house,
-separated from the garden by a thick privet hedge and moss-grown court,
-is the last dwelling at this end of the quiet market-town, and, with
-its slate roof and substantial double storey, is of a class greatly
-superior to its neighbours, whose warm red tiles are just visible over
-the walls. It stands where the old road to Edinburgh dipped to cross
-a little stream, and, in the bygone driving days, the stage-coach,
-after rattling out of the town, and down the steep road here, between
-the white, tile-roofed houses, when it crossed the bridge opposite
-the door, began to ascend through deep, embowering woods. But a more
-direct highway to the capital was opened many a year ago; just beyond
-the bridge a wall was built across the road; and the grey house with
-its garden was left secluded in the sunny hollow. The rapid crescendo
-of the coach-guard’s horn no longer wakens the echoes of the place, and
-the striking of the clock every hour in the town steeple is the only
-sound that reaches the spot from the outside world.
-
-The hot sun beats on the garden here all day, from the hour in the
-morning when it gets above the grand old beeches of the wood, till it
-sets away beyond the steeple of the town. But in the hottest hours it
-is always refreshing to look over the weather-stained tiles of the long
-low toolhouse at the mossy green of the hill that rises there, cool and
-shaded, under the trees. Now and then a bull, of the herd that feeds in
-the glades of the wood, comes down that shaded bank, whisking his tawny
-sides with an angry tail to keep off the pestering flies, and his deep
-bellow reverberates in the hollow. In the early morning, too, before
-the dewy freshness has left the air, the sweet mellow pipe of the
-mavis, and the fuller notes of the blackbird, float across from these
-green depths, and ever and again throughout the day the clear whistle
-of some chaffinch comes from behind the leaves.
-
-Standing among the deep box edgings and gravelled paths, it is not
-difficult to recall the place’s glory of forty years ago--the glory
-upon which the ancient plum-trees, blossoming yet against the sunny
-walls, looked down. To the eye of Thought time and space obstruct no
-clouds, and in the atmosphere of Memory the gardens of the past bloom
-for us always.
-
-Forty years ago! It is the day of the fashion for Dutch bulbs, when
-fabulous prices were paid for an unusually “fancy” specimen, and in
-this garden some of the finest of them are grown. The tulips are in
-flower, and the long narrow beds which, with scant space between,
-fill the entire middle of the garden, are ablaze with the glory of
-their bloom. Queenly flowers they are and tall, each one with a gentle
-pedigree--for nothing common or unknown has entrance here--and crimson,
-white, and yellow--the velvet petals of some almost black--striped
-with rare and exquisite markings, they raise to the sun their large
-chaste chalices. The perfection of shape is theirs, as they rise from
-the midst of their green, lance-like leaves; no amorous breeze ever
-invades the spot to dishevel their array or filch their treasures; and
-the precious golden dust lies in the deep heart of each, untouched as
-yet save by the sunshine and the bee. When the noonday heat becomes
-too strong, awnings will be spread above the beds, for with the fierce
-glare, the petals would open out and the pollen fall before the
-delicate task of crossing had been done.
-
-But see! through the gate in the privet hedge there enters as fair
-a sight. Ladies in creamy flowered muslins and soft Indian silks,
-shading their eyes from the sun with tiny parasols, pink and white
-and green,--grand dames of the county, and grander from a distance;
-gentlemen in blue swallow-tailed coats and white pantaloons--gallants
-escorting their ladies, and connoisseurs to examine the flowers--all,
-conducted by the owner, list-book in hand, advance into the garden and
-move along the beds.
-
-To that owner--an old man with white hair, clear grey eyes, and the
-memory of their youthful red remaining in his cheeks--this is the gala
-time of the year. Next month the beds of ranunculus will bloom, and
-pinks and carnations will follow; but the tulips are his most famous
-flowers, and, for the few days while they are in perfection, he leads
-about, with his old-world courtesy, replying to a question here, giving
-a name or a pedigree there, a constant succession of visitors. These
-are his hours of triumph. For eleven months he has gone about his
-beloved pursuit, mixing loams and leaf-moulds and earths, sorting,
-drying, and planting the bulbs, and tending their growth with his own
-hand--for to whose else could he trust the work?--and now his toil
-has blossomed, and its worth is acknowledged. Plants envied by peers,
-plants not to be bought, are there, and he looks into the heart of each
-tenderly, for he knows it a child of his own.
-
-Presently he leads his visitors back into the house, across the mossy
-stones of the court where, under glass frames, thousands of auricula
-have just passed their bloom, and up the railed stair to the sunny
-door in the house-side. He leads them into the shady dining-room,
-with its furniture of dark old bees-waxed mahogany, where there is a
-slight refreshment of wine and cake--rare old Madeira, and cake, rich
-with eggs and Indian spice, made by his daughter’s own hand. Jars and
-glasses are filled with sweet-smelling flowers, and the breath of the
-new-blown summer comes in through the open doors.
-
-The warm sunlight through the brown linen blind finds its way across
-the room, and falls with subdued radiance on the middle picture on the
-opposite wall. The dark eyes, bright cheeks, and cherry mouth were
-those of the old man’s wife--the wife of his youth. She died while the
-smile was yet on her lip, and the tear of sympathy in her eye; for
-she was the friend of all, and remains yet a tender memory among the
-neighbouring poor. The old man is never seen to look upon that picture;
-but on Sundays for hours he sits in reverie by his open Bible here in
-the room alone. In a velvet case in the corner press lies a silver
-medal. It was pinned to his breast by the Third George on a great day
-at Windsor long ago. For the old man, peacefully ending his years here
-among the flowers, in his youth served the king, and fought, as a naval
-officer, through the French and Spanish wars. As he goes quietly about,
-alone, among his garden beds, perchance he hears again sometimes the
-hoarse word of command, the quick tread of the men, and the deep roar
-of the heavy guns as his ship goes into action. The smoke of these
-battles rolled leeward long ago, and their glory and their wounds are
-alike forgotten. In that press, too, lies the wonderful ebony flute,
-with its marvellous confusion of silver keys, upon which he used to
-take pleasure in recalling the stirring airs of the fleet. It has
-played its last tune; the keys are untouched now, and it is laid past,
-warped by age, to be fingered by its old master no more.
-
-But his guests rise to leave, and, receiving with antique grace their
-courtly acknowledgments, he attends the ladies across the stone-paved
-hall to their carriages.
-
-Forty years ago! The old man since then has himself been carried across
-that hall to his long home, and no more do grand dames visit the
-high-walled garden. But the trees whisper yet above it; the warmth of
-summer beats on the gravelled walks; and the flowers, lovely as of old
-in their immortal youth, still open their stainless petals to the sun.
-
-
-
-
-BY THE BLASTED HEATH.
-
-
-The barometer has fallen somewhat since last night, and there are
-ominous clouds looming here and there in the west; but the sky remains
-clear blue overhead, the white road is dry and dazzling, and the sun
-as hot as could be wished. Out to the eastward the way turns along the
-top of the quaint fisher town, with its narrow lanes and throng of low
-thatched roofs, till at a sudden dip the little bridge crosses the
-river. Sweet Nairn! The river has given its name to the town. A hundred
-and forty years have passed since these clear waters, wimpling now in
-the sun, brought down from the western moors the life-blood of many a
-wounded Highlander fallen on dark Culloden. The sunny waters keep a
-memory still of the flight of the last Prince Charles.
-
-Like a crow-flight eastward the road runs straight, having on the left,
-beyond the rabbit warren, the silver sand-beach and the sea, and on
-the right the fertile farm-lands and the farther woods. The white line
-glistening on the horizon far along the coast to the east, is a glimpse
-of the treacherous hillocks of the Culbin shifting sands. They are
-shining now like silver in the calm forenoon; but, as if restless under
-an eternal ban, they keep for ever moving, and, when stirred by the
-strong sea-wind, they are wont yet to rise and rush and overwhelm, like
-the dust-storm of the Sahara. For two hundred years a goodly mansion
-and a broad estate have lain buried beneath those wastes, and what was
-once called the Garden of Moray is nothing now but a desolate sea of
-sand. They say that a few years ago an apple-tree of the ancient manor
-orchard was laid bare for some months by a drift, that it blossomed and
-bore fruit, and again mysteriously disappeared. Curious visitors, too,
-can still see, in the open spaces where the black earth of the ancient
-fields is exposed, the regular ridges and furrows as they were left
-by the flying farmers; and the ruts of cart-wheels two hundred years
-old are yet to be traced in the long-hidden soil. Flint arrowheads,
-bronze pins and ornaments, iron fish-hooks and spear-points, as well
-as numerous nails, and sometimes an ancient coin, are to be picked
-up about the mouldered sites of long-buried villages; but the mansion
-of Kinnaird, the only stone house on the estate, lies yet beneath a
-mighty sandhill, as it was hidden by the historic storm which in three
-days overwhelmed nineteen farms, altered by five miles the course of
-a river, and blotted out a prosperous country-side. Pray Heaven that
-yonder terrible white line by the sea may not rise again some night on
-its tempest wings to carry that ruin farther!
-
-Over the firth, looking backward as the highway at lasts bends inland,
-the red cliffs of Cromarty show their long line in the sun, and, with
-the yellow harvest-fields above them, hardly fulfil sufficiently the
-ancient name of the “Black Isle.” Not a sail is to be seen on the open
-firth, only the far-stretching waters, under the sunny sky, bicker with
-the “many-twinkling smile of ocean.” Here, though, two miles out of
-Nairn, where the many-ricked farmhouses lie snug among their new-shorn
-fields, the road rises into the trim village of Auldearn.
-
-Neat as possible are the little gardens before the cottages, bright
-yet with late autumn flowers. Yellow marigolds glisten within the low
-fences beside dark velvety calceolarias and creamy stocks; while the
-crimson flowers of tropeolum cover the cottage walls up to the thatch,
-and some pale monthly roses still bloom about the windows. A peaceful
-spot it is to-day, yet a spot with a past and a grim tale of a hundred
-years before Culloden. Here it was that in 1645 Montrose, fighting
-gallantly for the First Charles, drove back into utter rout the army of
-the covenanting Parliament. On the left, among sheepfolds and dry-dyke
-inclosures, lay his right wing with the royal standard; nearer, to the
-right, with their backs to the hill, stood the rest of his array with
-the cavalry; and here in the village street, between the two wings,
-his few guns deceived the enemy with a show of force. It was from the
-church tower, up there in front, that Montrose surveyed the position;
-and below, in the little churchyard and church itself, lie many of
-those who fell in the battle. They are all at peace now, the eastern
-Marquis and the western, Montrose and Argyle: long ago they fought out
-their last great feud, and departed.
-
-The country about has always been a famous place for witches, and
-doubtless the three who fired Macbeth with his fatal ambition belonged
-to Auldearn. Three miles beyond the village the road runs across the
-Hardmuir, and there it was that the awful meeting took place. The moor
-is planted now with pines, and the railway runs at less than a mile’s
-distance; but even when the road is flooded with sunshine, there hangs
-a gloom among the trees, and a strange feeling of eeriness comes upon
-the intruder in the solitude. On the left a gate opens into the wood,
-and the witches’ hillock lies at some distance out of sight.
-
-Utterly silent the place is! Not a breath of air is moving, and the
-atmosphere has become close and sultry. There is no path, for few
-people follow their curiosity so far. Dry ditches and stumps of old
-trees make the walking difficult; withered branches of pine crackle
-suddenly sometimes under tread; and here and there the fleshy finger of
-a fungus catches the eye at a tree root.
-
-And here rises the hillock. On its bald and blasted summit, in the
-lurid corpse-light, according to the old story,
-
- The weird sisters, hand in hand,
- Posters of the sea and land,
- Thus do go about, about,
-
-when Macbeth, approaching the spot with Banquo, after victory in the
-west over Macdonald of the Isles, exclaims:
-
- So foul and fair a day I have not seen!
-
-and the hags, suddenly confronting the general, greet him with the
-triple hail of Glamis, Cawdor, and King.
-
-The blasted hillock was indeed a fit spot for such a scene. Not a blade
-of grass grows upon it; the withered needles and cones of the pines lie
-about, wan and lifeless and yellow; and on one side, where the witches
-emptied their horrid caldron, and the contents ran down the slope, the
-earth remains bare, and scorched, and black. Even the trees themselves
-which grow on the hillock appear of a different sort from those on the
-heath around.
-
-Antiquaries set the scene of fulfilment of the witches infernal
-promptings--Macbeth’s murder of King Duncan--variously at Inverness,
-Glamis, and Bothgofuane, a smithy near Forres. Popular tradition,
-however, points to Cawdor, and less than seven miles from the fatal
-heath the Thane’s great moated keep frowns yet among its woods.
-
-But what is this? The air has grown suddenly dark; the gloom becomes
-oppressive; and in the close heat it is almost possible to imagine
-a smell of sulphur. A flash of lightning, a rush of wind among the
-tree-tops, and a terrible crash of thunder just overhead! A moment’s
-silence, a sound as if all the pines were shaking their branches
-together, a deluging downpour of rain, and the storm has burst. The
-spirits of the air are abroad, and the evil genius of the place is
-awake in demoniac fury. The tempest waxes terrific. The awful gloom
-among the trees is lit up by flash after flash of lightning; the cannon
-of thunder burst in all directions; and the rain pours in torrents. The
-ghastly hags might well revisit the scene of their orgies at such a
-moment.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It is enough. The powers of the air have conquered. It is hardly safe,
-and by no means pleasant, to remain among the pines in such a storm. So
-farewell to the deserted spot, and a bee-line for the open country. To
-make up for the wetting, it is consoling to think that few enthusiasts
-have beheld so realistic a representation of the third scene of
-Macbeth.
-
-
-
-
-AMONG THE GALLOWAY BECKS.
-
-
-It rained heavily at intervals all night, and, though it has cleared a
-little since day-break, there is not a patch of blue to be seen yet in
-the sky, and the torn skirts of the clouds are still trailing low among
-the hills. The day can hardly brighten now before twelve o’clock, and
-as the woods, at anyrate, will be rain-laden and weeping for hours, the
-walk through “fair Kirkconnel Lea” is not to be thought of. The lawn,
-too, is out of condition for tennis. But see! the burn, brown with peat
-and flecked with foam, is running like ale under the bridge, and though
-the spate is too heavy for much hope of catching trout down here, there
-will be good sport for the trouble higher up among the moorland becks.
-Bring out the fishing-baskets, therefore, some small Stewart tacklings,
-and a canister of bait. Put up, too, a substantial sandwich and a
-flask; for the air among the hills is keen, and the mists are sometimes
-chilly.
-
-Wet and heavy the roads are, and there will be more rain yet, for the
-pools in the ruts are not clear. The slender larch on the edge of the
-wood has put on a greener kirtle in the night, and stands forward like
-a young bride glad amid her tears. If a glint of sunshine came to kiss
-her there, she would glitter with a hundred rain-jewels. The still,
-heavy air is aromatic with the scent of the pines. By the wayside the
-ripening oats are bending their graceful heads after the rain, like
-Danae, with their golden burden, while the warrior hosts of the barley
-beyond hold their spiky crests white and erect.
-
-The long, springing step natural on the heather shortens the road to
-the hills; and already a tempting burn or two have been crossed by the
-way. But nothing can be done without rods; and these have first to be
-called for at the shepherd’s.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A quiet, far-off place it is, this shieling upon the moors, with the
-drone of bees about, and the bleating of sheep. The shepherd himself is
-away to the “big house” about some “hogs,” but his wife, a weather-grey
-woman of sixty, with rough hospitable hands and kindly eyes, says that
-“maybe Jeanie will tak’ a rod to the becks.” Jeanie, by her dark
-glance, is pleased with the liberty; and indeed this lithe, handsome
-girl of fifteen will not be the least pleasant of guides, with her hair
-like the raven’s wing, and on her clear features the thoughtful look of
-the hills.
-
-Here are the rods, straight ash saplings of convenient length, with
-thin brown lines.
-
-“Ye’ll come back and tak’ a cup o’ tea; and dinna stay up there if it
-rains,” says the goodwife, by way of parting.
-
-Jeanie is frank and interesting in speech, with a gentle breeding
-little to be expected in so lonely a place. She has the step of a deer,
-and seems to know every tuft of grass upon the hills. There is not so
-much heather in Galloway as in the West Highlands. A long grey bent
-takes its place, and on mossy ground the white tufts of the cotton
-grass appear.
-
-But here is a chance for a trial cast. A small burn comes down a side
-glen, and, just before it joins the main stream, runs foaming into a
-deeper pool. Keep well back from the bank, impale a tempting worm on
-the hook, and drop it in just where the water runs over the stones.
-Let the line go: the current carries it at once into the pool. There!
-The bait is held. Strike quickly down stream: the trout all swim
-against the current. But it is not a fish; the hook has only caught on
-a stone. Disentangle it, and try again. This time there is no mistaking
-the wriggle at the end of the rod; with a jerk the hungry nibbler is
-whipped into the air, and alights among the grass, a dozen yards from
-his native pool. A plump little fish he proves, his pretty brown sides
-spotted with scarlet, as he gasps and kicks on _terra firma_.
-
-Not another trout, however, can be tempted to bite in that eddy; the
-fish are too well fed by the spate, or too timid. “There will be more
-to catch,” says Jeanie, “higher up the becks.” She is right. Perhaps
-the trout in these narrow streamlets are less sophisticated than their
-kind lower down, for in rivulets so narrow as almost to be hidden by
-the bent-grass there seem plenty of fish eager to take the bait. These
-are darker in colour than the trout in the river, taking their shade
-from the peat, and though small, of course, averaging about a quarter
-of a pound in weight, are plump, and make merry enough rivalry in the
-whipping of them out.
-
-But the mists droop lower overhead, and a small smirring rain has been
-falling for some time; so, as Jeanie, at least, has a fair basketful,
-it will be best to put up the lines, discuss a sandwich under the
-shelter of the birches close by, and hold a council of war.
-
-Desolate and silent are these grey hillsides. Hardly a sheep is to
-be seen; the far-off cry of the curlew is the only sound heard; and
-as the white mists come down and shroud the mountains, there is an
-eerie, solemn feeling, as at the near presence of the Infinite.
-Something, however, must be done. The rain is every moment coming down
-more heavily, and the small leaves of the birches afford but scant
-protection. Off, then; home as fast as possible! The mountain maid
-knows a shorter way over the hill; and lightly and swiftly she leads
-the Indian file along the narrow sheep-path. On the moor, amid the grey
-mist and rain, appear the stone walls of a lonely sheepfold; and just
-below, in the channel of the beck, lies the deep pool, swirling now
-with peaty water and foam, where every year they wash the flocks.
-
-The shepherd’s wife appears at her door. Her goodman is home. A great
-peat fire is glowing on the warm hearth, and she is “masking the tea.”
-“Ye’ll find a basin of soft water in the little bedroom there, and
-ye’ll change ye’re coats and socks, and get them dried,” says the
-kindly woman.
-
-This is real hospitality. The rough coats and thick dry socks bespeak
-warm-hearted thoughtfulness; and a wash in clean water after the
-discomforts of fishing is no mean luxury. The small, low-raftered
-bedroom, with quaintly-papered walls, and little window looking out
-upon the moors, is comfortably furnished; and the stone-floored
-kitchen, clean and bright and warm, with geraniums flowering in the
-window, has as pleasant a fireside seat as could be desired. Why should
-ambition seek more than this, and why are so many hopeless hearts
-cooped up in the squalid city?
-
-Here comes Jeanie down from the “loft,” looking fresher and prettier
-than ever in her dry wincey dress, with a little bit of blue ribbon at
-the throat. The tea is ready; her mother has fried some of the trout,
-and the snowy table is loaded with thick white scones, thin oatmeal
-cakes, home-made bramble jelly, and the freshest butter. Kings may be
-blest; but what hungry man needs more than this? The shepherd, too, is
-well-read, for does not Steele and Addison’s “Spectator” stand there on
-the shelf, along with Sir Walter Scott, Robert Burns, and the Bible?
-With fare like this for body and mind, man may indeed become “the
-noblest work of God.”
-
-But an hour has passed, too quickly; the rain has cleared at last,
-and away to the south and west the clouds are lifting in the sunset.
-Yonder, under the clear green sky, glistens the treacherous silver
-of the Solway, and as far again beyond it in the evening light rises
-the dark side of Skiddaw, in Cumberland. The gravel at the door lies
-glistening after the shower, the yellow marigolds in the little plot
-are bright and opening, and the moorland air is perfumed with mint
-and bog-myrtle. A hearty handshake, then, from the shepherd, a warm
-pressing to return soon from his goodwife, a pleasant smile from
-Jeanie, and the road must be taken down hill with a swinging step.
-
-
-
-
-IN KILT AND PLAID.
-
-
-All dust has been swept from the causeways by the clear wind from the
-firth, as if in preparation for this great gala-day of the North.
-Unusual stir and movement fill the streets of the quiet Highland town,
-and the bright sunshine glitters everywhere on jewelled dirk and brooch
-and skeandhu. The clean pavements are ringing far and near with the
-quick, light step of the Highlander, and, from the number of tartans to
-be seen, it might almost be thought that the Fiery Cross was abroad, as
-in days of old, for the gathering of the clans.
-
-Sad enough are the memories here of the last war summons of the chiefs.
-High-hearted, indeed, was the town on the morning when the clans
-marched forth under “Bonnie Prince Charlie” to do battle for the Stuart
-cause. But before an April day had passed, the gates received again,
-flying from fatal Culloden, the remnants of the broken chivalry of
-the North, and the streets themselves shook under the thunder of the
-Lowland guns.
-
-The wounds of the past, however, are healed, the feuds are forgotten,
-and the clouds of that bygone sorrow have been blown away by the winds
-of time. A lighter occasion now has brought gaiety to the town, and the
-heroes of the hour go decked with no ominous white cockade. Already
-in the distance the wild playing of the pipes can be heard, and at
-the sound the kilted clansmen hurry faster along the streets; for the
-business of the day is on the greensward, and the hill folk, gentle and
-simple, are gathering from far and near to witness the Highland games.
-
-A fair and appropriate scene is the tourney-ground, with the mountains
-looking down upon it, purple and silent--the Olympus of the North. The
-eager crowd gathers thick already, like bees, round the barricade.
-Little knots of friends there, from glens among the hills, discuss the
-chances of their village hero. Many a swarthy mountaineer is to be
-seen, of pure Celtic blood, clear eyed and clean limbed, from far-off
-mountain clachan. Gamekeepers and ghillies there are, without number,
-in gala-day garb. And the townspeople themselves appear in crowds. On
-every side is to be heard the emotional Gaelic of the hills, beside the
-sweet English speech for which the town is famous, and only sometimes
-one catches the broader accent of a Lowland tongue.
-
-The lists have just been cleared, and the “chieftain” of the day has
-gathered his henchmen around him. The games are about to begin.
-
-Yonder go the pipers, half a dozen of them, their ribbons and tartans
-streaming on the wind. Featly they step together to the quick tune of
-the shrill mountain march they are playing. Deftly they turn in a body
-at the boundary, and brightly the cairngorms of their broad silver
-shoulder-brooches flash all at once in the sun. No wonder it is that
-the Highlander has the tread of a prince, accustomed as he is to the
-spring of the heather beneath his feet, and to music like that in the
-air. The Highland garb, too, can hardly fail to be picturesque when it
-is worn by stalwart fellows like these.
-
-The programme of the games is very full, and several competitions are
-therefore carried on at the same time. Here a dozen fleet youths speed
-past on the half-mile racecourse. Some lithe ghillies yonder are doing
-hop, step, and leap to an astonishing distance. And, farther off,
-five brawny fellows are preparing to “put” the heavy ball. Out of the
-tent close by come some sinewy men, well stripped for the encounter,
-to try a bout of wrestling. A pair at a time, they wind their strong
-arms about each other, and each strains and heaves to give his rival a
-fall. One man scowls, and another smiles as he picks himself up after
-his overthrow--the sympathy of the crowd goes largely by these signs.
-Most, however, display the greatest good-humour, and every one must
-obey the ruling of the umpire. Gradually the two stoutest and heaviest
-men overcome the rest; and at last, the only champions remaining, they
-stand up to engage each other. The grey-headed man has some joke to
-make as he hitches up his belt before closing, and the bystanders laugh
-heartily at his pleasantry; but his opponent evidently looks upon the
-contest too seriously for that. Hither and thither they stagger in “the
-grips,” the back of each as rigid as a plank at an angle of forty-five
-degrees. More than once they loosen hold for a breath, and again grasp
-each other, till at last, by dint of sheer strength, the grey-headed
-wrestler draws the younger man to himself, and, with a sudden toss,
-throws him clear upon the ground.
-
-The slim youths at the pole-vaulting look like white swallows as they
-swing high into the air on their long staves to clear the bar; and a
-roar of applause from the far end of the lists, where the dogged “tug
-of war” has been going on, tells that one of the teams of heavy fellows
-straining at the rope has been hauled over the brink into the dividing
-ditch. The brawny giants who were throwing the axle a little while
-ago are just now breathing themselves, and will be tossing the mighty
-caber by and by. And ever and anon throughout the day there float upon
-the breeze the wild strains of the competing pipers--pibrochs and
-strathspeys and “hurricanes of Highland reels.”
-
-Meanwhile the grand pavilion has filled. Lord and lady, earl and
-marquis and duke are there. And beside these are others, heads of
-families, who count their chieftainship, it may be, through ten
-centuries, and who are to be called neither esquire nor lord, but just
----- of that Ilk. Chiefs by right of blood, they need no other title
-than their name.
-
-The presence of so much that is noble and illustrious lends a feudal
-interest to the games, and imports to the rivalry something of that
-desire to appear well in the eyes of the chief which was once so
-powerful an influence in the Highlands. The young ghillie here, who has
-out-stripped all but one competitor at throwing the hammer, feels the
-stimulus of this. He knows not only that his sweetheart’s eyes are bent
-eagerly upon him from the barrier at hand, but that he has a chance of
-distinguishing himself before his master and “her ladyship,” who are
-watching from under the awning yonder. So he breathes on his hands,
-takes a firm grasp of the long ash handle, and, vigorously whirling
-the heavy iron ball round his head, sends it with all his strength
-across the lists. How far has it gone? They chalk the distance up on
-a board--95½ feet. There is a clapping of hands from the crowd, and a
-waving of white kerchiefs from the pavilion. He is sure of winning now,
-and the shy, pretty face at the barrier flushes with innocent pride. Is
-he not _her_ hero?
-
-There, on the low platform before the judges, go the dancers, two after
-two. They are trimly dressed for the performance, and wear the thin,
-low-heeled Highland shoes, while the breasts of some of them are fairly
-panoplied in gold and silver medals won at former contests. Mostly
-young lads, it is wonderful how neatly they perform every step, turning
-featly with now one arm in the air and now the other. Cleverly they go
-through the famous sword dance over crossed claymores, and in the wild
-whirl of the Reel o’ Tulloch seem to reach the acme of the art.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-But in the friendly rivalry of skill and strength the day wears on.
-The races in sacks and over obstacles, as well as the somewhat rough
-“bumping in the ring,” have all been decided; the “best dressed
-Highlander” has received his meed of applause; and the sun at last
-dips down behind the hills. Presently, as the mountain-sides beyond
-the river are growing grey, and their shadows gather upon the lists,
-the spectators melt by degrees from the barricades, and in a slow
-stream move back into the town. By and by the Assembly Rooms will be
-lit up, and carriages will begin to arrive with fair freights for the
-great Caledonian Ball. But, long before that, the upland roads will be
-covered with pedestrians and small mountain conveyances with family
-parties--simple folk, all pleased heartily with their long day’s
-enjoyment, and wending their way to far-off homes among the glens,
-where they will talk for another twelvemonth of the great feats done at
-the gathering here by Duncan or Fergus or Hamish.
-
-
-
-
-AT THE FOOT OF BEN LEDI.
-
-
-Sit here in the stern of the boat, and let her drift out on the
-glassy waters of the loch. After the long sultry heat of the day it
-is refreshing to let one’s fingers trail in these cool waters, and
-to watch the reflection of the hills above darkening in the crystal
-depths below. Happy just now must be the speckled trout that dwell in
-the loch’s clear depths; and when the fiery-flowering sun rolls ablaze
-in the zenith there are few mortals who will not envy the cool green
-domain of the salmon king. But now that the sunset has died away upon
-the hills, like “the watch-fires of departing angels,” a breath of air
-begins mysteriously to stir along the shore, and from the undergrowth
-about the streamlet that runs close by into the loch, blackbird and
-water-ousel send forth more liquid pipings. The cuckoos, that all day
-long have been calling to each other across loch and strath, now with a
-more restful “chuck! chu-chu, chu, chuck!” are flitting, grey flakes,
-from coppice to coppice, preparatory to settling for the night The
-grouse-cocks’ challenge, “kibeck, kibeck, kibeck!” can still be heard
-from their tourney-ground on the moraine at the moor’s edge; and from
-the heath above still comes the silvery “whorl-whorl-whorl” of the
-whaup. These sounds can be heard far off in the stillness of the dusk.
-
-But listen to this mighty beating of the waters, and look yonder! From
-the shadow of the hazels on the loch’s margin comes the royal bird of
-Juno, pursuing his mate. In his eager haste he has left the water, and
-with outstretched neck, beating air and loch into foam with his silver
-wings, he rushes after her. She, with the tantalising coyness of her
-sex, has also risen from the water, and, streaming across the loch,
-keeps undiminished the distance between herself and her pursuer. At
-this, finding his efforts vain, he gives up the chase, subsiding upon
-the surface with a force which sends the foam-waves curling high about
-his breast. Disdainfully he turns his back upon the fair, and, without
-once inclining his proud black beak in her direction, makes steadily
-for the shore. This, however, does not please the lady. She turns,
-looks after her inconstant lover, and, meeting with no response,
-begins slowly to sail in his direction. Suddenly again at this, with
-snowy pinions erect, neck curved gallantly back, and the calm waters
-foaming round his breast, he surges after her, ploughing up the loch
-into shining furrows. Again the coy dame flees, again and again the
-same amorous manœuvres are gone through, and when night itself falls,
-the splendid birds will still be dallying over their long-certain
-courtship. No plebeian affair is the mating of these imperial denizens
-of the loch. Seldom do mortals witness even this wooing of the swans.
-
-More commonplace, though not, perhaps, less happy, are the three brown
-ducks and their attentive drake, which having, one after another,
-splashed themselves methodically on the flat stone by the margin of the
-loch, now swim off in a string for home. Young trout are making silver
-circles in the water as they leap at flies under the grassy bank; and
-the keen-winged little swallows that skim the surface, sometimes tip
-the glassy wave with foot or wing.
-
-Before the daylight fades there are beautiful colours to be seen on
-shore. The fresh young reeds that rise at hand like a green mist out
-of the water deepen to a purple tint nearer the margin. The march dyke
-that comes down to the shallows is covered with the red chain-mail
-of a small-leaved ivy; and the gean-tree beside it, that a week or
-two ago raised into the blue sky creamy coral-branches of blossom,
-still retains something of its fragile loveliness. On the stony meadow
-beyond, the golden whinflower is fading now, but is being replaced by
-the paler yellow splendour of the broom. The rich blush-purple of some
-heathy banks betrays the delicate blossom of the blaeberry, and patches
-of brown show where the young bracken are uncurling their rusty tips.
-
-And silent and fair on the mountain descends the shadowy veil of night.
-Darkening high up there against the sapphire heaven, the dome-topped
-hill, keeping watch with the stars, has treasured for twenty centuries
-strange memories of an older world. Whether or not, in the earth’s
-green spring, it served as a spot of offering for some primeval race,
-no man now can tell. But long before the infant Christ drew breath
-among the far-off Jewish hills, grave Druid priests ascended here to
-offer worship to their Unknown God. On the holy Beltane eve, the First
-of May, the concourse gathered from near and far, and as the sun, the
-divine sign-manual set in the heavens, arose out of the east, they
-welcomed his rising with an offering of fire. From sea to sea across
-dim Scotland, from the storm-cloven peaks of Arran to the sentinel dome
-of the Bass, could be seen this mountain summit; and from every side
-the awed inhabitants, as they looked up and beheld the clear fire-jewel
-glittering on Ben Ledi’s brow, knew that Heaven had once more favoured
-them with the sacred gift of flame. For the light on the mountain-top,
-like the altar fires of the Chaldean seers on the hills of the East of
-old, was understood to be kindled by the hand of God; every hearth in
-the land had been quenched, and the people waited for the new Bal-tein,
-or Baal-fire from Heaven, for another year.
-
-Rude these people may have been--though that is by no means
-certain,--but few races on earth have had a nobler place of worship
-than this altar-mountain, which they called the Hill of God.
-
-The climber on Ben Ledi to-day passes, near the summit, the scene
-of a sad, more modern story. On the shoulder of the mountain lies a
-small, dark tarn. It is but a few yards in width, yet once it acted
-a part in a terrible tragedy. Amid the snows of winter, and under a
-leaden heaven, a funeral party was crossing the ridge, when there was
-a crash; the slow wail of the pipes changed into a shriek of terror,
-and a hundred mourners, with the dead they were carrying, sank in the
-icy waters to rise no more. That single moment sufficed to leave sixty
-women husbandless in Glen Finglas below. No tablet on that wind-swept
-moor records the half-forgotten disaster; only the eerie lapping of the
-lochlet’s waves fills the discoverer with strange foreboding; and at
-dusk, it is said, the lonely ptarmigan may be seen, like souls of the
-departed, haunting the fatal spot.
-
-On a knoll at the mountain foot, where the Leny leaves Loch Lubnaig,
-lies the little Highland burial-place to which the clansmen were
-bearing their dead comrade. Only a low stone wall now remains round
-the few quiet graves; but here once stood the chapel of St Bride, and
-from the Gothic arch of its doorway Scott, in his “Lady of the Lake,”
-describes the issuing of a blithesome rout, gay with pipe-music and
-laughter, when the dripping messenger of Roderick Dhu rushed up and
-thrust into the hand of the new-made groom the Fiery Cross of the
-Macgregors--
-
- “The muster place is Lanrick mead;
- Speed forth the signal! Norman, speed!”
-
-Well did the poet paint the parting of bride and groom; and to-day on
-the mossy stones of the little burial-place are to be read the wistful
-words of many who have bid each other since then a last good-bye.
-Surely the arcana of earth’s divinest happiness is only opened by the
-golden key of love. Sweet, indeed, must be that companionship which
-unclasps not with resignation even when sunset is fading upon the hills
-of life, and the shadows are coming in regretful eyes, but would fain
-stretch forth its yearnings through the pathways of a Hereafter. Simple
-and lacking excitement may be the lives of the folk who dwell under
-these hills, but something of the sublime surely is latent in hearts
-whose hopes extend beyond a time when heaven and earth shall have
-passed away.
-
-
-
-
-CADZOW FOREST.
-
-
-High on the edge of the crumbling cliff here, like the grey eyrie of
-some keen-winged falcon, hangs the ruined keep of Cadzow. Bowered and
-all but hidden by the leafy luxuriance of “the oak and the ash and the
-bonnie ivy-tree,” with the Evan roaring down its rocky bed far below at
-the foot of the sheer precipice, there is enough left of this ancestral
-home of the Hamiltons to give some idea of its ancient strength.
-Perched where it was unassailable on one side save by foes who had the
-gift of wings; on the other hand, the deep moss-grown moat and the
-massive remains of thick walls tell how secure a refuge it gave to its
-possessors. Secluded, too, in the depths of the old Caledonian forest,
-the fastness had endless facilities for secret communication and for
-safe hiding in case of necessity, and the deeds of its owners need have
-been subject to the curiosity of prying eye. Who can tell what captives
-have languished in the dungeons into which now, at places through the
-broken arch, the sunshine makes its way? Birds have built their nests,
-and twitter joyously about their callow young, where once only the
-sighs of the prisoner were heard and the iron clank of his chain. Alas!
-he had not the linnet’s wing to fly out and speed away along these
-sunny woodland paths.
-
-But not vindictive above their peers were the chiefs of the ancient
-race that held these baronies. Rather has the gleam of romance come
-here to lighten the records of their gloomy age. For it was within
-these walls, tradition says, that Queen Mary found an asylum upon
-the night following that of her escape from Loch Leven Castle--a
-tradition the more likely to be true since the Hamilton Palace of that
-day was but a rude square tower. And it is easy to imagine how in
-that sweet May morning, the second of her new-born liberty and of her
-fresh-reviving hopes, the eyes of the fair unfortunate Queen may have
-filled with tears of happiness as she gazed from this casement forth
-upon the green waving forests and the silver Evan in its gorge below,
-and heard in the courtyard and the woods behind the tramp of horses and
-the ring of arms. Alas! whatever her frailties, she suffered sorely
-for them. There are few perhaps whose errors lie so much at the door
-of circumstance. From the Rout of Solway, which heralded her birth, to
-the last sad scene at Fotheringay, her life was a walk of tears; and
-the student of her reign is tempted to think that had she been a less
-lovable woman she might have been a more successful queen. That was the
-last gleam of sunshine in her life, the eleven days between Loch Leven
-and Langside. Short was the respite, but it must have been sweet, and
-doubtless these Hamiltons made chivalrous hosts. They fought for her
-gallantly at anyrate, if in vain, for they were the foremost to rush
-against her enemies’ spears in the steep narrow lane at Langside.
-
-And at last she rode away from this place, surrounded by a brave little
-troop of nobles, their armour glancing in the sun as they caracoled off
-along these grassy forest glades. Then amid the restored quiet, only
-the whisper of the woods about them and the murmur of the river far
-below, the women waited here, listening. Presently, sudden and ominous,
-they heard a sound in the distance--cannonading near Glasgow, ten miles
-away. The Queen had been intercepted on her journey to Dunbarton.
-There was not much of the sound, and it died feebly.
-
-Hours afterwards, anxious waiting hours, down these forest avenues,
-slowly, with drooping crest and broken spear, came riding the lord of
-the castle, haggard, and almost alone. For of the gallant gentlemen who
-had followed him to Langside many had fallen upon the field, and the
-rest were scattered and fleeing for their lives.
-
-What sorrowings then for those who would never return must there have
-been within these walls--what aching hearts for those who had escaped!
-The smoke of the houses in Clydesdale, fired by the victorious army of
-the Regent, could almost be seen from here; and day after day news came
-of friends taken and friends in flight, until it was whispered that
-the Queen herself was a prisoner in the hands of the English Warden. A
-weary and anxious time it must have been; but the danger passed, and
-the hour of reprisal came.
-
-Through these woods, according to the tradition preserved by Sir
-Walter Scott, on a January afternoon less than two years after the
-battle of Langside, a hunting-party was returning to the castle. Amid
-the fast-falling shadows of the winter day they were bringing home
-their quarry--the wild bull whose race still roams these glades; and
-the guests and huntsmen were making merry over the success of their
-sport. There was the jingle, too, of hawk-bells, and the bark of
-hounds in leash. But their lord rode in front, silent, with clenched
-hand and clouded brow. He had not forgotten the misfortune that had
-befallen his house, and news of a fresh insult had but lately quickened
-his anger over it. The estate of one of his kinsmen, Hamilton of
-Bothwellhaugh, had been confiscated to a favourite of the Regent, and
-the new possessor, it was said, had used his power with such severity,
-in turning out Bothwellhaugh’s wife and new-born infant on a freezing
-night, that the poor lady had become furiously mad. Brooding darkly and
-bitterly on these evils, the chief was drawing near the castle, when
-there was suddenly heard approaching the heavy gallop of a horse, and
-in another moment Bothwellhaugh sprang to the earth before him. His
-face was wild and pale, and his steed, bespattered with foam and blood,
-drooped its head in exhaustion. Vengeance swift and dire had fallen
-upon the Regent, and, twenty miles away, in Linlithgow Palace, the
-birthplace of the sister he had dethroned, he lay dying. It is for a
-higher Judge than man to say whether his death was that of a martyr or
-of a miscreant; but at the time there were not wanting those who held
-that Bothwellhaugh satisfied with one blow his own private feud and the
-wrath of heaven over the distresses of the Queen. The brass matchlock,
-curiously enough a rude sort of rifle, with which the deed was done,
-lies yet in the palace of the Hamiltons.
-
-Three hundred years ago and more it all happened, and the moss grows
-dark and velvety now on the ruined bridge over which once rang the
-hoofs of Queen Mary’s steed; but the grey and broken walls, silent amid
-the warm summer sunshine, recall these memories of the past. There
-could be no sweeter spot to linger near. Foamy branches of hawthorn
-in spring fill the air here with their fragrance; and in the woodland
-aisles lie fair beds of speedwell, blue as miniature lakes. Under the
-dry, crumbling banks, too, among tufts of delicate fern, are to be seen
-the misty, purple-flowering nettle and the soft green shoots of brier.
-Overhead, in summer luxuriance, spread the broad, palm-like fronds of
-the chestnut; close by, the soft greenery of the beech lets the tinted
-sunshine through; and amid them rises the dark and sombre pine. But,
-venerable above all, on these rolling forest lands, the shattered
-girth of many an ancient oak still witnesses to an age that may have
-seen the rites of the Druids. Monarchs of the primeval wilds, these
-gigantic trees, garlanded now with the green leaf of another year, need
-acres each for the spread of their mighty roots; while as withies in
-comparison appear the cedars of a century.
-
-And down these forest avenues, the home of his sires from immemorial
-time, where his hoof sinks deep in the primeval sward, and there is
-no rival to answer his hoarse bellow of defiance, comes the lordly
-Caledonian bull. Never yet has the race been tamed, and the cream-white
-hide and black muzzle, horn, and hoof bespeak the strain of its ancient
-blood. There is a popular belief, indeed, that when the white cattle
-become extinct the house of Hamilton will pass away. Here, then, in the
-forgotten solitude, where seldom along the grassy woodland ways comes
-the foot of the human wanderer, the mountain bull keeps guard with his
-herd over the scene of that old and sorrowful story.
-
-
-
-
-A FISHER TOWN.
-
-
-Keen and strong, and steady to-night in the gathering dusk, the wind is
-coming up the firth out of the east. Darkling clouds roll low along the
-sky, and, before the breeze, the waves in their unnumbered hosts, like
-dark hussars white-crested, ride past to break upon the beach-sands
-yonder inland at Fort George. The full, deep gale brings with it out of
-the shadowy east the health of a hundred tumbling seas, and sets the
-glad life dancing in lip, and eye, and heart; while the music of the
-rushing waves, like the drums of far-off armies, stirs the soul with
-the daring of great purposes. Little need, therefore, is there to pity
-the fisher women and children far out at the ebb-tide edge gathering
-bait among the reefs. Clear are their eyes as the sea-pools over which
-they bend, and while sun and wind have made their skins brown as the
-wet sand itself, many a drawing-room beauty would give her diamonds
-for such a wealth of raven hair. Even at this distance the happy voices
-of the children, a pleasant murmur, speak of free and simple hearts.
-Sport on, happy children! Rejoice in your brown brood, simple mothers!
-Not yours are the pale cheek and the wasted form, the lifeless eye
-and the languid step. Sometimes, it may be, when the winds rise and
-the waves come thundering upon the beach, there are anxious hours for
-you because of husband or father tossing out there somewhere in the
-darkness; sometimes, alas! a sore heart and many tears when the little
-knot of sad and silent men come up from the beach and lay gently upon
-its pillow the pale wet face that will speak to you no more. But yours,
-at least, are not the fetid atmosphere of cities and their weary miles
-of pavement; for you the smile of Heaven is not veiled by a sin-black
-pall of smoke; and when the dark angel does come to your humble
-dwellings, and the last “Good-byes!” have to be said, it is not amid
-the heartless roar and the squalor of city streets, but amid the sweet,
-salt smell, and listening to the strange and solemn “calling” of the
-sea.
-
-A race by themselves are these fisher-folk, mixing little with the
-people of the upper town, and keeping very much by customs of their
-own. Danish, very likely, or Norse, in origin, their blood remains
-all but as pure yet as it was when their forefathers landed on these
-shores. Seven miles to the eastward along the coast, where the white
-sand-line gleams on the horizon, in places exposed by the shifting
-dunes, are still to be found the remains of villages which belonged
-to the ancestors of these folk, and by these remains--bronze pins,
-fish-hooks, broken pottery, and shell heaps--it seems clear that the
-ancient villagers lived very much the same life as is lived here
-to-day. Only, of late years the steamship and the School Board have
-made some invasions upon traditional ideas.
-
-At hand, spread on the bent-grass to dry, and brown as seaweed itself,
-lie miles of fishing-nets, with their rows of worn cork floats; for the
-herring fishery of the season is over, the west coast boats have gone
-home through the Canal, and the gear is being laid by for the winter.
-In the end of April it will be wanted again for the Loch Fyne fishing,
-but it will be the end of June before the herring nets are used on
-the east coast again. The good woman coming up the shore below with
-her creel and pail of bait--mussels, sand-worms, and silver-gleaming
-needle-fish--is going now to bait for the later white-fishing the “long
-lines,” with their hundreds of hooks, which her husband and his sons
-will take out to set before daylight. To-morrow morning, when the boat
-comes home, she will have to fill her creel with the haddocks, and
-sell them along the country-side; or perhaps the fish will be bought
-at auction by the curers, to be smoked with the smoke of fragrant
-fir-cones into succulent, appetising “speldings.”
-
-The quay-head in the morning, when the fish auction is going on,
-makes a characteristic sight, and displays the only occasion on which
-anything like business wakens in the quiet place.
-
-The boats have come in with the running tide, and lie moored to great
-iron rings in the landing-place. Curious names they have, mostly
-double--the “Elspat and Ann,” or the “Ann and Margaret”--probably
-to represent the wives or sweethearts of two partners. In the boats
-themselves lie together heaps of lines, ropes, and sails, with fish
-gleaming here and there among them; while the quay is littered with
-oars and spars and cables, enough to make walking a fine art. The fish
-have been lifted out of each boat by its crew, and when the women have
-divided them into glittering heaps--a heap for each man and one for the
-boat--the skipper sells the boat’s heap, and its price settles that of
-the others. Here the shrewd bargaining power of the fisher-folk comes
-out, trained, as it is, by the narrow path they tread between means and
-ends; while here the women who have no man’s hand to bring them home
-the harvest of the deep contrive to find their bread by buying the fish
-they will afterwards retail. The whole transaction is primitive in the
-extreme, but one that sufficiently serves its purpose.
-
-A life of which this is the busiest scene may appear monotonous to
-the dweller in cities, but again and again there come hours of stern
-excitement which prove the manhood of the race. There have been times
-when every boat of the fishing fleet as it came rushing ashore had to
-be caught, at peril of life and limb, breast-deep in the furious surf,
-and landed safely with its occupants. Yet men are ever most plentiful
-when the work is most dangerous, and never yet has the lifeboat lacked
-a crew.
-
-Once, indeed, a few years ago it happened that the men, all but one or
-two, were away at the fishing, when word was brought that a Norwegian
-timber-ship was going to pieces on the treacherous shifting sands
-yonder, seven miles away. A tremendous surf was beating upon the beach,
-and the lifeboat coxswain and crew were riding the storm out, cabled
-to their herring-nets somewhere in the North Sea. In the upper town,
-however, there was visiting his brother just then the captain of an
-East Indiaman, home upon holiday, and the message was handed to him as
-he sat at breakfast. In half an hour, sailor-like, he had the lifeboat
-out, manned with a scratch crew of volunteers, and run down the beach.
-Then began the difficulty and peril. By strong and willing hands the
-boat was run out into the surf, but again and again she was caught by
-a huge wave and driven back. Three-quarters of an hour’s hard rowing
-it took to pull her out to the fourth sea. A little longer, and she
-hoisted her sail, and went plunging off into the howling wilderness of
-waters.
-
-Would she accomplish her mission? Would she and the brave hearts on
-board her ever themselves come back? Old men and fishers’ wives watched
-her from the quay-head till she disappeared among the waves, and then
-they waited, anxious and fearful.
-
-The day passed without tidings of her, and at last night began to fall.
-The anxiety of the watchers had become intense, when suddenly some
-one caught a glimpse of white bows gleaming far out over the waves.
-There she was, clearly now, coming like a sea-bird through the driving
-spray. Who could tell whether she had won or lost lives? Presently her
-thwarts were seen black with men. She had accomplished her mission; but
-the question yet remained--how were they to be landed? Alas! all might
-yet be lost in the terrible surf. There was a strong hand at the helm,
-however; the full tide had covered the bar, and, with a single swoop,
-she shot into the harbour, every man safe, amid the wild huzzas of the
-waiting throng.
-
-One glad heart there was too full for words. Among the ringing cheers,
-as the crowd made way for its hero, she could only in silence take her
-husband’s arm. It was the captain’s wife.
-
-
-
-
-A LOCH-SIDE SUNDAY.
-
-
-A quarter to twelve. How quiet it is! Only the mellow note of a mavis
-sometimes in the oak woods, and the clear, high treble of a shilfa,
-break on the stillness. The tinkle of the little village smithy, down
-among the trees, is silent. It is the Day of Rest. There was a shower
-of rain in the early morning; it has laid the dust, and left the road
-firm and cool to the tread. Everything is refreshed: wild rosebuds,
-red and white, are everywhere opening after the shower; the yellow
-broom-blossom is softer and brighter; the delicate forget-me-nots have
-a lovelier blue; and beyond, in the shady spaces of the woods, the
-foxgloves raise their spires of drooping bells. The rain, too, has
-brought out afresh every wayside scent; the new-cut clover there in the
-meadow, the flowerless sweetbrier and clambering yellow honeysuckle
-here in the hedge, all fill the air with fragrance. The tide is out,
-almost at full ebb, and from the stony beach below sometimes the
-gentle swaying of the air brings up faintly the fresh smell of seaweed.
-The sun is very warm, and the last of the clouds, floating far up in
-the sky, are melting into the blue. The air is clear yet, though, and
-on the other side of the loch the sheep--small white dots--can be quite
-well seen feeding high up on the green patches of the mountain. A
-little later the heather will begin to bloom on these brown hillsides,
-and the mighty Bens, seated yonder on their rugged thrones, will
-put on their imperial purple. The loch lying calm below reflects
-perfectly every detail of the opposite hills--shrub and heather and
-shieling! Even the white gull, circling slowly a yard above the water,
-casts its image on the glassy mirror. Out on the open firth, too,
-beyond the low-lying points at the mouth of the loch, the sea, like
-cloth-of-silver, glistens in the sun.
-
-Hark! the bell on the roof of the little kirk among the trees has begun
-to ring, and already, in groups of two and three, the people are coming
-along the loch-side and down the road from the hills. These early
-arrivals mostly travel a long way to attend the service. From quiet
-farmhouses in lonely straths, and solitary shielings on the upland
-moors, some of the simple-hearted folk have wended for hours. Here are
-heavy-footed shepherds, shaggy-bearded and keen-eyed, in rough mountain
-tweed and flat Balmoral bonnets, grasping their long hazel staves, and
-accompanied, more than one of them, by a faithful old collie. There
-are comely lasses, of sun-browned pleasant features, and soft hill
-speech, in sober straw hats, strong boots, and serviceable dresses of
-homespun, with, perhaps, a keepsake kerchief in the bosom for a bit of
-colour. Over high stiles, across uneven stepping-stones, and through
-rugged glens of birch and rowan, they have made their way to attend
-the kirk. Farmers from ten and twelve miles distance come jogging in
-with their wives and daughters in primitive two-wheeled conveyances,
-built for strength, and drawn by shaggy little Highland horses. Here,
-too, come the people from the village--bent old women, their wrinkled
-faces hidden under snowy linen mutches, carrying in their hands, with
-the long-treasured Bible, a sprig of southernwood and sweetwilliam
-to smell at during sermon; the big-bearded, big-handed blacksmith,
-looking wonderfully clean for once; the lithe, sallow-faced tailor;
-and the widow who keeps the store. All linger in the sunny graveyard
-among the moss-grown stones, and while the beadle in the porch keeps
-ringing the bell, greetings are exchanged among friends who meet here
-once a week from distant ends of the parish. The gamekeeper has a word
-to say to the piermaster, the school-mistress comes up talking with
-the housekeeper from the castle, the old men exchange snuff-boxes
-with solemn nods, and young M’Kenzie, who is expecting to be made the
-Duke’s forester, takes the opportunity of getting near and whispering
-something of interest to the blacksmith’s pretty daughter.
-
-Presently, however, they all move into the kirk, dropping their
-“collection” as they pass, upon the plate in the porch, where two
-deacons stand to watch it. Inside, all is very still, though a swallow
-that has flown in and skims about the roof gives an occasional chirrup,
-and the regular rhythm of the bell is faintly heard. The doors remain
-open, yet the sunshine, falling in on the yellow walls, makes the air
-very warm, and through the clear lattice windows the cattle in the
-glebe close by can be seen whisking the flies from their sides under
-the larches. The old precentor has just come in from the vestry with
-his list of the psalm-tunes, and in his seat under the pulpit, is
-polishing his spectacles by way of preparation.
-
-At last the bell stops: there follows a tramp, tramp of heavy feet, and
-the youth of the parish, who by immemorial custom have been hanging
-about outside till the last moment, file solemnly down the aisles to
-their seats. The beadle carries in Bible and psalm-book, and, after a
-moment’s pause, the minister, in ample black gown and white neck-bands,
-reverently enters and ascends the pulpit.
-
-All is perfectly still for a minute while he bows his head; and then in
-a low tremulous voice he reads the verses of the rhymed psalm that is
-to be sung. The precentor leads off the singing, for there is no organ,
-and as he beats time with his tuning-fork, the praise that ascends, if
-not perhaps of perfect harmony, is at least sincere. More is felt by
-these simple folk than is apparent on the surface. Associations of many
-sorts influence them in the place. Pulpit and pew have been occupied
-and passed from father to son for generations; memories of the past
-and hopes of the future alike gather here, and the place is sacred to
-them all. The grey-haired minister, standing where his father once
-stood hears rising about him, with the praise of the child lips he
-has baptized, the quavering voices of those who were young when he was
-young; and his thoughts are of years gone by. The young forester in the
-raftered “loft” listens to the singing of a sweet voice in the choir,
-and his eyes grow bright with the hope and strength of days to come.
-The youthful look forward; the aged look back; and both feelings are an
-inspiration of worship.
-
-When the minister has read and prayed--a solemn extempore prayer--and
-they have sung again, the sermon, the principal part of the service,
-begins. The opening of the discourse is like the peaceful morning hour
-of summer. It is the calm, dispassionate statement of truth. Has this
-no effect? Their minds must be moved by fear. Cloud after cloud rolls
-up into the sky: the preacher is marshalling the battalions of his
-argument. Darker and darker they become. No ray of hope can pierce
-that leaden heaven. All deepens to the gloom of despair. Joy has fled:
-the twitter of little birds is still. There comes a sharp question--a
-flash of lightning; then, in a thunder-roll of denunciation, argument
-after argument overwhelms the sinner: the clouds are rent, earth
-trembles, rain falls. Are the hearers not awed? They must be stirred
-by gratitude. The thunders cease, the storm sweeps past, the clear
-light of hope shines again upon earth; a lark flutters up into the sky,
-and the last clouds of fear are melted afar into the rugged gold of
-sunset. The sermon is ended. Those who were not moved by reason, awed
-by terror, or inspired by hope, have been thrilled by the earnestness
-of the preacher. The old have listened with reverent, downcast looks,
-shaking their bent heads ever and again in solemn conviction; while the
-young have sat with earnest eyes riveted on the minister. The discourse
-has continued without a break for three-quarters of an hour, and when
-it is over, the hushed stillness lasts for more than a minute. The
-final prayer is short, condensing and putting in practical form the
-aspirations of the sermon, not neglecting, either, to stir pity “for
-all we love, the poor, the sad, the sinful.” A “paraphrase” is sung
-with renewed fervour, and a solemn benediction ends the service.
-
-Slowly the congregation melts out of the kirk. It has been very close
-inside, and the faint air moving out of doors is most refreshing. The
-tide is flowing in now with a gentle ripple on the beach, and the
-little boat at anchor off-shore has drifted round with the current.
-The sun is striking the west side of the mossy tombstones, the shadows
-of the trees have shifted on the grass, and all traces of the morning
-shower have disappeared. The people linger yet a little about the
-graveyard to talk over points of the sermon. Presently the minister
-comes out of the vestry, and, stopping here and there to say a kindly
-word to some of the old folk, who are pleased by the attention, passes
-across the glebe to the pleasant white manse resting, with deep eaves,
-among its fuchsias and rose-trees.
-
-
-
-
-THE GLEN OF GLOOM.
-
-
-Silence falls upon the gay deck of the floating palace, as, with
-quickly pulsing paddles, she throbs on amid the solitude of these dark
-waters under the mountains. Far away to the south behind, like silver
-in the sunshine, lies the open sea chased by the wind; but above the
-narrowing channel in front the rugged Bens, sombre and vast, frown
-down upon the invader. Purple-apparelled these Bens are now, like
-allied kings asleep after their battles with the storm-giants of the
-North. For the black waves in winter leap here savagely, and gnash
-their gleaming teeth against the mountain-sides; the storm-winds roar
-in anger as they buffet the iron breasts of their captors; and the
-silent frost strains with his strong embrace to crack the great ribs
-of the Titans. But the everlasting hills live on, and the sunshine
-kisses them again and the summer rain weeps upon their scars, while
-their children, the dwellers about their feet, look up and learn to
-love them for their memories with a love strong as life itself. Many a
-Highland heart failed long ago on the march through the Egyptian desert
-when the pipes wailed out “Lochaber no more.” These are the great
-mountains of Lochaber rising huge against the sky in front; and even
-the gay tourist, here on the sunny deck, feels a silence gather about
-his heart as he is borne on under their shadows. The young bride by the
-companion-way nestles closer to her husband as, with grave blue eyes,
-she gazes upon the solemn loneliness of the hills.
-
-But listen! Do you hear? Wild and sweet in the distance over the
-water comes the sound. It is the pipes, and they are playing “Flora
-Macdonald’s Lament.” Yonder, down near the shore--you can make them
-out through the glass--a shooting party has picnicked, and they have
-brought the piper with them. How the colour deepens on the cheek of
-the old Highland gentleman here at the sound! He is just returning
-from many years’ residence abroad, and for the last hour, leaning over
-the deck-rail, he has been feasting his heart upon the sight of the
-mountains. “There is no music like that music,” he exclaims, “over the
-water and among the hills.” To a Highlander, indeed, the sound of the
-pipes is full of many memories, like “the sough of the south wind in
-the trees” of an autumn night. The folk on deck who are from the south
-will know something of it now perhaps. Yesterday, no doubt, some of
-them supposed the ragged vagabond who strutted and blew on a pier-head
-as the steamer passed, a specimen of the pibroch-players. They should
-see a chief’s own hereditary piper march on the castle terrace,
-cairngorm and silver gleaming about him, ribbons streaming on the wind,
-and tartans afloat!
-
-And the steamer draws in to the little wooden pier under the mountain,
-where the horses are waiting. A quiet and peaceful spot it is, with
-the clear green waves washing in among the shining, clinging mussels,
-to break upon the dark blue shingle. Only twice a day is the peaceful
-murmur of these waters broken upon by the coming of the great palace
-steamers, when there is a momentary stir and excitement, the gleam
-of white dresses as visitors come ashore, and the getting of the few
-mail-bags on board. Then presently with churning paddles the steamer
-departs up the loch, leaving behind it on the dark waters a long trail
-of foam; the visitors stow themselves like clustering bees upon the
-high coaches that are in waiting; and the place falls a-dreaming again
-amid the coming and going of the tides.
-
-The five horses in the foremost coach to-day are quite fresh, and as
-the steamer was half an hour late, they have grown restive under the
-reins. The driver now, however, after looking behind to see that all
-is secure, makes his whip crack like a rifle shot, and with prancing
-leader and gallant clatter of hoofs the cavalcade moves off. Above, the
-mountain-side, tufted with heather and bracken and dark with trees,
-overhangs the road, and from the high box-seat one might drop an acorn
-into the waves that wash the foot of the precipice forty feet below.
-After the throbbing deck of the great steamer, and the oily smell of
-engines and cook’s galley, it is pleasant to be bowling along a firm
-road with the honey-scent of the heather in the air, and--yes, it is
-quite certain--the fragrance of peat smoke. For as the road turns
-inland the village opens to view, a double line of dark blue dwellings
-along the mountain foot. Cold, perhaps, these cottages look to a
-southern eye accustomed to warm red brick; but in winter, when the
-storms come roaring down the glens, and the hills are hidden by falling
-snow, the hearths within, heaped with glowing sea-coal and peat, are
-cosy enough for all that. Then the brown fishermen, home from the
-herring harvest of the North Sea, talk over the year’s success as they
-mend their gear by the fireside, and swarthy fellows shut out by the
-snowdrifts from their work in the great slate quarries on the mountain,
-gather to hear the week-old news that has come by the trading steamer.
-Just now it is only women and children who come to the doors to see the
-coach go past.
-
-The horses dash on at a gallop through the village and into the mouth
-of the great glen that opens, rugged and wild and dark, in front.
-Between the mountain walls of that deep and lonely pass reigns an
-awful silence now, broken only by the far-off cry of the curlew and
-the beating of the wild-bird’s wing. Unsought in the corries, the
-hazel-nuts are ripening and the rowan clusters growing red; while along
-the misty precipices, the eagles, undisturbed, are teaching their
-young to fly. All here to-day is desolation, for hand of man has not
-tilled the spot since the terrible night, two hundred years ago, when
-the valley was swept with fire and sword, and a hundred hearths, the
-dwellings of its devoted clan, were buried in smoking ruins. Foul lies
-that dark deed at its perpetrators’ door, and its memory remains a blot
-upon their name.
-
-Gleams of sunshine lie golden on the steep mountain-sides to-day, and
-the purple heather warms them with its bloom; but a storm was raging
-through the pass on that awful winter night, and snow lay thick upon
-the ground, when shriek and musket-shot told that the unsuspecting
-clansmen were being murdered by their guests--guests, too, who,
-though soldiers, were their own neighbours and relations. Tottering
-old men and lisping children were butchered here then to avenge
-the baulked ambition of a cruel statesman; and heart-broken women,
-clasping helpless infants to their breasts, fled shrieking from their
-blood-stained hearths to perish amid the storm.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-And the coach with its holiday occupants will drive at a gallop to the
-head of the glen, and some one will make a jest upon the bard’s choice
-of an abode when Ossian’s cave is pointed out, high up in the precipice
-face. But the heart of the young bride will fill with world-old pity
-as she sees, mouldering among the heather in the valley, the ruins of
-once happy homes; and when the coach comes down again there will be
-tears perhaps in her eyes as she gazes at the chief’s house, and is
-told how the rude soldiers, after shooting her brave old lord before
-her eyes, tore the gold wedding-ring with their teeth from the finger
-of MacIan’s wife, and thrust her out, trembling with age and grief, to
-die of her agony in the snow. For on the loch-shore at the entrance to
-the glen, the house of the chief stands yet, silent, haunted by its
-memories, amid the trees--
-
- Where Sorrow broods in silence evermore
- Among the shadows of eternal hills,
- While at her feet sobs the unceasing sea.
-
-
-
-
-ACROSS BUTE.
-
-
-Tea is over--the large eggs, snowy scones, and home-made cheese that
-loaded the table half an hour ago, have been satisfactorily demolished;
-the full-bodied brown teapot has yielded its final drop, and the
-crofter’s warm-hearted wife is at last assured that her hospitality has
-received ample justice. It is time to go, for there is a nine miles’
-tramp across the island yet to be done.
-
-Wait a little! The good woman and her husband will see us to the hill
-by a short path through their fields. She will “just put a peat on the
-fire first.”
-
-Sweet the air is in the doorway, and peaceful is the hour! The sun is
-just setting beyond the Cantyre hills, and out there, over the water,
-the lonely peaks of Arran are purple in the evening light. Scarcely
-a cloud lingers in the clear green sky, and the calm sea stirs but
-at intervals with the incoming of the tide. The tan-brown sails of
-the fishing-boats that came out of Loch Ranza an hour ago have hardly
-moved a mile yet up Kilbrannan Sound. The rooks have gone home to the
-Mount Stuart woods; the whirr of the reaping-machine in the corn-field
-over there has ceased; all the air is still. The grey smoke rising
-from thatched roofs here and there in the little strath tells that the
-evening meal is being prepared. Presently the darkness will come down,
-and the simple crofter hamlet by the shore will sink to rest. And the
-weary and the disappointed, soiled with the dust of the far-off city,
-striving all their lives after what they will never win, have forgotten
-that sweet bread may be earned on the cornlands, and fair fish caught
-in the sea; that there is music for listening, here by the murmuring
-brooks, and rest in the setting of the sun.
-
-Soft shadows are gathering in the hollows of the hills, and the road
-rising inland through the quiet moors shows its white winding line
-among the heather. This wandering by-path, too, among the fields, is
-pleasant. Fitches are flowering yet, purple and yellow, in the hedges,
-as well as the delicate harebell--bluebell of Scotland--on the bank
-below. The wild poppies have mostly seeded now, but here and there a
-spot of flame tells where a late bloom lingers. Among the feathery
-grasses in this untouched corner of the field rich heads of the pink
-clover are still to be seen, and creamy tufted clouds of meadowsweet
-rise on their dark stems. Above, amid the prickly sprays of wild brier,
-the glossy hips are already a bright yellow, and on the uncut branches
-of the thorn clustering bunches of haws are becoming brown. Along the
-straight “rigs” of the corn-field here, where the crofter was shearing
-to-day, the dusky stooks of oats stand in long rows. The good man
-casts a pleased glance along their lines, for the straw is long this
-year, and the heads are heavy. There is a quiet satisfaction in the
-completion of a day’s work among the fields which never comes to the
-mere mercantile toiler. The ploughman strolls forth at night to gaze at
-the broad acres he has furrowed, and the eye of the reaper is rewarded
-with fair stooks of winnowing grain.
-
-Healthy as could be the crofter’s children look as they pick their
-way with bare feet along the grassy edge of the stubble-field. No one
-need wonder that their cheeks and legs are so chubby and brown; for
-they get their school holidays in harvest-time, and have been helping
-their father, all day long, to bind his sheaves. Both boy and girl
-have caught the clear blue of heaven in their eyes; and the straying
-locks of their bonnetless hair are just the yellow colour of the corn.
-Donald, here, will make a sturdy ploughman some day; and that wild
-Lizzie will soon be a strapping lass. Theirs are the free air of the
-mountain, the lusty bowl of porridge, and thick broth of stalwart kale.
-
-The road lies close beyond this plantation. But, take care! the ground
-is boggy here, and one may sink over the boot-head in the soft peat.
-Step on the hussocks of grass, though, and the footing will be firm
-enough. In the late light, the higher branches of the pines up there
-among their dark green foliage shine as red as copper: it is the colour
-of the rich new bark. Not a blade of grass springs beneath the firs,
-and the floor of the wood, with its carpet of brown fallen needles, is
-soft and dry under foot. Only the green feathery fronds of solitary
-bracken rise here and there in the spaces.
-
-The wood ends at the road, and our little friendly escort need come
-no farther. A hearty handshake from the crofter, a kindly God-speed
-from his wife, a laugh and retreat by Lizzie at suggestion of a kiss,
-and, as we scale the mossy dyke, they turn back among the trees. A
-comfortable, contented couple these are, rearing children that will be
-healthy and strong as themselves. After all, is not this the existence
-that best fulfils life’s real ends? As he cares for the patient beast,
-and reaps the autumn corn, a man need not be told to glorify God; and
-here, under sunshine and starshine, where the fruitful earth smells
-fresh with the rainfall and the dew, he cannot help enjoying Him.
-
-The winding lines of telegraph-poles that mark the road can be seen
-stretching away for miles among the hills. The sun has set now, and
-night, falling earlier in the late autumn, is coming down. It is
-the gloaming hour. Out of the grass-field here by the roadside the
-trailing-footed kine, with patient eyes and deep udders, are turning
-down the hill towards their byre. Their satisfied breathing fills the
-air as they pass with the warm sweet scent of clover. The red-cheeked
-farm-lass fastens the gate-hurdle to its post when the last beast
-has gone, and slowly follows homewards. A comely lass she is, with
-eyes like the sloe, and teeth like milk, and doubtless her sweetheart
-knows she has a soft voice and a dewy lip. This is the traditional
-courting-time in the country--
-
- ’Tween the gloaming and the mirk,
- When the kye comes hame.
-
-Not another creature is to be seen on the upland road; only, now and
-again, the lonely cry of the curlew can still be heard far off upon the
-moor. The last field is passed, and the last shieling lies behind in
-the valley. The air up here is full of the honey-scent of the heather.
-The last belated bee, however, hummed homewards half an hour ago.
-
-The summit of the climb at last! Look! Down there on the left, dark
-and silent under the hills, lies Loch Fad, with, on the far edge
-of it, a glimmer of silver, the reflection of the full-orbed moon.
-Could the birth of Aphrodite be fairer, as she rose from the soft sea
-of the south? Hark! too, there is the sound of lingering footfalls
-on the road in front, and the murmur of a deep voice. The voice
-suddenly ceases, and two figures linked together drift past in the
-dusk. Just a glimpse of shy, happy eyes can be seen--a glimpse worth
-remembering--and the outline of a modest face. It is the old, old
-story. The lovely Pagan goddess of the far Ægæan has worshippers
-yet among these simple-hearted people of the hills. Happy rustic
-dreamers!--gamekeeper’s lad and gardener’s lass, maybe. Sweet is
-their courting-place and courting-time, with the deep woods to listen
-to their whispers, and the stars to look down in kindly sympathy.
-Other lovers there are, alas! whose feet do not tread among the blue
-forget-me-nots, and for whom no blackbird warbles the vesper song.
-
-Civilisation, however, is approaching, and cultivated fields begin to
-occupy the strath. A snipe, beating about in the darkness, has alarmed
-the birds here; peeweets are startling the night with their untimely
-cries, and their white breasts ever and anon glance by the roadside.
-Was that faint sound the first bell of the steamer? There is little
-time to linger. Close below, however, shine the clustered lights of
-Rothesay; presently the bright fire-points of the yachts at anchor in
-the bay appear; the old chapel and its graveyard of stones mouldering
-within their wall is passed--a somewhat eerie place under these dark
-trees by the roadside;--then, half-way among the quaint houses of the
-old town, with their jutting gables, the ancient castle--grey, silent,
-moated--where old King Robert III. died of grief at the news that
-his son James had been taken by the English. With threatening clamour
-the second bell rings up from the steamer, and, with a wild rush down
-through the newer town and across the fashionable esplanade amid the
-dazzling lights and fair promenaders of a seaside resort, there is only
-time to reach the pier and get on board before the last bell rings and
-the moorings are thrown off.
-
-
-
-
-WITH A CAST OF FLIES.
-
-
-“Get up, man; get up! Look at the morning! What glorious sunshine! What
-mists rising on the loch!”
-
-And, indeed, the fresh morning air through the open window, and the
-flood of rich sunlight falling on the opposite wall of the room, are
-enough to dispel all lingering drowsiness. Up, then, for a refreshing
-plunge in the deepest pool of the river, breasting the brown depths
-with the exulting strength that is born of the air of the mountain,
-and casting up, with waves of the sweet murmuring waters, a high-tide
-mark on the white stones that are hot already with the sunshine! Up,
-for a stroll before breakfast along the warm Highland road; to hear the
-cuckoo calling across the valley, and, at the door of the byre, the
-sighing of the patient kine and the soft plash-plashing of the milk in
-the milking-pails! Cool yet is the air of the corrie as it comes from
-the waterfall, and all the mountain-side is musical with the far-off
-call of the grouse. Under the rich-leaved plane-trees there is the hum
-of bees at the green hanging blossoms, and from the meadows by the
-river drift the bleatings of a thousand lambs. Appetite comes here
-keen as a knife if one but stands a moment on the sunny doorstep, and
-the morning meal is enjoyed with a whole-hearted zest that brooks no
-scantiness. Indeed, if there be healing power anywhere on earth for
-the wasted body or the sorrowing soul, it is to be found here among
-the hills. Who can long be sick at heart with that glory of valley and
-sky about him? and who frail of step with his nostrils full of the
-clover-scent and his tread on the springing heather?
-
-The newspapers have to be got at the morning train; and it is curious
-to see how the jaded folk who have been travelling all night in the
-close carriages from the far south open wide the windows to let in the
-mountain air, and begin to revive like flowers that have just been
-watered. Enviously they look at the sunburnt schoolboys, who have come
-panting along the line, and whose faces compare all too well with their
-own pale features.
-
-The letters, too, have to be waited for at the village post-office.
-It is universal supply-shop for the country-side as well, so other
-business can be transacted while Her Majesty’s mails, a very small
-parcel indeed, are being sorted out. Then--for there is nothing needing
-attention in the correspondence--away for the loch side! It is too fine
-a day to waste at the displenishing sale up country, though gig after
-gig has passed, carrying thither farmers on the lookout for bargains.
-A fair breeze has sprung up, and a cloud or two are moving across the
-blue, so there is the chance of a fair day’s sport with the fly. Bring,
-then, the rods, and put some provender in the basket, for there will be
-no coming home for dinner if the trout be taking.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The pleasantest road to the loch will be the path along the
-mountain-side, and old John M’Gregor can be requisitioned as boatman,
-by the way. Yonder he is, under the flowering gean-tree, mending his
-garden wicket. An easy, comfortable life the old man lives, with his
-many-wrinkled, bright-eyed old wife, on their “wee bit bield and
-heathery moor.” In that snug, thatched little cot they have reared a
-stalwart brood--sons whose strong hands are tilling their own broad
-acres in the West, and daughters in southern lands, about whose knees
-are springing, sturdy as seedling oaks, the true materials for future
-nations. But old John and his wife will be beholden to none of them
-yet, and when his little croft has been planted for the summer and his
-peats cast on the moor, when the cow has been turned out to the hill in
-the morning and the calf tethered in the narrow paddock, he is always
-ready to take an oar on the loch. His broad-eaved Balmoral bonnet and
-his rough homespun coat are green with long years of sun and rain;
-but the head and heart below them keep hale as ever. He is full of
-anecdotes about the last laird and his feats with the salmon-rod, and
-it takes a long day of wind on the water to tire his arm when the trout
-are rising.
-
-Quick, though! There is a cloud just now before the sun, and a fish or
-two may be got while the shadow is on the loch. It was a mistake to
-coil up the fly-casts in the tackle-book, for the gut will take some
-wetting to straighten it out again. It is better to keep the flies
-round your hat. There, push the boat off; the water is fairly alive
-with leaping minnows in the shallow bays, and if the bigger fish be
-only as eager there will be plenty of sport. Try a cast or two first
-across the burn mouth; a good chance of something lies there, for the
-trout wait in the running water to seize any food the stream may bring
-down. The boat can drift broadside to the wind, so that it is possible
-to fish both from bow and stern. Bring your line well up behind, and
-then with a turn of the wrist use the switch of the rod to send the
-cast out, fair and straight and light, before you. Take care, though;
-do not begin to work the line before the last fly has touched the
-surface. The day could not be better, with that ripple on the water,
-the wind behind, and the sun in front. Hardly an effort is needed to
-send the line out, and it is possible to put the tail-fly on the very
-spot where a trout has risen. See! here is a little fellow. What a
-splashing he makes as the line draws him up to the boat! The spring of
-the rod itself will lift him over the gunwale. There! you have another;
-a char, by his sides of gleaming silver and copper.
-
-Whirr! Ah! here is a fellow worth catching; two pounds at least, by
-the weight on the rod. How the singing of the reel as he makes off
-gladdens the heart! There he leaps, for the third time; he is off with
-a rush, firmly hooked, surely. “Haud up ye’re p’int!” shouts John in a
-terrific whisper. “It’s awa’ below the boat! Ye’ll lose’t; an’ we’re
-clean a’most--the boat’s a’ but clean!” It is an exciting moment; but
-the hooks have not fouled the boat, and the fish’s freshness is spent.
-Slowly he is drawn in, showing the white of his sides. Now with the
-landing-net; There! he is safe on board--“A gey guid fish,” according
-to the cautious critic. Then comes the inevitable story. The old man
-“minds ae nicht” here at the burn mouth. There was a party of three.
-It was a fine night, but dark, and they kindled a fire, when, whether
-owing to the light or not, they got a great basket of “as fine trouts
-as ye’ll see.”
-
-But the sun has come out again, and, as the ripple is not very strong
-on the water, there is no great chance of doing much with the fly for
-some time. Something might be done with the minnow, however; so it can
-be let out with a long line and trailed down the loch.
-
-Down the loch! By the little shingly bays where the swan is preening
-her plumage on the margin, while her lord floats near, admiring;
-where the keen-winged little sand-martins are skimming bank and water,
-and the quack of wild duck is to be heard among the reeds; past the
-lonely farm, with its weather-stained roof, at the foot of its own wild
-glen--a place for life to linger and grow sweet and gather memories, a
-place for the growth of strong love or deep hate; and under the black
-crag that rises a thousand feet sheer against the sky, making a mile of
-cool darkness with its shadow amid the hot sunshine of the loch:--it
-is like the fabled Voyage of Maeldune. Then there will be the return
-in the evening, when the sun has set, and the clouds roof the valley
-as with rust of gold; up the silent strath as the mountains grow dark,
-and, under the shadow of Ben Shian, the still river, like a pale-green
-thread, reflects its own clear space of tranquil sky; to the quiet
-village where there will be supper by lamplight, and the recounting to
-interested listeners the day’s exploits.
-
-
-
-
-FROM A FIELD-GATE.
-
-
-A glorious afternoon it is, the hottest of midsummer, with not a shadow
-in the dazzling blue of the heavens. Who could sit at a desk, with
-the white butterflies flickering in and out at the open window, the
-sweet breath of the clove-pinks filling the air, and the faint gurgle
-of the river coming up from the glen below? The gardener has long ago
-left off weeding the lawn borders, and betaken himself to the cool
-planting-house; Jug the spaniel lies panting out there, with lolling
-tongue, in the shadow under the rhododendrons; and the leaves of the
-aspens themselves seem tremulous with the heat. It will be pleasanter
-to go up through the wood to the end of the lane, to sit under the
-edge of the trees there on the trunk of silver birch that serves for a
-cattle-gate, and enjoy something of the southern _dolce far niente_,
-with a pocket copy of gentle Allan Ramsay to finger through.
-
-Altogether quiet the spot is, with the wood behind, and the flowery
-fields sloping away in front. Not a murmur comes here from the city,
-whose smoke rises, a murky cloud, far off in the valley below. The
-streets there will be stifling to-day amid the hot reekings of asphalt
-pavements, the sifting particles of burning dust, and the incessant
-roar of traffic. Here, above the fields, the air is sweet with the
-scent of clover; the stillness is only broken by the faint pipe of a
-yellowhammer sometimes in the depth of the wood; and the blue heavens
-shed their peace upon the heart. Nothing but the faintest breath of air
-is moving, just enough to stir gently the deep grasses of the hayfield,
-and to touch cheek and lip now and again with the soft warm sigh of the
-sweetbrier in the hedge. Gleaming flies, green and yellow, with gauzy
-wings, float like jewels in the sunshine; a shadow for a moment touches
-the page as a stray rook drifts silently overhead; and on the edge of
-the great yellow daisy that flames over there like a topaz among the
-corn, a blue butterfly lazily opens and shuts its wings.
-
-This is the silent month, they say, because the birds have nested and
-foregone the twitterings of their courting-time; but from the lark up
-aloft, a quivering black speck in the sky, there is falling a perfect
-rill of melody. What is he exulting about, the little black speck? Is
-it for sheer gladsomeness in the happy sunshine, or is it because there
-is a little helpless brood of callow laverocks in a nest somewhere
-below among the clover? Glad little heart! sing thy song out while the
-blue sky smiles above thee. Thou hast forgotten the pinching of the
-winter cold, and why should thy rapturous hour be saddened by taking
-thought for the dark things of the morrow. Under the hedge close by, an
-occasional rustle of dry leaves and an admonitory cluck betray a brood
-of chickens surreptitiously brought into existence by some lawless and
-absconding hen; and on a twig a little way off, a young sparrow with
-fluttering wings gapes its yellow beak for the attentions of a proud
-and sprightly parent.
-
-In the distance, from the bottom of the next meadow, comes the faint
-whir of a mowing-machine. It and the reapers are out of sight; but on
-the level beyond, the ryegrass lies in long white lines winnowing in
-the sun. Well may that harvest be the first to be gathered, for it is
-the share that falls to the faithful dumb friends of man. Meanwhile,
-the farm horses left at liberty in the grass-field at hand are
-evidently, like many honest souls of another genus who have worked hard
-all their lives, quite at a loss what to do with their late-acquired
-leisure.
-
-On the dyke-top here, the clover, with great ball-blooms of rich pink,
-is growing beside the purple-toothed vetch and the small yellow stars
-of another unknown flower. In the hedge, among the heavy-scented
-privet blossoms, are flowers of pink wild-rose delicate as the bloom
-of a girl’s cheek, with full pouting buds red as lips that would be
-kissed. White brier-roses there are, too, as large as crown pieces;
-and great velvety humble-bees are busy botanising among their stamens.
-The bees prefer the newly opened ones, however, whose hearts are still
-a rich golden yellow. Below, among the woodland grasses, the white
-dome-clusters of the dim-leaved yarrow are flowering amid a miniature
-forest of green mare’s-tails and the downy stalks of hemlock. Gardeners
-are only now beginning to see the beauty of the yarrow for deep
-borders, as they are beginning to see the beauty of the foxglove and
-the glory of the broom. Over there in the side of the wood-ditch are
-springing delicate tufts of spleenwort; and already the flower-fronds
-of the hard-fern are rising from the nest of their dark-spread
-fellows. The graceful heart-shaped nettle leaf appears there too,
-with its purple stem, beside the tall magenta-coloured flowers of the
-bastard-thistle.
-
-A pleasant retreat, indeed, is the spot; and through the tangled
-wood-depth, of a moonlight night, might be expected to come the revel
-court of Titania. Is not that one of her furry steeds, with velvet ears
-erect and bright wide eyes, cropping the green blade in the grassy
-lane path? Her sleek chorister, too, the blackbird, has forgotten
-to be timid as he hops across the ruts there, waiting doubtless for
-her coming. Whirr! What a rush of wings! It is a flight of starlings
-disturbed from the grass-field below; for these birds bring their young
-out to the fields this month in flocks of hundreds to feed. Round and
-round they wheel in the air, as if delighting in their power of wing,
-before finally settling on the grassy knoll a hundred yards away.
-
-A sunny knoll that is, where the birds feed undisturbed to-day--a small
-point in the landscape; yet it has a page of history to itself. On
-its summit once stood a Scottish queen, surrounded by a little group
-of nobles, watching, a mile to the north, the die of her fate being
-cast, the arbiter of life or death. Two armies lay before her. Far off
-about the little village in the bosom of yonder hill she saw two dark
-masses gathered, with a battery line of guns between them. Those were
-her enemies; and one of the horsemen behind them--it was only a mile
-away--she knew was her own half-brother. Nearer, on the lower rising
-ground, which the railway cuts through now, she saw her own troops
-gathering, a larger force, but without the advantage of position.
-And the queen watched and waited; it was about nine o’clock of the
-morning. Presently, a cloud of smoke sprang out between the armies, and
-immediately was heard the roar of cannon. The duel of the artillery
-had begun. During half an hour little could be seen for the smoke,
-and there was a constant explosion of ordnance. It must have been an
-anxious time. Suddenly, however, the firing ceased, the smoke rolled
-away, and the battlefield could be made out. The queen’s cavalry had
-formed into line, had charged, and were driving the enemy’s horse
-before them. Then a tear sprang to the queen’s eye as she saw her
-vanguard leave the hill, cross the open ground among the furze, and,
-with their gallant leader at their head, rush to storm the village.
-They disappeared in the narrow lane, where the new church stands now
-in the hollow of the hill, and there could only be heard faintly
-their shout as they closed with their opponents, and the shot-reports
-of the enemy’s hagbutters firing at them from the hedge-gardens and
-the village roofs. How was the day going? See! the enemy’s wing was
-wavering, was giving way. Fight on, brave fellows! brave vanguard!
-press them hard. A few moments longer, and the day is yours.
-
-But look! A horseman gallops to the other wing of the enemy, where the
-Regent is riding. It stirs: it moves down upon the village. Ah, where
-now is the queen’s reserve. Why does it remain inactive and aloof?
-Are its rival leaders quarrelling over petty precedence, or is there
-treachery in its ranks? The battle closes again about the narrow lane.
-The vanguard is attacked on either flank--it is overborne--it gives
-way. See! they are broken; they pour back out of the lane. Wounded,
-weaponless, they are fleeing, and with a yell their foes are upon
-them, cutting them down. But the reserve is moving at last; it may
-bring help; it may yet retrieve the hour. Ah, cowards! it breaks and
-scatters. The day is lost. Away! then, away, poor hapless queen! Ply
-whip and spur for thy life. Neither here nor anywhere in all thy
-fathers’ kingdom of Scotland is there safe tarrying-place for thee now.
-And may Heaven help thee in the hour of need, for thou wilt find small
-help in man or woman!
-
-The starlings are feeding this afternoon on the Court Knowe, the
-hillock there, undisturbed; and it is three hundred and twenty-eight
-years since the stricken queen rode away through the hollow of the
-hills where the green corn is growing. The suburbs of the city are
-spreading even over the battlefield itself. But ever and again, upon a
-summer day, there comes a pilgrim to stand a while in pitying silence
-on the little knoll under the trees, and to recall something of these
-“old, unhappy, far-off things,” as he reads upon the stone there the
-royal monogram, and the date, May 13, 1568.
-
-
-
-
-SCHOOL-DAYS.
-
-
-As a means of awakening the genial after-dinner humour of most men
-past middle age, no subject, perhaps, equals the memory of early
-school-days. Let the topic but be started by an anecdote of some
-long dead dominie, it is as if the spigot had been drawn from a
-butt of old vintage, and the stream of recollection will flow forth
-rich and sparkling with the mellowed light of years. Strange is the
-charm of a word! For a lifetime a man has been painfully toiling up
-the Alps of circumstance; it may be he has gained the object of his
-desire--the glittering ice-crystal on the peak which long ago dazzled
-his upward-looking eyes; and now, toying with the walnuts and the wine,
-someone says “I remember:”--lo! the years are forgotten; the greybeard
-is back in the sunny valley of his boyhood, wandering the field-paths
-with chubby companions long since dust, and filling his heart once more
-with the sweet scent of hayricks, of the hedges in hawthorn-time. It
-is not for nothing that rustic children day after day, as they start
-for school, hear the low of the farmyard kine coming in to the milking,
-and that day after day, as they tread the long miles of moorland path,
-they see the grouse whirr off to the mountain, and the trout dart away
-from the sunny shallows; and it is not for nothing that they spend long
-truant afternoons by ferny lanes and harebell copses in the seasons of
-bird-nesting and bramble-gathering. These make the fragrant memories of
-after years! And again and again, in later life, to the man jaded with
-anxiety and care, the old associations come back, laden with pleasant
-regrets--a breath from the clover-fields of youth.
-
-School life in town, notwithstanding its more sophisticated
-surroundings, has also its memories; for in what circumstances will
-not the boyish mind create a charmed world of its own! Apart from the
-actual events of class-room and play-ground, the streets and the shop
-windows, and the things in them to be desired, all furnish absorbing
-interests; and a half-amused envy in later years attends the memory
-of the fearful joy with which, after much contriving of ways and
-means, and much final screwing-up of courage to face the shopman,
-the long-coveted percussion pistol, or the wonderful and still more
-expensive model locomotive, was acquired and smuggled home. But school
-life in the city has a certain precocity which detracts from the poetry
-of its remembrance--an aroma is lacking which forms the subtlest charm
-of the associations of rustic childhood. What has the city-bred man
-to compare to the memory of that hot afternoon in July, when, escaped
-from the irksome thrall of desk and rod, in the clear river pool at the
-bottom of some deep-secluded dingle, the urchins of the rural pedagoguy
-learned to swim? Such a scene remains in a man’s mind, a possession and
-a “joy for ever.” Far off in some city den, gas-lit and fog-begrimed,
-his eyes may grow dim, poring over ledgers that are not his own, and
-his heart may grow heavy and sick with hope deferred; but at a word, a
-suggestion, it will all come back; he will be standing again on that
-grassy margin, the joyous voices of his comrades will be ringing in
-his ears, while the sunshine once more beats warmly on his head, and
-at his feet sparkle over their sandy bottom the pellucid waters of the
-woodland pool.
-
-The black art of letters is probably the least detail of the learning
-acquired by school-children in the country, and it must be confessed
-that the thirst for book-lore is not exactly their most conspicuous
-foible. Happy, nevertheless, in “schools and schoolmasters” of Nature’s
-own appointing, they grow up like the lilies, children of the earth
-and sun, and none the less fit for life, perhaps, that their learning
-has been got at first-hand from the facts and realities of actual
-existence. Who has not envied the bright-eyed boys and red-lipped
-little lasses, healthy with the breath of the woods and of the
-fresh-delved earth, whom one meets, satchel on back, on sequestered
-country roads? The dead tongues may be dead, indeed, to them, and
-mathematics an unnamed mystery; but, with eyes and ears open, they have
-learned all the lore of the fields and the hedges--have drunk deep at
-those nature-fountains whence all the literatures and poetries of the
-world have sprung.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Many changes have been made in school-teaching in the country of recent
-years. The Government inspector is now abroad, and code and standard
-compel all within their iron rule. The old ruts and byways have been
-forsaken, and the coach of Learning has been made to roll, if not
-yet along the coveted “royal road” of the old saw, at least along a
-highway more uniformly paved than of yore. The difference in outside
-appearance between the wayside school-houses of to-day and of thirty
-years ago is only an indication of the changes which have taken
-place within. The days are past when any incompetent would do for a
-dominie; and in place of the halt and the palsied, who used to fill the
-pedagogic chair, there is now the pretty school-ma’am from some Normal
-seminary. A tyrant of the most petty kind, it is to be feared, the
-rural schoolmaster of the old days too often was--
-
- Well had the boding tremblers learned to trace
- The day’s disasters in his morning face;
- Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee
- At all his jokes, for many a joke had he:
- Full well the busy whisper, circling round,
- Conveyed the dismal tidings when he frowned.
-
-Now all this is altered. No longer would it be suffered that a sour and
-crabbed dominie, too crippled to walk, should, out of sheer caprice
-and ill-temper, hurl his tawse at some urchin’s head, and order him to
-bring them up and be thrashed; and it is to be doubted if the modern
-“Board” would countenance even such a gallant device as the vicarious
-birching of a boy for the delinquencies of one of the dearer sex.
-Idiosyncrasies like these, no doubt, made much of the picturesqueness
-of school life in the country a generation ago; and people whose
-memories are of the old régime are apt to look back upon the former
-state of things, faulty as it was, with a sigh. Sometimes a head is
-shaken regretfully, and it is averred that with modern innovations are
-being planed away all those strong, rich peculiarities of ancient rural
-life which made character in the country interesting. The crabbed rule
-of the ancient village pedagogue has a charm for those who have escaped
-beyond reach of his tawse, the thrashings themselves of bygone days
-have become mere subject for a smile. Point of view, however, makes a
-considerable difference in the matter, and the unfortunate urchin of
-those days, counting the strokes of an ill-tempered and unreasoning
-castigation upon his nether habiliments, probably entertained a
-somewhat different sentiment.
-
-Head-shakings and misgivings notwithstanding, individuality of country
-life may very well be left to take care of itself. Children remain
-true to their instincts under the new régime as under the old; and
-growing like the trees of the hedgerows, amid the influences of wild
-and varied nature, rustic character may still be trusted to develop
-a picturesqueness of its own. The real country school, after all,
-does not lie within four walls, nor is it ruled by the rod of prim
-school-ma’am or spectacled dominie. Nature herself, the primeval
-_alma mater_ of all mankind, is the educator there. The leaves of her
-primers are stored in the woodlands; her history-books are written and
-explained by the seasons themselves; the lark and the rivulet are the
-perpetual tutors of her “old notation”; and her terms are timed by the
-bloom and flight of the snowdrop and the swallow.
-
-
-
-
-A LOCH-SIDE STRATH.
-
-
-Hardly more than twenty miles from the populous heart of Glasgow lies
-a parish of which no notice is to be found in the guide-books. No
-show-place is supposed to be there, and no tourist route runs through
-it, and so, though almost within hearing of the hum of a great city,
-the strip of country between mountain and loch remains all but as
-primitive in its rustic simplicity as it was a hundred years ago. A
-century ago, indeed, the district may have been better known than it
-is to-day, if notoriety be regarded as a distinction; for every corrie
-in the hillsides and every burnside hollow, where a little wooding
-afforded concealment, appears then to have been the scene of illicit
-distilling operations; and the raids of the excise and military in
-search of “sma’ stills” were both frequent and famous. With this
-exception the parish has been allowed to slumber on in happy obscurity
-since the days of the old clan feuds and the cattle-liftings of its
-neighbours, the wild Macgregors.
-
-Nevertheless, unknown though it may be, and unfrequented by “the
-Sassenach” as in the days of Rob Roy himself, this quiet loch-shore has
-a history stirring enough, and memories of its own. Situated just on
-the old Highland line, the district must frequently at all periods have
-been the scene of warlike episodes. Regarding the tastes and pursuits
-of its ancient inhabitants there remains small doubt. The memorial of a
-peaceful enough enterprise, it is true, seems crystallised in the name
-of the parish--the parish of St Ronan’s Cell, as it reads translated.
-Midway, it is said, on his journey from Kilmarnock in Ayrshire to
-Kilmaronaig on Loch Etive, that famous missionary priest of the early
-Church thought it worth his while to tarry a space in the district
-in order to teach the rude inhabitants peace. But, to judge by the
-later events of history, the task would seem to have had but doubtful
-results. The prevailing names, at the present hour, of the people in
-the district--Galbraith, Macfarlane, M’Kean--recall the circumstances
-of less orderly times. In the stalwart farmers’ sons guiding the plough
-and feeding the cattle about the steadings there to-day, one sees the
-lineal descendants of clansmen who once held their own on the loch-side
-by the primitive _coir a glaive_--the title of the strong arm. To
-keep these turbulent vassals in order, the Earls of Lennox found it
-necessary to hold three castles in the neighbourhood.
-
-Nor has the strath been without a share in the outstanding events of
-history. This loch-shore it was which witnessed the failure of Argyle’s
-ill-advised attempt at rebellion in 1685. Here, barring his progress,
-beyond the streamlet in the clachan of the parish, the Protestant Earl,
-after his long march among the western lochs, first came within sight
-of the Royal troops. Here, that night, his camp-fires were left burning
-to deceive his opponents; and it was on the hills behind that his
-little army finally lost its way, broke up, and dispersed amid the bogs
-and the darkness.
-
-A romantic story of that most romantic of episodes, the Rebellion of
-1745, also belongs to the district. The most powerful family in the
-strath at that time, as, indeed, it had been for generations, was one
-of the name Buchanan. This family owned two mansions and estates at
-no great distance from each other, and from the larger of these they
-took their familiar title, Buchanans of the Ross. Whether the head
-of the house of that date had personally taken part in the Jacobite
-rising, or had incurred suspicion of Jacobite sympathies, need not be
-inquired into, but, upon the final overthrow of the Stuart cause in the
-spring of 1746, it can be understood that he, in common with others
-in his position, was willing enough to demonstrate his loyalty to the
-Government of King George. The opportunity for doing so which occurred
-to him, however, involved a breach of laws which above all others were
-held inviolably sacred by the Highlanders--the laws of hospitality.
-
-The tradition of the district has to be relied upon for the story. By
-this tradition it would appear that among the fugitives upon whose head
-a price was set, after Culloden, was the Marquis of Tullibardine, elder
-brother of the Duke of Athole. Being hard pressed by the search-parties
-which were everywhere scouring the country, this nobleman, it is
-said, betook himself to Buchanan of the Ross, with whom he had been
-upon terms of friendship, and besought temporary asylum. This favour
-Buchanan granted readily enough, and apparently in all good faith;
-but no sooner was the unfortunate refugee secure under his roof than
-he intimated the fact to the nearest military post. The natural
-consequence was an immediate visit of the soldiery and the arrest of
-the fugitive.
-
-Here the story becomes uncanny. The victim of misplaced confidence was
-being dragged across the threshold, when, it is said, recovering from
-surprise at the unheard-of treachery, his Highland rage and indignation
-reached the blazing point, and, turning upon his host, he hurled out
-the imprecation, “There’ll be Murrays on the braes of Athole when
-there’s ne’er a Buchanan at the Ross!”
-
-This was the last of the Marquis, so far as the district was concerned,
-but it was by no means, in the eyes of the dwellers there, the last of
-his “curse.” Strangely enough, and, whether in fulfilment of the fierce
-prophecy or not, only a few decades had passed when the race at the
-Ross, so far as the male line was concerned, actually died out, and, as
-if to complete the result, upon two occasions since then the estates
-have passed to other hands through female heirs.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In the early decades of the present century the master of the
-place was an Edinburgh advocate, Mr Hector Macdonald, and under his
-hospitable roof again and again was entertained no less a guest than
-the author of “Waverley.” It is not difficult to understand, apart from
-the congenial society of his host, Scott’s attraction to the house.
-The natural beauty of the place, if nothing else, must have been a
-continual delight to one so keenly alive as he was to the interest
-of woodland and loch. The district around, the house itself, and the
-mountains before him, besides, were teeming with memories--every glen
-the home of a romance. In Ross Priory, at anyrate, he frequently
-stayed, and from the local legends and colour with which his residence
-supplied him he selected the materials for some of the most famous
-episodes in “Rob Roy” and “The Lady of the Lake.” The use he made of
-it, indeed, has invested the whole district with a new interest. All
-the neighbourhood, strath and glen, glows with the reflected splendour
-of his thought, a “light that never was on sea or land”; and with
-the clear wind blowing fresh from mountain and loch, something seems
-mingled of the wholesome mental health and vigour of the “Wizard’s”
-work.
-
-The place has changed but little since Scott last visited it, and
-the wanderer by the loch’s margin may, with the atmosphere of the
-past still about him, indulge in all the pleasures of reverie and
-recollection undisturbed. At the present day hardly a sound is to
-be heard there but the lapse of wavelets on the pebbly beach, and
-the sighing of the wind through the branches of the immemorial oaks.
-Occasionally, on a summer evening, when the air is still, the far-off
-beat of paddles comes faintly across the lake, as the steamer threads
-its passage among the islands. But for the rest of the time the call
-sometimes of the peacocks on the lawn before a storm, and, at night,
-the harsh cry of wild-fowl making flight for the marshes at the river’s
-mouth, form the only addition to the harmony of the wind and the
-waters.
-
-
-
-
-A HIGHLAND REEL.
-
-
-Much study, truly, becomes a weariness of the flesh. After a long day’s
-seclusion over desk and books the cobwebs begin to gather about one’s
-brain, and stronger and stronger grows the longing to look upon the
-face of one’s fellows. There are fair faces, too, to look upon, and
-bright-lipped laughter to listen to not far away; and the shriek of a
-fiddle or the skirl of the pipes is all that is needed to set light
-footsteps tripping on a broad barn floor. Down with pamphlet and pen,
-therefore; on with a heavy coat in case of rain, and out into the
-roaring night.
-
-A heavy “carry” is tearing across the sky, but the air is fresh and
-clear; and see, away below through the darkness, by the loch-side,
-shining hospitable and bright, are the lights of Gartachraggan. Away,
-then, by the steading, where the patient beasts are stirring in their
-byres, and a breath is caught of the rich warm mash preparing for
-their evening meal. Away through the whin-haughs, where the owls answer
-each other with silvery hootings, and again and again overhead there
-is heard the creaking wing of belated snipe beating to and fro. How
-the wind sighs in the naked hedges, with a louder whisper where the
-thick-leaved holly-trees are set! One is tempted to linger under the
-soft shelter of the wood, where the air is rich with the fragrance of
-the undergrowth, and the stillness gives a feeling of pleasant security
-by contrast with the roar and sough of the storm in the tree-tops
-far above. The stones of the dry-dyke here are covered close with
-the clinging tendrils of a small-leaved ivy, and wild strawberry and
-wild geranium in summer star with white and pink the mossy crannies.
-A pleasant spot it is, therefore, at that time of year, to linger in,
-to watch the red squirrel frolic on the road, and the chaffinch build
-his mossy home overhead. But to-night one’s thoughts are otherwise.
-It is cold, and the south wind is roaring in the wood, hustling the
-withered leaves to limbo. Down the hill, therefore, at a blithesome
-pace, jousting and jesting with the storm, till a glimpse of the realm
-of Oberon is caught below--the foam-swept loch with its lonely islets,
-seen by the fitful gleam of stars. Life comes back to the jaded heart
-on such a night, as the fresh wind lifts the hair and clears the brain.
-There is war in the heavens overhead, and the scream can be heard of
-wild-duck entangled in the driving clouds; but in the heart there is
-only laughter, born of the comradeship of “rude Boreas.” Whew! Draw in
-here to the shelter till the rain-blast sweeps over. It whistles like
-arrowy sleet through the branches overhead, and the great limbs roar
-and struggle in the contest. The bole of the giant ash itself heaves
-and groans with the effort. But the strong tree has grappled before
-with the Titan, and the wrestlings of eighty winters have but given it
-a deeper grip of the soil. And so the blast blows over, the air clears,
-and close at hand, a ruddy blaze among the trees, are seen the gleaming
-windows of the farm.
-
-What a kindly welcome is this! No ordinary “How d’ye do?” and touch
-of listless fingers, but a heartiness honest as its own broad vowels.
-The good folk here live close to the soil, and continually touch the
-real facts of life. Ennui and cynicism, those soul-cankers of the
-dwellers in towns, have never found their way to these homesteads by
-the loch-side; and sweet and whole-hearted as the breath of their own
-hay-ricks are the greetings of these hospitable folk. For the frank
-grasp that will ease world-cares, go to the kindly sea-captain, or
-the hand that has held a plough. Years have gathered on the heads of
-the farmer and his wife since first their plough-shares turned the
-loch-side soil, but still they are fresh and hale, and the frost of
-years that has silvered their hair has touched them no whit besides.
-Meanwhile, there has grown around them a brave and comely brood--sons
-stalwart as the ark-builders of old, and daughters--ah! Look not too
-long upon these, good youth, or thou art undone (though that might not
-be the worst thing that could happen thee). For there is choice and
-difference among them; the hair of one dark as the starling’s wing,
-another’s bright with russet gold; eyes blue as the summer skies, eyes
-dark as the woodland wells; cheeks of fair soft peach-bloom, and cherry
-lips ripe and red. Beware!
-
-Into the parlour? No!--the kitchen is the place. A carpeted parlour
-can be seen at any time, but such a kitchen only in such a spot. The
-great fire blazing in the chimney roars defiance to the storm outside,
-and flashes its warm light upon wall and rafter. Lamps shine bright
-as silver in their sconces, and plate-racks and harness steels gleam
-in the wall’s recesses. Not a speck stains the purity of the red-stone
-floor, and the massy tables and chairs of honest deal are white as
-driven snow. Into the kitchen, then, and ask for the goodman’s health,
-and whether the ploughing has gone forward well, whether the collie
-that went amissing has turned up yet, and what was done with the tramp
-who threatened the ploughman’s wife.
-
-But, listen! the neighbours are coming already, and in the lull of
-the wind surely that was the sound of the pipes! How the girls’ eyes
-sparkle and their colour rises! What tempting access of witchery!--wait
-a little, take care, keep hold of your heart! Perhaps their sweethearts
-are coming. The pipes stop at the door, there is a sound of laughter,
-a moment’s pause, and then a new invasion of brave lads and comely
-lasses, bringing in with them the earth-smelling wind of the night.
-Fresh-voiced as the spring thrushes, it is an inspiration to look at
-and listen to these sons and daughters of the hills.
-
-First of all, for the Highlands are hospitable, something must be
-eaten. The table in a trice is heaped with tempting array--everything
-the produce of the farm itself, and not the less delicious for the fair
-hands that have placed it there.
-
-Then, hey, presto! the scene is changed. A space has been cleared in
-the barn, and lamps hung from the rafters and on the walls light it up
-in gipsy fashion, casting fantastic shadows into the far corners behind
-the great heaps of warm oat-straw. A skirl of the pipes, and in a
-moment partners are chosen. Then more than one secret slips out to the
-curious eye; for much there is to be read in the language of a blush
-and a look. The lads stand back to back, two and two, their partners
-facing them, and as the music takes to the air, featly they trip it
-in the merry figure-of-eight. Presently, opposite their neighbours’
-partners, comes the chance for spirit and agility, and many a wild
-capering step is done by the lads with arm in air and a whirl of the
-tartans, while the lasses, more modest, with downcast look, hold back
-their skirts daintily as they foot it with toe and heel. Faster and
-faster the music gathers, faster flies the dance with its changing
-step, with the threading of eights and the Highland fling, while cheeks
-take flame, eyes flash wildly, and the barn floor shakes in rhythm.
-More and more breathless grow lasses and lads, but no one will yield
-to stop, till at last, with a wild whoop, they fling themselves all at
-once upon the straw, and the music slowly runs out.
-
-Again and again it will be renewed, with the wilder “Reel o’ Hulochan”
-for a change, or some wonderful old-fashioned country dance; and only
-some time in the morning, long after the old folk have gone to bed,
-will the merry party break up, tired but delighted, to go home in twos
-and threes along the hills.
-
-
-
-
-AN ARRAN RIDE.
-
-
-“Hamish will just be putting the mare in the cart to drive over the
-ladies, so the need is not so great for hurrying.”
-
-The arrangement of the crofter’s wife is hospitably meant, if somewhat
-ominously expressed. Conveyance of any kind, moreover, will be most
-acceptable to the two ladies of our party after their long ramble
-on seashore and moorland; and the more primitive it prove, the more
-fittingly will it end the memories of the day. “Meanwhile ‘the need
-is not so great for hurrying,’” repeats one of the two slyly, out of
-hearing of her hostess, and, pulling off her gloves, proceeds to gather
-pleasure from the blazing chimneyful of peat. Leaning back in the
-warm light, she stirs the white feathery ash with a dainty boot, and
-discovers, to the boot’s cost and her own surprise, that the whiteness
-of the peat conceals a glow of burning red. It is a peculiarity of the
-Highland character, as of the Highland fuel, this fire within the grey
-exterior, needing only a touch or a breath to show itself.
-
-The light ash of the peat, they say, flies everywhere about a shieling.
-But it is a cleanly thing. It leaves no tarnish, at anyrate, on
-the snowy wood dresser or its high rack of shining delf. The tall
-old-fashioned mahogany case-clock in the corner, an heirloom much
-valued, may have absorbed more of the powder, perhaps, than conduces
-to regular intestinal working; but the open iron cruizie or cresset
-lamp hanging quaintly, though now unused, from the high mantelshelf, is
-kept clear enough for lighting yet if need were; and maybe the hams and
-“kippered” fish hanging from hooks in the blackened rafters are rather
-improved in flavour by the condiment.
-
-But look here. With true Highland hospitality, preparations for tea
-have been surreptitiously advanced, and the fresh, wholesome-looking
-daughter of the house and her mother lift into the middle of the
-earthen floor the table ready caparisoned with cloth-of-snow,
-glittering cups and knives, heaped sugar-bowl, and beaker of rich
-yellow cream. A lissome flower of the moors is this crofter maid. The
-oatmeal which she has been baking is not more soft and fair than
-the skin of the comely lass, and, as she smiles reply in lifting the
-toasted oat-farles from the flat iron “girdle” swung over the fire, it
-needs no poet to notice that her eyes are bits of summer sea and her
-mouth a damask bud. The toasted farles of oat-cake from her hand send
-forth an ambrosial smell which, with the fragrance of the new-made tea,
-is irresistible to hungry folk, and no pressing Highland exhortation is
-needed to set visitors of both sexes to the attack of the viands.
-
-Not till every one has again and again declared sheer inability to
-pursue the attack further, does the announcement come that “the mare
-is in the cart.” A chair, therefore, is presently carried out, and
-the whole party of four mount into the rough vehicle among the straw.
-Hereupon follow a hand-shaking and repetition of hospitable invitations
-to return which begin to become almost embarrassing, before Hamish
-starts at his horse’s head upon the moor track.
-
-A long, memorable day it has been, amid the warm sunshine and the
-bright sea-breeze, a day to do the heart good and to tire the limbs
-royally--the morning draught of brave mountain air and life on the
-white moorland road before the inn; the forenoon ramble, rod in hand,
-on the warm gorse-path by the river; luncheon in quaint-flavoured,
-wit-haunted company by the blue Kilbrannan Sound, with nothing to
-interrupt but the beat of sudden outflying wings sometimes about
-the warm cliff crannies overhead, and, on the beach below, the soft
-caressing murmur of the secret-telling sea; the afternoon drive to the
-far hill-clachan, where the turf roofs were tied down with heather
-ropes, where the brown women were carrying sea-wrack to manure their
-fields, and where, as a back-sound to the quaint-turned Highland
-speech, was heard the thud-thud of the swinging flails; and, last of
-all, the return at evening by the high moorland path, with the amethyst
-fire dying out on Ben Ghoil in the east, and, in the west, the sunset
-heavens aflame with saffron and rose, and the sea a living splendour of
-generous wine.
-
-Now it is night, and the air comes cooler over the moor. No air is like
-Arran air at night, with its vague herb-perfumes adrift, for stirring
-old memories and desires in the heart and new ambitions in the blood.
-Upon its clear breath old designs, old possibilities long forgotten,
-come back again to make life and hope. By it the vapours of worldly
-wisdom are blown aside, the cloud-wrack care of intervening years is
-lifted, and one walks again clear-hearted for a time in the April
-valley of his youth. Night anywhere has charms for those who think, but
-night upon the moors possesses an influence peculiarly its own. The
-primeval heath, wild and undesecrated by the hand of man, lies under
-“the splendid-mooned and jewelled night,” shadowy and mystic with the
-silence of the ages. Abroad upon the moor at such an hour seem to brood
-the imaginings of an older world, and the grey stone circles standing
-gaunt yet upon the Arran wilds are hardly needed to suggest the memory
-that along these wilds, once upon a time, wound processions of bearded
-Druids, to practise under the starry influences rites of a faith now
-long forgotten. At intervals upon the moor appear these grey menhirs
-and circles. Inscrutable as the Egyptian sphinx they stand with sealed
-lips, strange monuments of a buried past. For tens of centuries they
-have seen the dusks gather and the stars swim overhead, but no rising
-sun has wakened them from their silence, and still they keep the stony
-secret of their origin, though they could not keep the ashes of the
-dead committed to their charge.
-
-Meanwhile Hamish makes way steadily, though by tortuous windings.
-None but a native bred on the spot could conduct a vehicle safely by
-night across these moors. Where unaccustomed eyes can make out no sign
-whatever of a track, and where a single mistake would send one wheel
-floundering into a peat-hag and the other spinning in the air, or
-capsize the whole equipage into the miry abysses of a bog, Hamish leads
-confidently on, with no worse result than the jolting of a rugged road.
-The mare is a sturdy beast of the small sure-footed Arran breed, now
-dying out, and she pulls away gallantly among rocks and heath-tufts
-that would bring any other sort of horse to quick disaster. It takes
-her master all his time to keep up with her on the rough ground, and
-he has breath left for no more than an occasional “Ay, ay,” or “’Deed,
-yes, sir!” in the true Arran accent. English is evidently the less
-familiar language to him; his remarks to the mare, _sotto voce_, are in
-Gaelic.
-
-All last month after nightfall tufts and sheets of flame were to be
-seen among the darkness of the hills; for in March they burn the
-heather on the sheep-farms to let the young herbage come up, and the
-conflagrations which appear then as pillars of smoke by day become
-pillars of fire by night. But in April the moorland birds have begun to
-build their nests, and the hills are left to them in darkness and in
-peace. The only light to be seen from the cart is that in the window
-of the croft far behind, which will be kept aglow by thoughtful hands
-as a guide till Hamish’s return after moonset. Over the brow of the
-moor, however, the shining lights of the clachan at the mountain foot
-before long come into sight, and away to the right, tremulous with
-silver and shadows, the sheen of the moonlight can be made out on the
-sea. Rapidly now the path descends, plunging presently through lanes of
-high thorn hedges where the stars are all but shut out overhead. The
-rush of a river is heard, the wheels grate harshly on the gravel, there
-is a sudden and vigorous splashing of hoofs, and the mare has passed
-the ford. Then a half-mile of climb uphill on a good road, and Hamish
-stands still with his charge at the door of the inn.
-
-
-
-
-BY A WESTERN FIRTH.
-
-
-“Good-bye, my dear!”
-
-How beautiful the old lady looks as she stands in the porch
-overclustered with its tangle of budding roses and honeysuckle, a
-kindly smile on her lips, and her eyes shining, and her silver hair,
-in the last light of afternoon! For the sun is setting now, across
-the water, behind the hills of Bute, and the glory that fills the
-heavens and floods the full-ebbed sea casts about her, in its departing
-moments, a halo of peace serene as the hours of her life’s own
-afternoon. “Good-bye, my dear!”
-
-Sunshine and silence sleep now on the hillside strath above, where
-the woods hang motionless, and the sward here and there, in the open
-spaces, is lit with the golden flame of gorse in blossom; but across
-that hillside once long ago raged the tide of a relentless war. Here,
-blood-red in the setting sun, waved the standard of a Scottish king,
-and yonder, down to the shore and to the wrecks of his ships, was
-driven back the shattered strength of the invading Norseman. The
-corries were filled then with the bodies of the dead, and the brown
-waters were stained a dreadful purple in the burn-pools where the trout
-leap now after the evening fly. That was the Scottish Salamis.
-
-No one is in sight upon the white road, and no sound to be heard of
-distant footstep or departing wheels. There is only the lingering lapse
-of the quiet ripples as the sea sows its pearl-seed along the shore.
-A perfect calm rests upon the waters while the light slowly leaves
-them, and the red sun goes down behind the hills; only, at one place,
-across the glassy surface, where the tide is stirring, run, on the
-tiny wavelets, a hundred flickering tongues of fire, and, far out, the
-reflection of the great yellow cloud aflame in the west shimmers like
-frosted gold upon the sea.
-
-Gently the gloaming falls. The last mellow pipe of the mavis floats
-from the garden shrubbery behind, and bats begin to jerk about with
-their uncertain flight under the trees, their wings making a curious
-eerie creaking in the air. Only a dim green light falls through the
-leaves interlaced overhead as the road leaves the bay and dips inland
-through the woods.
-
-The day’s work is over. It is the sacred hour, and, far from “the stir
-and tumult of the street,” in these still aisles, carpeted soft with
-fallen bud-sheaths and grass, roofed with the fretted canopy of branch
-and leaf, and hung with the fringed banners of larch and birch, ascends
-to heaven with the last notes of the woodland choristers the sweet
-incense of a thousand flowers. Mossy dykes run into the wood-depths
-here, and among the tall feathery grasses under the trees there are
-places purple with a mist of wild hyacinths. A crimson shadow, too,
-lies here and there, where the wood geranium throws its profusion; and
-pink and white sandflowers grow in the dry ditch-sides. By the clear
-mossy roadside well, and among the withered leaves in the glades, rise
-the first green spires of the foxgloves; a golden haze betrays the beds
-of yellow crowfoot; and in some sequestered spots pale primroses are
-still starring the rivulet banks.
-
-Amid the woods, a secluded nook, nestles a cottage--the gamekeeper’s
-lodge, with its low slate roof, and sweetbrier trained upon the white
-walls, yellow pansies asleep beneath its window-sills, and crimson
-fuchsia and wild dog-roses blossoming in the hedge. The little
-flower-garden about it is trimly kept, with its southernwood and
-thyme, its clipped box edgings and gravelled path; and in the grassy
-hollow under the wood behind are the rows of boxes for breeding the
-young pheasants. A faint luscious smell hangs in the air of the
-spot--suggestive of frying trout freshly caught in the brown burn that
-gurgles close by in the darkness. The keeper, too, is sitting outside
-the quiet doorway enjoying his evening pipe; and the fragrance of
-the southern weed mingles with the sweet scent of the pink hawthorn
-flowering over the wicket. Tread softly, though, on the grassy edge of
-the road for a little way. The kennel is at hand, and the slightest
-sound will set every dog baying his loudest. The rattle of a terrier’s
-chain is enough, sometimes, to set the woods echoing for full ten
-minutes.
-
-The air grows less heavy as the road again approaches the shore, and
-there comes up with the murmur of the shingle the faint salt smell
-of the sea. Away in front the bright blaze streaming out in the
-darkness strikes from the lighthouse tower at the outmost sea-edge,
-receiving its signal, like the bale-fires of old, from the beacon on
-the opposite coast, and flashing it on to the next point up channel.
-Far out, too, on the firth a red light is moving, and the faint beat
-of paddles comes across the water. It is the last river-steamer making
-for the watering-place opposite. Singularly still the air is, to carry
-so distinctly the throbbing of that distant pulse. Not another sound
-is to be heard, and nothing astir is to be seen. Only, the moon has
-risen, a clear sickle, on the edge of the dark hill above. On such a
-night loveliness and mystery swim together on the air; the blushing of
-the rose is the fairer for being but half seen in the dim light; the
-woods above have ceased their amorous whisperings; and the sea amid the
-silence is kissing the shore’s wet lips.
-
-What white shadow comes yonder, though, moving under the high hedge
-in the darkness? It might almost be one of those wraiths of which the
-country-folk speak with bated breath--the awful Something seen moving
-in the dusk from the house where a man has died. There is a sound
-of hoofs here, however, and the spectre proves to be but the gaunt
-Rozinante of some wandering gipsies--the grey and pitiful counterpart,
-doubtless, of a once-gallant steed. Delicate hands may have patted the
-neck worn bare now by the collar, and sweet sugar-bits may have been
-offered by dainty fingers to the lips that tremble now as they crop the
-dusty roadside grasses. Does memory ever come to the brain behind those
-patient eyes?
-
-See! close by in the little dell among the flowering broom twinkles
-the camp-fire of the owners. Their dark figures lie about it asleep,
-for the night is warm, and they are a hardy race; while at hand
-stands their quaint house on wheels, overhung with baskets of all
-sorts and uses. A strange, lawless life they live in the midst of
-nineteenth-century civilisation, those Bedouins of the broomfields and
-commons.
-
-But here is our inn, a long-forgotten hostelrie, where one can sit at
-noon in the shade by the doorway with a book, and watch the ships far
-out go by upon the firth, while the cool sea glistens below, and all
-day long there is the drowsy hum of bees about the yellow tassels of
-the laburnums at the gable ends. A pleasant spot it is even now in the
-darkness. The lilac-trees in the garden are a-bloom, and the air is
-sweet with their scent. A pleasant place, where the comely hostess will
-welcome the tired pedestrian, where his supper will taste the better
-for the fresh night air from the open window, and where, presently,
-he will fall asleep between sheets that smell of the clover-field, to
-dream of the firmly-grasped tiller, the snowy cloud of sails overhead,
-and the rushing of the water under the yacht’s counter of the morrow.
-
-
-
-
-AN ISLAND PICNIC.
-
-
-Seven o’clock, and a glorious morning! The sun is shining brightly on
-the coral-clustered rowan-tree outside, and the sky already is dazzling
-blue. A gentle air, too, just stirs the muslin curtain of the window
-left open overnight. With it comes in the scent of honey and the hum of
-bees at work in the garden below. No morning is this for laziness and a
-late breakfast. The impulse to be abroad is born of the sunshine; and
-a few minutes serve, after a hurried toilet, to snatch a towel, bound
-down stairs, and go tramping across the heather to the well-known pool.
-
-A magnificent day indeed it promises to be. The wreathing night-mists
-have already risen from the Bens, and the loch below gleams like
-melted sapphire round sylvan island and far-set promontory. Everywhere
-the mountains are clad in purple, and from the moor-bloom spreading
-its springy carpet underfoot rises a fragrance that fills air and
-heart alike with delight. And the river pool--never was found more
-delightful bathing-place. Hidden deep between overhanging banks of
-heather in flower, with a clean brown ledge of rock to dive from, the
-depth of dark, clear water, like amber wine, sparkles with foam-bells,
-and the waterfall tosses from the rock above great showers of silver
-spray. No more invigorating plunge could be had. For a moment, as he
-breasts the brown depths, the bather feels something of the salmon’s
-exultant pride; and a dip like that sets one off high-hearted for the
-day.
-
-Breakfast is a delight after such an appetiser; and fresh eggs and thin
-oatcakes, creamy porridge, golden marmalade, and all the wealth of
-Highland fare, disappear with startling despatch. There is no time to
-be wasted either, for Archie was to have the boat ready at half-past
-nine, and there is a Highland half-mile of road between the house and
-the loch. Archie would by no means scruple about expressing his candid,
-and perhaps not very complimentary, opinion if the party chanced to be
-late; and there is a kind of unwritten law in the house that the old
-servant is to be humoured as much as possible. So already the ladies
-are concerning themselves with the making and packing of sandwiches,
-the due stowage of cold provender, jellies, fruit, milk, _et cetera_,
-and the apportioning to each his load. For the luncheon is to be, _bonâ
-fide_, a true Robinson Crusoe affair, no servants interfering; and each
-man must make himself useful.
-
-“’Deed, and ye’re no that late, efter a’!” is Archie’s magnanimous
-reply to a deprecating remark of his mistress on reaching the
-loch-side. The sunshine has evidently thawed his usual crustiness.
-“Aye, mem,” he replies further, “it’ll be a fine mornin’, a very fine
-mornin’; the hills is quite clear.” After which deliverance he holds
-the boat steady alongside the little wooden landing-place, while
-provisions, kettles, and rugs are stowed away in the bow; and his grey
-eyes twinkle with pleased humour under their shaggy brows when the heir
-of the house whispers some bit of sly badinage in his ear. “Aye he iss
-a fine lad that, a fine lad!” the old fellow will be saying to himself
-when the boat has been pushed off, and he watches from the pier the
-stalwart object of his remark bestirring himself to haul up the sail.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There is just enough breeze to curl the water gently; and when the
-snowy sheet is hoisted the boat bends away gracefully before it,
-leaving a swirling track of foam and eddies in her wake. When the
-morning is so fine as this there is little fear of danger; but on these
-Highland lochs one never can foretell the moment when a sudden gust may
-come down from some hillside corrie; and cool nerves and a steady hand
-are needed to control sheet and tiller. The man who loses his wits on
-an emergency, who cannot slacken out sail or bring the boat’s head up
-to wind when a squall strikes her, is no fit pilot for these waters,
-and many a fair freight has gone to the bottom from such an one holding
-the helm. A strong and ready hand is in charge to-day, however, and
-“black care” is a thing impossible on board, as the little craft goes
-bounding out upon the bosom of the loch.
-
-And fair as a romance is the scene--the clear lake winding away among
-the mountains, its surface broken only by bosky islets that float in
-their own reflections--while the sunny air is full of the awe and
-silence of the Bens.
-
-The only spot in all the scene where silence reigns not is on board the
-little boat herself; and a continuous ripple of merry chat and joyous
-laughter floats away astern with her foam. From wild little islets
-passed by the way come breaths of pinewood and of heather in bloom,
-faint and delicious as the gales which drifted leeward of old from
-homeward-bound spice-argosies of the East. But the bright eyes on board
-are an inspiration themselves, independent of the sunshine and the
-pure and scented air; and the gladness of youth has broken forth--the
-contagion of happy and hopeful hearts. A sweet strain of melody floats
-once and again from the bow, where the singing throats are:
-
- Speed, bonnie boat, like a bird on the wing!
-
---the Skye Boat Song, a farewell to Prince Charlie, that old-time idol
-of the Highland hearts. A sad melody it is, amid its sweetness, as are
-all the old Jacobite songs, with their breathing of hopes that were
-never to be fulfilled; and somehow, strains like that come to the ear
-with more real tenderness when sung as to-day by clear young voices
-among their native mountains.
-
-Too soon, almost, the boat’s keel grates upon the island beach--the
-strip of silver shingle under the green-fringing trees. One would
-fain have prolonged especially the last part of the voyage, through
-the straits between the islands--straits like the miniature narrows of
-fairy-land, between whose near and bosky shores the fragile shallop
-of Oberon and Titania might almost be expected to appear, flying a
-web of the woodland gossamers for its sail. But other attractions
-enough lie within the island greenwood. There are delicate groups of
-birches to be sketched by those who have brought block and colours.
-In the rivulet dells some of the young ladies have been promised the
-discovery of the much-sought hart’s-tongue fern. And for those who
-wish to recall to fancy the place’s romance of the past, there are the
-remains of a ruined monastery to explore. But the merriest party of
-all, perhaps, is that retained for the preparation of luncheon; and it
-is wonderful in how short a time those dainty-fingered damsels have the
-tasteful display of linen and crystal and silver spread on a grassy
-plot, the clumsy-handed males being retained, after the fashion of the
-knights-errant of old, for the opening of baskets and boxes, and the
-seeking of leaves wherewith to decorate fruit-salvers, napkins, and the
-tablecloth’s centre.
-
-A merry meal it is, too, which follows, _al fresco_--“all in the
-greenwood free”--with the contortions of carvers on their knees,
-the popping of corks, and continual little explosions of mysterious
-laughter from the various groups perched on cloaks and rugs wherever
-a seat-hold offers round the roots of some gnarled oak or ash. Never
-more gallant do young men appear than when attending the wants of their
-fair comrades amid such a scene; and thrice happy is he who has such an
-opportunity of laying siege to the heart that he desires.
-
-Then away again over the island they go, in parties of two and three;
-and the flutter of a light dress is to be seen and the joyous ripple
-of merry laughter to be heard in many a nook and dell hitherto invaded
-only by the antlered and timid deer. Many a pleasant word is spoken,
-and many a heart mayhap lightened of its care on such an afternoon;
-for the anxieties of civilised life come not to a sylvan retreat like
-this, and it is impossible to be aught but joyous-spirited when the
-surroundings are all of gladness.
-
-But hark! they have caught a piper on the mainland, and have brought
-him over, and there is to be a dance on the grass. Yonder he goes,
-under the edge of the trees, pouring forth a torrent of Highland
-reels. A brave sound that, setting the blood on fire and making
-it impossible to sit still. And merrily go the twinkling feet on
-the greensward--“figures of eight,” and Reel o’ Tulloch, Highland
-Schottische and Highland Fling. Wilder and faster grows the music,
-as the piper catches the spirit of the scene, and faster and faster
-the dancers foot it, with swirling tartans and flying skirts, till,
-at a final blast of the screaming chanter, the last partners throw
-themselves panting on the grass. Then a cup of tea makes a kindly
-refreshment and prevents heated throats from catching cold, and the
-boat has to be got ready, and the furniture of the feast stowed away.
-Afterwards, as the clear young moon begins to sparkle in the sky, the
-sail is set once more and the prow pointed for home. And if the wind
-fails, and some rowing has to be done, the exercise is good for keeping
-off the chill; and with song after song floating out across the water
-under the stars, a fitting end is made of a day without regrets.
-
-
-
-
-TENNIS IN THE NORTH.
-
-
-A pretty sight they are, these two, this fair summer morning, among
-the dewy branches of the rose-garden, all unconscious that anyone is
-looking at them, Minna, the daughter of the house, her white hands wet
-with flowers, is cutting fresh blossoms for the breakfast-table, and
-that tall fellow, the Professor, who at home used to get up only when
-the college bell was ringing, has actually risen half an hour earlier
-than he need have done in order to hold the basket for her. He is not
-looking at the costly little circlet of diamonds sparkling upon her
-finger, but at the bright dark eyes swimming under the edge of that
-delightful straw hat, where, doubtless, he is getting some fresh light
-upon the Greek particles. For they are engaged, Minna and he, and he
-is coming back in the autumn to carry her off and transplant her, like
-some bright-petalled flower, in his dim old college city.
-
-But there is the voice of our host greeting them from the porch below,
-and the Professor comes forward eagerly to shake hands with him. Young
-Rossdhu has driven down to say that some friends arrived at their house
-last night, and his mother will be glad if we can go up to tennis
-and luncheon there this morning. No other engagement will be broken
-by this, and a day on that velvet lawn among the pine-woods will be
-delightful; so the carriage has been ordered for eleven o’clock. The
-day promises to be very warm here by the sea, but more air will perhaps
-be moving up among the hills, and there will always be the shadow of
-the old beeches to rest under. When breakfast is over, then, it will
-just be time to get ready, though it is tempting to linger in the
-quiet cool little room, at the white-spread table with its freshness
-of flowers--the full-blowing Maréchal Niel and the languorous yellow
-tea-roses set there by dainty fingers.
-
-Outside, the sunshine is very hot already, and the last dewdrop has
-long ago dried from the scarlet petals of the geraniums in the urns.
-The ponies at the door, too, are impatiently whisking their tails and
-twitching their ears to keep off the flies.
-
-There could be no more enjoyable drive than that along this road
-of the far North, running a mile or two first within sight of the
-blue glistening sea, and then turning inland. The road itself, of
-that dazzling sandy whiteness peculiar to the district, is perfectly
-dry and smooth; and while from the deep grasses of the bank on each
-side, and from the warren beyond, come the hot passion-breath of the
-golden-flowered whin, and the soft amorous sigh of the milky-clouded
-thorn, there is ever in sight the broad country, rich in old forests,
-showing here and there the grey tower of some ancient castle, and
-stretching away to the mountains beyond, purple under the speckless
-sky. Then it turns off suddenly into the pine-woods of Rossdhu, and the
-wheels roll noiseless upon the soft bed of fir needles.
-
-Forty years ago, when old Rossdhu found that, owing to the repeal
-of the Corn Laws, it would no longer be profitable to grow wheat,
-like many another proprietor in the North he planted his lands with
-trees. And so, while the country buys its bread with the riches of
-ore and fossil stored up æons ago in Nature’s grim treasure-caverns
-underground, the soil, at rest from plough and harrow, is growing
-young again amid the forests, under the brown depth of mouldering leaf
-and cone.
-
-Deep quiet reigns among these warm pine-woods, a sort of enchanted
-stillness amid the yellow sunshine. In the bosky hollow where the brown
-butterfly is hovering, old Pan might be asleep among the fern. The
-feathery grasses everywhere are in flower, as high as a man’s shoulder;
-above them shimmers the great green dragon-fly, two inches long, with
-his gossamer wings; and from among their clouds at places little
-ladybird beetles, like pin-heads, spotted scarlet and black, fall into
-the carriage in their flight. The wild strawberry, with its tiny white
-blossom, is growing on the sunny banks of the road, and wild rasps
-spread their tangle in the undergrowth beyond.
-
-In the narrow meadow amidst the woods a lonely mower is at work, and
-the air is sweet with the scent of new-mown hay. He lifts his cap
-respectfully as the carriage passes, for the manners of the district
-have not been corrupted yet by contact with rude railway navvies, nor
-by the shortcomings of Board schools; and the peasant still exchanges a
-recognition with his superior. Much more real kindliness might exist
-between the social classes if in our schools there were a Government
-grant for manners. All store nowadays seems to be set upon the three
-“Rs”--reading, writing, and arithmetic--as if the whole sum of human
-felicity lay in a knowledge of the “black art” of books.
-
-The mower was singing to himself as we came up, a soft Gaelic song
-that kept time to the sweep of his scythe, and Minna blushes a little
-as she promises to translate it in the evening, for it is a song of
-confessed love. The man is happy, surely, singing as he sees the
-glistening, swathes fall by his side to ripen in the sun: and well he
-may be, for has he not, like the happy birds, a nest, too, somewhere in
-these woods, and a blue-eyed brood that will greet his home-coming at
-nightfall.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-But the manor-house stands close by now, and there, on the smooth green
-lawn among the trees, the tennis nets are spread, and the courts marked
-with lines on the grass. A beautiful old place it is, its grey stone
-walls hot with the sunshine, and, among the thick-climbing jessamine
-and fuchsia, the open windows revealing tempting depths of shadow
-within. The sound of the wheels on the gravel brings out old Rossdhu
-himself, the soul of hospitality, with half a dozen of his dogs barking
-a welcome after their fashion, and wagging their tails. Shaggy-bearded
-as some of his own peasants, the old gentleman is the pink of Highland
-courtesy, and he assists “Miss Minna” to alight as if she were a
-princess. “Alec,” that is his son, he explains, “is busy inside,” and
-the frequent popping of corks heard there intimates his occupation.
-
-The dark cool drawing-room is bright with the light dresses of young
-girls, and musical with the murmur of happy laughter, while the air
-that just stirs the creamy gossamer of the curtains brings in with
-it the fragrance of the dark velvety wallflower still flowering
-outside in the sunshine before the window. The lady of the house is an
-invalid, and Rossdhu begs that Minna will give her just one song before
-everybody goes out to the game. So Minna draws off her gloves, and the
-piano is opened. And it is very pleasant to sit in the deep shadow
-by the open casement, looking out upon the sunny lawn and woods, and
-listening to the melody of that sweet young voice. It is a Jacobite
-song she sings, “The Auld House”--some other such place as this, with
-low-roofed rooms, dark-panelled and oaken-raftered, where the hopes
-of gentle hearts blossomed and withered long ago with the fortunes of
-their fair, ill-fated Prince. The plaintive words linger with their air
-in the memory, how “the auld ladye”--
-
- Here sheltered Scotland’s heir,
- And clipped a lock wi’ her ain hand
- Frae his lang yellow hair.
-
-Then, afterwards, when everybody has had enough of the ices and the
-claret cup, there is the tennis. And though it is somewhat warm work
-for those actually playing, there are seats under the leafy beeches and
-chestnut-trees, where a quiet _tête-à-tête_ can be enjoyed, and a lazy
-glance cast at the lithe, light-clad figures of the players out in the
-sunshine, and the white balls that fly to and fro across the nets.
-
-
-
-
-THROUGH THE PASS.
-
-
-Rain is not to be heeded in the Highlands. It is the picturesque part
-of the weather here. The air grows fresher and sweeter in a shower,
-a richer fragrance comes out in the woods, and the true gloom and
-grandeur of the mountains can only be seen when the grey rain-veils
-are darkening and glittering among their glens. Even into the house
-steals the reviving freshness of the rain. The scent of the wet
-sweetbrier budding in the garden hedge enters at the open window; from
-the larch-wood near, the grateful thrushes can be heard sending forth
-more liquid trillings; and the daffodils, hung like yellow jewels along
-the lawn, appear fairer and brighter amid the shower. But better than
-wasting the day indoors it is to sally forth, strong-booted and roughly
-clad, breathe the freshness of the cool, new air, and start, staff in
-hand, for the hills themselves. It is worth while to defy the rain,
-for the road lies through woods dewy and dim as Keats dreamed for his
-“Endymion.” In their deep-secluded ways sometimes may be seen the timid
-roedeer, and on the fragrant air be heard the amorous crooning of wild
-doves.
-
-In another month the quiet dells among these woods will be purple with
-dewy hyacinths, and many a sequestered nook will be dim with the blue
-forget-me-not. Already the open meads are sprinkled with patins of
-buttercup-gold, and a modest spot of cream here and there, under some
-mossy bank, betrays a late primrose. As yet, however, the delicate
-broidery of summer has not carpeted the forest floors. Under the dark,
-low-hanging branches of the spruce-firs--made a richer green by the
-rain--there is only a russet wealth of withered fern, with a warm depth
-of shadow such as Rembrandt loved to paint. Looking over a mossy old
-bridge parapet into the ferny dingle below, one can see the feathery
-grey larches powdered with sweet pink blossom, whose beauty few people
-know; and lower down, by the burn, the alders putting forth silky
-silver bud-tips--the “mouse’s ear,” which is the angler’s sign that
-perch are to be caught. In open spaces where some forest-clearing has
-been done, the few silver-barked birches left standing begin to show a
-smir of green, their graceful drooping branches looking like trailing
-sprays of delicate maidenhair; whilst here and there a spot is lit up
-by the golden glory of the whin.
-
-The woods at this time of the year are full of life, for the cruel
-gun is silent, and many a happy home of bird and beast is hidden in
-the tangled undergrowth. In the elm-tops about the lodge behind by
-the river the rooks are giving each other much grandmotherly advice
-as to the rearing of broods. The cock pheasant’s crow is to be heard
-frequently in the covers, and sometimes, from his open feeding-ground
-beside the path, a splendid bird rises suddenly with whirring wings,
-and sails royally away to more secluded fastnesses. Among the
-thick-leaved tangle of wild rhododendron on either hand blackbirds are
-fluttering joyously about their nests. Overhead, occasionally, passes
-the heavy, rushing flight of a wild pigeon. And more than once across a
-gleam of sunshine on the path runs a red squirrel, like a bit of living
-gold.
-
-And while one treads on the brown, fallen needles of spruce and larch,
-the subtle forest scents fill the heart with many pleasant memories.
-Never are these forest scents richer than when brought out by a
-shower, and it is curious how vividly some faint perfume drifting on
-the air will recall the happy scenes of other days, memories that are
-themselves the pensive fragrance of old age.
-
-Through these ducal woods, and amid such pleasant sights and sounds,
-some seventy years ago wandered the “Wizard of the North,” gathering
-material for his work. Fairer scenes a poet could not have chosen to
-gather inspiration from. Everyone may feel the eloquence of those
-northern hills in front, as everyone may enjoy the fragrance of the
-meadow violets: it needed a poet, however, to turn into speech the
-eloquence of the hills, as it needs a bee to turn into honey the
-fragrance of the flowers. Hither, therefore, fitly came Scott to his
-work; and over clachan and mountain alike he has woven the golden net
-of romance.
-
-One may wander for miles through these woods and out beyond upon the
-old Highland road, with its low, mossy dykes, without meeting a single
-wayfarer. Only Nature herself, with gentle and sweet suggestion, speaks
-to him of the past or of the future. For the touch of the fresh cool
-air upon the face clears away all cobwebs of sordid thought, and
-braces the faculties for new endeavour. Here, too, may be witnessed
-many a matchless transformation scene. For presently the rain ceases,
-the grey mist melts into the lucent blue of the sky, and wet hill and
-woodland sparkle and glow in a flood of hot sunshine. Immediately
-the shallow trout burn that comes down to the stepping-stones under
-the edge of the wood laughs gaily and dances over its pebbles; the
-mountain in front becomes a great sapphire burning gloriously under
-the blue; the larks rise, true sun-worshippers, pouring forth rills
-of song, libations to their God, at heaven’s own gate; and from the
-twittering coppice flutter the vain chaffinches, with purple velvet
-heads, gold breasts, and silver-barred wings, to show themselves.
-Never do the vaunted birds of the tropics sing so joyously as the
-sweet hedge-warblers of Britain; and, ages before the alchemists
-came, thrush and robin and yellowhammer had found out Nature’s own
-philosopher’s-stone, and sang the praises of that sunshine which, like
-love and like human genius, turns all it touches into gold.
-
-Steep as a wall in front rises the mountain barrier of the Highlands,
-its wooded and inaccessible shoulder projecting far into the loch.
-Only one passage is to be found through that rocky wall, and the road
-to it winds perilously round a little bay, between darkening precipice
-and lapping wave, before ascending the narrow and unseen defile. Daring
-would the assailant be who tried that steep and narrow path with a
-Highland foe above him! Scarcely more than a bridle-path, and steep as
-a staircase, it winds upward between rugged mountain walls. A single
-clansman, posted with gun and claymore behind one of its jutting crags,
-might hold the road against a regiment. High and dark overhead against
-the sky rise sombre pines and immemorial holly-trees, which from their
-torn and shattered girth might be--
-
- Seedlings of those that heavenward sprung
- While yet the maiden moon was young
-
---ancient enough, at anyrate, to have looked down on many a Highland
-foray. No one need marvel that the Macgregors thought themselves safe
-when they had driven their spoil through the Pass of Balmaha.
-
-And glorious as well as welcome was the sight that met these clansmen
-when once actually through the defile. For away to the north, Ben
-beyond Ben, far as eye could range, rose the fastnesses of their native
-mountains--silver waters flashing below round islands of fern, and the
-blue sky laughing above. Every glen had its memory, and every corrie
-was their inheritance, and even the traveller of the present day can
-know no more gorgeous spectacle than Ben Lomond after sunset burning
-in amethystine fire. For more reasons than one, therefore, might these
-rough old warriors rejoice when they had scaled the pass and beheld
-before them this wild but lovely vista of the country they called their
-home.
-
-
-
-
-A HIGHLAND MORNING.
-
-
-Breakfast is over--a Highland breakfast. Full justice has been done to
-the pleasant porridge and warm creamy milk, the fresh herrings that
-were alive in Loch Fyne a few hours ago, salmon from the splash-nets at
-Eriska, fragrant coffee, excellent home-made scones, and rich butter,
-tasting of the clover-field. The day is superb, and no one will spend
-more of it indoors than he can help; besides, the boat will be almost
-afloat now, and it will take a little time to bale her out. Bring the
-lines, then, with their gaudy red and yellow flies--it may be that
-a mackerel or two are to be caught in the loch; a novel of William
-Black’s, “The Princess of Thule” or “MacLeod of Dare,” and a pocketful
-of good cigars. It is hardly nine o’clock, yet the sun is dazzling
-and hot in the doorway. There is just enough air moving to bring up
-the fresh smell of the seaweed stirred by the rising tide. The white
-sandy road is almost dry again after the rain which has fallen in the
-night, and as the kine, after their morning milking, are turned into
-the clover-field alongside, the foremost will hardly move from the gate
-to allow the others to enter, but bury their muzzles at once in the
-fresh, wet grass. The sea lies flashing and sparkling in the morning
-sunshine, and, on the dark Kingairloch mountains opposite, here and
-there the silver streak of a torrent still shows the effects of the
-morning shower. A sunny quiet fills the air. The faint screaming and
-splashing of gulls and sea-swallows far out over some shoal of fishes,
-and the sound of the oars in the rowlocks of the distant boat, can be
-distinctly heard, while the leisurely movements of the horse and cart
-going down the road a quarter of a mile away are quite distinguishable.
-The driver is whistling pleasantly; the tune is “Mo nighean donn
-bhoidheach.” The last mists are leaving the mountain sides, and
-everything promises a hot day. Even the soft white clouds far up in the
-sky are every moment growing fainter, and already the thin shimmer of
-heat is ascending from the dry-stone dyke beside the road. The brambles
-on the other side of the dry, grassy ditch show profuse clusters
-of bright red fruit, but there are no ripe berries to be seen--the
-children pluck them long before they are black. The scarlet hips, too,
-shine bravely on the sprays of hedgebrier, the tips of whose leaves
-are just beginning to turn brown. A small blue butterfly flickers
-across the road, and, rising at the dyke, is lost in a moment against
-the blue of the sky; while a silent humble-bee comes by, alights on
-the last empty bell of a seeded foxglove, and immediately tumbles out
-again disgusted, to continue his researches farther on. Over the hedge
-there, on the other side of the road, the oats seem yellow enough to
-cut, and among them are still in flower a few yellow Marguerites. The
-hill beyond glows purple yet with the heather, although its full bloom
-is past. Here and there plants of it are flowering close to the dyke
-by the roadside. It is the small sort, the kind the bees frequent, for
-they can get into it--the bell heather flowers earlier, and is over now.
-
-But here is our boat. She is already afloat, the mainsail and jib are
-soon hoisted, there is just enough wind to carry her against the tide,
-and Appin and Castle Stalker, the ruined stronghold of the Stewarts
-of Appin, are slowly hidden by the point behind. On the right is the
-green island of Lismore, low lying and fertile, with few houses visible
-upon it; only the slate roof of Lady Elphinstone’s lodge flashes in the
-sunlight like a crystal. And beyond and above tower the dark mountains
-of Morven. To the south, in the offing, lie the islands of Easdale and
-Luing, famous for their slates.
-
-Down we drift, past the Black Isle, to the narrows of Eriska. The
-tide is still running in towards Loch Creran, and the passage, which
-otherwise would have been difficult among the eddies and currents,
-is easily and quickly made. An immense volume of water must pour to
-and fro through that narrow channel to fill the loch at every tide.
-At these times the current rushes like a mill-race. We are inside
-presently, and as the air is very warm, and a pleasant little bay with
-a sandy beach lies close at hand on Eriska, there could be no better
-opportunity for a bathe.
-
-No sooner said than done. The boat is anchored a little way from the
-beach, where through the clear green water the sandy bottom can be
-seen some few fathoms below, and one after another enjoys a header
-from the bow, or slips gently over the stern. Pleasant as Arcady and
-utterly secluded is the spot; not even the crack of a gamekeeper’s
-fowling-piece is to be heard on shore.
-
-But what is this--that jig-jig-jigging of engines? A small steam yacht
-is coming into the loch, and--gracious goodness! there are ladies on
-board. To cover, all three, behind the boat, hang on by the gunwale,
-and trust in Providence to keep the yacht at a respectable distance.
-One has no ambition at such moments to court the suffrages even of the
-most delectable society. But the danger moves past, and though the fair
-ones on deck do smile at the phenomenal movements of our boat, and the
-ominous absence of occupants, who is a whit the worse? They will laugh
-with us, rather than at us, should we meet.
-
-The breeze has freshened a little now, and will be enough to carry
-us up the loch amongst the currents and against the outflowing tide.
-Yonder goes the ferry-boat, crossing from Shian. It has a waggonette
-and horses on board, and the sweeps carry it over but slowly. The long
-low island there, with its few stunted bushes, is seldom visited,
-and remains a favourite haunt of the graceful sea-swallows. Two
-months ago every grassy ledge upon its sides would have its couple of
-sea-swallow’s eggs. See yonder, just beyond the rocky point, swimming
-quietly about, with watchful, intelligent eyes, there is the black head
-of a seal.
-
-As the boat gets round the end of Craigailleach, the ruin of the
-ancient castle of Barcaldine, on the low neck of land across which
-the road winds from Connal, comes into sight. In the days of which
-Sir Walter Scott speaks in his “Lord of the Isles,” when against the
-Bruce in Artornish Castle “Barcaldine’s arm was high in air,” there
-was scantier cultivation around the site of that black stronghold. The
-shrub ivy was not waving then from its beacon turret, and the retainers
-whose thatched cottages are still scattered among the fields around
-were rather caterans and pirates than peaceful crofters. Now, however,
-as Mr William Freeland puts it--
-
- The freebooters, reiving and killing,
- No longer swoop down from their glens,
- But delve by the bothie and shieling,
- Or shepherd their flocks on the bens.
-
-The mountains in front seem to rise higher as we approach, and to cast
-a deeper silence on the narrowing water and motionless woods at their
-base. Barcaldine House, as secluded and delightful a spot as any in the
-Highlands, with its old-fashioned gardens and vineries, lies hidden
-among these woods.
-
-Far up on the purple hillside at the head of the loch the eye can make
-out a lonely burying-place. A stone dyke guards the little enclosure
-of quiet graves. The spot is visible for many a mile around, and its
-presence ever in sight must have a tender and solemn effect in keeping
-alive the memory of the dead. Every day, as the crofter toils in his
-little field, or the shepherd takes the hill with his dogs, his eyes
-will turn to it, and he will think of wife or child who lie in that
-still, peaceful place, asleep under the calm sunshine and among the
-heather. Only sometimes will it be hidden--when the soft, white,
-trailing mists come down and weep their gentle tears upon the spot.
-
-Directly in front, away beyond and above the other mountains, towers
-Ben Cruachan, a monarch among the peers. And below, on the shore of the
-loch, appears the long, low-roofed cottage, half covered a month ago
-with crimson tropeolum, and half smothered among its roses, where lives
-the author of the humorous and valuable “Notes from Benderloch.” Here
-is our destination. Let down the mainsail, let go the jib, and we will
-run ashore. It is not yet noon, and there are many hours before us to
-spend in the beautiful Barcaldine woods.
-
-
-
-
-TILL DEATH US PART.
-
-
-“Is she better, Doctor?”
-
-“No; worse. Can’t last through the night, I’m afraid.”
-
-The forester’s wife pauses a moment, looking after the physician’s
-carriage as it whirls out of sight in the gathering darkness along the
-road; then, exclaiming sadly, “Poor, dear young lady!” she closes again
-the heavy iron gates, and retires to her own happy hearthside within
-the lodge.
-
-Night has all but fallen, and though it is still only dusk upon the
-open road outside, within the avenue the gloaming is already deepening
-into mirk, and under the shadows of the limes it will soon be quite
-dark. A quiet spring night. When the wheels of the doctor’s carriage
-have retreated in the distance, no sound is to be heard amid the
-shadows but the twitter of a blackbird settling itself again to roost
-in its perfumed dreaming-place among the spruce branches, and the
-silvery tinkle of a streamlet making its way at hand through the ferny
-under-tangle of the wood. The air is rich with the fresh sweetness
-of budding life--the breath of unseen primroses opening their creamy
-petals upon dewy moss-banks in the darkness. Born amid the stillness,
-new, vague hopes stir within the heart; everywhere seems the delicious
-promise of the time of blossom and leaf that is to be; and the
-motionless night itself seems conscious of the coming of desire. It is
-a night to inspire a poet or a lover; every faint wood-scent, the cool
-touch of the night air itself upon the cheek, bringing with it some
-subtle suggestion, the more delightful that it is undefined, setting
-the pulse of youth a-beating with thoughts of a glad to-morrow.
-
-Alas for those to whom no morrow will come!
-
-At the upper end of the long avenue a faint light is shining yet in two
-windows of the many-gabled mansion-house. One of the windows is open,
-and within, at a small table, leaning his head upon his hand, can be
-seen the figure of a man. It is the master of the house. He has just
-received the last sentence of the physician, “I can be of no further
-service. The end will probably come before to-morrow”; and the words
-are still in his ears, beating like a leaden pendulum against his
-heart. Straight before him into the dark night he is gazing; but the
-eyes that look are tearless; only the drawn line about his mouth and
-the pitiful twitching of his lip bespeak the emotion that is working
-within. Yet he is not altogether left to himself. The air from the open
-window stirs his hair and fans his pale cheek--Nature, like a sweet and
-gentle friend, would offer him the soothing of her sympathy. Probably
-he is unconscious of it--drowning in the hopeless flood-tide of his
-grief; but, with the gentle air stealing in from the darkness outside,
-the influence of the great Reconciler, mother-heart of all mankind,
-is already touching him. While his ear takes in the soft movements
-of the nurse in the next room, tending all that is dearest to him on
-earth, his heart, stirred unconsciously by the subtle suggestions of
-the incoming night-scents, is travelling, torn with regret, through
-the tender avenues of the past. And strangely fresh in every detail
-reappear those scenes imprinted upon the pages of memory by the
-sunshine of love.
-
-He is in a cottager’s garden, listening, amid the hum of the hives
-and the glory of old-fashioned wallflower borders, to the gossip of
-the simple old soul who is showing him her little domain. There is
-the quick trotting of a pony. A low phaeton drives past on the road
-beneath. And he has seen and shared the smiling glance of a gentle,
-lovely face--a sunny glimpse to be remembered. Again, he has been
-picnicking with friends, a family party, on the shore of a Highland
-loch, and has noticed with mingled admiration and resentment that while
-all others have been seeking their own enjoyment, one pair of frank
-and willing little hands has wrought the whole comfort of the group.
-They are in the shallops, rowing home, and as, pulling at his oar, he
-listens to the innocent freshness of a shy young voice singing some
-Highland boat-song, he becomes conscious for the first time of a vista
-before him of wondrous new and fair possibilities--of a path in life
-which is not to be trodden alone. Once more. It is a secluded spot. He
-has wandered in happy company, from his party. Clear as yesterday comes
-back the memory of the scene. In front some tented waggons, rust-brown
-with wandering years, trail down the woodland by-road. The gipsy woman
-has taken his silver coin, and, with a keen, shrewd glance, has wished
-the “lady and gentleman a happy bridal!” He has seized the moment, has
-whispered the secret which was no secret, and has read in shining eyes
-the answer of his hopes.
-
-All that was a year ago, little more--woodland and lake and garden,
-with a hundred other scenes and episodes as tender, which, crowding
-back, fill his heart to bursting; and now----
-
-He rises, closing the window, and passes into the adjoining room.
-
-Treading softly on the thick carpet, a glance assures him that nothing
-has altered in the sick-chamber since he left it with the physician.
-Only amid the momentous stillness, in the subdued light by the fire,
-the trim, white-aproned nurse is trying to read. A whisper to her--she
-will be called if required; and, closing the door noiselessly behind
-her, she leaves him to watch alone.
-
-Alone, for the last time, with all that is dear to him, the flower that
-is fading out of his life so soon! He turns to the bed. There, pale
-with preternatural loveliness, her dark hair spread like a cloud upon
-the pillow, lies the sunny sweetheart, the shy bride of a year ago.
-A faint moan, the glistening of a tear between the closed eyelids,
-betrays the grief that is haunting that strange shadowland between this
-world and the next--grief for that which was not to be! He can look
-no more! Sinking into a chair by the fire, he buries his face in his
-hands. It is the hour of his despair.
-
-Midnight has long passed; the fire is sinking unheeded in the grate;
-and he has not moved.
-
-“Arthur!”
-
-In a moment he is by the bed, that thin, hot hand in his, gazing
-heartbroken into the face of his wife. In those grey eyes of hers there
-is no second thought. Love, for the time is short, has dropped his last
-disguise, and looks forth from them with unutterable tenderness and
-regret. “Arthur!” She lingers fondly upon his name, and her fingers
-push the hair tenderly from his brow--“Arthur!”
-
-But there is a sudden change. A look of terror springs to her eyes,
-and she clings wildly to his arm. Is this the end? She would have
-fallen back upon the pillow had not his arm been round her. With a
-despairing effort, her eyes filling with tears, she articulates, “We
-have--been--very--happy--my dear!” Their lips meet for the last
-time--a long, long farewell. Then a second shadow passes over her face.
-He lays her gently back upon the pillow. The wistful, eager look dies
-away out of her eyes. It is all over. He is alone, kneeling by the bed,
-his face pressed deep into his hands. A gust of wind, rising outside,
-shakes the sash of the window; the crow of chanticleer is heard far off
-at the stables: it is three o’clock, the coldest hour of the night.
-
-And in the lodge at the foot of the avenue, at that hour, the young
-forester’s wife, stirring softly in her sleep, presses the month-old
-babe beside her closer to her heart.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-A FOREST WEDDING.
-
-
-Though it is not yet seven o’clock, the winter night, in this northern
-parish, has quite closed in, and it is already very dark. When the sun
-set, far in the south, some hours ago, its disc gleamed coppery red
-through brown mist veils as of rising smoke, and the shepherd’s wife on
-the moor, as she brought in her peats for the night, said she thought
-there would be more snow before morning. It has not yet begun to fall,
-however, when the minister, wrapped up to the ears in his heavy coat,
-and his feet encased in strong, thick-soled boots, pulling on a pair
-of rough worsted gloves, and calling his spaniel from her place on the
-study hearth, sets out from his comfortable manse.
-
-Presently, as he turns from the beaten highway into the snow-clad woods
-of the manor, hearing the bell of the distant town steeple behind
-him striking the hour, he gives an encouraging word to his dog, and
-quickens his steps a little. As he passes the humble window of the
-gate-lodge, he pauses a moment--there was a sound; yes, it is audible
-again--a mother crooning softly over her child; and his eye glistens as
-his ear catches the lullaby, old bachelor as he is. From the chimney
-on the low roof, too, there steals down among the trees the savoury
-fragrance of the evening meal. The father, one of the under-gamekeepers
-on the estate, evidently has not come home yet, and his young wife is
-waiting for him.
-
-The sky hangs soft and very dark overhead, the tree-tops are all but
-lost in it, and one can almost fancy he hears the drifting of the
-coming snow. But all is silent, not a branch in the forest stirs, and
-between the black tree-trunks the white sheet can be seen stretching
-stainless and undisturbed on either hand into the mysterious depths of
-the woods. The trees themselves, unshaken all these weeks by wind or
-squirrel or woodbird, raise into the night their branches robed to the
-remotest twig in the matchless lacework of the frost.
-
-But see! Along the hollow, to the left, can be caught a glimpse of
-the manor-house, its windows, most of them, aglow with light. A grey,
-stately old place it is, in the midst of its woods, eloquent with the
-memories of long-past centuries. Royalty has been entertained there in
-bygone days, and in the woodland aisles around has echoed merrily the
-laughter of many a gay party from the Court, distant only a morning’s
-ride. But storm after storm has swept the land since then; that gay
-Court’s palace lies a ruin now; and while the race of the humble
-peasant still thrives in the manor woods, the race of the manor lord
-and the race of the kings themselves of those days have passed from the
-earth for ever.
-
-There is no spot in so old a land but has its memories, sad and gay.
-Somewhere in these woods, in days still farther gone, a national hero
-was betrayed, and on the moorland ridge, a mile away, a king’s army
-suffered defeat. But the minister passes on. His errand to-night is
-neither to palace nor castle, yet it may be that the simple hearts he
-is presently to unite will beat as happily under a lowly roof of thatch
-as do those of the gentle owners in their mansion yonder.
-
-By degrees, as he presses on, the path becomes rougher, the trees
-deepen the darkness overhead, and hardly a former footstep has left its
-trace in the undrifted snow. The solitude might almost be primeval,
-so absolute is the silence in these untrodden recesses. The solitary
-snapping, once, of a rime-laden branch has only testified amid the
-stillness to the intensity of the frost. At last, however, the path
-widens somewhat, there is a little clearing and a forsaken lodge, and
-beyond, here and there in the open, gleam the scattered lights of the
-village. A sequestered spot it is, bowered in summer by the whispering
-woods, and in winter buried in the forest solitudes by the swathing
-snow.
-
-But there is merriment enough to-night in the little community; and
-the frequent ring of laughter from the nearest cottage, as well as
-the warm glow of firelight streaming from its threshold and windows,
-deep-set under the thatch, tell where the festivities are going
-forward. It is the cottage of the bride’s father: all the village has
-assembled here to assist in the ceremony, and they are waiting now
-for the minister. The laughter subsides as he lifts the latch and
-enters, stamping in the doorway to shake the snow from his feet; and
-all eyes are turned upon him, as the goodman of the house, a grizzled
-forester of sixty winters, hastens forward with a welcome to help
-him out of his coat. It is a comfortable scene, the interior of the
-low-raftered kitchen, lit up rather by the warm glow of the open fire
-than by the candles set on table and window-shelf. By the hearth are
-gathered the older folk--the many-wrinkled granny, in comely white
-mutch and kerchief; the few matrons, with smoothly-braided hair,
-and little ornament, except a well-worn ring or two; and the men in
-decent homespun; while farther back are grouped the more youthful
-members of the party--broad-shouldered young fellows and merry-eyed
-lasses, excited a little by the somewhat infectious inspiration of the
-occasion. Everything in the humble apartment is as clean as housewifely
-care can make it; not a speck is to be seen on the brown stones of the
-floor, and above the black shining chimney-piece the brass candlesticks
-glitter like gold. On the snowy dresser, below the well-filled
-plate-rack, is piled in profusion the substantial fare which will do
-duty later on. Meanwhile, on the white deal table in the middle of the
-room is set only the well-worn family Bible.
-
-The minister, with a kindly word, has shaken the hand of the somewhat
-embarrassed bridegroom, and stands now, inquiring pleasantly after
-granny’s eyesight, by the fire. There is a pause of expectancy, a
-hurried messenger or two pass between the rooms, and then the bride, a
-handsome young woman of twenty-two or so, is brought in by her mother
-from “ben the hoose,” as the only other apartment is called. With a
-look of happy pride at the object of his affection, the bridegroom
-takes his place by her side at the farther end of the table, and the
-minister, glancing round to see that all is ready, opens the Bible.
-
-After a brief but earnest prayer, and the reading of a short passage of
-Scripture, the good old man addresses them in a few solemn yet kindly
-words. They are taking the most serious step in life; let them look to
-Heaven for a blessing upon it. The future may bring them prosperity;
-let them see that it does not cool their affection. It may also have
-trials in store for them; let these be lightened by being shared
-between them. Above all, let them remember to be open-hearted to one
-another. Then he asks if they are willing to be wedded “for better or
-for worse,” bids them join hands, engages in another most momentous
-prayer, and finally declaring them man and wife, with the solemn
-injunction, “Whom God has joined together, let no man put asunder,”
-ends the short ceremony.
-
-Immediately there is a great stir, shaking of hands with the
-bridegroom, and kissing of the bride; the gallant “best man,” somehow,
-unwarrantably extending the salutation to the blushing bridesmaid. The
-mother sheds a few quiet tears, and granny, by the fire, wakens up to
-speak of her own wedding day.
-
-But the proper papers have been signed, and the minister, followed to
-the door by the overflowing thanks of the little family, and refusing
-all offers of escort, leaves the homely company to its enjoyment--for
-the dance will be kept up till a late hour in the morning. The night
-air is bracing, after the warmth inside, and, as the sky has cleared a
-little by this time, the pathway back through the woods will be better
-seen by the silvery sparkle of the frosty stars.
-
-
-
-
-LOCH LOMOND ICE-BOUND.
-
-
-There could hardly be a greater contrast than that between the
-fog-laden atmosphere of Queen Street Station, Glasgow, on a winter
-morning, and the frosty, bracing air of the country outside. Ever since
-the train emerged from the murky gloom of the long city tunnel into the
-open freedom of the frost-covered fields, the sense of exhilaration
-has been increasing. Sounds of laughter from the compartments
-before and behind bespeak the high spirits of the occupants; while
-at every roadside station along the Clyde valley fresh parties of
-pleasure-seekers, their cheeks red and eyes bright with the cold, have
-added to the freight, and swelled the merriment. The ice on Loch Lomond
-is “bearing,” and the clash of skates is in the air.
-
-Slowly at last the train, crammed by this time with skaters of both
-sexes and all ages, pants into the station at Balloch Pier. Before it
-has stopped, the doors of the carriages swing open, and an eager crowd
-swarms out upon the platform. The throng chokes the stairway down the
-face of the pier, so many impatiently hasten back to the shore; there
-is a scramble over a wire fence, a stampede across a well-trodden
-stubble-field to the loch, and then the stream of enthusiasts disperses
-in all directions to don the necessary foot-gear.
-
-Different indeed is the scene now from what it was in summer! Then the
-clear water glistened and twinkled in the sunshine, the white sail of
-a boat slowly moved across the dark green of a distant island, and the
-mountains beyond rose, purple and grey, into a fleckless sky; while one
-of the little loch steamers at the pier blew clouds of steam noisily
-from its funnel, as it took on board its gay crowd of tourists. Now no
-lapse of water is to be heard upon the pebbles, not a whisper moves
-among the frosted fretwork of the trees. The landscape everywhere
-is draped and lifeless, the loch itself lies a level sheet of snow,
-and far up yonder, above the dark narrows where the waters are still
-unfrozen, Ben Lomond raises his shoulder, ermine-clad, into a darkling
-heaven. The twin steamers, too, lie prisoned in the ice, crusted white,
-and motionless as Lot’s wife.
-
-If Nature herself, however, is crystallised into silence and
-stillness, there is both movement and sound of another sort about. Here
-at a run over the field to the ice comes a schoolboy, as eager as if
-the whole day were not before him, his wooden skates clashing together
-as he stumbles on the molehills. Farther off a young man and a maiden
-are transacting in orthodox fashion the idyll of the ice, she seated
-on what has ordinarily been a mooring post, and holding out a dainty
-boot, while he, kneeling devotedly in the snow, buckles on her skate.
-All along the shore, on every hillock that affords a seat, are groups
-of eager enthusiasts, busy with straps and buckles; and the shrill
-whirring sound of the ice tells that many of the new-comers are already
-moving over it.
-
-But the last refractory screw-nut is adjusted--Mercury has buckled on
-his wings; and yonder, two miles away, lies Inch Murren. Each winter,
-when the loch is frozen, the first person who crosses on foot to the
-island receives a pair of deer antlers as a trophy; and often, before
-the ice is very strong, the efforts of some bold skater to win the
-honours are exciting enough. Since the trophy was won this year,[C]
-however, thousands of pleasure-seekers have crossed the loch; venders
-of hot coffee and biscuits have established themselves on the shore
-of the island, under the ruined keep; and a rink of curlers has taken
-possession of the little bay. Where the deer came down to drink in
-summer, there mingles now the crackling roar of heavy stones hurled
-along the ice, with shrieks of vulgar laughter as some conspicuous
-skater comes to grief. The cries of the curlers themselves are loud
-and puzzling enough. At the near end of the rink the leader, a stout,
-grizzled countryman, shouts with many explanatory gestures to the
-player at the far end to “Tak’ a wick aff the fore stane, and lie in
-front to gaird.” The person addressed, evidently a clergyman (for on
-the ice social distinctions are forgotten), sends his cheese-shaped
-block of granite “birling” towards his instructor, and, as it comes
-along, the cries of the players stationed on either side of the rink
-with brushes to “soup her up,” and their vigorous efforts to smooth the
-path before it, are exciting as well as amusing, until the stone comes
-crashing in at last among the others round the mark.
-
- [C] 1882, I think.
-
-The “roaring game” is perhaps more interesting to the player than to
-the onlooker, but the enthusiasm it excites, and the exertion it
-requires, are exactly suited to the season, and prepare its votaries to
-enjoy most heartily the traditional “curler’s dinner” of corned beef
-and greens.
-
-One soon grows tired of the noise and stir around this oasis of the
-ice. Indeed, the laughter and the movement seem almost sacrilege in
-a place where so lately the autumn leaves dropped silently into the
-clear brown water below, where the plash of a trout made stillness
-felt, and the solitude was unbroken by the step of man. Away, then,
-from the coffee-stands and the curling-rink, from the shouting of
-the shinty-players, and the fragrance of intolerable cigarettes! The
-loch is frozen all the way to Luss; last night’s wind has swept every
-particle of snow from the surface; and to the little loch village, out
-of sight in the bay ahead, stretch seven miles of ice, smooth as black
-glass.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Easily as thought the skates curl over the keen ice. The air is clear,
-cold, and bracing, with just a faint odour of the shore woods upon it;
-and curve after curve on the “outside edge” adds, every moment, to the
-exhilarating sense of power and the conscious poetry of motion. It
-is a new and strange sensation, this flight for miles over ice whose
-surface has till now known no invasion. One feels as an astronomer
-must, when exploring new depths of Heaven--
-
- Or like stout Cortez, when, with eagle eyes,
- He stared at the Pacific--and all his men
- Looked at each other with a wild surmise--
- Silent, upon a peak in Darien.
-
-Lonely and far stretches the level realm of ice away northward to the
-dark narrows of the loch, where, under the steep dark sides of the
-mountains, the water is too deep to freeze. To terrible tragedy have
-the black depths under foot been witness. Here it was that Sir James
-Colquhoun, returning from a hunting party on one of the islands, in
-his boat, deep-laden with deer, was caught by a sudden squall on the
-loch and drowned, and it was long before the hidden depths gave up
-their prey. For the waters that lie motionless now in their icy prison
-are given to rise and rage at a moment’s warning; and many are the
-fair pleasure freights they have swallowed. Across these waters, too,
-in the days when might was right, and the Highlands lived by helping
-themselves, have not the boats of the Red Macgregor swept down by
-night from the narrows to pillage and burn? For the Rob Roy country
-lies opposite among the mountains.
-
-But away! away! this is the joyous motion of a bird, and the miles fly
-under foot without effort. It is seven miles from Balloch; and the
-fatigue of the distance has been trifling. A point of land, covered
-with trees, runs out into the loch, and a mile beyond lies Luss.
-Another turn, and a little bay is discovered, most like, in all the
-world, a miniature scene from fairy-land. The glassy ice sleeps on the
-crusted shore; birch and beech and hazel hang motionless around, a
-delicate tracery of snow; not a squirrel moves; the silence is perfect.
-The spot is under the spell of the Frost King. Not altogether, though,
-for a robin flutters down with a twitter from a shaken spray, and,
-proud of his scarlet breast, hops bravely out upon the ice.
-
-At hand, however, appears the chimney of the inn, and--inspiring
-sight!--there is smoke rising from it. The air of the loch is
-appetising, and, as it is now almost five o’clock, something more solid
-than a sandwich seems desirable. Unbuckle the skates, therefore, and,
-following the windings of that narrow loch-side road among the trees,
-let us awaken the hospitality of mine host. It will be dark before we
-start for home; but the sky is clear, there will be a full moon, and,
-under the scintillations of the frosty stars, it will be a merry party
-that skims back over the ice by night to Balloch.
-
-
-
-
-HALLOWMAS EVE.
-
-
-“The good old customs of the country are passing away.”
-
-No speech, perhaps, is oftener heard than this when, over the walnuts
-and the wine, about Christmas time or Hallowe’en, the talk has turned
-upon the subject of old-fashioned festivities. And the sentiment seldom
-fails to evoke a sigh of regret, and to awake recollections of frolic
-mirth enjoyed in lighter-hearted days. But while there is, without
-doubt, truth in the remark, happily it is not altogether true. The
-portly old gentleman who animadverts upon the subject is generally too
-apt to take for granted that, because for some decades he has ceased
-to share in these festal sports, the sports themselves have ceased
-to be observed. If, however, the speaker were to return upon such a
-night as All Hallow’s Eve to the village where perchance his youthful
-years were passed, he might find that the quaint and merry customs he
-laments do not altogether belong to the golden dust of long-forgotten
-days. Though he himself has grown older and graver, the great heart of
-the world has remained ever young; and ever still, as the traditional
-occasions come round, there breaks forth amid its long-accustomed
-scenes the ancient madcap carnival of mirth.
-
-Not, indeed, quite as in bygone times is this festival of Hallowe’en
-now observed. The witches no longer, as in days of yore, are believed
-to hold their revels then upon the green-sward, and something of the
-ancient superstition which otherwise lent awe to the eve of All Saints’
-Day has been dispelled by modern education. But enough remains of
-uncanny feeling to lend interest to the more mysterious proceedings of
-the night; and the spirit of simple enjoyment may be trusted to keep
-alive for its own sake most of the mirth-giving functions of the feast.
-An institution which took its origin probably from some strange rite of
-far-back pagan times, which has managed to survive countless changes of
-thought, and, like a rolling snowball, to incorporate in itself traces
-of the Crusades, of the mediæval church mysteries or miracle plays,
-and of later witchcraft and elfin superstitions, must have a strong
-hold somewhere upon human nature, and is not likely to disappear quite
-at once even before the blast of the steam-engine and the roll of the
-printing-press.
-
-If one wishes to know how lads and lasses spent their Hallowe’en in
-Ayrshire a hundred years ago, he has but to read the famous description
-of the occasion written by the glowing peasant-pen of Burns; and
-cold indeed must be his imagination if he does not catch from that
-description something of the frolic spirit of the night. In these lines
-he may hear the timid lasses “skirl” as their sweethearts surprise them
-pulling the fateful corn-stalks; he may watch Jamie Fleck secretly
-sowing his handful of hemp-seed, and waiting for the image of his
-destined true-love to appear behind him in the act of harrowing it; he
-may see Meg in the empty barn, winnowing her “wechts o’ naething,” and
-likewise waiting for her true-love’s presentment; and he may laugh at
-the mishap befalling the wanton widow as she dips her left sleeve in
-the rivulet at the meeting of three lairds’ lands. But one must not
-think that these time-honoured rites are all unpractised now.
-
-Let him step into some great farm-kitchen of the Lothians, with its
-red fire roaring up the chimney, its plate-racks gleaming on the walls,
-and dressers, tables, and chairs clean as scrubbing can make them, and
-he will find in practice bits of traditional folklore and traits of
-human nature equally worthy of the poet’s pen.
-
-The place for the moment is empty, the lamps shining from their bright
-tin sconces on the walls upon unoccupied wooden settles and chairs;
-for lads and lasses together have betaken themselves to pull each his
-particular prophetic stock in the kailyard at hand. But presently,
-with shouts of laughter, they come streaming in from the darkness;
-and shrieks of merriment greet the discovery of the fortune which has
-befallen individual members of the company. For, according as the
-stock lighted on in the dark turns out to be straight or crooked, and
-its taste sweet or bitter, so the appearance and disposition of its
-possessor’s future mate will be; and according as earth has clung to
-the uptorn root or not will the pockets of the future pair be well
-filled or the reverse. A merry party these men and maidens make,
-bringing in with them, as they enter, a breeze of the cool night air,
-and a breath of the sweet, fresh-smelling earth. And from the flaming
-cheeks and sparkling eyes of at least one of the laughing girls, it is
-to be doubted that she has met outside with somewhat warmer and more
-certain assurance of the personality of her future partner in life than
-is likely to be afforded by her stock of curly kail.
-
-Another method of divination, however, presently engrosses all
-attention indoors. Three bowls are set out on the hearth--one full
-of clean water, one muddy, and the remaining vessel empty. One after
-another each lad and lass is blindfolded, the position of the bowls is
-changed in thimble-rigging fashion, and he or she is led forward and
-invited to place a hand in one. According as the dish chosen proves
-dirty, clean, or empty, will the inquirer of the Fates marry a widow or
-a maid, or remain a bachelor; and shrieks of merriment are occasioned
-by the appropriate mishaps which befall the most confident.
-
-Then there is the burning of nuts to be done in the great
-kitchen-fire--a method of discovering whether the future wedded state
-is to be one of peace or discord. And it is amusing to see the quietest
-of the maids drop two nuts side by side into a red corner of the
-coal, blushing at the guesses made by her merry companions, but shyly
-whispering to herself, “This is Patey and this is me,” and watching
-with bashful eagerness as the two take fire together. Puff! Alas for
-her hopes, poor child! “Patey” has shot away from her side; and the hot
-tears are woefully near her eyes as she notices that he has settled
-down to burn by the nut of her neighbour. May her sorrows, sweet lass,
-never have darker cause than this imaginary presage of losing a fickle
-lover!
-
-And now, by way of supper, a mighty platter of “champed” potatoes
-is placed upon the table--a pile mountain high, in which are hidden
-somewhere a ring, a sixpence, a thimble, and a button. The lamps are
-put out, each person is armed with a spoon, and in the uncertain
-light of the glowing fire the mystic procession moves round the table
-in single file. Each one as he passes the platter takes a spoonful
-of potatoes, and he or she who finds the ring is fated to be first
-married. The sixpence is an augury of wealth, and the finding of
-the thimble or the button is, according to the sex of the finder,
-an indication that he or she will marry a maiden spouse or will die
-single.
-
-But, listen! There is a sudden loud knocking at the door. It heralds
-the time-honoured visitation of the Guizards, a ceremony annually
-renewed by each succeeding generation of village boys. In they stalk,
-got up in grotesque improvisations of mumming costume, each armed with
-a wooden sword, and carrying a ghostly lantern hollowed out of a giant
-turnip. “Here comes in Galoshin,” as that individual himself informs
-the company--being doubtless the traditional representative of some
-forgotten Templar Knight; and presently he is engaged in a sanguinary
-hand-to-hand encounter with another wooden-sworded champion upon the
-floor. Many are the bold words that are said and the doughty deeds
-that are done; and through the whole performance one may see, as Scott
-remarked in a note to “Marmion,” traces of the ancient monkish plays
-and the revels of the mediæval Lord of Misrule. At the end the players
-are contented with a reward of apples and nuts, and a share in their
-elders’ merriment.
-
-Tubs full of water are placed on the floor, and dozens of red-cheeked
-apples set swimming in them; and immediately a wild scene of revel
-ensues, as all and sundry, men and maids, on their knees, seek to
-snatch the floating apples with their teeth. Many an unexpected ducking
-is got, and shrieks of laughter greet each mishap and each ineffectual
-effort to secure a prize. Then there is a wild game of blind man’s
-buff, led off by Galoshin himself, who turns out, now that his burnt
-cork and whiskers have been washed off, to be one of the younger men
-of the house, and the soul of all the fun. And from the sly fashion
-in which he avoids other quarry, and keeps hemming one rosy little
-maid into corners, compelling her to spring shrieking over settles and
-chairs, it may be gathered that the knowing fellow is no more blinded
-than he wishes himself to be.
-
-And so the night goes on, a night of whole-hearted and innocent
-mirth--enough to prove that the spirit of old-fashioned revelry is by
-no means dead, and that, for at least one night in the year, the young
-blood of Lowland and Lothian still can make as much and as joyous
-merriment as ever did its progenitors a hundred years ago.
-
-
-
-
-HOGMANAY.
-
-
-Conspicuous among the folk-customs which, north of the Tweed, have
-survived from the remotest antiquity, remains that of welcoming with
-wassail and good wishes the birth of the New Year. To all appearance
-a pagan custom, dating from the pre-Christian past, it probably owes
-its permanence to instincts acquired amid the superstitions of the
-Dark Ages. Of late years, it is true, under the influence of southern
-fashion, the festival of Christmas has seemed to be superseding that
-of New Year’s Eve. But, as with many other picturesque and interesting
-customs of Scotland, the older observance remains yet deeply rooted in
-the heart of the people, and, having already survived so many changes
-of habit and creed, may be expected to outlive even this latest inroad.
-
-There is much to be said, too, for the keeping of Hogmanay. Christmas,
-indeed, is the commemoration of a great religious event, and even in
-the North it appears interesting and appropriate enough as a Church
-festival; while to those with whom its observance has been a national
-and family custom it contains, of course, an ample significance. But
-to people who have inherited the instinct with their blood, the end of
-the year remains a more fitting time for recalling the deeds and the
-days that are past; and the keeping of Hogmanay awakens, north of the
-Border, a subtle train of early feelings and associations--the pensive
-charm and sweetness of “auld lang syne.” Scarcely a dwelling is there,
-cottage or hall, in the breadth of all broad Scotland, which has not,
-time out of mind, on this night of the year witnessed some observance
-of the ancient and pleasant festival. Alike under gilded ceilings and
-roofs of thatch there is to be heard then the toasting of old memories
-and the pledging of health and fortune to the house and its occupants
-throughout the dawning year. About every village cross, too, as the
-last moments of the year approach, the young men of the neighbourhood
-have ever been wont to gather to greet the incoming day with shouts of
-rejoicing and with the curious traditional custom of “first-footing.”
-Even in the cities, where contact with the world tends greatly to
-obliterate such folk-customs, it is curious to see the ancient festival
-year after year assert itself, its observance the better assured,
-probably, because it brings back to those who attend it the scenes and
-memories of earlier, and, perhaps, happier days.
-
-Ever with the same details the time-honoured proceeding may be
-witnessed on the night of any 31st day of December at the Cross of the
-ancient city of St Mungo.
-
-Some time before midnight the roar of the day’s traffic has died out of
-the streets. The great warehouses are closed, and their windows gaze,
-like sightless eyes, into the deserted thoroughfares. To one imbued
-with the spirit of the hour, it is as if the city herself were thinking
-of the past; and the sudden sweep of wind that comes and dies away
-seems a sigh of regret for her departed glories. Many memories cluster
-about this ancient heart of Glasgow; and at such an hour, and upon
-such a night, it would seem little more than natural if the historic
-figures of the past should move again abroad. Strangely enough, too,
-the creatures of imagination present a no less tangible presence to
-the mind’s eye than the real persons of bygone days. Behind the tall,
-limping figure of Sir Walter Scott, a curious visitor here, the equally
-immortal Bailie picks his steps; and as the bold Rob Roy strides past
-into the shadow, there is heard the tramp of Cromwell’s bodyguard
-and the clatter of the Regent Moray’s cavalry. For it was out by the
-Gallowgate here, and across the river by the Briggate, that the troops
-of the Protestant lords marched in 1568 to the battle of Langside; and
-at the head of Saltmarket the Protector Cromwell quartered himself
-in 1650, issued his orders, and held levees. In the Gallowgate yet,
-though sore transformed from its ancient glory, stands that once-famous
-inn, the Saracen’s Head, at which the learned Dr Johnson put up while
-passing through Glasgow on his Hebridean tour. Close by the Cross,
-where the street lamps shine on the shuttered windows of a great
-east-end warehouse, stood the town-house of the Earls of Lennox;
-and past it, up the gentle hill, and still wearing something of its
-old-world look, bends the High Street with its memories. Out of sight
-up there the façade of the venerable College, _alma mater_ of Campbell
-the poet, Smollett the novelist, Archbishop Tait, and a host of great
-divines, was wont for over four hundred years to frown upon the
-pavement. The Vandal, however, has at last prevailed against it. A
-few paces farther and the gigantic form of Sir William Wallace still
-seems to slaughter his enemies at the Bell o’ the Brae. And beyond all,
-on the slope of the hollow where the classic Molendinar once flowed,
-surrounded in the darkness by its city of the dead, stands the grey
-cathedral of St Kentigern.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The spot itself, however, has indeed changed with time, and but few
-links are left it to recall bygone days. The loud tramp of Dundee’s
-dragoons long since died away in Rottenrow. No longer do the rustling
-gowns of bishop and dean sweep through the cathedral choir. Even the
-house from which the ill-fated Lord Darnley, sick to death, was carried
-to the lonely Kirk o’ Fields three hundred years ago, has disappeared.
-Cavalier and Covenanter and Virginia merchant have given place to
-the petty trader and the artizan. The house at the foot of Glassford
-Street, where Prince Charlie put up in the ’45, has been pulled down;
-and of the walls which witnessed the rejoicing bonfires of the Whig
-burgesses after the news of Culloden, few are left but those of the dim
-cathedral. Even the Saltmarket at hand has been so altered of late
-years, that if worthy Bailie Nicol Jarvie were to step out again on
-the causeway he would find no trace at all of the narrow, ill-paved,
-unlighted lane of his day, with its high, rickety houses, and creaking
-shop-signs.
-
-Rather must the city pride herself now upon her glories of the present.
-Far off, upon the great Clyde artery at Govan, where the nets of the
-salmon-fishers once hung in the sun to dry, the noise of a myriad
-hammers has just ceased for the holiday, and the iron skeletons of a
-hundred ships stand silent in the darkness--spectres not of the past
-but of the future. Overhead, between the high house-roofs, the heaven
-is very dark, and above the lanterns of the clock the Tron steeple is
-hidden from sight; but one side of the neighbouring tower--that of the
-ancient Tolbooth in High Street--reflects the red glare, from a mile
-away, of the iron furnaces at Hutchesontown--those undying vestal fires
-of the nineteenth century; and the golden vane upon the spire shines,
-strangely lit, alone in the dark heaven. Significant indications,
-these, of the strong modern life that throbs in the veins of the
-ancient city.
-
-But the great gilt hand of the clock overhead is approaching midnight,
-and along the streets, from the four points of the compass, comes the
-sound of innumerable hastening feet. It is the crowd gathering to
-observe this immemorial ceremony of “bringing in the year.”
-
-Few of the revellers, probably, reflect upon the antiquity of the
-custom they are observing; if they did, it might, perhaps, lend
-the proceeding a deeper interest in their eyes. To survive so many
-vicissitudes of history, the rite must once have possessed a solemn
-religious meaning. On the bank of the river below, the rough Norse
-rover has shouted “Wæs hael” to Thor; on the crest of the hill above,
-the Roman warrior has poured libations to Jove. Bishops of a feudal
-church within the storied cathedral walls have said the mass of Christ;
-and the spires of many a Presbyterian kirk now rise round the ancient
-Cross. But through all changes, through the ebb and flow of Faith and
-Fear, has come down the relic of an older worship, and in the mistletoe
-and the New-Year mysteries the Druid lives among us still. These people
-are gathering now, as for ages their race has gathered, to bid farewell
-to the old year and welcome to the new, and to pour their mystic
-sacrifice to Time--not, indeed, as of old, upon the unconscious earth
-nor within the stone circle of a rude astronomy, but at least under the
-open sky, and with something of the ancient wish-rites of the runes.
-
-Hundreds in number they come, and over all the open space--at corners
-where in the daytime knots of loafers are for ever to be seen, as well
-as on the Trongate pavement, where, all day long, recruiting sergeants,
-splendid in red and gold, pace magnificently to and fro--in little
-groups they wait the stroke of twelve. Each man has brought with him a
-bottle, and in each man’s pocket there is hidden a glass, one that has
-seen service and lost its stem being the popular variety.
-
-Quickly enough the final seconds of the year run out. The hand of the
-great clock reaches and touches the hour. At last it strikes, a single
-bell--one, two, three--a bold sound in the silence; and immediately
-it is answered by a bewildering clangour from all the city belfries.
-Before the last stroke has died away, a wild cheer bursts from the
-throat of the waiting crowd below. There is a great commotion among
-the little groups; and, as cheer after cheer rings up into the sky,
-from the belfry overhead the city chimes ring out upon the night their
-welcome to the New Year.
-
-Meanwhile everyone is drinking the health of everyone else, Celt and
-Saxon, countryman and citizen; and as no one can pass an acquaintance
-without hospitality offered and taken, and as, moreover, the dew of Ben
-Nevis is somewhat potent, the shaking of hands and wishing of good luck
-soon become fairly exuberant. Presently, however, everyone sets off to
-first-foot his friends.
-
-The origin of this ceremony it is difficult to suggest, unless it be
-to represent some priestly visitation, a sacrament assuring to the
-people throughout the coming year the blessings of food and drink.
-A door-to-door proceeding, at anyrate, it is--accompanied by much
-eating of cake and drinking of whisky, and it will last well into the
-morning hours. Lucky, for this performance, are accounted those dark
-of skin. If the first-footer be fair the tradition runs that it bodes
-ill-fortune for the year to the house whose threshold he or she has
-crossed; and often enough a door is shut in the face of such a friend,
-simply because of his complexion. Moreover, the visitor must not come
-empty-handed; and so the bottle and broken wine-glass which each
-carries serve as a double introduction.
-
-And now all who sat up till the city bells struck twelve, as well in
-the crowded tenements here as in the far-off suburbs of the rich, have
-wished each other a good New Year, and are retiring to rest. Among
-them, doubtless, there are many thoughts of sadness. Many a widow was a
-wife last year; many a ruined home was prosperous; many a soiled heart
-still was pure. But the old year, with its sorrow, has passed away in
-the night, and with the New Year’s dawn a glimmer of hope comes in at
-the darkest casement.
-
-
- _Printed by_ M’FARLANE & ERSKINE, _Edinburgh_.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not
-changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.
-
-Text uses “humble-bees”, not “bumble-bees”.
-
-Page 170: “he iss a fine lad” was printed with two s’s.
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketch-Book of the North, by George Eyre-Todd
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Sketch-Book of the North
-
-Author: George Eyre-Todd
-
-Illustrator: A. S. Boyd
- A. Monro
- S. Reid
- Harrington Mann
-
-Release Date: January 31, 2017 [EBook #54083]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCH-BOOK OF THE NORTH ***
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-
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">Sketch-Book of the North</span></h1>
-
-<div class="newpage p4 ad">
-<p class="center larger"><i>OTHER WORKS BY GEORGE EYRE-TODD.</i></p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-
-<p class="p2 in0 in4 sans bold">
-Byways of the Scottish Border.<br />
-Anne of Argyle.<br />
-Vignettes of the North.<br />
-Four Months of Bohemia.<br />
-Scotland Picturesque and Traditional.
-</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center"><i>Also, Edited by the same</i>,</p>
-
-<p class="in0 bold">
-<span class="sans">The Abbotsford Series of Scottish Poets.</span> 7 Vols.<br />
-<span class="sans">Ancient Scots Ballads, with their Traditional Airs.</span>
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="i_frontis" class="newpage p4 figcenter" style="max-width: 22.8125em;"><img src="images/i_004.jpg" width="365" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace xxlarge">
-<span class="gesperrt bold"><span class="bb">SKETCH</span>-BOOK</span><br />
-<span class="xxsmall">OF THE</span><br />
-<span class="gesperrt bold">NORTH</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center vspace large wspace"><span class="small">BY</span><br />
-GEORGE EYRE-TODD</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center small vspace wspace">ILLUSTRATED BY A. S. BOYD, A. MONRO, S. REID<br />
-AND HARRINGTON MANN</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center wspace"><i>Fifth Thousand</i></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center vspace wspace">EDINBURGH AND LONDON<br />
-<span class="larger">OLIPHANT, ANDERSON &amp; FERRIER</span><br />
-1903
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">v</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
- <tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Roman Road</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_1">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Black Douglas</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_2">8</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In the Shadow of St Giles’</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_3">16</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Weaving Village</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_4">23</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Where the Clans Fell</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_5">30</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tam o’ Shanter’s Ride</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_6">37</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Old Tulip Garden</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_7">45</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">By the Blasted Heath</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_8">52</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Among the Galloway Becks</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_9">59</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In Kilt and Plaid</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_10">66</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">At the Foot of Ben Ledi</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_11">74</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cadzow Forest</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_12">81</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Fisher Town</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_13">88</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Loch-side Sunday</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_14">95</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Glen of Gloom</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_15">103</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Across Bute</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_16">110</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">With a Cast of Flies</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_17">118</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">From a Field-Gate</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_18">125</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi">vi</a></span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">School-Days</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_19">133</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Loch-side Strath</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_20">140</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Highland Reel</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_21">147</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Arran Ride</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_22">154</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">By a Western Firth</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_23">161</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Island Picnic</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_24">168</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tennis in the North</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_25">176</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Through the Pass</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_26">183</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Highland Morning</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_27">190</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Till Death us Part</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_28">198</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Forest Wedding</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_29">205</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Loch Lomond Ice-bound</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_30">212</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Hallowmas Eve</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_31">220</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Hogmanay</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_32">228</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii">vii</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="loi" summary="Illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Signal of Death</span> (<i>see <a href="#Page_10">p. 10</a></i>)</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. Monro</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
- <tr class="smaller">
- <td> </td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>facing page</i></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Thoughts of Home</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. Monro</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_4">4</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Web Returned</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. S. Boyd</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_28">28</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Death of Keppoch</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Harrington Mann</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_32">32</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On the Blasted Heath</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. Monro</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_58">58</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jeanie</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. S. Boyd</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_60">60</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Throwing the Hammer</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. S. Boyd</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_72">72</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Massacre of Glencoe</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. Monro</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_108">108</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Gentle Art</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>S. Reid</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_120">120</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Forbidden Waters</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>S. Reid</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_136">136</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Murray’s Curse</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. Monro</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_144">144</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Archie</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. S. Boyd</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_170">170</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">“<span class="smcap">Serve!</span>”</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>S. Reid</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_180">180</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Last Hour</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A. S. Boyd</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_204">204</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Seven Miles of Ice</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>S. Reid</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_216">216</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Trongate of St Mungo</span></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>S. Reid</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_232">232</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_1">A ROMAN ROAD.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Still</span> and soft with the mild radiance of
-early spring the afternoon sunshine sleeps
-upon the rich country, moor and woodland and
-meadow, that stretches away southward towards
-the Border. The top of a ruined tower far off
-rises grey amid the shadowy woods, and a river,
-like a shining serpent, gleams in blue windings
-through the russet valley-land, while the smoke
-of an ancient Border town hangs in the distance,
-like an amber haze, above the side of its narrow
-strath. Northward, too, league upon league,
-sweep the rich pasture-lands of another river
-valley. The red roofs of more than one peaceful
-hamlet glow warm there among the bowering
-road-avenues of ancient trees. And afar at the
-foot of the purple mountain to the west lies the
-grey sequestered abbey of the Bruce.</p>
-
-<p>North and south upon that rich landscape
-history marks with a crimson stain the field of
-many a battle; and though peace and silence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-sleep upon it to-day in the sunshine, hardly is
-there hamlet or meadow in sight whose name does
-not recall some struggle of bygone times. Across
-these hills a hundred and forty years ago Prince
-Charles Edward led the last raid of the clans, and
-before his time the battlefields of Douglas and
-Percy, of Cumberland and Liddesdale, carry the
-mind back into the mists of antiquity, out of which
-looms the sullen splendour of more classic arms.</p>
-
-<p>Here, straight as a swan-flight along the ridge
-of the watershed, commanding the country for
-miles upon either side, still runs the ancient
-highway of Imperial Rome. From the golden
-milestone of Augustus in the Capitol, in a line
-scarce broken by the blue straits of the sea,
-ran hither the path of that ancient Power. Of
-old, along these far-stretching arteries came
-pulsing in tidal waves the iron blood of the
-stern heart beating far away in the south.
-From the wooded valleys below, the awed
-inhabitants doubtless long ago looked up and
-wondered, as the dark masses of the legions
-came rolling along these hills.</p>
-
-<p>Tide after tide, like the rising sea, they rolled
-to break upon the Grampian barriers of the
-North. Here rode Agricola, his face set towards<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-the dark and mist-wrapt mountains beyond the
-Forth, eager to add by their conquest the word
-“Britannicus” to his name. Here by his side, it
-is probable, rode the courtly Tacitus, his son-in-law,
-to describe to future ages the Scotland of
-that time, “lashed,” as he knew it, “by the
-billows of a prodigious sea.” Southward here,
-stern and intent, once sped the swift couriers
-bearing to Rome tidings of that great battle at
-Mons Grampus, where the bodies of ten thousand
-Caledonians slain barred the northward march of
-the Roman general. Southward, again, along
-this road it is almost certain has passed the
-majesty of a Roman Emperor himself. For in
-the year 211 the Emperor Severus, ill and angry,
-leaving fifty thousand dead among the unsubdued
-mountains of the North, was borne out of Scotland
-by the remnant of his army, to die of chagrin
-at York. And here, long ago, by his flickering
-watch-fire at night, the Roman sentinel, perhaps,
-has let his thoughts wander again sadly to his
-home by the yellow Tiber two thousand miles
-away, to the vine-clad cot where the dark-eyed
-sister of his boyhood, the little Livia or Tessa,
-would be ripening now like the olives, with no
-one to care for and protect her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">4</a></span></p>
-
-<div id="ip_4" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30.8125em;"><img src="images/i_015.jpg" width="493" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Fifteen hundred years ago, however, the last
-yellow-haired captives had been carried south to
-whet the wonder of the populace in the triumph
-of a Roman general. Fifteen hundred years ago
-the power of the Imperial city had begun to
-wane, and the tide of her conquest ebbed along
-these hills. The eagles of the empire swept
-southward to defend their own eyrie upon the
-Palatine, and here, along the highways they had
-made, died the tramp of the departing legions.
-The tides of later wars, it is true, have flowed
-and ebbed across the Border. Saxon and Norman,
-both in turn, have set their faces towards the
-North. But later nations kept lower paths, and,
-untrodden here along the hill-tops, like the great
-Roman Empire itself, this chariot-way of the
-Cæsars has looked down upon them all. Forsaken,
-indeed, and altogether lonely it is now.
-Torn by the rains of fifteen centuries, and overgrown
-with the tangle of a thousand years, the
-roadway that rang to the hoofs of Agricola is
-haunted to-day by the timid hare, while overhead,
-where the sun glittered once on the golden eagles
-of the legions, grey wood-doves flutter now among
-the trees. But, strongly marked by its moss-grown
-ramparts, it still bears witness to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-might of its makers, and, affording no text for
-the sad <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Sic transit gloria mundi</i>, it remains a
-Roman defiance to time, like the defiance of all
-true greatness&mdash;<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Non omnis moriar</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Greater benefits than these roads of stone did
-the Roman bring to the lands he conquered.
-The tread of the victorious legions it was that
-broke the dark slumber of Europe, and in the
-onward march of the western nations the footsteps
-of the Cæsars echo yet upon the earth.
-Rome, it is true, ploughed her empire with the
-sword, but in the furrows she sowed the seeds of
-her own greatness; and these seeds since then
-have grown to many a stately tree. Fallen, it
-may be, is the splendour of the “city upon seven
-hills”; but east and north and west of her rise
-the younger empires of her sons. Augustus from
-his gilded Capitol no longer rules the world, and
-the gleam of the steel-clad legions no longer
-flashes along these old forsaken highways among
-the hills; but the earth is listening yet, spell-bound,
-to the strains of the Latin lyre, and
-wherever to this hour there is eloquence in the
-west, there flourishes the living glory of the
-Roman tongue.</p>
-
-<p>To-day, with the coming of spring in the air,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-there are symbols enough on every hand of the
-great Past that is <em>not</em> dead. The bole of the
-giant beech-tree here, it is true, has itself long
-since ceased to put forth leaves; but, springing
-upward from its strength, a hundred branches are
-spreading aloft the promise of the budding year.
-The dry brown spires of foxglove that stand six
-feet high in the coppice near, dropped months
-ago their purple splendours; but thick already
-about their roots the green tufts of their seedlings
-are pushing up through rich mould and warm
-leaf-drifts of bygone autumn to fill the place anon
-with tenfold glory. From the gnarled roots of
-the ancient thorn-hedge hangs many a yellow
-tress of withered fern; yet the life of the fallen
-fronds is, even now, stirring underground, and
-from the brown knobs there before long will rise
-the greenery of another year. Already, here and
-there, in sunny nooks, a spray of the prickly
-whin has burst into blossom of bright gold. A
-little longer, and the mossy crannies of the ruined
-dyke will be purple with the dim wood-violet.
-And soon, in the steep corner of the immemorial
-pasture that runs up there under the edge of the
-wood, the deep sward will be tufted with creamy
-clusters of the pale primrose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-A pleasant spot it is to linger in, even on this
-early spring day, for the sunshine falls warm in
-the mossy hollow of the road, and rampart and
-thicket overhead are a shelter from the wind.
-Resting on the dry branch of a fallen pine, one
-can gaze away southward over the landscape
-that the Romans saw; and, fingering through
-a pocket volume of some old Augustan singer,
-it is possible to realise something of the iron
-thought that stirred them to become masters of
-the world.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">8</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_2">THE BLACK DOUGLAS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Under</span> the great eastern oriel at Melrose,
-where the high altar of the abbey once
-stood, lies buried the heart of King Robert the
-Bruce. Elsewhere, far off at Dunfermline, in
-Fife, the body of the Scots King was entombed.
-Some seventy years ago, when workmen in that
-ancient Scottish capital were repairing the ruined
-church, they came upon a marble monument,
-broken and defaced. Digging below, amid the
-mould of the sepulchre, they found the skeleton
-of a tall man. Fragments of cloth-of-gold lay
-about it, and the breast-bone had been sawn
-through; and by these signs the workmen knew
-that they had found the resting-place of the
-King. There, as one who was present has said,
-after the silence and darkness of five centuries,
-was seen the head that had planned and changed
-the destinies of Scotland; there lay the dry bone
-of the arm that on the eve of Bannockburn
-had at one blow slain the fierce De Bohun.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-But the Bruce’s heart, embalmed and cased
-in silver, bearing its own strange romantic
-story, lies apart in the Border Abbey. Around
-the place of its rest, in that fallen and mouldering
-fane, lie the race that took from the heart
-their armorial cognisance&mdash;the lords of the great
-house of Douglas.</p>
-
-<p>Hot and stirring was the Douglas blood, and
-hardly a battlefield of the Middle Ages in Scotland
-but was stained with some of its best.
-Derived far back amid the mists of antiquity,
-none could tell how the race arose, and it was
-wont to be a boast with the house that none
-could point to its “first mean man.” There is
-a tower in Yarrow by the Douglas (<em>dhu glas</em>,
-black water) Burn which is said to have been
-the stronghold of “the Good Lord James”; and
-amid the fastnesses of Cairntable in Lanark
-there is another Douglas Water and Douglas
-Castle. From one of these, no doubt, in ancient
-Scots fashion, the family took its name; but
-when that happened, and what the story was
-of its early days, must remain a tale untold.
-The house’s mediæval greatness began, however,
-with the rise of Robert the Bruce, and from
-that time onwards its deeds mark with stain or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-blazon every page of Scottish history. Lords
-of the broad Scottish Border, east and west,
-their hands were sometimes stronger than the
-King’s. At one time a Douglas could ride to
-the field with twenty thousand spears at his
-back, and the gallop of the Douglas steeds
-sometimes was terrible alike on the causeway
-of Edinburgh and on the moorland marches of
-Northumberland. Douglas Earls and Knights
-fought as leaders through all the wars of David
-Bruce. A dead Douglas in 1388 won the famous
-fight with Hotspur on the moonlit field of Otterbourne.
-At Shrewsbury, in the days of Robert
-III., Henry IV. of England himself ran close to
-being hewn in pieces by the Earl of Douglas;
-and for gallantry on the battlefields of France
-this same great Earl was invested by the French
-King with the Dukedom of Touraine. The fame
-of Scottish chivalry for three hundred years was
-blown abroad under the Douglas name; for
-courtesies and blows alike were exchanged by
-the race on many battlefields besides those of
-the northern Borderland. Not that dark deeds
-are lacking in their history. Dark deeds belonged
-to their times. But in the tilting-yard or on the
-tented field were to be met no fairer foes. Nor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-was their heroism all of the sword-and-buckler
-order, or confined to one sex. The finest thing
-recorded of the race, after all, was done by a
-woman. On that dark February night in 1437,
-when James I. was murdered in the Blackfriars
-Abbey at Perth, when the noise and clashing
-was heard as of men in armour, and the torches
-of the coming assassins in the garden below cast
-up great flashes of light against the windows of
-the King’s chamber, was it not a Catherine
-Douglas who, for lack of a bolt, thrust her own
-fair arm into the staples of the door?</p>
-
-<p>The fortunes of the family culminated in the
-reign of James II. Whatever its origin had
-been, in that reign the race had attained an
-eminence more dazzling, perhaps, than that of
-any subject before or since. Earls of Douglas
-and Wigton, Lords of Bothwell, Galloway, and
-Annandale, Dukes of Touraine, Lords of Longueville,
-and Marshals of France, they had inter-married
-more than once with the Scottish Royal
-House itself. Members of the family also held
-the Earldoms of Angus, Ormond, and Moray.
-What wonder that they lifted haughty heads,
-and began to look askance at the Royal power?
-Then it was that the Stuart King stooped to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-treachery, and then was done the darkest deed
-that ever sullied the Stuart name.</p>
-
-<p>Already, in the boyhood of James, a youthful
-Earl of Douglas and his brother had been
-betrayed and slain by the King’s Ministers.
-For this transaction, however, the King was in
-no way to blame. The young Earl was his
-guest in the Castle of Edinburgh, and when at
-the treacherous feast the black bull’s head, the
-sign of death, was placed upon their table, James
-had wept piteously and begged hard for the lives
-of his friends. It was later, when another Earl
-was lord upon the Border, that the King made
-murder his resource. For this act, it must be
-said, James had strong provocation. Douglas
-had been honoured by him, had been made
-Lieutenant-General of the Kingdom, and had
-abused that honour. He had flouted the King’s
-authority, and slain the King’s friends, and,
-having been commanded by letter to deliver up
-to James’s representative the person of a subject
-unjustly imprisoned by him, he delivered him
-up “wanting the head.” Finally, with two great
-Earls of the North, he had entered into an open
-league against the King. All this, however, cannot
-palliate the King’s resource, cannot absolve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-the tragic scene in that little supper-chamber in
-the Castle of Stirling. There the great Earl was
-under the protection of the King’s hospitality,
-when James, bursting into rage at his taunts
-and at his refusal to abandon the treasonous
-compact, suddenly cried, “By Heaven, my Lord,
-if you will not break the league, this shall!”
-and, drawing his dagger, stabbed Douglas to
-the heart.</p>
-
-<p>This deed brought the family fortunes to
-a climax, and for three years Scotland was
-blackened by the raging of the Douglas Wars.
-From Berwick to Inverness the country was
-wasted by the struggles of the partisans. Stirling
-and Elgin were burned, and, amid famine and
-pestilence, the troubles of the wars of Edward
-seemed come again on Scotland: so great had
-grown the power of these Border lords. At last,
-however, the King and the Earl came face to
-face. Each led an army of forty thousand men,
-and only the small river Carron ran between
-them. By the combat of the morrow, it seemed,
-would be known whether James Stuart or James
-Douglas should wear the Scottish crown. But
-the Earl’s heart was seen to fail, and on the
-morrow, when he awoke, he found his camp<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-deserted. Of all his host of the previous day
-not a hundred followers remained. Nothing was
-left him but flight; and, turning his back, as a
-Douglas had never done before, he made his
-way to England. Twenty years later, having
-been captured by one of his own vassals in a
-petty skirmish on the Border, he was sent to
-end his days as a monk in the Fifeshire Abbey
-of Lindores.</p>
-
-<p>Thus ended the great line of the Earls of
-Douglas, a race whose history for three hundred
-years had been the history of Scotland, and
-whose foot had twice, at least, been set upon
-the step even of the throne. From the house’s
-latter days of turbulence and ambition there is
-pleasure in turning back to those earlier years
-when the Good Lord James rode at the Bruce’s
-saddle-bow, and the patriotism of groaning Scotland
-rallied round the coupled names of Douglas
-and the King. No later deed can dim the
-lustre of those years, and nothing in history can
-outshine the last scene in the life of the Knight
-who strove to carry the Bruce’s heart to the
-Holy Land. Himself hemmed round by the
-Moors on that Spanish plain, in his effort, it is
-said, to succour a friend, the Earl took from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-his neck the casket containing the King’s heart.
-“Pass first in fight,” he cried, “as thou wert
-wont to do! Douglas will follow thee, or die!”
-Then, throwing the casket far among the enemy,
-he rushed forward to the place where it fell, and
-was there slain. Well would it have been for
-the race of Douglas had they ever remained true
-as that ancestor to the service of their King!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_3">IN THE SHADOW OF ST GILES’.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Night</span> in Edinburgh! The traveller may
-have seen the sun set over the lagoons
-of Venice; he may have watched the moon rise
-behind the Acropolis of Athens; but he has
-seen nothing finer or more inspiring than is
-shown him by the sparkle of the frosty stars in
-this grey metropolis of Scotland. From the
-terraced pavement of Princes Street, that unmatched
-boulevard of the modern city, looking
-across the dark chasm where once surged the
-waters of the North Loch, he sees the form of
-the Old Town rise, from Holyrood Palace low
-in the eastern meadows to the castled rock high
-at the western end, a dark mass all against the
-southern sky. Yellow lines of light mark the
-modern bridges spanning the abyss below, and
-windows still glowing&mdash;dim loopholes in the
-perilously high old houses beyond&mdash;bespeak the
-inhabitants there not yet all asleep. But these
-are forgotten in the witchery of the sight, when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-the clouds part, and the silvery starlight is
-shaken down upon the ancient city; when behind
-the broken sky-line of roofs and gables the clear
-moon comes up, and hangs, a lustrous jewel,
-among the pinnacles of St Giles’.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is it only the magic of the sight that
-stirs strange pulses in the blood. Standing at
-night in the Roman Coliseum, it seems still
-possible to hear majestic echoes of an older
-world. But the Scotsman under the shadow of
-“high Dunedin” is moved, as nowhere else, by
-memories of old glory and old sorrow. Here to
-a Scottish heart the past comes back. Here
-sighed the fatal sweetness of Rizzio’s lute. Here
-rang the wild clan-music of Lochiel. Among
-these old walls, however, something more is to
-be remembered than the deeds of high fame.
-Ever and again, it is true, amid the gloom of
-half-forgotten centuries, there is caught the glitter
-of some historic pageant. Out of the silence
-about the Cathedral one seems to catch the
-chime of fuming censers and the roll of coronation
-litanies, with, perchance, the sonorous accents
-of a Gavin Douglas, poet-bishop of Dunkeld; and
-one thrills again to hear the boom of the Castle
-cannon as the Fourth James rides gallantly away<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-to his death. But behind all this a more tender
-interest touches the heart. What of the real
-inner life of those centuries bygone&mdash;the loves and
-sorrows, burning once, and poignant as ours are
-to-day, which have passed out of sight among
-the years, and been forgotten? Of some of
-these, indeed, Sir Walter Scott has written the
-story on the dark curtain of the past with a pen
-of fire. But for countless others there is not
-even the poor consolation of a recorded name.
-Occasionally, however, amid the seething of
-history, or in some half-remembered old song, a
-reference occurs, and a glimpse all too brief is
-had into some tender and mournful story. And
-so one sees that, behind the glitter of a Stuart
-chivalry, of brave and splendid deeds before the
-world, sometimes there lay a shadow, the sigh of
-a breaking heart, the stain of unavailing tears.</p>
-
-<p>Who knows the early history of that Lady of
-Loch Leven, mother of the Regent Murray?
-Grimly enough she is painted by Scott in her
-old age as the keeper of Queen Mary. Yet
-assuredly once she was lovely and young, and
-had strange beatings of heart as she listened to
-the whispers of her Royal lover, that all too
-gallant James V. What was their parting like,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-when the parting came? Was there the last
-touch of regretful hands, a remorseful caress
-from the royal lips, a passionate farewell? Or
-was there only the cruel news by alien mouths
-that her place was filled by another, that she
-had been forsaken? No one can tell us now.</p>
-
-<p>Then what of the Lady Anne Campbell of
-Argyle, at one time betrothed to Charles II.?
-The youthful Prince, aged twenty, had been
-crowned gorgeously, after the ancient manner of
-the Scottish Kings, at Scone. But King only in
-name, with England still under the iron rule of
-Cromwell, and only a faction in Scotland devoted
-to his cause, his immediate fortunes were entirely
-in the hands of the Scottish leader, the crafty,
-covenanting Marquis of Argyle. Reaching ever
-higher in ambition, and dazzled by the weird
-vision of the race of MacCallum More mounting
-the throne, Argyle proposed that Charles
-should marry his daughter. Needy and reckless,
-and eager to attach Argyle to the Royalist cause
-by the golden bands of hope, the King pretended
-consent. Alas for the Lady Anne! What maiden
-could keep still her heart when wooed by so
-royal a lover? For wooing there must have
-been, to keep up the pretence of betrothal, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-how was the maiden to know that those words
-and looks, and, it may have been, those warmer
-caresses, were all no more than a diplomacy?
-And when the crash came, with Cromwell’s defeat
-of the covenanting army at Dunbar, and the
-revelation that she had given up her all and
-had been deceived&mdash;how bitter, how cruel the
-discovery! The contemporary Kirkton relates
-circumstantially that “so grievous was the disappointment
-to the young lady, that of a gallant
-young gentlewoman, she lost her spirit, and turned
-absolutely distracted.”</p>
-
-<p>Then there is a pitiful little song, unprinted
-and all but forgotten,<a id="FNanchor_A" href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">A</a> sung to a quavering,
-pathetic old tune, and relating in quaint ballad
-fashion something of the story of one Jeanie
-Cameron, an adherent of Prince Charles Edward
-in the rebellion of 1745. It narrates how the
-maiden, having fallen sick, not without a suspicion
-of its being heart-sickness, and all cures
-of the leeches failing, was prescribed “ae bricht
-blink o’ the Young Pretender.” So she sate her
-down and wrote the Prince “a very long letter,
-stating who were his friends and who were his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">21</a></span>foes.” This letter she had closed, and was just
-“sealing with a ring,” when, as used to happen
-in ballad story, “ope flew the door, and in came
-her King.” Poor young lady!&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">She prayed to the saints and angels to defend her,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And sank i’ the arms o’ the Young Pretender.<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Rare, oh, rare! bonnie Jeanie Cameron!<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Nor is this pretty romance merely an invention
-of the poet’s brain. One of the family by whom
-the song has been preserved happened, it seems,
-in the latter part of last century, to be buying
-snuff in a shop in Edinburgh, when a beggar
-came in. Nothing was said before the stranger;
-but the shopkeeper, as if it were an accustomed
-dole, handed the beggar a groat. Afterwards,
-in reply to a remark of his customer as to the
-delicacy of the beggar’s hand which had received
-the coin, the shopkeeper revealed the fact that
-the recipient of his charity was no man, but a
-woman, and no other than Jeanie Cameron, a
-follower of the Chevalier. Her story, so far as
-he knew it, was sad enough. She had followed
-the Prince to France, hoping, no doubt, poor
-thing! to resume there something of the place
-she had believed herself to hold in his affections.
-Alas! it was only to find herself, like so many<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-others, forgotten, cast off, an encumbrance to a
-broken man. And then, with who can tell how
-heavy a heart, she made her way home, only to
-discover that her family had shut their door
-upon her, and cut her adrift. So, for these
-many years, she had wandered about forlorn and
-lonely, supported by a few charitable bourgeois
-in the streets of Edinburgh&mdash;she who could look
-back upon the day when she had loved and
-been loved by a Stuart Prince.<a id="FNanchor_B" href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">B</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_A" href="#FNanchor_A" class="fnanchor">A</a> It has now been included in “Ancient Scots Ballads with
-their Traditional Airs.” Glasgow: Bayley &amp; Ferguson, 1894.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_B" href="#FNanchor_B" class="fnanchor">B</a> This account of the latter days of “Mrs Jean Cameron” finds
-corroboration in a footnote to the second volume of Chambers’s
-“Traditions of Edinburgh.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Such are some of the stories which find no
-place in history, but whose consciousness sheds
-a tragic and tender interest about this grey old
-capital of the North. Who will say that they
-are not as well worth thought as the trumpetings
-of herald pursuivants and the clash of
-warlike arms?</p>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">23</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_4">A WEAVING VILLAGE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Out</span> of the way, in this quiet hollow of the
-Ayrshire hills, something remains yet of
-the life of a hundred years ago. Elsewhere the
-puffing of steam may have taken the place of
-toil by hand, but here in the long summer days,
-from morning till night, the click-clack of the
-looms is still to be heard, and within every second
-window up the length of the village street, the
-dusty frames are to be seen moving regularly
-to and fro. Pots of geranium and fuchsia are
-set sometimes in these windows, and through the
-narrow doorways the cottage gardens can be seen
-behind, carefully kept, and ablaze just now with
-wallflower borders and pansies. Sadly, however,
-is the place decayed from its prosperity of old.
-Little traffic comes now to the wide, empty street.
-The carrier’s waggon is an object of interest when
-it puts in an appearance. The baker’s van may
-be the only vehicle of an afternoon; and twice
-a week only comes the flesher’s cart. Butcher<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-meat, it is to be feared, is but seldom seen on
-some of the village tables; and, when work is
-more than usually scarce, many must put up with
-but “muslin-broth.” Here and there a roofless
-ruin, breaking the regular line of dwellings, tells
-of a decaying industry. In the sunny inn-door
-at the head of the village the brown retriever
-may rouse himself, once in the afternoon, to
-inspect the credentials of some vagrant terrier;
-and, but for the faint click-clack of the looms
-all day, and the appearance, once in a while, of
-a woman with a pair of stoups to draw water at
-the village well, the place might seem asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Yet a hearty trade once throve on the spot.
-Every house had its loom going, sometimes two;
-and there was always work in plenty. Weavers’
-wives could go to kirk then in black-beaded
-bonnets and flowered Paisley shawls, and the
-Relief Kirk minister got his stipend of eighty
-pounds a year nearly always paid. In those
-times the carrier’s cart used to have business in
-the village every day; merchants from Glasgow
-came bidding against each other for work in a
-hurry; and four of the weavers at once have
-been known to have sons at college studying
-for the ministry. Those were the days when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-village kept a watchful eye upon the religious
-and political movements of the country. Before
-the Stamp Duty was removed from newspapers,
-the weavers subscribed in clubs and took out
-their weekly sheet, which was passed from
-shop to shop, read and digested, and thoroughly
-threshed out in the door-step debates, when a
-knot of neighbours would gather between the
-spells of work. In this way the great Reform
-Bill was fully discussed and settled here long
-before it passed the House of Commons; and
-the absorbing question of the Disruption, which
-gave birth to the Free Church, was thoroughly
-argued and thought out on its merits.</p>
-
-<p>True to the traditions of their craft, of course,
-most of the weavers were the reddest of Radicals,
-and the progress of the Chartist movement excited
-the keenest interest among them. The work at
-the looms was to a great extent mechanical, and
-while they pushed the treadles and pulled the
-shuttles to and fro, the weavers had time to
-think; and shrewd thinkers and able debaters
-many of them became, ready at the hustings
-with questions on the Corn Laws, the freeing of
-the slaves, and the Irish grievances, which were
-apt to put a political candidate to some trouble.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-He had not their advantage of the daily
-“argufying” and the Saturday night debates at
-the village inn. There was a tradition that in
-the room where this club met, the poet Burns
-had once spent an evening, and the fact lent an
-additional zest to his song, which they never
-tired of quoting,&mdash;“A man’s a man for a’ that.”</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">A king can mak’ a belted knight,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">A marquis, duke, and a’ that;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But an honest man’s aboon his might,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Guid faith he maunna fa’ that.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">The industry of the village has died hard. Amid
-decaying trade the weavers kept to their looms,
-and many a pinch was suffered before one after
-another laid down his shuttle. Their feelings
-are not difficult to understand. As boys they
-had played about the village well. As young
-men they had wandered with their sweethearts&mdash;that
-delicious time&mdash;down the woodland roads
-around. Memories had grown about them and
-their old homes during the long years of work.
-In the kirkyard not far off lay the ashes of
-mother or wife or child. But the merchants had
-ceased to come to the village, and it was a
-weary walk for the poor weavers to carry their
-webs all the way to Glasgow, to hawk them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-from warehouse to warehouse, and sometimes to
-have the choice at last of accepting a ruinous
-price for them, or of taking them home again.</p>
-
-<p>It was after a bootless errand of this sort that
-old John Gilmour was returning to the village
-one night in late October some forty-three years
-back. Honest soul, through all his straits he
-had never owed a neighbour a penny. That
-night, however, his affairs had come to a critical
-pass, and the morrow held a black look-out for
-him. His web was still on his back, not an
-offer having been got for it in town, though he
-knew the workmanship to be his best. Upon its
-sale he had depended to pay for the winter’s
-coals, and the necessaries of the morrow; for on
-the day previous the last of his carefully guarded
-savings had been spent. Moreover, his wife and
-he were growing old, and could hardly look
-forward to increased energy for work. And he
-was bringing home bad news. Their second son
-(the eldest had run away to sea eleven years
-before) had broken down in his attempt to teach,
-and, at the same time, push his way through
-the Divinity Hall, and had been ordered by the
-doctor to stop work for the winter altogether.
-How was the old man to break all this disastrous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-news to his wife? The web was heavy, but his
-heart was heavier.</p>
-
-<p>He had reached the fork of the road close by
-the old disused graveyard of the parish, and was
-thinking a little bitterly of the reward that
-remained to him from his long life of hard work,
-and of how quiet and far from care those were
-who lay on the other side of the low dyke under
-the green sod, when a hackney carriage came
-up behind, and the driver stopped to ask the way
-to &mdash;&mdash;.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep the left road,” said the old man, and
-was resuming his walk, when a bearded face
-appeared at the carriage window.</p>
-
-<p>“That seems a heavy bundle you are carrying.
-Are you going my way?”</p>
-
-<p>Once inside, the old weaver found his companion
-looking at him intently.</p>
-
-<p>“You have had a long walk this day, surely?
-Have you no son to carry so heavy a load for
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>Ay, he had two sons, Gilmour said: but one
-was lost at sea, and the other was struggling at
-college.</p>
-
-<p>“You live alone, then?” asked the questioner,
-tremulously.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_28" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 25.75em;"><img src="images/i_041.jpg" width="412" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-No, thank God! he had a kind wife at home,
-who had been his consolation through many a
-dark hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank God!” echoed the younger man.</p>
-
-<p>The carriage rolled on and entered the village.
-The weaver pointed to his house, and they stopped
-there. The stranger helped him out with his web,
-and entered the house with him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s just the web back, guidwife,” he said.
-“But dinna look sae queer like. I’se warrant I’ll
-sell it the morn. An’ here’s a gentleman has
-helpit me on the road. Hae ye onything i’ the
-hoose to offer him?”</p>
-
-<p>But the wife was not thinking of the web or
-the distress of the morrow. Her eyes were on
-the stranger, and the corners of her lips were
-twitching curiously. He had not spoken, but as
-he removed his hat she sprang towards him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Willie!” she cried; “it’s Willie!” And
-her arms were about his neck, and, half laughing
-and half crying, she buried her face on his
-breast.</p>
-
-<p>It was Willie. He was the first who came back
-to the village from the gold-fields of Ballarat.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">30</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_5">WHERE THE CLANS FELL.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">What</span> richer picture could the eye desire
-than this sunlit glory of harvest colour
-amid the Highland mountains? The narrow
-sea-loch itself below gleams blue as melted
-sapphire under the radiant and stainless sky;
-around it, on the rising slopes, the corn-fields,
-rough with fruitful stooks, spread their yellow
-ripeness in the sun; amid them shine patches
-of fresh soft green where the second clover has
-been cut; while above hang the sheltering woods,
-like dark brown shadows; and, over all, the
-surrounding hills, bloom-spread as for a banquet
-of the gods, raise their purple stain against the
-blue. Only far off, above the dim mountains of
-amethyst in the North, lies a white argosy of
-clouds, like some convoy of home-bound India-men
-becalmed on a summer sea.</p>
-
-<p>There has been no sound for an hour but the
-whisper of the warm autumn wind that the farmer
-loves for winnowing his grain, the drone of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-velvety bee sometimes in the blue depth of a
-hare-bell, and the crackle of the black broom-pods
-bursting in the heat. The furry brown
-rabbits that pop prudently out of sight in the
-mossy bank are silent as shadows; the red
-squirrel that runs along the dyke top and disappears
-up a tree makes no chatter; and even
-the shy speckled mavis that bobs bright-eyed
-across the path is voiceless, for among the birds
-this is the silent month.</p>
-
-<p>Less and less, as the narrow road rises through
-the fir woods, grows the bit of blue loch seen
-far behind under the branches, and the little
-clachan in the warm hollow over the brow of
-the hill is shut from the world on every side by
-the deep and silent forests of fragrant pine.
-Wayside flowers are seeding on the time-darkened
-thatch of these sequestered dwellings. There,
-with branches of narrow pods, the wallflower
-clings; and the spikes of the field-mustard ripen
-beside the golden bullets of the ox-eyed daisy.
-On a chair at the door of one of the cottages
-an ancient granny is sunning herself, counting
-with feeble fingers the stitches on her glancing
-knitting wires. A frail old body she is, set here,
-neat and comfortable, by some loving hand, to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-enjoy, it may be, the sunshine of her last autumn
-on earth. Withered and wrinkled are her old
-cheeks with the cares of many a winter, and it
-seems difficult to recall the day when she was a
-ripe-lipped, merry reaper in the corn-fields; but
-under her clean, white mutch the grey old eyes
-are undimmed yet as they watch, heedful and
-lovingly, the movements of the little maid tottering
-about her knee. Where are her thoughts as
-she sits there alone, hour after hour, in the silent
-sunshine? Is she back in the dusk among the
-sweet-scented hay-ricks, listening with fluttering
-heart to the whispers of her rustic lover? Is it
-a sunny doorway where she sits crooning for
-happiness over the baby on her knee? the little
-one that is all her own&mdash;and his. Or is it a
-winter night as she kneels in the flickering light
-by the bedside, feeling the rough, loving hand
-relax its grasp, while she sees the shadow pass
-across the wistful face, and knows with breaking
-heart that she is alone? These are the peaceful
-scenes of peasant life; alas, that they should ever
-be darkened by the shadow of the sword!</p>
-
-<div id="ip_32" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29.4375em;"><img src="images/i_047.jpg" width="471" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Granny can speak no English, or she might
-have something to say of the great disaster that
-befell the clans on the moor close by in her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-father’s time. For not far beyond the little
-clachan the road emerges on the open heath, and
-there, where the paths cross, lies the great, grey
-boulder on which the terrible duke stood to
-survey the field just before the battle. Not even
-then was he aware how nearly his birthday
-carousals of the night before, at Nairn, had been
-surprised and turned into another slaughter of
-Prestonpans. So perilously sometimes does the
-sword of Damocles tremble over an unconscious
-head. His troops, well rested and provisioned,
-were fresh as that April morning itself, while the
-poor clansmen in the boggy hollow to the right,
-divided in their councils, and famishing for treacherous
-lack of bread, were exhausted by the
-fruitless twenty-four mile surprise march of the
-night. Yet they came on, these clansmen, half
-an hour later, like lions; plunging through the
-bog, sword in hand, in the face of the regulars’
-terrific blaze of musketry, cutting Cumberland’s
-first line to pieces, and rushing on the second
-line to be blown to atoms at sword’s length.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow corn is being shorn to-day where
-the clans were mowed down then. Here was
-spilt the best blood of the Highlands. Close by,
-the brave Keppoch, crying out as he charged alone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-before the eyes of his immovable Macdonalds
-that the children of his tribe had forsaken him,
-threw his sword in the air as a bullet went
-into his heart. Wounded, at the tall tree to the
-west fell Cameron of Lochiel; and in the little
-valley beyond, the defeated Prince Charles, as he
-fled, paused a moment to bid his army a bitter
-farewell. The road here at the corn-field’s edge
-dips a little yet, where the fatal bog once lay,
-and ten yards to the left still springs the Dead
-Men’s Well, to which so many poor fellows
-crawled during the awful succeeding night to
-allay the tortures of their thirst before they died.
-Here the gigantic MacGillivray, leader that day
-of the clan M’Intosh, fell dead as, with his last
-strength, he bore to the spring a little wounded
-boy whom he had heard at his side moaning
-for water.</p>
-
-<p>A better fate the bravery of these men deserved,
-misguided though they might be; for the victors
-gave no quarter to wounded or prisoners, and the
-soul shudders yet at thought of the horrors that
-followed the battle. It was not enough that disabled
-men should be clubbed and shot, and barns
-full of them burned to ashes; but to this day in
-many a quiet glen lie the remains of hamlets<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-ruined in cold blood, and tales are told of the
-dark vengeance taken by the victorious soldiery
-upon defenceless women, little children, and old
-men. Well was it, perhaps, for those who had
-fallen that they lay here at rest under the
-heather&mdash;they could not know the cruel fate of
-wife or child. To other lips was left the wail
-for “Drummossie; oh, Drummossie!” At rest
-they were, these hot and valiant hearts, plaided
-and plumed as warriors wish to lie, in their long
-bivouac under the open heaven. Not the first
-nor the last of their race, either, were they to
-fall, scarred with the wounds of war; for, less
-than a mile away, under the lichened cairns of
-Clava, do not the ashes rest of the chiefs their
-ancestors, slain in some long-forgotten battle of
-the past, and waiting, like these, for the sound
-of the last <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">réveille</i>?</p>
-
-<p>Here, on each side of the road, can still be
-made out the trenches where the dead were
-buried, according to their tartans it is said; and,
-while the rest of the moor is purple with heather,
-these sunken places alone are green. On the
-edge of the corn-field rises a stone, inscribed
-“Field of the English; they were buried here”;
-and at the end of each trench on the moor stands<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-a rude slab bearing the name of its tribe. A
-singular pathos attends two of these stones, on
-which is written, not M’Intosh or Stewart or
-Fraser, but “Mixed Clans.”</p>
-
-<p>Round the oval moorland of the battle rise
-thick fir-woods now, dark and mournful. Sometimes
-the winds of the equinox, as they roar
-through these, recall the deadly rolling musketry
-of long ago. But the air to-day scarcely whispers
-in the tree-tops, and sunshine and silence sleep
-upon the resting-place of the gallant dead. Only
-some fair, white-clad girls, who have come up
-from Inverness to read the battle inscription on
-the great boulder-cairn, are plucking a spray of
-heather from the Camerons’ grave.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">37</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_6">TAM O’ SHANTER’S RIDE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Never</span> is a man more conscious of his
-manhood than when, with bridle in hand
-and a good horse under him, he takes the road
-at a gallop. As his steed stretches out and the
-hoof-beats quicken, as the milestones fly past and
-the cool air rushes in his face, he casts care to
-the winds, his pulse beats stronger, he rejoices to
-breathe and to live. The pride and the pleasure
-of this experience have ever appealed to the poets,
-and the ringing of horse-hoofs echoes through
-the verse of all ages&mdash;in the warrior chants of
-Israel; through the sounding Virgilian lines; to
-the reverberating rhythm of the “Ride from Ghent
-to Aix.” But the maddest, most riotous gallop
-of all is, perhaps, that of the grey mare Meg and
-her master from Ayr to the Shanter farm.</p>
-
-<p>Burns was never more fortunate in his
-subject than when thus fulfilling his promise of
-providing a legend for “Alloway’s auld haunted
-kirk.” He did not, it is true, with the nice precision<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-of the Augustan laureate, trim his verse
-to a mechanical imitation of sound; but the wild
-rush and deftness of the movement of the poem,
-the quick succession of humour on pathos, scene
-upon scene, the ludicrous, the startling, the horrible,
-carry away the breath, and suggest more vividly
-than any mere measuring rhythm the mad daring
-of that midnight ride.</p>
-
-<p>There is a little, old-fashioned, deep-thatched
-inn still standing where the street leads southwards
-out of Ayr. Under its low, brown-raftered
-roof it is yet easy to imagine how the veritable
-hero, Tam, may have sat with his cronies “fast
-by the ingle, bleezing finely,” while “the night
-drave on wi’ sangs and clatter,” and the storm
-outside hurled itself fruitlessly against the little
-deep-set window. It would need all the liquor
-he had imbibed to fortify the carouser for that
-fourteen-mile ride into Carrick. A midnight
-hurricane of rain and wind would be no pleasant
-encounter on that lonely road, to say nothing of
-the eerie spots to be passed, and at least one
-point more than a trifle dangerous. But Tam
-o’ Shanter was a stout Ayrshire farmer, and,
-moreover, he was accustomed to face worse
-ragings than those of the elements; so it may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-be supposed that, when he had hiccupped a last
-goodbye to his friends, and, leaving the warm
-lights of the inn streaming into the street behind
-him, galloped off into the blackness of the night,
-it was with no stronger regret than that he must
-go so soon. Half a mile to his right, as he
-bucketed southward along the narrow road, he
-could hear the ocean thundering its diapason on
-the broad beach of sand, and at the places where
-he crossed the open country its spray would
-strike his cheek and fly inland with the foam
-from Maggie’s bit. Sometimes, when the way
-lay through belts of beech and oak woods, the
-branches would roar and shriek overhead as they
-strove with maniac arms against the tempest.</p>
-
-<p>The old road to Maybole, and that which
-Tam o’ Shanter took, ran a little nearer the
-sea than the one which did duty in Burns’
-time, and still serves its purpose; and about a
-mile out of Ayr it crosses the small stream at
-the ford where “in the snaw the chapman
-smoored.” Here, on the newer road, a curious
-adventure is said to have befallen the poet’s
-father. There was formerly no bridge across
-this stream; and the legend runs that William
-Burnes, a few hours before the birth of his son,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-in riding to Ayr for an attendant, found the
-water much swollen, and was requested by an
-old woman on the farther side to carry her
-across. Notwithstanding his haste he did this;
-and a little later, on returning home with the
-attendant, he was surprised to find the woman
-seated by his own fireside. It is said that when
-the child was born it was placed in the gipsy’s
-lap, and she, glancing into its palm, made a
-prophecy which the poet has turned in one of
-his <span class="locked">verses:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">He’ll hae misfortunes great and sma’,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But aye a heart aboon them a’;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">He’ll be a credit till us a’&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i4">We’ll a’ be prood o’ Robin.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">If all gipsy predictions were as well fulfilled as
-this concerning the poet, the dark-skinned race
-assuredly would be far sought and courted.</p>
-
-<p>A few strides beyond the stream his grey mare
-had to carry Tam past a dark, uncanny spot&mdash;“the
-cairn whare hunters fand the murdered
-bairn.” It was covered then with trees, and one
-of them still stands marking the place. To the
-left of the old road here, and hard by the newer
-highway, lies the humble cottage, of one storey,
-where Robert Burns was born. It has been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-considerably altered since then, having been used
-until recently as an alehouse, and further accommodation
-having been added at either end. But
-enough of the interior remains untouched to allow
-of its original aspect being realised. The house
-is the usual “but and ben,” built of natural stones
-and clay, and neatly whitewashed and thatched.
-In the “but,” the apartment to the left on entering
-from the road, there is little alteration; and
-it was here, in the recessed bed in the wall, that
-the poet first saw light. The plain deal dresser,
-with dish-rack above, remains the same, and the
-small, square, deep-set window still looks out
-behind, over the fields his father cultivated. An
-old mahogany press with drawers still stands next
-the bed; the floor is paved with irregular flags;
-and the open fireplace, with roomy, projecting
-chimney, occupies the gable. An extra door has
-been driven through the south-east corner to allow
-the profane crowd to pass through, and a larger
-window has been opened towards the road that
-they may see to scratch their names in the
-visitors’ book; but the rest of the apartment,
-towards the back, is little changed, if at all, since
-the eventful night when “Januar’ winds blew
-hansel in on Robin.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-The hour of his ride was too dark, however, for
-the galloping farmer to see so far over the fields.
-A weirder sight was in store for him.</p>
-
-<p>A few hundred yards farther on, when, by a
-well which is still flowing, he had passed the
-thorn, now vanished, where “Mungo’s mither
-hanged hersel,” just as the road plunged down
-along the woody banks of Doon, there, a little
-to his left,</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i4">glimmering through the groaning trees<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Kirk Alloway seemed in a bleeze.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">The grey walls of the little kirk are standing
-yet among the graves, though the last rafters
-of the ruined roof were carried off long since to
-be carved into mementos. The tombs of Lord
-Alloway’s family occupy one end of the interior,
-and a partition wall has been built dividing off
-that portion, but otherwise the place remains
-unchanged. The bell still hangs above the
-eastern gable, and under it remains the little
-window with a thick mullion, the “winnock
-bunker” in which the astonished farmer, sitting
-on his mare, and looking through another
-opening in the side wall, saw the queer musician
-ensconced.</p>
-
-<p>A more eerie spot on a stormy night could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-hardly be imagined, the trees shrieking and
-groaning around, the Doon roaring in the darkness
-far below, while the thunder crashed overhead,
-and the lurid glare of lightning ever and again
-lit up the ruin. But with the unearthly accessories
-of warlocks and witches, corpse-lights and open
-coffins, with the screech of the pipes, and grotesque
-contortions of the dancers, the place must pass
-comparison in horror. Yet, inspired by “bold
-John Barleycorn,” the farmer stared eagerly in
-on the revels, till, fairly forgetting himself in the
-height of his admiration, he must shout out “Weel
-dune, Cutty Sark!” Then, in a moment, as every
-reader is aware, the lights went out, the pipes
-stopped, and the wrathful revellers streamed after
-him like angry bees. A few bounds of his mare
-down that narrow, winding, and rather dangerous
-road would carry Tam to the bridge, and the
-clatter of terrified Maggie’s hoofs as she plunged
-off desperately through the trees seems to echo
-in the hollow way yet. All the world knows
-how she carried her master in safety across the
-keystone of the bridge at the cost of her own
-grey tail. The feat was no easy one, for the
-single arch (still spanning the river there) was
-high and steep and narrow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-Beyond the Doon the old road rises inland,
-bowered high with ash and saugh trees, to the
-open country; and Tam, pale and sober no
-doubt, but breathing freer, had still twelve long
-miles before him to the far side of Kirkoswald
-in Carrick, where sat his <span class="locked">wife&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Gathering her brows like gathering storm,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Nursing her wrath to keep it warm.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">45</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_7">AN OLD TULIP GARDEN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A</span> quiet, sunny nook in the hollow it is,
-this square old garden with its gravelled
-walks and high stone walls; a sheltered retreat
-left peaceful here, under the overhanging woods,
-when the stream of the world’s traffic turned off
-into another channel. The grey stone house,
-separated from the garden by a thick privet
-hedge and moss-grown court, is the last dwelling
-at this end of the quiet market-town, and, with
-its slate roof and substantial double storey, is of
-a class greatly superior to its neighbours, whose
-warm red tiles are just visible over the walls.
-It stands where the old road to Edinburgh dipped
-to cross a little stream, and, in the bygone driving
-days, the stage-coach, after rattling out of the
-town, and down the steep road here, between
-the white, tile-roofed houses, when it crossed the
-bridge opposite the door, began to ascend through
-deep, embowering woods. But a more direct<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-highway to the capital was opened many a year
-ago; just beyond the bridge a wall was built
-across the road; and the grey house with its
-garden was left secluded in the sunny hollow.
-The rapid crescendo of the coach-guard’s horn
-no longer wakens the echoes of the place, and
-the striking of the clock every hour in the town
-steeple is the only sound that reaches the spot
-from the outside world.</p>
-
-<p>The hot sun beats on the garden here all day,
-from the hour in the morning when it gets above
-the grand old beeches of the wood, till it sets
-away beyond the steeple of the town. But in
-the hottest hours it is always refreshing to look
-over the weather-stained tiles of the long low
-toolhouse at the mossy green of the hill that
-rises there, cool and shaded, under the trees.
-Now and then a bull, of the herd that feeds in
-the glades of the wood, comes down that shaded
-bank, whisking his tawny sides with an angry
-tail to keep off the pestering flies, and his deep
-bellow reverberates in the hollow. In the early
-morning, too, before the dewy freshness has left
-the air, the sweet mellow pipe of the mavis, and
-the fuller notes of the blackbird, float across from
-these green depths, and ever and again throughout<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-the day the clear whistle of some chaffinch comes
-from behind the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>Standing among the deep box edgings and
-gravelled paths, it is not difficult to recall the
-place’s glory of forty years ago&mdash;the glory upon
-which the ancient plum-trees, blossoming yet
-against the sunny walls, looked down. To the
-eye of Thought time and space obstruct no
-clouds, and in the atmosphere of Memory the
-gardens of the past bloom for us always.</p>
-
-<p>Forty years ago! It is the day of the fashion
-for Dutch bulbs, when fabulous prices were paid
-for an unusually “fancy” specimen, and in this
-garden some of the finest of them are grown.
-The tulips are in flower, and the long narrow
-beds which, with scant space between, fill the
-entire middle of the garden, are ablaze with the
-glory of their bloom. Queenly flowers they are
-and tall, each one with a gentle pedigree&mdash;for
-nothing common or unknown has entrance here&mdash;and
-crimson, white, and yellow&mdash;the velvet petals
-of some almost black&mdash;striped with rare and
-exquisite markings, they raise to the sun their
-large chaste chalices. The perfection of shape
-is theirs, as they rise from the midst of their
-green, lance-like leaves; no amorous breeze ever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-invades the spot to dishevel their array or filch
-their treasures; and the precious golden dust
-lies in the deep heart of each, untouched as yet
-save by the sunshine and the bee. When the
-noonday heat becomes too strong, awnings will be
-spread above the beds, for with the fierce glare,
-the petals would open out and the pollen fall
-before the delicate task of crossing had been done.</p>
-
-<p>But see! through the gate in the privet hedge
-there enters as fair a sight. Ladies in creamy
-flowered muslins and soft Indian silks, shading
-their eyes from the sun with tiny parasols, pink
-and white and green,&mdash;grand dames of the county,
-and grander from a distance; gentlemen in blue
-swallow-tailed coats and white pantaloons&mdash;gallants
-escorting their ladies, and connoisseurs
-to examine the flowers&mdash;all, conducted by the
-owner, list-book in hand, advance into the garden
-and move along the beds.</p>
-
-<p>To that owner&mdash;an old man with white hair,
-clear grey eyes, and the memory of their youthful
-red remaining in his cheeks&mdash;this is the gala
-time of the year. Next month the beds of
-ranunculus will bloom, and pinks and carnations
-will follow; but the tulips are his most famous
-flowers, and, for the few days while they are in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-perfection, he leads about, with his old-world
-courtesy, replying to a question here, giving a
-name or a pedigree there, a constant succession
-of visitors. These are his hours of triumph.
-For eleven months he has gone about his beloved
-pursuit, mixing loams and leaf-moulds and earths,
-sorting, drying, and planting the bulbs, and tending
-their growth with his own hand&mdash;for to whose
-else could he trust the work?&mdash;and now his toil
-has blossomed, and its worth is acknowledged.
-Plants envied by peers, plants not to be bought,
-are there, and he looks into the heart of each
-tenderly, for he knows it a child of his own.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he leads his visitors back into the
-house, across the mossy stones of the court where,
-under glass frames, thousands of auricula have
-just passed their bloom, and up the railed stair
-to the sunny door in the house-side. He leads
-them into the shady dining-room, with its
-furniture of dark old bees-waxed mahogany,
-where there is a slight refreshment of wine and
-cake&mdash;rare old Madeira, and cake, rich with eggs
-and Indian spice, made by his daughter’s own
-hand. Jars and glasses are filled with sweet-smelling
-flowers, and the breath of the new-blown
-summer comes in through the open doors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-The warm sunlight through the brown linen
-blind finds its way across the room, and falls
-with subdued radiance on the middle picture on
-the opposite wall. The dark eyes, bright cheeks,
-and cherry mouth were those of the old man’s
-wife&mdash;the wife of his youth. She died while the
-smile was yet on her lip, and the tear of sympathy
-in her eye; for she was the friend of all, and
-remains yet a tender memory among the neighbouring
-poor. The old man is never seen to
-look upon that picture; but on Sundays for
-hours he sits in reverie by his open Bible here
-in the room alone. In a velvet case in the
-corner press lies a silver medal. It was pinned
-to his breast by the Third George on a great
-day at Windsor long ago. For the old man,
-peacefully ending his years here among the
-flowers, in his youth served the king, and fought,
-as a naval officer, through the French and Spanish
-wars. As he goes quietly about, alone, among
-his garden beds, perchance he hears again sometimes
-the hoarse word of command, the quick
-tread of the men, and the deep roar of the
-heavy guns as his ship goes into action. The
-smoke of these battles rolled leeward long
-ago, and their glory and their wounds are alike<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-forgotten. In that press, too, lies the wonderful
-ebony flute, with its marvellous confusion of silver
-keys, upon which he used to take pleasure in
-recalling the stirring airs of the fleet. It has
-played its last tune; the keys are untouched
-now, and it is laid past, warped by age, to be
-fingered by its old master no more.</p>
-
-<p>But his guests rise to leave, and, receiving with
-antique grace their courtly acknowledgments, he
-attends the ladies across the stone-paved hall to
-their carriages.</p>
-
-<p>Forty years ago! The old man since then has
-himself been carried across that hall to his long
-home, and no more do grand dames visit the
-high-walled garden. But the trees whisper yet
-above it; the warmth of summer beats on the
-gravelled walks; and the flowers, lovely as of
-old in their immortal youth, still open their stainless
-petals to the sun.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">52</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_8">BY THE BLASTED HEATH.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> barometer has fallen somewhat since last
-night, and there are ominous clouds looming
-here and there in the west; but the sky remains
-clear blue overhead, the white road is dry and
-dazzling, and the sun as hot as could be wished.
-Out to the eastward the way turns along the
-top of the quaint fisher town, with its narrow
-lanes and throng of low thatched roofs, till at
-a sudden dip the little bridge crosses the river.
-Sweet Nairn! The river has given its name to
-the town. A hundred and forty years have
-passed since these clear waters, wimpling now
-in the sun, brought down from the western
-moors the life-blood of many a wounded Highlander
-fallen on dark Culloden. The sunny
-waters keep a memory still of the flight of the
-last Prince Charles.</p>
-
-<p>Like a crow-flight eastward the road runs
-straight, having on the left, beyond the rabbit
-warren, the silver sand-beach and the sea, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-on the right the fertile farm-lands and the farther
-woods. The white line glistening on the horizon
-far along the coast to the east, is a glimpse of
-the treacherous hillocks of the Culbin shifting
-sands. They are shining now like silver in the
-calm forenoon; but, as if restless under an eternal
-ban, they keep for ever moving, and, when stirred
-by the strong sea-wind, they are wont yet to rise
-and rush and overwhelm, like the dust-storm of
-the Sahara. For two hundred years a goodly
-mansion and a broad estate have lain buried
-beneath those wastes, and what was once called
-the Garden of Moray is nothing now but a
-desolate sea of sand. They say that a few
-years ago an apple-tree of the ancient manor
-orchard was laid bare for some months by a
-drift, that it blossomed and bore fruit, and again
-mysteriously disappeared. Curious visitors, too,
-can still see, in the open spaces where the black
-earth of the ancient fields is exposed, the regular
-ridges and furrows as they were left by the flying
-farmers; and the ruts of cart-wheels two hundred
-years old are yet to be traced in the long-hidden
-soil. Flint arrowheads, bronze pins and ornaments,
-iron fish-hooks and spear-points, as well
-as numerous nails, and sometimes an ancient<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-coin, are to be picked up about the mouldered
-sites of long-buried villages; but the mansion of
-Kinnaird, the only stone house on the estate,
-lies yet beneath a mighty sandhill, as it was
-hidden by the historic storm which in three days
-overwhelmed nineteen farms, altered by five miles
-the course of a river, and blotted out a prosperous
-country-side. Pray Heaven that yonder
-terrible white line by the sea may not rise again
-some night on its tempest wings to carry that
-ruin farther!</p>
-
-<p>Over the firth, looking backward as the highway
-at lasts bends inland, the red cliffs of Cromarty
-show their long line in the sun, and, with the
-yellow harvest-fields above them, hardly fulfil
-sufficiently the ancient name of the “Black Isle.”
-Not a sail is to be seen on the open firth, only
-the far-stretching waters, under the sunny sky,
-bicker with the “many-twinkling smile of ocean.”
-Here, though, two miles out of Nairn, where the
-many-ricked farmhouses lie snug among their
-new-shorn fields, the road rises into the trim
-village of Auldearn.</p>
-
-<p>Neat as possible are the little gardens before
-the cottages, bright yet with late autumn flowers.
-Yellow marigolds glisten within the low fences<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-beside dark velvety calceolarias and creamy
-stocks; while the crimson flowers of tropeolum
-cover the cottage walls up to the thatch, and
-some pale monthly roses still bloom about
-the windows. A peaceful spot it is to-day,
-yet a spot with a past and a grim tale of a
-hundred years before Culloden. Here it was
-that in 1645 Montrose, fighting gallantly for the
-First Charles, drove back into utter rout the
-army of the covenanting Parliament. On the
-left, among sheepfolds and dry-dyke inclosures,
-lay his right wing with the royal standard;
-nearer, to the right, with their backs to the hill,
-stood the rest of his array with the cavalry; and
-here in the village street, between the two wings,
-his few guns deceived the enemy with a show of
-force. It was from the church tower, up there
-in front, that Montrose surveyed the position;
-and below, in the little churchyard and church
-itself, lie many of those who fell in the battle.
-They are all at peace now, the eastern Marquis
-and the western, Montrose and Argyle: long ago
-they fought out their last great feud, and departed.</p>
-
-<p>The country about has always been a famous
-place for witches, and doubtless the three who
-fired Macbeth with his fatal ambition belonged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-to Auldearn. Three miles beyond the village
-the road runs across the Hardmuir, and there it
-was that the awful meeting took place. The
-moor is planted now with pines, and the railway
-runs at less than a mile’s distance; but even
-when the road is flooded with sunshine, there
-hangs a gloom among the trees, and a strange
-feeling of eeriness comes upon the intruder in
-the solitude. On the left a gate opens into
-the wood, and the witches’ hillock lies at some
-distance out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>Utterly silent the place is! Not a breath of
-air is moving, and the atmosphere has become
-close and sultry. There is no path, for few
-people follow their curiosity so far. Dry ditches
-and stumps of old trees make the walking
-difficult; withered branches of pine crackle
-suddenly sometimes under tread; and here and
-there the fleshy finger of a fungus catches the
-eye at a tree root.</p>
-
-<p>And here rises the hillock. On its bald and
-blasted summit, in the lurid corpse-light, according
-to the old story,</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">The weird sisters, hand in hand,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Posters of the sea and land,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Thus do go about, about,<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<p class="in0"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-when Macbeth, approaching the spot with Banquo,
-after victory in the west over Macdonald of the
-Isles, exclaims:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">So foul and fair a day I have not seen!<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">and the hags, suddenly confronting the general,
-greet him with the triple hail of Glamis, Cawdor,
-and King.</p>
-
-<p>The blasted hillock was indeed a fit spot for
-such a scene. Not a blade of grass grows upon
-it; the withered needles and cones of the pines
-lie about, wan and lifeless and yellow; and on
-one side, where the witches emptied their horrid
-caldron, and the contents ran down the slope,
-the earth remains bare, and scorched, and black.
-Even the trees themselves which grow on the
-hillock appear of a different sort from those on
-the heath around.</p>
-
-<p>Antiquaries set the scene of fulfilment of the
-witches infernal promptings&mdash;Macbeth’s murder
-of King Duncan&mdash;variously at Inverness, Glamis,
-and Bothgofuane, a smithy near Forres. Popular
-tradition, however, points to Cawdor, and less
-than seven miles from the fatal heath the
-Thane’s great moated keep frowns yet among
-its woods.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-But what is this? The air has grown suddenly
-dark; the gloom becomes oppressive; and
-in the close heat it is almost possible to imagine
-a smell of sulphur. A flash of lightning, a rush
-of wind among the tree-tops, and a terrible crash
-of thunder just overhead! A moment’s silence,
-a sound as if all the pines were shaking their
-branches together, a deluging downpour of rain,
-and the storm has burst. The spirits of the air
-are abroad, and the evil genius of the place is
-awake in demoniac fury. The tempest waxes
-terrific. The awful gloom among the trees is lit
-up by flash after flash of lightning; the cannon
-of thunder burst in all directions; and the rain
-pours in torrents. The ghastly hags might well
-revisit the scene of their orgies at such a moment.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_58" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.6875em;"><img src="images/i_075.jpg" width="427" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>It is enough. The powers of the air have conquered.
-It is hardly safe, and by no means
-pleasant, to remain among the pines in such a
-storm. So farewell to the deserted spot, and a
-bee-line for the open country. To make up for
-the wetting, it is consoling to think that few
-enthusiasts have beheld so realistic a representation
-of the third scene of Macbeth.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">59</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_9">AMONG THE GALLOWAY BECKS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> rained heavily at intervals all night, and,
-though it has cleared a little since day-break,
-there is not a patch of blue to be seen
-yet in the sky, and the torn skirts of the clouds
-are still trailing low among the hills. The day
-can hardly brighten now before twelve o’clock,
-and as the woods, at anyrate, will be rain-laden
-and weeping for hours, the walk through “fair
-Kirkconnel Lea” is not to be thought of. The
-lawn, too, is out of condition for tennis. But
-see! the burn, brown with peat and flecked with
-foam, is running like ale under the bridge, and
-though the spate is too heavy for much hope of
-catching trout down here, there will be good
-sport for the trouble higher up among the
-moorland becks. Bring out the fishing-baskets,
-therefore, some small Stewart tacklings, and a
-canister of bait. Put up, too, a substantial
-sandwich and a flask; for the air among the hills
-is keen, and the mists are sometimes chilly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-Wet and heavy the roads are, and there will
-be more rain yet, for the pools in the ruts are
-not clear. The slender larch on the edge of the
-wood has put on a greener kirtle in the night,
-and stands forward like a young bride glad amid
-her tears. If a glint of sunshine came to kiss
-her there, she would glitter with a hundred rain-jewels.
-The still, heavy air is aromatic with the
-scent of the pines. By the wayside the ripening
-oats are bending their graceful heads after the
-rain, like Danae, with their golden burden, while
-the warrior hosts of the barley beyond hold their
-spiky crests white and erect.</p>
-
-<p>The long, springing step natural on the heather
-shortens the road to the hills; and already a
-tempting burn or two have been crossed by the
-way. But nothing can be done without rods;
-and these have first to be called for at the
-shepherd’s.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_60" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.5625em;"><img src="images/i_079.jpg" width="425" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>A quiet, far-off place it is, this shieling upon
-the moors, with the drone of bees about, and the
-bleating of sheep. The shepherd himself is away
-to the “big house” about some “hogs,” but his
-wife, a weather-grey woman of sixty, with rough
-hospitable hands and kindly eyes, says that
-“maybe Jeanie will tak’ a rod to the becks.”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-Jeanie, by her dark glance, is pleased with the
-liberty; and indeed this lithe, handsome girl of
-fifteen will not be the least pleasant of guides,
-with her hair like the raven’s wing, and on her
-clear features the thoughtful look of the hills.</p>
-
-<p>Here are the rods, straight ash saplings of
-convenient length, with thin brown lines.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll come back and tak’ a cup o’ tea; and
-dinna stay up there if it rains,” says the goodwife,
-by way of parting.</p>
-
-<p>Jeanie is frank and interesting in speech,
-with a gentle breeding little to be expected in
-so lonely a place. She has the step of a deer,
-and seems to know every tuft of grass upon the
-hills. There is not so much heather in Galloway
-as in the West Highlands. A long grey bent
-takes its place, and on mossy ground the white
-tufts of the cotton grass appear.</p>
-
-<p>But here is a chance for a trial cast. A small
-burn comes down a side glen, and, just before it
-joins the main stream, runs foaming into a deeper
-pool. Keep well back from the bank, impale a
-tempting worm on the hook, and drop it in just
-where the water runs over the stones. Let the line
-go: the current carries it at once into the pool.
-There! The bait is held. Strike quickly down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-stream: the trout all swim against the current.
-But it is not a fish; the hook has only caught
-on a stone. Disentangle it, and try again. This
-time there is no mistaking the wriggle at the
-end of the rod; with a jerk the hungry nibbler is
-whipped into the air, and alights among the grass,
-a dozen yards from his native pool. A plump
-little fish he proves, his pretty brown sides spotted
-with scarlet, as he gasps and kicks on <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">terra firma</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Not another trout, however, can be tempted to
-bite in that eddy; the fish are too well fed by
-the spate, or too timid. “There will be more to
-catch,” says Jeanie, “higher up the becks.” She
-is right. Perhaps the trout in these narrow
-streamlets are less sophisticated than their kind
-lower down, for in rivulets so narrow as almost
-to be hidden by the bent-grass there seem plenty
-of fish eager to take the bait. These are darker
-in colour than the trout in the river, taking their
-shade from the peat, and though small, of course,
-averaging about a quarter of a pound in weight,
-are plump, and make merry enough rivalry in
-the whipping of them out.</p>
-
-<p>But the mists droop lower overhead, and a
-small smirring rain has been falling for some
-time; so, as Jeanie, at least, has a fair basketful,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-it will be best to put up the lines, discuss a
-sandwich under the shelter of the birches close
-by, and hold a council of war.</p>
-
-<p>Desolate and silent are these grey hillsides.
-Hardly a sheep is to be seen; the far-off cry of
-the curlew is the only sound heard; and as the
-white mists come down and shroud the mountains,
-there is an eerie, solemn feeling, as at the near
-presence of the Infinite. Something, however,
-must be done. The rain is every moment coming
-down more heavily, and the small leaves of the
-birches afford but scant protection. Off, then;
-home as fast as possible! The mountain maid
-knows a shorter way over the hill; and lightly
-and swiftly she leads the Indian file along the
-narrow sheep-path. On the moor, amid the grey
-mist and rain, appear the stone walls of a lonely
-sheepfold; and just below, in the channel of the
-beck, lies the deep pool, swirling now with peaty
-water and foam, where every year they wash the
-flocks.</p>
-
-<p>The shepherd’s wife appears at her door. Her
-goodman is home. A great peat fire is glowing
-on the warm hearth, and she is “masking the
-tea.” “Ye’ll find a basin of soft water in the
-little bedroom there, and ye’ll change ye’re coats<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-and socks, and get them dried,” says the kindly
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>This is real hospitality. The rough coats and
-thick dry socks bespeak warm-hearted thoughtfulness;
-and a wash in clean water after the
-discomforts of fishing is no mean luxury. The
-small, low-raftered bedroom, with quaintly-papered
-walls, and little window looking out upon the
-moors, is comfortably furnished; and the stone-floored
-kitchen, clean and bright and warm, with
-geraniums flowering in the window, has as pleasant
-a fireside seat as could be desired. Why should
-ambition seek more than this, and why are so
-many hopeless hearts cooped up in the squalid
-city?</p>
-
-<p>Here comes Jeanie down from the “loft,” looking
-fresher and prettier than ever in her dry
-wincey dress, with a little bit of blue ribbon at
-the throat. The tea is ready; her mother has
-fried some of the trout, and the snowy table is
-loaded with thick white scones, thin oatmeal cakes,
-home-made bramble jelly, and the freshest butter.
-Kings may be blest; but what hungry man needs
-more than this? The shepherd, too, is well-read,
-for does not Steele and Addison’s “Spectator”
-stand there on the shelf, along with Sir Walter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-Scott, Robert Burns, and the Bible? With fare
-like this for body and mind, man may indeed
-become “the noblest work of God.”</p>
-
-<p>But an hour has passed, too quickly; the rain
-has cleared at last, and away to the south and
-west the clouds are lifting in the sunset. Yonder,
-under the clear green sky, glistens the treacherous
-silver of the Solway, and as far again beyond it
-in the evening light rises the dark side of Skiddaw,
-in Cumberland. The gravel at the door
-lies glistening after the shower, the yellow marigolds
-in the little plot are bright and opening,
-and the moorland air is perfumed with mint
-and bog-myrtle. A hearty handshake, then,
-from the shepherd, a warm pressing to return
-soon from his goodwife, a pleasant smile from
-Jeanie, and the road must be taken down hill
-with a swinging step.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">66</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_10">IN KILT AND PLAID.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">All</span> dust has been swept from the causeways
-by the clear wind from the firth, as if in
-preparation for this great gala-day of the North.
-Unusual stir and movement fill the streets of the
-quiet Highland town, and the bright sunshine
-glitters everywhere on jewelled dirk and brooch
-and skeandhu. The clean pavements are ringing
-far and near with the quick, light step of the
-Highlander, and, from the number of tartans to
-be seen, it might almost be thought that the
-Fiery Cross was abroad, as in days of old, for
-the gathering of the clans.</p>
-
-<p>Sad enough are the memories here of the last
-war summons of the chiefs. High-hearted, indeed,
-was the town on the morning when the clans
-marched forth under “Bonnie Prince Charlie”
-to do battle for the Stuart cause. But before
-an April day had passed, the gates received
-again, flying from fatal Culloden, the remnants
-of the broken chivalry of the North, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-streets themselves shook under the thunder of
-the Lowland guns.</p>
-
-<p>The wounds of the past, however, are healed,
-the feuds are forgotten, and the clouds of that
-bygone sorrow have been blown away by the
-winds of time. A lighter occasion now has
-brought gaiety to the town, and the heroes
-of the hour go decked with no ominous white
-cockade. Already in the distance the wild
-playing of the pipes can be heard, and at the
-sound the kilted clansmen hurry faster along
-the streets; for the business of the day is on
-the greensward, and the hill folk, gentle and
-simple, are gathering from far and near to witness
-the Highland games.</p>
-
-<p>A fair and appropriate scene is the tourney-ground,
-with the mountains looking down upon
-it, purple and silent&mdash;the Olympus of the North.
-The eager crowd gathers thick already, like bees,
-round the barricade. Little knots of friends there,
-from glens among the hills, discuss the chances
-of their village hero. Many a swarthy mountaineer
-is to be seen, of pure Celtic blood, clear
-eyed and clean limbed, from far-off mountain
-clachan. Gamekeepers and ghillies there are,
-without number, in gala-day garb. And the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-townspeople themselves appear in crowds. On
-every side is to be heard the emotional Gaelic of
-the hills, beside the sweet English speech for which
-the town is famous, and only sometimes one
-catches the broader accent of a Lowland tongue.</p>
-
-<p>The lists have just been cleared, and the
-“chieftain” of the day has gathered his henchmen
-around him. The games are about to
-begin.</p>
-
-<p>Yonder go the pipers, half a dozen of them,
-their ribbons and tartans streaming on the wind.
-Featly they step together to the quick tune of
-the shrill mountain march they are playing.
-Deftly they turn in a body at the boundary,
-and brightly the cairngorms of their broad silver
-shoulder-brooches flash all at once in the sun.
-No wonder it is that the Highlander has the
-tread of a prince, accustomed as he is to the
-spring of the heather beneath his feet, and to
-music like that in the air. The Highland garb,
-too, can hardly fail to be picturesque when it is
-worn by stalwart fellows like these.</p>
-
-<p>The programme of the games is very full, and
-several competitions are therefore carried on at
-the same time. Here a dozen fleet youths speed
-past on the half-mile racecourse. Some lithe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-ghillies yonder are doing hop, step, and leap to
-an astonishing distance. And, farther off, five
-brawny fellows are preparing to “put” the heavy
-ball. Out of the tent close by come some sinewy
-men, well stripped for the encounter, to try a bout
-of wrestling. A pair at a time, they wind their
-strong arms about each other, and each strains and
-heaves to give his rival a fall. One man scowls,
-and another smiles as he picks himself up after
-his overthrow&mdash;the sympathy of the crowd goes
-largely by these signs. Most, however, display the
-greatest good-humour, and every one must obey
-the ruling of the umpire. Gradually the two
-stoutest and heaviest men overcome the rest; and
-at last, the only champions remaining, they stand
-up to engage each other. The grey-headed man
-has some joke to make as he hitches up his belt
-before closing, and the bystanders laugh heartily
-at his pleasantry; but his opponent evidently looks
-upon the contest too seriously for that. Hither
-and thither they stagger in “the grips,” the back
-of each as rigid as a plank at an angle of forty-five
-degrees. More than once they loosen hold
-for a breath, and again grasp each other, till at
-last, by dint of sheer strength, the grey-headed
-wrestler draws the younger man to himself, and,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-with a sudden toss, throws him clear upon the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>The slim youths at the pole-vaulting look like
-white swallows as they swing high into the air
-on their long staves to clear the bar; and a roar
-of applause from the far end of the lists, where
-the dogged “tug of war” has been going on,
-tells that one of the teams of heavy fellows straining
-at the rope has been hauled over the brink
-into the dividing ditch. The brawny giants who
-were throwing the axle a little while ago are
-just now breathing themselves, and will be tossing
-the mighty caber by and by. And ever and
-anon throughout the day there float upon the
-breeze the wild strains of the competing pipers&mdash;pibrochs
-and strathspeys and “hurricanes of
-Highland reels.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the grand pavilion has filled. Lord
-and lady, earl and marquis and duke are there.
-And beside these are others, heads of families,
-who count their chieftainship, it may be, through
-ten centuries, and who are to be called neither
-esquire nor lord, but just &mdash;&mdash; of that Ilk. Chiefs
-by right of blood, they need no other title than
-their name.</p>
-
-<p>The presence of so much that is noble and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-illustrious lends a feudal interest to the games,
-and imports to the rivalry something of that
-desire to appear well in the eyes of the chief
-which was once so powerful an influence in the
-Highlands. The young ghillie here, who has out-stripped
-all but one competitor at throwing the
-hammer, feels the stimulus of this. He knows
-not only that his sweetheart’s eyes are bent
-eagerly upon him from the barrier at hand, but
-that he has a chance of distinguishing himself
-before his master and “her ladyship,” who are
-watching from under the awning yonder. So he
-breathes on his hands, takes a firm grasp of the
-long ash handle, and, vigorously whirling the
-heavy iron ball round his head, sends it with
-all his strength across the lists. How far
-has it gone? They chalk the distance up on
-a board&mdash;95½ feet. There is a clapping of
-hands from the crowd, and a waving of white
-kerchiefs from the pavilion. He is sure of
-winning now, and the shy, pretty face at the
-barrier flushes with innocent pride. Is he not
-<em>her</em> hero?</p>
-
-<p>There, on the low platform before the judges,
-go the dancers, two after two. They are trimly
-dressed for the performance, and wear the thin,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-low-heeled Highland shoes, while the breasts of
-some of them are fairly panoplied in gold and
-silver medals won at former contests. Mostly
-young lads, it is wonderful how neatly they
-perform every step, turning featly with now one
-arm in the air and now the other. Cleverly
-they go through the famous sword dance over
-crossed claymores, and in the wild whirl of the
-Reel o’ Tulloch seem to reach the acme of the
-art.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_72" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;"><img src="images/i_093.jpg" width="600" height="486" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>But in the friendly rivalry of skill and strength
-the day wears on. The races in sacks and over
-obstacles, as well as the somewhat rough “bumping
-in the ring,” have all been decided; the “best
-dressed Highlander” has received his meed of
-applause; and the sun at last dips down behind
-the hills. Presently, as the mountain-sides beyond
-the river are growing grey, and their shadows
-gather upon the lists, the spectators melt by
-degrees from the barricades, and in a slow stream
-move back into the town. By and by the
-Assembly Rooms will be lit up, and carriages
-will begin to arrive with fair freights for the
-great Caledonian Ball. But, long before that,
-the upland roads will be covered with pedestrians
-and small mountain conveyances with family<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-parties&mdash;simple folk, all pleased heartily with
-their long day’s enjoyment, and wending their
-way to far-off homes among the glens, where
-they will talk for another twelvemonth of the
-great feats done at the gathering here by Duncan
-or Fergus or Hamish.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">74</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_11">AT THE FOOT OF BEN LEDI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Sit</span> here in the stern of the boat, and let her
-drift out on the glassy waters of the loch.
-After the long sultry heat of the day it is refreshing
-to let one’s fingers trail in these cool waters,
-and to watch the reflection of the hills above
-darkening in the crystal depths below. Happy
-just now must be the speckled trout that dwell
-in the loch’s clear depths; and when the fiery-flowering
-sun rolls ablaze in the zenith there are
-few mortals who will not envy the cool green
-domain of the salmon king. But now that the
-sunset has died away upon the hills, like “the
-watch-fires of departing angels,” a breath of air
-begins mysteriously to stir along the shore, and
-from the undergrowth about the streamlet that
-runs close by into the loch, blackbird and water-ousel
-send forth more liquid pipings. The
-cuckoos, that all day long have been calling to
-each other across loch and strath, now with a
-more restful “chuck! chu-chu, chu, chuck!” are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-flitting, grey flakes, from coppice to coppice,
-preparatory to settling for the night The grouse-cocks’
-challenge, “kibeck, kibeck, kibeck!” can
-still be heard from their tourney-ground on the
-moraine at the moor’s edge; and from the heath
-above still comes the silvery “whorl-whorl-whorl”
-of the whaup. These sounds can be heard far
-off in the stillness of the dusk.</p>
-
-<p>But listen to this mighty beating of the waters,
-and look yonder! From the shadow of the
-hazels on the loch’s margin comes the royal bird
-of Juno, pursuing his mate. In his eager haste
-he has left the water, and with outstretched
-neck, beating air and loch into foam with his
-silver wings, he rushes after her. She, with the
-tantalising coyness of her sex, has also risen from
-the water, and, streaming across the loch, keeps
-undiminished the distance between herself and
-her pursuer. At this, finding his efforts vain, he
-gives up the chase, subsiding upon the surface
-with a force which sends the foam-waves curling
-high about his breast. Disdainfully he turns his
-back upon the fair, and, without once inclining
-his proud black beak in her direction, makes
-steadily for the shore. This, however, does not
-please the lady. She turns, looks after her inconstant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-lover, and, meeting with no response,
-begins slowly to sail in his direction. Suddenly
-again at this, with snowy pinions erect, neck
-curved gallantly back, and the calm waters foaming
-round his breast, he surges after her, ploughing
-up the loch into shining furrows. Again the coy
-dame flees, again and again the same amorous
-manœuvres are gone through, and when night
-itself falls, the splendid birds will still be dallying
-over their long-certain courtship. No plebeian
-affair is the mating of these imperial denizens of
-the loch. Seldom do mortals witness even this
-wooing of the swans.</p>
-
-<p>More commonplace, though not, perhaps, less
-happy, are the three brown ducks and their
-attentive drake, which having, one after another,
-splashed themselves methodically on the flat stone
-by the margin of the loch, now swim off in a
-string for home. Young trout are making silver
-circles in the water as they leap at flies under
-the grassy bank; and the keen-winged little
-swallows that skim the surface, sometimes tip the
-glassy wave with foot or wing.</p>
-
-<p>Before the daylight fades there are beautiful
-colours to be seen on shore. The fresh young
-reeds that rise at hand like a green mist out of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-the water deepen to a purple tint nearer the
-margin. The march dyke that comes down to
-the shallows is covered with the red chain-mail
-of a small-leaved ivy; and the gean-tree beside it,
-that a week or two ago raised into the blue sky
-creamy coral-branches of blossom, still retains
-something of its fragile loveliness. On the stony
-meadow beyond, the golden whinflower is fading
-now, but is being replaced by the paler yellow
-splendour of the broom. The rich blush-purple
-of some heathy banks betrays the delicate blossom
-of the blaeberry, and patches of brown show
-where the young bracken are uncurling their
-rusty tips.</p>
-
-<p>And silent and fair on the mountain descends
-the shadowy veil of night. Darkening high up
-there against the sapphire heaven, the dome-topped
-hill, keeping watch with the stars, has
-treasured for twenty centuries strange memories
-of an older world. Whether or not, in the earth’s
-green spring, it served as a spot of offering for
-some primeval race, no man now can tell. But
-long before the infant Christ drew breath among the
-far-off Jewish hills, grave Druid priests ascended
-here to offer worship to their Unknown God.
-On the holy Beltane eve, the First of May, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-concourse gathered from near and far, and as the
-sun, the divine sign-manual set in the heavens,
-arose out of the east, they welcomed his rising
-with an offering of fire. From sea to sea across
-dim Scotland, from the storm-cloven peaks of
-Arran to the sentinel dome of the Bass, could
-be seen this mountain summit; and from every
-side the awed inhabitants, as they looked up and
-beheld the clear fire-jewel glittering on Ben Ledi’s
-brow, knew that Heaven had once more favoured
-them with the sacred gift of flame. For the
-light on the mountain-top, like the altar fires of
-the Chaldean seers on the hills of the East of old,
-was understood to be kindled by the hand of
-God; every hearth in the land had been quenched,
-and the people waited for the new Bal-tein, or
-Baal-fire from Heaven, for another year.</p>
-
-<p>Rude these people may have been&mdash;though
-that is by no means certain,&mdash;but few races on
-earth have had a nobler place of worship than
-this altar-mountain, which they called the Hill
-of God.</p>
-
-<p>The climber on Ben Ledi to-day passes, near
-the summit, the scene of a sad, more modern
-story. On the shoulder of the mountain lies a
-small, dark tarn. It is but a few yards in width,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-yet once it acted a part in a terrible tragedy.
-Amid the snows of winter, and under a leaden
-heaven, a funeral party was crossing the ridge,
-when there was a crash; the slow wail of the
-pipes changed into a shriek of terror, and a
-hundred mourners, with the dead they were
-carrying, sank in the icy waters to rise no more.
-That single moment sufficed to leave sixty women
-husbandless in Glen Finglas below. No tablet
-on that wind-swept moor records the half-forgotten
-disaster; only the eerie lapping of the lochlet’s
-waves fills the discoverer with strange foreboding;
-and at dusk, it is said, the lonely ptarmigan may
-be seen, like souls of the departed, haunting the
-fatal spot.</p>
-
-<p>On a knoll at the mountain foot, where the
-Leny leaves Loch Lubnaig, lies the little Highland
-burial-place to which the clansmen were
-bearing their dead comrade. Only a low stone
-wall now remains round the few quiet graves;
-but here once stood the chapel of St Bride,
-and from the Gothic arch of its doorway Scott,
-in his “Lady of the Lake,” describes the issuing
-of a blithesome rout, gay with pipe-music and
-laughter, when the dripping messenger of
-Roderick Dhu rushed up and thrust into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-hand of the new-made groom the Fiery Cross
-of the <span class="locked">Macgregors&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“The muster place is Lanrick mead;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Speed forth the signal! Norman, speed!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Well did the poet paint the parting of bride and
-groom; and to-day on the mossy stones of the
-little burial-place are to be read the wistful words
-of many who have bid each other since then a
-last good-bye. Surely the arcana of earth’s
-divinest happiness is only opened by the golden
-key of love. Sweet, indeed, must be that companionship
-which unclasps not with resignation
-even when sunset is fading upon the hills of
-life, and the shadows are coming in regretful
-eyes, but would fain stretch forth its yearnings
-through the pathways of a Hereafter. Simple
-and lacking excitement may be the lives of the
-folk who dwell under these hills, but something
-of the sublime surely is latent in hearts whose
-hopes extend beyond a time when heaven and
-earth shall have passed away.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">81</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_12">CADZOW FOREST.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">High</span> on the edge of the crumbling cliff here,
-like the grey eyrie of some keen-winged
-falcon, hangs the ruined keep of Cadzow. Bowered
-and all but hidden by the leafy luxuriance of
-“the oak and the ash and the bonnie ivy-tree,”
-with the Evan roaring down its rocky bed far
-below at the foot of the sheer precipice, there is
-enough left of this ancestral home of the Hamiltons
-to give some idea of its ancient strength. Perched
-where it was unassailable on one side save by foes
-who had the gift of wings; on the other hand, the
-deep moss-grown moat and the massive remains
-of thick walls tell how secure a refuge it gave to
-its possessors. Secluded, too, in the depths of the
-old Caledonian forest, the fastness had endless
-facilities for secret communication and for safe
-hiding in case of necessity, and the deeds of its
-owners need have been subject to the curiosity of
-prying eye. Who can tell what captives have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-languished in the dungeons into which now, at
-places through the broken arch, the sunshine
-makes its way? Birds have built their nests, and
-twitter joyously about their callow young, where
-once only the sighs of the prisoner were heard
-and the iron clank of his chain. Alas! he had
-not the linnet’s wing to fly out and speed away
-along these sunny woodland paths.</p>
-
-<p>But not vindictive above their peers were the
-chiefs of the ancient race that held these baronies.
-Rather has the gleam of romance come here to
-lighten the records of their gloomy age. For it
-was within these walls, tradition says, that Queen
-Mary found an asylum upon the night following
-that of her escape from Loch Leven Castle&mdash;a
-tradition the more likely to be true since the
-Hamilton Palace of that day was but a rude
-square tower. And it is easy to imagine how
-in that sweet May morning, the second of her
-new-born liberty and of her fresh-reviving hopes,
-the eyes of the fair unfortunate Queen may have
-filled with tears of happiness as she gazed from
-this casement forth upon the green waving forests
-and the silver Evan in its gorge below, and heard
-in the courtyard and the woods behind the tramp
-of horses and the ring of arms. Alas! whatever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-her frailties, she suffered sorely for them. There
-are few perhaps whose errors lie so much at the
-door of circumstance. From the Rout of Solway,
-which heralded her birth, to the last sad scene
-at Fotheringay, her life was a walk of tears; and
-the student of her reign is tempted to think that
-had she been a less lovable woman she might
-have been a more successful queen. That was
-the last gleam of sunshine in her life, the eleven
-days between Loch Leven and Langside. Short
-was the respite, but it must have been sweet, and
-doubtless these Hamiltons made chivalrous hosts.
-They fought for her gallantly at anyrate, if in
-vain, for they were the foremost to rush against
-her enemies’ spears in the steep narrow lane at
-Langside.</p>
-
-<p>And at last she rode away from this place,
-surrounded by a brave little troop of nobles, their
-armour glancing in the sun as they caracoled off
-along these grassy forest glades. Then amid the
-restored quiet, only the whisper of the woods
-about them and the murmur of the river far
-below, the women waited here, listening. Presently,
-sudden and ominous, they heard a sound
-in the distance&mdash;cannonading near Glasgow, ten
-miles away. The Queen had been intercepted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-on her journey to Dunbarton. There was not
-much of the sound, and it died feebly.</p>
-
-<p>Hours afterwards, anxious waiting hours, down
-these forest avenues, slowly, with drooping crest
-and broken spear, came riding the lord of the
-castle, haggard, and almost alone. For of the
-gallant gentlemen who had followed him to Langside
-many had fallen upon the field, and the
-rest were scattered and fleeing for their lives.</p>
-
-<p>What sorrowings then for those who would never
-return must there have been within these walls&mdash;what
-aching hearts for those who had escaped!
-The smoke of the houses in Clydesdale, fired by
-the victorious army of the Regent, could almost
-be seen from here; and day after day news came
-of friends taken and friends in flight, until it was
-whispered that the Queen herself was a prisoner
-in the hands of the English Warden. A weary
-and anxious time it must have been; but the
-danger passed, and the hour of reprisal came.</p>
-
-<p>Through these woods, according to the tradition
-preserved by Sir Walter Scott, on a January
-afternoon less than two years after the battle of
-Langside, a hunting-party was returning to the
-castle. Amid the fast-falling shadows of the
-winter day they were bringing home their quarry&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">85</a></span>the
-wild bull whose race still roams these glades;
-and the guests and huntsmen were making
-merry over the success of their sport. There
-was the jingle, too, of hawk-bells, and the bark
-of hounds in leash. But their lord rode in front,
-silent, with clenched hand and clouded brow.
-He had not forgotten the misfortune that had
-befallen his house, and news of a fresh insult
-had but lately quickened his anger over it. The
-estate of one of his kinsmen, Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh,
-had been confiscated to a favourite of
-the Regent, and the new possessor, it was said,
-had used his power with such severity, in turning
-out Bothwellhaugh’s wife and new-born infant on
-a freezing night, that the poor lady had become
-furiously mad. Brooding darkly and bitterly on
-these evils, the chief was drawing near the castle,
-when there was suddenly heard approaching the
-heavy gallop of a horse, and in another moment
-Bothwellhaugh sprang to the earth before him.
-His face was wild and pale, and his steed,
-bespattered with foam and blood, drooped its
-head in exhaustion. Vengeance swift and dire
-had fallen upon the Regent, and, twenty miles
-away, in Linlithgow Palace, the birthplace of
-the sister he had dethroned, he lay dying. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-is for a higher Judge than man to say whether
-his death was that of a martyr or of a miscreant;
-but at the time there were not wanting those
-who held that Bothwellhaugh satisfied with one
-blow his own private feud and the wrath of
-heaven over the distresses of the Queen. The
-brass matchlock, curiously enough a rude sort
-of rifle, with which the deed was done, lies yet
-in the palace of the Hamiltons.</p>
-
-<p>Three hundred years ago and more it all
-happened, and the moss grows dark and velvety
-now on the ruined bridge over which once rang
-the hoofs of Queen Mary’s steed; but the grey
-and broken walls, silent amid the warm summer
-sunshine, recall these memories of the past.
-There could be no sweeter spot to linger near.
-Foamy branches of hawthorn in spring fill the
-air here with their fragrance; and in the woodland
-aisles lie fair beds of speedwell, blue as
-miniature lakes. Under the dry, crumbling banks,
-too, among tufts of delicate fern, are to be seen
-the misty, purple-flowering nettle and the soft
-green shoots of brier. Overhead, in summer
-luxuriance, spread the broad, palm-like fronds of
-the chestnut; close by, the soft greenery of the
-beech lets the tinted sunshine through; and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-amid them rises the dark and sombre pine. But,
-venerable above all, on these rolling forest lands,
-the shattered girth of many an ancient oak still
-witnesses to an age that may have seen the rites
-of the Druids. Monarchs of the primeval wilds,
-these gigantic trees, garlanded now with the
-green leaf of another year, need acres each for
-the spread of their mighty roots; while as withies
-in comparison appear the cedars of a century.</p>
-
-<p>And down these forest avenues, the home of
-his sires from immemorial time, where his hoof
-sinks deep in the primeval sward, and there is
-no rival to answer his hoarse bellow of defiance,
-comes the lordly Caledonian bull. Never yet has
-the race been tamed, and the cream-white hide
-and black muzzle, horn, and hoof bespeak the
-strain of its ancient blood. There is a popular
-belief, indeed, that when the white cattle become
-extinct the house of Hamilton will pass away.
-Here, then, in the forgotten solitude, where seldom
-along the grassy woodland ways comes the foot
-of the human wanderer, the mountain bull keeps
-guard with his herd over the scene of that old
-and sorrowful story.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">88</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_13">A FISHER TOWN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Keen</span> and strong, and steady to-night in the
-gathering dusk, the wind is coming up the
-firth out of the east. Darkling clouds roll low
-along the sky, and, before the breeze, the waves
-in their unnumbered hosts, like dark hussars
-white-crested, ride past to break upon the beach-sands
-yonder inland at Fort George. The full,
-deep gale brings with it out of the shadowy east
-the health of a hundred tumbling seas, and sets
-the glad life dancing in lip, and eye, and heart;
-while the music of the rushing waves, like the
-drums of far-off armies, stirs the soul with the
-daring of great purposes. Little need, therefore,
-is there to pity the fisher women and children
-far out at the ebb-tide edge gathering bait among
-the reefs. Clear are their eyes as the sea-pools
-over which they bend, and while sun and wind
-have made their skins brown as the wet sand
-itself, many a drawing-room beauty would give<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-her diamonds for such a wealth of raven hair.
-Even at this distance the happy voices of the
-children, a pleasant murmur, speak of free and
-simple hearts. Sport on, happy children! Rejoice
-in your brown brood, simple mothers! Not yours
-are the pale cheek and the wasted form, the lifeless
-eye and the languid step. Sometimes, it
-may be, when the winds rise and the waves
-come thundering upon the beach, there are
-anxious hours for you because of husband or
-father tossing out there somewhere in the darkness;
-sometimes, alas! a sore heart and many
-tears when the little knot of sad and silent men
-come up from the beach and lay gently upon
-its pillow the pale wet face that will speak to
-you no more. But yours, at least, are not the
-fetid atmosphere of cities and their weary miles
-of pavement; for you the smile of Heaven is not
-veiled by a sin-black pall of smoke; and when
-the dark angel does come to your humble
-dwellings, and the last “Good-byes!” have to
-be said, it is not amid the heartless roar and
-the squalor of city streets, but amid the sweet,
-salt smell, and listening to the strange and
-solemn “calling” of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>A race by themselves are these fisher-folk,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-mixing little with the people of the upper town,
-and keeping very much by customs of their
-own. Danish, very likely, or Norse, in origin,
-their blood remains all but as pure yet as it
-was when their forefathers landed on these
-shores. Seven miles to the eastward along the
-coast, where the white sand-line gleams on the
-horizon, in places exposed by the shifting dunes,
-are still to be found the remains of villages
-which belonged to the ancestors of these folk,
-and by these remains&mdash;bronze pins, fish-hooks,
-broken pottery, and shell heaps&mdash;it seems clear
-that the ancient villagers lived very much the
-same life as is lived here to-day. Only, of late
-years the steamship and the School Board have
-made some invasions upon traditional ideas.</p>
-
-<p>At hand, spread on the bent-grass to dry, and
-brown as seaweed itself, lie miles of fishing-nets,
-with their rows of worn cork floats; for the
-herring fishery of the season is over, the west
-coast boats have gone home through the Canal,
-and the gear is being laid by for the winter.
-In the end of April it will be wanted again
-for the Loch Fyne fishing, but it will be the
-end of June before the herring nets are used
-on the east coast again. The good woman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-coming up the shore below with her creel and
-pail of bait&mdash;mussels, sand-worms, and silver-gleaming
-needle-fish&mdash;is going now to bait for the
-later white-fishing the “long lines,” with their
-hundreds of hooks, which her husband and his
-sons will take out to set before daylight. To-morrow
-morning, when the boat comes home,
-she will have to fill her creel with the haddocks,
-and sell them along the country-side; or perhaps
-the fish will be bought at auction by the curers,
-to be smoked with the smoke of fragrant fir-cones
-into succulent, appetising “speldings.”</p>
-
-<p>The quay-head in the morning, when the fish
-auction is going on, makes a characteristic sight,
-and displays the only occasion on which anything
-like business wakens in the quiet place.</p>
-
-<p>The boats have come in with the running tide,
-and lie moored to great iron rings in the landing-place.
-Curious names they have, mostly double&mdash;the
-“Elspat and Ann,” or the “Ann and Margaret”&mdash;probably
-to represent the wives or sweethearts
-of two partners. In the boats themselves lie
-together heaps of lines, ropes, and sails, with fish
-gleaming here and there among them; while the
-quay is littered with oars and spars and cables,
-enough to make walking a fine art. The fish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-have been lifted out of each boat by its crew,
-and when the women have divided them into
-glittering heaps&mdash;a heap for each man and one
-for the boat&mdash;the skipper sells the boat’s heap,
-and its price settles that of the others. Here
-the shrewd bargaining power of the fisher-folk
-comes out, trained, as it is, by the narrow path
-they tread between means and ends; while here
-the women who have no man’s hand to bring
-them home the harvest of the deep contrive to
-find their bread by buying the fish they will
-afterwards retail. The whole transaction is primitive
-in the extreme, but one that sufficiently serves
-its purpose.</p>
-
-<p>A life of which this is the busiest scene may
-appear monotonous to the dweller in cities, but
-again and again there come hours of stern
-excitement which prove the manhood of the
-race. There have been times when every boat
-of the fishing fleet as it came rushing ashore
-had to be caught, at peril of life and limb,
-breast-deep in the furious surf, and landed safely
-with its occupants. Yet men are ever most
-plentiful when the work is most dangerous, and
-never yet has the lifeboat lacked a crew.</p>
-
-<p>Once, indeed, a few years ago it happened that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-the men, all but one or two, were away at the
-fishing, when word was brought that a Norwegian
-timber-ship was going to pieces on the treacherous
-shifting sands yonder, seven miles away. A
-tremendous surf was beating upon the beach,
-and the lifeboat coxswain and crew were riding
-the storm out, cabled to their herring-nets somewhere
-in the North Sea. In the upper town,
-however, there was visiting his brother just then
-the captain of an East Indiaman, home upon
-holiday, and the message was handed to him
-as he sat at breakfast. In half an hour, sailor-like,
-he had the lifeboat out, manned with a
-scratch crew of volunteers, and run down the
-beach. Then began the difficulty and peril. By
-strong and willing hands the boat was run out
-into the surf, but again and again she was caught
-by a huge wave and driven back. Three-quarters
-of an hour’s hard rowing it took to pull her out
-to the fourth sea. A little longer, and she hoisted
-her sail, and went plunging off into the howling
-wilderness of waters.</p>
-
-<p>Would she accomplish her mission? Would
-she and the brave hearts on board her ever
-themselves come back? Old men and fishers’
-wives watched her from the quay-head till she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-disappeared among the waves, and then they
-waited, anxious and fearful.</p>
-
-<p>The day passed without tidings of her, and at
-last night began to fall. The anxiety of the
-watchers had become intense, when suddenly some
-one caught a glimpse of white bows gleaming far
-out over the waves. There she was, clearly now,
-coming like a sea-bird through the driving spray.
-Who could tell whether she had won or lost
-lives? Presently her thwarts were seen black
-with men. She had accomplished her mission;
-but the question yet remained&mdash;how were they
-to be landed? Alas! all might yet be lost in
-the terrible surf. There was a strong hand at
-the helm, however; the full tide had covered
-the bar, and, with a single swoop, she shot
-into the harbour, every man safe, amid the wild
-huzzas of the waiting throng.</p>
-
-<p>One glad heart there was too full for words.
-Among the ringing cheers, as the crowd made
-way for its hero, she could only in silence take
-her husband’s arm. It was the captain’s wife.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">95</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_14">A LOCH-SIDE SUNDAY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A</span> quarter to twelve. How quiet it is!
-Only the mellow note of a mavis sometimes
-in the oak woods, and the clear, high treble
-of a shilfa, break on the stillness. The tinkle of
-the little village smithy, down among the trees,
-is silent. It is the Day of Rest. There was a
-shower of rain in the early morning; it has laid
-the dust, and left the road firm and cool to the
-tread. Everything is refreshed: wild rosebuds,
-red and white, are everywhere opening after the
-shower; the yellow broom-blossom is softer and
-brighter; the delicate forget-me-nots have a
-lovelier blue; and beyond, in the shady spaces
-of the woods, the foxgloves raise their spires of
-drooping bells. The rain, too, has brought out
-afresh every wayside scent; the new-cut clover
-there in the meadow, the flowerless sweetbrier
-and clambering yellow honeysuckle here in the
-hedge, all fill the air with fragrance. The tide is
-out, almost at full ebb, and from the stony beach<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-below sometimes the gentle swaying of the air
-brings up faintly the fresh smell of seaweed. The
-sun is very warm, and the last of the clouds,
-floating far up in the sky, are melting into the
-blue. The air is clear yet, though, and on the
-other side of the loch the sheep&mdash;small white
-dots&mdash;can be quite well seen feeding high up on
-the green patches of the mountain. A little later
-the heather will begin to bloom on these brown
-hillsides, and the mighty Bens, seated yonder on
-their rugged thrones, will put on their imperial
-purple. The loch lying calm below reflects
-perfectly every detail of the opposite hills&mdash;shrub
-and heather and shieling! Even the white gull,
-circling slowly a yard above the water, casts its
-image on the glassy mirror. Out on the open
-firth, too, beyond the low-lying points at the
-mouth of the loch, the sea, like cloth-of-silver,
-glistens in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>Hark! the bell on the roof of the little kirk
-among the trees has begun to ring, and already, in
-groups of two and three, the people are coming
-along the loch-side and down the road from the
-hills. These early arrivals mostly travel a long
-way to attend the service. From quiet farmhouses
-in lonely straths, and solitary shielings on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-the upland moors, some of the simple-hearted
-folk have wended for hours. Here are heavy-footed
-shepherds, shaggy-bearded and keen-eyed,
-in rough mountain tweed and flat Balmoral
-bonnets, grasping their long hazel staves, and
-accompanied, more than one of them, by a faithful
-old collie. There are comely lasses, of sun-browned
-pleasant features, and soft hill speech,
-in sober straw hats, strong boots, and serviceable
-dresses of homespun, with, perhaps, a keepsake
-kerchief in the bosom for a bit of colour. Over
-high stiles, across uneven stepping-stones, and
-through rugged glens of birch and rowan, they
-have made their way to attend the kirk. Farmers
-from ten and twelve miles distance come jogging
-in with their wives and daughters in primitive
-two-wheeled conveyances, built for strength, and
-drawn by shaggy little Highland horses. Here,
-too, come the people from the village&mdash;bent old
-women, their wrinkled faces hidden under snowy
-linen mutches, carrying in their hands, with the
-long-treasured Bible, a sprig of southernwood
-and sweetwilliam to smell at during sermon;
-the big-bearded, big-handed blacksmith, looking
-wonderfully clean for once; the lithe, sallow-faced
-tailor; and the widow who keeps the store. All<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-linger in the sunny graveyard among the moss-grown
-stones, and while the beadle in the porch
-keeps ringing the bell, greetings are exchanged
-among friends who meet here once a week from
-distant ends of the parish. The gamekeeper has
-a word to say to the piermaster, the school-mistress
-comes up talking with the housekeeper
-from the castle, the old men exchange snuff-boxes
-with solemn nods, and young M’Kenzie, who is
-expecting to be made the Duke’s forester, takes
-the opportunity of getting near and whispering
-something of interest to the blacksmith’s pretty
-daughter.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, however, they all move into the kirk,
-dropping their “collection” as they pass, upon
-the plate in the porch, where two deacons stand
-to watch it. Inside, all is very still, though a
-swallow that has flown in and skims about the
-roof gives an occasional chirrup, and the regular
-rhythm of the bell is faintly heard. The doors
-remain open, yet the sunshine, falling in on the
-yellow walls, makes the air very warm, and
-through the clear lattice windows the cattle in the
-glebe close by can be seen whisking the flies from
-their sides under the larches. The old precentor
-has just come in from the vestry with his list of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-the psalm-tunes, and in his seat under the pulpit,
-is polishing his spectacles by way of preparation.</p>
-
-<p>At last the bell stops: there follows a tramp,
-tramp of heavy feet, and the youth of the
-parish, who by immemorial custom have been
-hanging about outside till the last moment, file
-solemnly down the aisles to their seats. The
-beadle carries in Bible and psalm-book, and, after
-a moment’s pause, the minister, in ample black
-gown and white neck-bands, reverently enters and
-ascends the pulpit.</p>
-
-<p>All is perfectly still for a minute while he
-bows his head; and then in a low tremulous
-voice he reads the verses of the rhymed psalm
-that is to be sung. The precentor leads off the
-singing, for there is no organ, and as he beats
-time with his tuning-fork, the praise that ascends,
-if not perhaps of perfect harmony, is at least
-sincere. More is felt by these simple folk than
-is apparent on the surface. Associations of many
-sorts influence them in the place. Pulpit and
-pew have been occupied and passed from father
-to son for generations; memories of the past
-and hopes of the future alike gather here, and
-the place is sacred to them all. The grey-haired
-minister, standing where his father once stood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-hears rising about him, with the praise of the
-child lips he has baptized, the quavering voices
-of those who were young when he was young;
-and his thoughts are of years gone by. The
-young forester in the raftered “loft” listens to
-the singing of a sweet voice in the choir, and his
-eyes grow bright with the hope and strength
-of days to come. The youthful look forward;
-the aged look back; and both feelings are an
-inspiration of worship.</p>
-
-<p>When the minister has read and prayed&mdash;a
-solemn extempore prayer&mdash;and they have sung
-again, the sermon, the principal part of the
-service, begins. The opening of the discourse is
-like the peaceful morning hour of summer. It
-is the calm, dispassionate statement of truth.
-Has this no effect? Their minds must be moved
-by fear. Cloud after cloud rolls up into the sky:
-the preacher is marshalling the battalions of his
-argument. Darker and darker they become. No
-ray of hope can pierce that leaden heaven. All
-deepens to the gloom of despair. Joy has fled:
-the twitter of little birds is still. There comes
-a sharp question&mdash;a flash of lightning; then, in
-a thunder-roll of denunciation, argument after
-argument overwhelms the sinner: the clouds are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-rent, earth trembles, rain falls. Are the hearers
-not awed? They must be stirred by gratitude.
-The thunders cease, the storm sweeps past, the
-clear light of hope shines again upon earth; a
-lark flutters up into the sky, and the last clouds
-of fear are melted afar into the rugged gold of
-sunset. The sermon is ended. Those who were
-not moved by reason, awed by terror, or inspired
-by hope, have been thrilled by the earnestness of
-the preacher. The old have listened with reverent,
-downcast looks, shaking their bent heads ever
-and again in solemn conviction; while the young
-have sat with earnest eyes riveted on the minister.
-The discourse has continued without a break for
-three-quarters of an hour, and when it is over,
-the hushed stillness lasts for more than a minute.
-The final prayer is short, condensing and putting
-in practical form the aspirations of the sermon,
-not neglecting, either, to stir pity “for all we love,
-the poor, the sad, the sinful.” A “paraphrase”
-is sung with renewed fervour, and a solemn
-benediction ends the service.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the congregation melts out of the kirk.
-It has been very close inside, and the faint air
-moving out of doors is most refreshing. The
-tide is flowing in now with a gentle ripple on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-the beach, and the little boat at anchor off-shore
-has drifted round with the current. The sun is
-striking the west side of the mossy tombstones,
-the shadows of the trees have shifted on the
-grass, and all traces of the morning shower have
-disappeared. The people linger yet a little about
-the graveyard to talk over points of the sermon.
-Presently the minister comes out of the vestry,
-and, stopping here and there to say a kindly
-word to some of the old folk, who are pleased
-by the attention, passes across the glebe to the
-pleasant white manse resting, with deep eaves,
-among its fuchsias and rose-trees.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">103</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_15">THE GLEN OF GLOOM.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Silence</span> falls upon the gay deck of the
-floating palace, as, with quickly pulsing
-paddles, she throbs on amid the solitude of
-these dark waters under the mountains. Far
-away to the south behind, like silver in the
-sunshine, lies the open sea chased by the wind;
-but above the narrowing channel in front the
-rugged Bens, sombre and vast, frown down upon
-the invader. Purple-apparelled these Bens are
-now, like allied kings asleep after their battles
-with the storm-giants of the North. For
-the black waves in winter leap here savagely,
-and gnash their gleaming teeth against the
-mountain-sides; the storm-winds roar in anger
-as they buffet the iron breasts of their captors;
-and the silent frost strains with his strong
-embrace to crack the great ribs of the Titans.
-But the everlasting hills live on, and the sunshine
-kisses them again and the summer rain
-weeps upon their scars, while their children, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-dwellers about their feet, look up and learn to
-love them for their memories with a love strong
-as life itself. Many a Highland heart failed
-long ago on the march through the Egyptian
-desert when the pipes wailed out “Lochaber no
-more.” These are the great mountains of Lochaber
-rising huge against the sky in front; and
-even the gay tourist, here on the sunny deck,
-feels a silence gather about his heart as he
-is borne on under their shadows. The young
-bride by the companion-way nestles closer to her
-husband as, with grave blue eyes, she gazes
-upon the solemn loneliness of the hills.</p>
-
-<p>But listen! Do you hear? Wild and sweet
-in the distance over the water comes the sound.
-It is the pipes, and they are playing “Flora
-Macdonald’s Lament.” Yonder, down near the
-shore&mdash;you can make them out through the glass&mdash;a
-shooting party has picnicked, and they have
-brought the piper with them. How the colour
-deepens on the cheek of the old Highland
-gentleman here at the sound! He is just
-returning from many years’ residence abroad,
-and for the last hour, leaning over the deck-rail,
-he has been feasting his heart upon the
-sight of the mountains. “There is no music<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-like that music,” he exclaims, “over the water
-and among the hills.” To a Highlander, indeed,
-the sound of the pipes is full of many memories,
-like “the sough of the south wind in the trees”
-of an autumn night. The folk on deck who
-are from the south will know something of it
-now perhaps. Yesterday, no doubt, some of
-them supposed the ragged vagabond who strutted
-and blew on a pier-head as the steamer passed,
-a specimen of the pibroch-players. They should
-see a chief’s own hereditary piper march on the
-castle terrace, cairngorm and silver gleaming about
-him, ribbons streaming on the wind, and tartans
-afloat!</p>
-
-<p>And the steamer draws in to the little wooden
-pier under the mountain, where the horses are
-waiting. A quiet and peaceful spot it is, with
-the clear green waves washing in among the
-shining, clinging mussels, to break upon the dark
-blue shingle. Only twice a day is the peaceful
-murmur of these waters broken upon by the
-coming of the great palace steamers, when there
-is a momentary stir and excitement, the gleam
-of white dresses as visitors come ashore, and the
-getting of the few mail-bags on board. Then
-presently with churning paddles the steamer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-departs up the loch, leaving behind it on the
-dark waters a long trail of foam; the visitors
-stow themselves like clustering bees upon the
-high coaches that are in waiting; and the place
-falls a-dreaming again amid the coming and
-going of the tides.</p>
-
-<p>The five horses in the foremost coach to-day
-are quite fresh, and as the steamer was half an
-hour late, they have grown restive under the reins.
-The driver now, however, after looking behind to
-see that all is secure, makes his whip crack like
-a rifle shot, and with prancing leader and gallant
-clatter of hoofs the cavalcade moves off. Above,
-the mountain-side, tufted with heather and bracken
-and dark with trees, overhangs the road, and from
-the high box-seat one might drop an acorn into
-the waves that wash the foot of the precipice forty
-feet below. After the throbbing deck of the great
-steamer, and the oily smell of engines and cook’s
-galley, it is pleasant to be bowling along a firm
-road with the honey-scent of the heather in the
-air, and&mdash;yes, it is quite certain&mdash;the fragrance of
-peat smoke. For as the road turns inland the
-village opens to view, a double line of dark blue
-dwellings along the mountain foot. Cold, perhaps,
-these cottages look to a southern eye accustomed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-to warm red brick; but in winter, when the storms
-come roaring down the glens, and the hills are
-hidden by falling snow, the hearths within, heaped
-with glowing sea-coal and peat, are cosy enough
-for all that. Then the brown fishermen, home
-from the herring harvest of the North Sea, talk
-over the year’s success as they mend their gear
-by the fireside, and swarthy fellows shut out by
-the snowdrifts from their work in the great slate
-quarries on the mountain, gather to hear the
-week-old news that has come by the trading
-steamer. Just now it is only women and
-children who come to the doors to see the
-coach go past.</p>
-
-<p>The horses dash on at a gallop through the
-village and into the mouth of the great glen
-that opens, rugged and wild and dark, in front.
-Between the mountain walls of that deep and
-lonely pass reigns an awful silence now, broken
-only by the far-off cry of the curlew and the
-beating of the wild-bird’s wing. Unsought in
-the corries, the hazel-nuts are ripening and the
-rowan clusters growing red; while along the
-misty precipices, the eagles, undisturbed, are
-teaching their young to fly. All here to-day is
-desolation, for hand of man has not tilled the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-spot since the terrible night, two hundred years
-ago, when the valley was swept with fire and
-sword, and a hundred hearths, the dwellings of
-its devoted clan, were buried in smoking ruins.
-Foul lies that dark deed at its perpetrators’ door,
-and its memory remains a blot upon their name.</p>
-
-<p>Gleams of sunshine lie golden on the steep
-mountain-sides to-day, and the purple heather
-warms them with its bloom; but a storm was
-raging through the pass on that awful winter
-night, and snow lay thick upon the ground,
-when shriek and musket-shot told that the unsuspecting
-clansmen were being murdered by their
-guests&mdash;guests, too, who, though soldiers, were
-their own neighbours and relations. Tottering
-old men and lisping children were butchered
-here then to avenge the baulked ambition of a
-cruel statesman; and heart-broken women, clasping
-helpless infants to their breasts, fled shrieking
-from their blood-stained hearths to perish amid
-the storm.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_108" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;"><img src="images/i_131.jpg" width="600" height="358" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>And the coach with its holiday occupants will
-drive at a gallop to the head of the glen, and
-some one will make a jest upon the bard’s choice
-of an abode when Ossian’s cave is pointed out,
-high up in the precipice face. But the heart of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-the young bride will fill with world-old pity as
-she sees, mouldering among the heather in the
-valley, the ruins of once happy homes; and when
-the coach comes down again there will be tears
-perhaps in her eyes as she gazes at the chief’s
-house, and is told how the rude soldiers, after
-shooting her brave old lord before her eyes, tore
-the gold wedding-ring with their teeth from the
-finger of MacIan’s wife, and thrust her out,
-trembling with age and grief, to die of her
-agony in the snow. For on the loch-shore at
-the entrance to the glen, the house of the chief
-stands yet, silent, haunted by its memories, amid
-the <span class="locked">trees&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Where Sorrow broods in silence evermore<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Among the shadows of eternal hills,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">While at her feet sobs the unceasing sea.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">110</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_16">ACROSS BUTE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Tea</span> is over&mdash;the large eggs, snowy scones,
-and home-made cheese that loaded the
-table half an hour ago, have been satisfactorily
-demolished; the full-bodied brown teapot has
-yielded its final drop, and the crofter’s warm-hearted
-wife is at last assured that her hospitality
-has received ample justice. It is time to go, for
-there is a nine miles’ tramp across the island yet
-to be done.</p>
-
-<p>Wait a little! The good woman and her
-husband will see us to the hill by a short path
-through their fields. She will “just put a peat
-on the fire first.”</p>
-
-<p>Sweet the air is in the doorway, and peaceful
-is the hour! The sun is just setting beyond the
-Cantyre hills, and out there, over the water, the
-lonely peaks of Arran are purple in the evening
-light. Scarcely a cloud lingers in the clear green
-sky, and the calm sea stirs but at intervals with
-the incoming of the tide. The tan-brown sails of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-the fishing-boats that came out of Loch Ranza
-an hour ago have hardly moved a mile yet up
-Kilbrannan Sound. The rooks have gone home
-to the Mount Stuart woods; the whirr of the
-reaping-machine in the corn-field over there has
-ceased; all the air is still. The grey smoke rising
-from thatched roofs here and there in the little
-strath tells that the evening meal is being prepared.
-Presently the darkness will come down,
-and the simple crofter hamlet by the shore will
-sink to rest. And the weary and the disappointed,
-soiled with the dust of the far-off city, striving all
-their lives after what they will never win, have
-forgotten that sweet bread may be earned on the
-cornlands, and fair fish caught in the sea; that
-there is music for listening, here by the murmuring
-brooks, and rest in the setting of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>Soft shadows are gathering in the hollows of
-the hills, and the road rising inland through the
-quiet moors shows its white winding line among
-the heather. This wandering by-path, too, among
-the fields, is pleasant. Fitches are flowering yet,
-purple and yellow, in the hedges, as well as the
-delicate harebell&mdash;bluebell of Scotland&mdash;on the
-bank below. The wild poppies have mostly
-seeded now, but here and there a spot of flame<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-tells where a late bloom lingers. Among the
-feathery grasses in this untouched corner of the
-field rich heads of the pink clover are still to be
-seen, and creamy tufted clouds of meadowsweet
-rise on their dark stems. Above, amid the prickly
-sprays of wild brier, the glossy hips are already
-a bright yellow, and on the uncut branches of the
-thorn clustering bunches of haws are becoming
-brown. Along the straight “rigs” of the corn-field
-here, where the crofter was shearing to-day,
-the dusky stooks of oats stand in long rows.
-The good man casts a pleased glance along their
-lines, for the straw is long this year, and the
-heads are heavy. There is a quiet satisfaction in
-the completion of a day’s work among the fields
-which never comes to the mere mercantile toiler.
-The ploughman strolls forth at night to gaze at
-the broad acres he has furrowed, and the eye
-of the reaper is rewarded with fair stooks of
-winnowing grain.</p>
-
-<p>Healthy as could be the crofter’s children look
-as they pick their way with bare feet along the
-grassy edge of the stubble-field. No one need
-wonder that their cheeks and legs are so chubby
-and brown; for they get their school holidays in
-harvest-time, and have been helping their father,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-all day long, to bind his sheaves. Both boy and
-girl have caught the clear blue of heaven in their
-eyes; and the straying locks of their bonnetless
-hair are just the yellow colour of the corn.
-Donald, here, will make a sturdy ploughman
-some day; and that wild Lizzie will soon be a
-strapping lass. Theirs are the free air of the
-mountain, the lusty bowl of porridge, and thick
-broth of stalwart kale.</p>
-
-<p>The road lies close beyond this plantation.
-But, take care! the ground is boggy here, and
-one may sink over the boot-head in the soft
-peat. Step on the hussocks of grass, though,
-and the footing will be firm enough. In the
-late light, the higher branches of the pines up
-there among their dark green foliage shine as
-red as copper: it is the colour of the rich new
-bark. Not a blade of grass springs beneath the
-firs, and the floor of the wood, with its carpet of
-brown fallen needles, is soft and dry under foot.
-Only the green feathery fronds of solitary bracken
-rise here and there in the spaces.</p>
-
-<p>The wood ends at the road, and our little
-friendly escort need come no farther. A hearty
-handshake from the crofter, a kindly God-speed
-from his wife, a laugh and retreat by Lizzie at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-suggestion of a kiss, and, as we scale the mossy
-dyke, they turn back among the trees. A comfortable,
-contented couple these are, rearing children
-that will be healthy and strong as themselves.
-After all, is not this the existence that best fulfils
-life’s real ends? As he cares for the patient
-beast, and reaps the autumn corn, a man need
-not be told to glorify God; and here, under
-sunshine and starshine, where the fruitful earth
-smells fresh with the rainfall and the dew, he
-cannot help enjoying Him.</p>
-
-<p>The winding lines of telegraph-poles that mark
-the road can be seen stretching away for miles
-among the hills. The sun has set now, and
-night, falling earlier in the late autumn, is coming
-down. It is the gloaming hour. Out of the
-grass-field here by the roadside the trailing-footed
-kine, with patient eyes and deep udders, are turning
-down the hill towards their byre. Their
-satisfied breathing fills the air as they pass with
-the warm sweet scent of clover. The red-cheeked
-farm-lass fastens the gate-hurdle to its post when
-the last beast has gone, and slowly follows homewards.
-A comely lass she is, with eyes like
-the sloe, and teeth like milk, and doubtless her
-sweetheart knows she has a soft voice and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-dewy lip. This is the traditional courting-time
-in the <span class="locked">country&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">’Tween the gloaming and the mirk,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">When the kye comes hame.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Not another creature is to be seen on the upland
-road; only, now and again, the lonely cry of the
-curlew can still be heard far off upon the moor.
-The last field is passed, and the last shieling lies
-behind in the valley. The air up here is full of the
-honey-scent of the heather. The last belated bee,
-however, hummed homewards half an hour ago.</p>
-
-<p>The summit of the climb at last! Look!
-Down there on the left, dark and silent under
-the hills, lies Loch Fad, with, on the far edge
-of it, a glimmer of silver, the reflection of the
-full-orbed moon. Could the birth of Aphrodite
-be fairer, as she rose from the soft sea of the
-south? Hark! too, there is the sound of lingering
-footfalls on the road in front, and the murmur
-of a deep voice. The voice suddenly ceases,
-and two figures linked together drift past in the
-dusk. Just a glimpse of shy, happy eyes can
-be seen&mdash;a glimpse worth remembering&mdash;and the
-outline of a modest face. It is the old, old story.
-The lovely Pagan goddess of the far Ægæan<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">116</a></span>
-has worshippers yet among these simple-hearted
-people of the hills. Happy rustic dreamers!&mdash;gamekeeper’s
-lad and gardener’s lass, maybe.
-Sweet is their courting-place and courting-time,
-with the deep woods to listen to their whispers,
-and the stars to look down in kindly sympathy.
-Other lovers there are, alas! whose feet do not
-tread among the blue forget-me-nots, and for
-whom no blackbird warbles the vesper song.</p>
-
-<p>Civilisation, however, is approaching, and cultivated
-fields begin to occupy the strath. A snipe,
-beating about in the darkness, has alarmed the
-birds here; peeweets are startling the night with
-their untimely cries, and their white breasts ever
-and anon glance by the roadside. Was that
-faint sound the first bell of the steamer? There
-is little time to linger. Close below, however,
-shine the clustered lights of Rothesay; presently
-the bright fire-points of the yachts at anchor in
-the bay appear; the old chapel and its graveyard
-of stones mouldering within their wall is passed&mdash;a
-somewhat eerie place under these dark trees
-by the roadside;&mdash;then, half-way among the
-quaint houses of the old town, with their jutting
-gables, the ancient castle&mdash;grey, silent, moated&mdash;where
-old King Robert III. died of grief at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-news that his son James had been taken by the
-English. With threatening clamour the second
-bell rings up from the steamer, and, with a wild
-rush down through the newer town and across
-the fashionable esplanade amid the dazzling lights
-and fair promenaders of a seaside resort, there is
-only time to reach the pier and get on board
-before the last bell rings and the moorings are
-thrown off.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">118</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_17">WITH A CAST OF FLIES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Get</span> up, man; get up! Look at the
-morning! What glorious sunshine!
-What mists rising on the loch!”</p>
-
-<p>And, indeed, the fresh morning air through
-the open window, and the flood of rich sunlight
-falling on the opposite wall of the room,
-are enough to dispel all lingering drowsiness.
-Up, then, for a refreshing plunge in the deepest
-pool of the river, breasting the brown depths
-with the exulting strength that is born of the
-air of the mountain, and casting up, with waves
-of the sweet murmuring waters, a high-tide
-mark on the white stones that are hot already
-with the sunshine! Up, for a stroll before breakfast
-along the warm Highland road; to hear the
-cuckoo calling across the valley, and, at the door
-of the byre, the sighing of the patient kine
-and the soft plash-plashing of the milk in the
-milking-pails! Cool yet is the air of the corrie
-as it comes from the waterfall, and all the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-mountain-side is musical with the far-off call of
-the grouse. Under the rich-leaved plane-trees
-there is the hum of bees at the green hanging
-blossoms, and from the meadows by the river
-drift the bleatings of a thousand lambs. Appetite
-comes here keen as a knife if one but stands a
-moment on the sunny doorstep, and the morning
-meal is enjoyed with a whole-hearted zest that
-brooks no scantiness. Indeed, if there be healing
-power anywhere on earth for the wasted
-body or the sorrowing soul, it is to be found
-here among the hills. Who can long be sick
-at heart with that glory of valley and sky about
-him? and who frail of step with his nostrils
-full of the clover-scent and his tread on the
-springing heather?</p>
-
-<p>The newspapers have to be got at the morning
-train; and it is curious to see how the jaded
-folk who have been travelling all night in the
-close carriages from the far south open wide
-the windows to let in the mountain air, and
-begin to revive like flowers that have just been
-watered. Enviously they look at the sunburnt
-schoolboys, who have come panting along the
-line, and whose faces compare all too well with
-their own pale features.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-The letters, too, have to be waited for at the
-village post-office. It is universal supply-shop for
-the country-side as well, so other business can
-be transacted while Her Majesty’s mails, a very
-small parcel indeed, are being sorted out. Then&mdash;for
-there is nothing needing attention in the
-correspondence&mdash;away for the loch side! It is
-too fine a day to waste at the displenishing sale
-up country, though gig after gig has passed, carrying
-thither farmers on the lookout for bargains.
-A fair breeze has sprung up, and a cloud or two
-are moving across the blue, so there is the chance
-of a fair day’s sport with the fly. Bring, then,
-the rods, and put some provender in the basket,
-for there will be no coming home for dinner if
-the trout be taking.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_120" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;"><img src="images/i_145.jpg" width="600" height="487" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>The pleasantest road to the loch will be the
-path along the mountain-side, and old John
-M’Gregor can be requisitioned as boatman, by
-the way. Yonder he is, under the flowering
-gean-tree, mending his garden wicket. An easy,
-comfortable life the old man lives, with his many-wrinkled,
-bright-eyed old wife, on their “wee
-bit bield and heathery moor.” In that snug,
-thatched little cot they have reared a stalwart
-brood&mdash;sons whose strong hands are tilling their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-own broad acres in the West, and daughters
-in southern lands, about whose knees are springing,
-sturdy as seedling oaks, the true materials
-for future nations. But old John and his wife
-will be beholden to none of them yet, and
-when his little croft has been planted for the
-summer and his peats cast on the moor, when
-the cow has been turned out to the hill in the
-morning and the calf tethered in the narrow
-paddock, he is always ready to take an oar
-on the loch. His broad-eaved Balmoral bonnet
-and his rough homespun coat are green with
-long years of sun and rain; but the head and
-heart below them keep hale as ever. He is
-full of anecdotes about the last laird and his
-feats with the salmon-rod, and it takes a long
-day of wind on the water to tire his arm when
-the trout are rising.</p>
-
-<p>Quick, though! There is a cloud just now
-before the sun, and a fish or two may be got
-while the shadow is on the loch. It was a
-mistake to coil up the fly-casts in the tackle-book,
-for the gut will take some wetting to
-straighten it out again. It is better to keep
-the flies round your hat. There, push the boat
-off; the water is fairly alive with leaping minnows<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-in the shallow bays, and if the bigger fish be
-only as eager there will be plenty of sport. Try
-a cast or two first across the burn mouth; a
-good chance of something lies there, for the trout
-wait in the running water to seize any food the
-stream may bring down. The boat can drift
-broadside to the wind, so that it is possible to
-fish both from bow and stern. Bring your line
-well up behind, and then with a turn of the
-wrist use the switch of the rod to send the cast
-out, fair and straight and light, before you. Take
-care, though; do not begin to work the line
-before the last fly has touched the surface. The
-day could not be better, with that ripple on the
-water, the wind behind, and the sun in front.
-Hardly an effort is needed to send the line out,
-and it is possible to put the tail-fly on the very
-spot where a trout has risen. See! here is a
-little fellow. What a splashing he makes as the
-line draws him up to the boat! The spring of
-the rod itself will lift him over the gunwale.
-There! you have another; a char, by his sides of
-gleaming silver and copper.</p>
-
-<p>Whirr! Ah! here is a fellow worth catching;
-two pounds at least, by the weight on the rod.
-How the singing of the reel as he makes off<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">123</a></span>
-gladdens the heart! There he leaps, for the
-third time; he is off with a rush, firmly hooked,
-surely. “Haud up ye’re p’int!” shouts John in
-a terrific whisper. “It’s awa’ below the boat!
-Ye’ll lose’t; an’ we’re clean a’most&mdash;the boat’s
-a’ but clean!” It is an exciting moment; but
-the hooks have not fouled the boat, and the
-fish’s freshness is spent. Slowly he is drawn
-in, showing the white of his sides. Now with the
-landing-net; There! he is safe on board&mdash;“A
-gey guid fish,” according to the cautious critic.
-Then comes the inevitable story. The old man
-“minds ae nicht” here at the burn mouth. There
-was a party of three. It was a fine night, but
-dark, and they kindled a fire, when, whether
-owing to the light or not, they got a great
-basket of “as fine trouts as ye’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p>But the sun has come out again, and, as the
-ripple is not very strong on the water, there is
-no great chance of doing much with the fly for
-some time. Something might be done with the
-minnow, however; so it can be let out with a
-long line and trailed down the loch.</p>
-
-<p>Down the loch! By the little shingly bays
-where the swan is preening her plumage on the
-margin, while her lord floats near, admiring;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-where the keen-winged little sand-martins are
-skimming bank and water, and the quack of wild
-duck is to be heard among the reeds; past the
-lonely farm, with its weather-stained roof, at the
-foot of its own wild glen&mdash;a place for life to
-linger and grow sweet and gather memories, a
-place for the growth of strong love or deep hate;
-and under the black crag that rises a thousand
-feet sheer against the sky, making a mile of cool
-darkness with its shadow amid the hot sunshine
-of the loch:&mdash;it is like the fabled Voyage of
-Maeldune. Then there will be the return in the
-evening, when the sun has set, and the clouds
-roof the valley as with rust of gold; up the silent
-strath as the mountains grow dark, and, under
-the shadow of Ben Shian, the still river, like a
-pale-green thread, reflects its own clear space of
-tranquil sky; to the quiet village where there will
-be supper by lamplight, and the recounting to
-interested listeners the day’s exploits.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">125</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_18">FROM A FIELD-GATE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A</span> glorious afternoon it is, the hottest of
-midsummer, with not a shadow in the
-dazzling blue of the heavens. Who could sit at
-a desk, with the white butterflies flickering in
-and out at the open window, the sweet breath
-of the clove-pinks filling the air, and the faint
-gurgle of the river coming up from the glen
-below? The gardener has long ago left off
-weeding the lawn borders, and betaken himself
-to the cool planting-house; Jug the spaniel lies
-panting out there, with lolling tongue, in the
-shadow under the rhododendrons; and the leaves
-of the aspens themselves seem tremulous with
-the heat. It will be pleasanter to go up through
-the wood to the end of the lane, to sit under
-the edge of the trees there on the trunk of
-silver birch that serves for a cattle-gate, and
-enjoy something of the southern <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">dolce far niente</i>,
-with a pocket copy of gentle Allan Ramsay to
-finger through.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-Altogether quiet the spot is, with the wood
-behind, and the flowery fields sloping away in
-front. Not a murmur comes here from the city,
-whose smoke rises, a murky cloud, far off in the
-valley below. The streets there will be stifling
-to-day amid the hot reekings of asphalt pavements,
-the sifting particles of burning dust, and
-the incessant roar of traffic. Here, above the
-fields, the air is sweet with the scent of clover;
-the stillness is only broken by the faint pipe of
-a yellowhammer sometimes in the depth of the
-wood; and the blue heavens shed their peace
-upon the heart. Nothing but the faintest breath
-of air is moving, just enough to stir gently the
-deep grasses of the hayfield, and to touch cheek
-and lip now and again with the soft warm sigh
-of the sweetbrier in the hedge. Gleaming flies,
-green and yellow, with gauzy wings, float like
-jewels in the sunshine; a shadow for a moment
-touches the page as a stray rook drifts silently
-overhead; and on the edge of the great yellow
-daisy that flames over there like a topaz among
-the corn, a blue butterfly lazily opens and shuts
-its wings.</p>
-
-<p>This is the silent month, they say, because
-the birds have nested and foregone the twitterings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-of their courting-time; but from the lark
-up aloft, a quivering black speck in the sky, there
-is falling a perfect rill of melody. What is he
-exulting about, the little black speck? Is it for
-sheer gladsomeness in the happy sunshine, or is
-it because there is a little helpless brood of callow
-laverocks in a nest somewhere below among the
-clover? Glad little heart! sing thy song out
-while the blue sky smiles above thee. Thou
-hast forgotten the pinching of the winter cold,
-and why should thy rapturous hour be saddened
-by taking thought for the dark things of the
-morrow. Under the hedge close by, an occasional
-rustle of dry leaves and an admonitory cluck
-betray a brood of chickens surreptitiously brought
-into existence by some lawless and absconding
-hen; and on a twig a little way off, a young
-sparrow with fluttering wings gapes its yellow
-beak for the attentions of a proud and sprightly
-parent.</p>
-
-<p>In the distance, from the bottom of the next
-meadow, comes the faint whir of a mowing-machine.
-It and the reapers are out of sight;
-but on the level beyond, the ryegrass lies in
-long white lines winnowing in the sun. Well
-may that harvest be the first to be gathered,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-for it is the share that falls to the faithful dumb
-friends of man. Meanwhile, the farm horses left
-at liberty in the grass-field at hand are evidently,
-like many honest souls of another genus who
-have worked hard all their lives, quite at a loss
-what to do with their late-acquired leisure.</p>
-
-<p>On the dyke-top here, the clover, with great
-ball-blooms of rich pink, is growing beside the
-purple-toothed vetch and the small yellow stars
-of another unknown flower. In the hedge, among
-the heavy-scented privet blossoms, are flowers of
-pink wild-rose delicate as the bloom of a girl’s
-cheek, with full pouting buds red as lips that
-would be kissed. White brier-roses there are,
-too, as large as crown pieces; and great velvety
-humble-bees are busy botanising among their
-stamens. The bees prefer the newly opened
-ones, however, whose hearts are still a rich
-golden yellow. Below, among the woodland
-grasses, the white dome-clusters of the dim-leaved
-yarrow are flowering amid a miniature
-forest of green mare’s-tails and the downy stalks
-of hemlock. Gardeners are only now beginning
-to see the beauty of the yarrow for deep borders,
-as they are beginning to see the beauty of the
-foxglove and the glory of the broom. Over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-there in the side of the wood-ditch are springing
-delicate tufts of spleenwort; and already the
-flower-fronds of the hard-fern are rising from
-the nest of their dark-spread fellows. The graceful
-heart-shaped nettle leaf appears there too, with
-its purple stem, beside the tall magenta-coloured
-flowers of the bastard-thistle.</p>
-
-<p>A pleasant retreat, indeed, is the spot; and
-through the tangled wood-depth, of a moonlight
-night, might be expected to come the revel court
-of Titania. Is not that one of her furry steeds,
-with velvet ears erect and bright wide eyes,
-cropping the green blade in the grassy lane
-path? Her sleek chorister, too, the blackbird,
-has forgotten to be timid as he hops across the
-ruts there, waiting doubtless for her coming.
-Whirr! What a rush of wings! It is a flight
-of starlings disturbed from the grass-field below;
-for these birds bring their young out to the
-fields this month in flocks of hundreds to feed.
-Round and round they wheel in the air, as if
-delighting in their power of wing, before finally
-settling on the grassy knoll a hundred yards
-away.</p>
-
-<p>A sunny knoll that is, where the birds feed
-undisturbed to-day&mdash;a small point in the landscape;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-yet it has a page of history to itself. On
-its summit once stood a Scottish queen, surrounded
-by a little group of nobles, watching, a mile to
-the north, the die of her fate being cast, the
-arbiter of life or death. Two armies lay before
-her. Far off about the little village in the bosom
-of yonder hill she saw two dark masses gathered,
-with a battery line of guns between them. Those
-were her enemies; and one of the horsemen
-behind them&mdash;it was only a mile away&mdash;she
-knew was her own half-brother. Nearer, on the
-lower rising ground, which the railway cuts
-through now, she saw her own troops gathering,
-a larger force, but without the advantage of
-position. And the queen watched and waited;
-it was about nine o’clock of the morning. Presently,
-a cloud of smoke sprang out between the
-armies, and immediately was heard the roar of
-cannon. The duel of the artillery had begun.
-During half an hour little could be seen for the
-smoke, and there was a constant explosion of
-ordnance. It must have been an anxious time.
-Suddenly, however, the firing ceased, the smoke
-rolled away, and the battlefield could be made
-out. The queen’s cavalry had formed into line,
-had charged, and were driving the enemy’s horse<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-before them. Then a tear sprang to the queen’s
-eye as she saw her vanguard leave the hill, cross
-the open ground among the furze, and, with their
-gallant leader at their head, rush to storm the
-village. They disappeared in the narrow lane,
-where the new church stands now in the hollow
-of the hill, and there could only be heard faintly
-their shout as they closed with their opponents,
-and the shot-reports of the enemy’s hagbutters
-firing at them from the hedge-gardens and the
-village roofs. How was the day going? See!
-the enemy’s wing was wavering, was giving way.
-Fight on, brave fellows! brave vanguard! press
-them hard. A few moments longer, and the
-day is yours.</p>
-
-<p>But look! A horseman gallops to the other
-wing of the enemy, where the Regent is riding.
-It stirs: it moves down upon the village. Ah,
-where now is the queen’s reserve. Why does it
-remain inactive and aloof? Are its rival leaders
-quarrelling over petty precedence, or is there
-treachery in its ranks? The battle closes again
-about the narrow lane. The vanguard is attacked
-on either flank&mdash;it is overborne&mdash;it gives way.
-See! they are broken; they pour back out of
-the lane. Wounded, weaponless, they are fleeing,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-and with a yell their foes are upon them, cutting
-them down. But the reserve is moving at last;
-it may bring help; it may yet retrieve the hour.
-Ah, cowards! it breaks and scatters. The day is
-lost. Away! then, away, poor hapless queen!
-Ply whip and spur for thy life. Neither here nor
-anywhere in all thy fathers’ kingdom of Scotland
-is there safe tarrying-place for thee now. And
-may Heaven help thee in the hour of need, for
-thou wilt find small help in man or woman!</p>
-
-<p>The starlings are feeding this afternoon on the
-Court Knowe, the hillock there, undisturbed; and
-it is three hundred and twenty-eight years since
-the stricken queen rode away through the hollow
-of the hills where the green corn is growing. The
-suburbs of the city are spreading even over the
-battlefield itself. But ever and again, upon a
-summer day, there comes a pilgrim to stand a
-while in pitying silence on the little knoll under
-the trees, and to recall something of these “old,
-unhappy, far-off things,” as he reads upon the
-stone there the royal monogram, and the date,
-May 13, 1568.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">133</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_19">SCHOOL-DAYS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> a means of awakening the genial after-dinner
-humour of most men past middle
-age, no subject, perhaps, equals the memory
-of early school-days. Let the topic but be
-started by an anecdote of some long dead
-dominie, it is as if the spigot had been drawn
-from a butt of old vintage, and the stream of
-recollection will flow forth rich and sparkling
-with the mellowed light of years. Strange is
-the charm of a word! For a lifetime a man has
-been painfully toiling up the Alps of circumstance;
-it may be he has gained the object of
-his desire&mdash;the glittering ice-crystal on the peak
-which long ago dazzled his upward-looking eyes;
-and now, toying with the walnuts and the wine,
-someone says “I remember:”&mdash;lo! the years are
-forgotten; the greybeard is back in the sunny
-valley of his boyhood, wandering the field-paths
-with chubby companions long since dust, and
-filling his heart once more with the sweet scent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-of hayricks, of the hedges in hawthorn-time. It
-is not for nothing that rustic children day after
-day, as they start for school, hear the low of the
-farmyard kine coming in to the milking, and that
-day after day, as they tread the long miles of
-moorland path, they see the grouse whirr off to
-the mountain, and the trout dart away from the
-sunny shallows; and it is not for nothing that
-they spend long truant afternoons by ferny lanes
-and harebell copses in the seasons of bird-nesting
-and bramble-gathering. These make the fragrant
-memories of after years! And again and again,
-in later life, to the man jaded with anxiety and
-care, the old associations come back, laden with
-pleasant regrets&mdash;a breath from the clover-fields
-of youth.</p>
-
-<p>School life in town, notwithstanding its more
-sophisticated surroundings, has also its memories;
-for in what circumstances will not the boyish
-mind create a charmed world of its own! Apart
-from the actual events of class-room and play-ground,
-the streets and the shop windows, and
-the things in them to be desired, all furnish
-absorbing interests; and a half-amused envy in
-later years attends the memory of the fearful
-joy with which, after much contriving of ways<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-and means, and much final screwing-up of
-courage to face the shopman, the long-coveted
-percussion pistol, or the wonderful and still more
-expensive model locomotive, was acquired and
-smuggled home. But school life in the city
-has a certain precocity which detracts from the
-poetry of its remembrance&mdash;an aroma is lacking
-which forms the subtlest charm of the associations
-of rustic childhood. What has the city-bred
-man to compare to the memory of that
-hot afternoon in July, when, escaped from the
-irksome thrall of desk and rod, in the clear river
-pool at the bottom of some deep-secluded dingle,
-the urchins of the rural pedagoguy learned to
-swim? Such a scene remains in a man’s mind,
-a possession and a “joy for ever.” Far off in
-some city den, gas-lit and fog-begrimed, his
-eyes may grow dim, poring over ledgers that
-are not his own, and his heart may grow heavy
-and sick with hope deferred; but at a word,
-a suggestion, it will all come back; he will be
-standing again on that grassy margin, the joyous
-voices of his comrades will be ringing in his ears,
-while the sunshine once more beats warmly on
-his head, and at his feet sparkle over their sandy
-bottom the pellucid waters of the woodland pool.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-The black art of letters is probably the
-least detail of the learning acquired by school-children
-in the country, and it must be confessed
-that the thirst for book-lore is not exactly their
-most conspicuous foible. Happy, nevertheless,
-in “schools and schoolmasters” of Nature’s own
-appointing, they grow up like the lilies, children
-of the earth and sun, and none the less fit for
-life, perhaps, that their learning has been got
-at first-hand from the facts and realities of
-actual existence. Who has not envied the bright-eyed
-boys and red-lipped little lasses, healthy
-with the breath of the woods and of the fresh-delved
-earth, whom one meets, satchel on back,
-on sequestered country roads? The dead tongues
-may be dead, indeed, to them, and mathematics
-an unnamed mystery; but, with eyes and ears
-open, they have learned all the lore of the fields
-and the hedges&mdash;have drunk deep at those nature-fountains
-whence all the literatures and poetries
-of the world have sprung.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_136" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 31.4375em;"><img src="images/i_163.jpg" width="503" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Many changes have been made in school-teaching
-in the country of recent years. The
-Government inspector is now abroad, and code
-and standard compel all within their iron rule.
-The old ruts and byways have been forsaken, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-the coach of Learning has been made to roll, if
-not yet along the coveted “royal road” of the
-old saw, at least along a highway more uniformly
-paved than of yore. The difference in outside
-appearance between the wayside school-houses
-of to-day and of thirty years ago is only an
-indication of the changes which have taken
-place within. The days are past when any
-incompetent would do for a dominie; and in
-place of the halt and the palsied, who used to
-fill the pedagogic chair, there is now the pretty
-school-ma’am from some Normal seminary. A
-tyrant of the most petty kind, it is to be feared,
-the rural schoolmaster of the old days too
-often <span class="locked">was&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Well had the boding tremblers learned to trace<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The day’s disasters in his morning face;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">At all his jokes, for many a joke had he:<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Full well the busy whisper, circling round,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Conveyed the dismal tidings when he frowned.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Now all this is altered. No longer would it be
-suffered that a sour and crabbed dominie, too
-crippled to walk, should, out of sheer caprice and
-ill-temper, hurl his tawse at some urchin’s head,
-and order him to bring them up and be thrashed;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-and it is to be doubted if the modern “Board”
-would countenance even such a gallant device as
-the vicarious birching of a boy for the delinquencies
-of one of the dearer sex. Idiosyncrasies like
-these, no doubt, made much of the picturesqueness
-of school life in the country a generation ago;
-and people whose memories are of the old régime
-are apt to look back upon the former state of
-things, faulty as it was, with a sigh. Sometimes
-a head is shaken regretfully, and it is averred
-that with modern innovations are being planed
-away all those strong, rich peculiarities of ancient
-rural life which made character in the country
-interesting. The crabbed rule of the ancient
-village pedagogue has a charm for those who
-have escaped beyond reach of his tawse, the
-thrashings themselves of bygone days have
-become mere subject for a smile. Point of
-view, however, makes a considerable difference
-in the matter, and the unfortunate urchin of
-those days, counting the strokes of an ill-tempered
-and unreasoning castigation upon his
-nether habiliments, probably entertained a somewhat
-different sentiment.</p>
-
-<p>Head-shakings and misgivings notwithstanding,
-individuality of country life may very well be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-left to take care of itself. Children remain true
-to their instincts under the new régime as under
-the old; and growing like the trees of the
-hedgerows, amid the influences of wild and
-varied nature, rustic character may still be
-trusted to develop a picturesqueness of its own.
-The real country school, after all, does not lie
-within four walls, nor is it ruled by the rod of
-prim school-ma’am or spectacled dominie. Nature
-herself, the primeval <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">alma mater</i> of all mankind,
-is the educator there. The leaves of her primers
-are stored in the woodlands; her history-books
-are written and explained by the seasons themselves;
-the lark and the rivulet are the perpetual
-tutors of her “old notation”; and her terms are
-timed by the bloom and flight of the snowdrop
-and the swallow.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">140</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_20">A LOCH-SIDE STRATH.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Hardly</span> more than twenty miles from
-the populous heart of Glasgow lies a
-parish of which no notice is to be found in the
-guide-books. No show-place is supposed to be
-there, and no tourist route runs through it, and
-so, though almost within hearing of the hum of
-a great city, the strip of country between mountain
-and loch remains all but as primitive in its
-rustic simplicity as it was a hundred years ago.
-A century ago, indeed, the district may have
-been better known than it is to-day, if notoriety
-be regarded as a distinction; for every corrie in
-the hillsides and every burnside hollow, where a
-little wooding afforded concealment, appears then
-to have been the scene of illicit distilling operations;
-and the raids of the excise and military in
-search of “sma’ stills” were both frequent and
-famous. With this exception the parish has
-been allowed to slumber on in happy obscurity
-since the days of the old clan feuds and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-the cattle-liftings of its neighbours, the wild
-Macgregors.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, unknown though it may be, and
-unfrequented by “the Sassenach” as in the days
-of Rob Roy himself, this quiet loch-shore has a
-history stirring enough, and memories of its own.
-Situated just on the old Highland line, the
-district must frequently at all periods have been
-the scene of warlike episodes. Regarding the
-tastes and pursuits of its ancient inhabitants
-there remains small doubt. The memorial of
-a peaceful enough enterprise, it is true, seems
-crystallised in the name of the parish&mdash;the
-parish of St Ronan’s Cell, as it reads translated.
-Midway, it is said, on his journey from Kilmarnock
-in Ayrshire to Kilmaronaig on Loch Etive,
-that famous missionary priest of the early Church
-thought it worth his while to tarry a space in
-the district in order to teach the rude inhabitants
-peace. But, to judge by the later events of
-history, the task would seem to have had but
-doubtful results. The prevailing names, at the
-present hour, of the people in the district&mdash;Galbraith,
-Macfarlane, M’Kean&mdash;recall the circumstances
-of less orderly times. In the stalwart
-farmers’ sons guiding the plough and feeding the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-cattle about the steadings there to-day, one sees
-the lineal descendants of clansmen who once held
-their own on the loch-side by the primitive <em>coir
-a glaive</em>&mdash;the title of the strong arm. To keep
-these turbulent vassals in order, the Earls of
-Lennox found it necessary to hold three castles
-in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>Nor has the strath been without a share in the
-outstanding events of history. This loch-shore
-it was which witnessed the failure of Argyle’s
-ill-advised attempt at rebellion in 1685. Here,
-barring his progress, beyond the streamlet in
-the clachan of the parish, the Protestant Earl,
-after his long march among the western lochs,
-first came within sight of the Royal troops.
-Here, that night, his camp-fires were left burning
-to deceive his opponents; and it was on the hills
-behind that his little army finally lost its way,
-broke up, and dispersed amid the bogs and the
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>A romantic story of that most romantic of
-episodes, the Rebellion of 1745, also belongs to
-the district. The most powerful family in the
-strath at that time, as, indeed, it had been for
-generations, was one of the name Buchanan.
-This family owned two mansions and estates at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-no great distance from each other, and from the
-larger of these they took their familiar title,
-Buchanans of the Ross. Whether the head of
-the house of that date had personally taken part
-in the Jacobite rising, or had incurred suspicion
-of Jacobite sympathies, need not be inquired into,
-but, upon the final overthrow of the Stuart cause
-in the spring of 1746, it can be understood that
-he, in common with others in his position, was
-willing enough to demonstrate his loyalty to
-the Government of King George. The opportunity
-for doing so which occurred to him,
-however, involved a breach of laws which above
-all others were held inviolably sacred by the
-Highlanders&mdash;the laws of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>The tradition of the district has to be relied
-upon for the story. By this tradition it would
-appear that among the fugitives upon whose head
-a price was set, after Culloden, was the Marquis of
-Tullibardine, elder brother of the Duke of Athole.
-Being hard pressed by the search-parties which
-were everywhere scouring the country, this nobleman,
-it is said, betook himself to Buchanan of
-the Ross, with whom he had been upon terms of
-friendship, and besought temporary asylum. This
-favour Buchanan granted readily enough, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-apparently in all good faith; but no sooner was the
-unfortunate refugee secure under his roof than he
-intimated the fact to the nearest military post.
-The natural consequence was an immediate visit
-of the soldiery and the arrest of the fugitive.</p>
-
-<p>Here the story becomes uncanny. The victim
-of misplaced confidence was being dragged across
-the threshold, when, it is said, recovering from
-surprise at the unheard-of treachery, his Highland
-rage and indignation reached the blazing point,
-and, turning upon his host, he hurled out the
-imprecation, “There’ll be Murrays on the braes
-of Athole when there’s ne’er a Buchanan at the
-Ross!”</p>
-
-<p>This was the last of the Marquis, so far as
-the district was concerned, but it was by no
-means, in the eyes of the dwellers there, the
-last of his “curse.” Strangely enough, and,
-whether in fulfilment of the fierce prophecy or
-not, only a few decades had passed when the
-race at the Ross, so far as the male line was
-concerned, actually died out, and, as if to complete
-the result, upon two occasions since then
-the estates have passed to other hands through
-female heirs.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_144" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 35.25em;"><img src="images/i_173.jpg" width="564" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>In the early decades of the present century the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-master of the place was an Edinburgh advocate,
-Mr Hector Macdonald, and under his hospitable
-roof again and again was entertained no less a
-guest than the author of “Waverley.” It is not
-difficult to understand, apart from the congenial
-society of his host, Scott’s attraction to the house.
-The natural beauty of the place, if nothing else,
-must have been a continual delight to one so
-keenly alive as he was to the interest of woodland
-and loch. The district around, the house itself,
-and the mountains before him, besides, were
-teeming with memories&mdash;every glen the home of
-a romance. In Ross Priory, at anyrate, he
-frequently stayed, and from the local legends
-and colour with which his residence supplied
-him he selected the materials for some of the
-most famous episodes in “Rob Roy” and “The
-Lady of the Lake.” The use he made of it,
-indeed, has invested the whole district with a
-new interest. All the neighbourhood, strath and
-glen, glows with the reflected splendour of his
-thought, a “light that never was on sea or
-land”; and with the clear wind blowing fresh
-from mountain and loch, something seems mingled
-of the wholesome mental health and vigour of
-the “Wizard’s” work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-The place has changed but little since Scott
-last visited it, and the wanderer by the loch’s
-margin may, with the atmosphere of the past
-still about him, indulge in all the pleasures of
-reverie and recollection undisturbed. At the
-present day hardly a sound is to be heard there
-but the lapse of wavelets on the pebbly beach,
-and the sighing of the wind through the branches
-of the immemorial oaks. Occasionally, on a
-summer evening, when the air is still, the far-off
-beat of paddles comes faintly across the lake, as
-the steamer threads its passage among the islands.
-But for the rest of the time the call sometimes
-of the peacocks on the lawn before a storm, and,
-at night, the harsh cry of wild-fowl making flight
-for the marshes at the river’s mouth, form the
-only addition to the harmony of the wind and
-the waters.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">147</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_21">A HIGHLAND REEL.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Much</span> study, truly, becomes a weariness of
-the flesh. After a long day’s seclusion
-over desk and books the cobwebs begin to gather
-about one’s brain, and stronger and stronger grows
-the longing to look upon the face of one’s fellows.
-There are fair faces, too, to look upon, and
-bright-lipped laughter to listen to not far away;
-and the shriek of a fiddle or the skirl of the
-pipes is all that is needed to set light footsteps
-tripping on a broad barn floor. Down with
-pamphlet and pen, therefore; on with a heavy
-coat in case of rain, and out into the roaring
-night.</p>
-
-<p>A heavy “carry” is tearing across the sky, but
-the air is fresh and clear; and see, away below
-through the darkness, by the loch-side, shining
-hospitable and bright, are the lights of Gartachraggan.
-Away, then, by the steading, where
-the patient beasts are stirring in their byres,
-and a breath is caught of the rich warm mash<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-preparing for their evening meal. Away through
-the whin-haughs, where the owls answer each other
-with silvery hootings, and again and again overhead
-there is heard the creaking wing of belated
-snipe beating to and fro. How the wind sighs
-in the naked hedges, with a louder whisper where
-the thick-leaved holly-trees are set! One is
-tempted to linger under the soft shelter of the
-wood, where the air is rich with the fragrance of
-the undergrowth, and the stillness gives a feeling
-of pleasant security by contrast with the roar
-and sough of the storm in the tree-tops far above.
-The stones of the dry-dyke here are covered close
-with the clinging tendrils of a small-leaved ivy,
-and wild strawberry and wild geranium in summer
-star with white and pink the mossy crannies. A
-pleasant spot it is, therefore, at that time of year,
-to linger in, to watch the red squirrel frolic on
-the road, and the chaffinch build his mossy home
-overhead. But to-night one’s thoughts are otherwise.
-It is cold, and the south wind is roaring in
-the wood, hustling the withered leaves to limbo.
-Down the hill, therefore, at a blithesome pace,
-jousting and jesting with the storm, till a glimpse
-of the realm of Oberon is caught below&mdash;the foam-swept
-loch with its lonely islets, seen by the fitful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-gleam of stars. Life comes back to the jaded
-heart on such a night, as the fresh wind lifts the
-hair and clears the brain. There is war in the
-heavens overhead, and the scream can be heard
-of wild-duck entangled in the driving clouds; but
-in the heart there is only laughter, born of the
-comradeship of “rude Boreas.” Whew! Draw in
-here to the shelter till the rain-blast sweeps over.
-It whistles like arrowy sleet through the branches
-overhead, and the great limbs roar and struggle
-in the contest. The bole of the giant ash itself
-heaves and groans with the effort. But the strong
-tree has grappled before with the Titan, and the
-wrestlings of eighty winters have but given it a
-deeper grip of the soil. And so the blast blows
-over, the air clears, and close at hand, a ruddy
-blaze among the trees, are seen the gleaming
-windows of the farm.</p>
-
-<p>What a kindly welcome is this! No ordinary
-“How d’ye do?” and touch of listless fingers,
-but a heartiness honest as its own broad vowels.
-The good folk here live close to the soil, and
-continually touch the real facts of life. Ennui
-and cynicism, those soul-cankers of the dwellers
-in towns, have never found their way to these
-homesteads by the loch-side; and sweet and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-whole-hearted as the breath of their own hay-ricks
-are the greetings of these hospitable folk. For the
-frank grasp that will ease world-cares, go to the
-kindly sea-captain, or the hand that has held
-a plough. Years have gathered on the heads
-of the farmer and his wife since first their plough-shares
-turned the loch-side soil, but still they are
-fresh and hale, and the frost of years that has
-silvered their hair has touched them no whit
-besides. Meanwhile, there has grown around
-them a brave and comely brood&mdash;sons stalwart
-as the ark-builders of old, and daughters&mdash;ah!
-Look not too long upon these, good youth, or
-thou art undone (though that might not be the
-worst thing that could happen thee). For there
-is choice and difference among them; the hair of
-one dark as the starling’s wing, another’s bright
-with russet gold; eyes blue as the summer skies,
-eyes dark as the woodland wells; cheeks of fair
-soft peach-bloom, and cherry lips ripe and red.
-Beware!</p>
-
-<p>Into the parlour? No!&mdash;the kitchen is the
-place. A carpeted parlour can be seen at any
-time, but such a kitchen only in such a spot.
-The great fire blazing in the chimney roars
-defiance to the storm outside, and flashes its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-warm light upon wall and rafter. Lamps shine
-bright as silver in their sconces, and plate-racks
-and harness steels gleam in the wall’s recesses.
-Not a speck stains the purity of the red-stone
-floor, and the massy tables and chairs of honest
-deal are white as driven snow. Into the kitchen,
-then, and ask for the goodman’s health, and
-whether the ploughing has gone forward well,
-whether the collie that went amissing has turned
-up yet, and what was done with the tramp who
-threatened the ploughman’s wife.</p>
-
-<p>But, listen! the neighbours are coming already,
-and in the lull of the wind surely that was the
-sound of the pipes! How the girls’ eyes sparkle
-and their colour rises! What tempting access
-of witchery!&mdash;wait a little, take care, keep hold
-of your heart! Perhaps their sweethearts are
-coming. The pipes stop at the door, there is
-a sound of laughter, a moment’s pause, and then
-a new invasion of brave lads and comely lasses,
-bringing in with them the earth-smelling wind
-of the night. Fresh-voiced as the spring thrushes,
-it is an inspiration to look at and listen to these
-sons and daughters of the hills.</p>
-
-<p>First of all, for the Highlands are hospitable,
-something must be eaten. The table in a trice<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-is heaped with tempting array&mdash;everything the
-produce of the farm itself, and not the less
-delicious for the fair hands that have placed it
-there.</p>
-
-<p>Then, hey, presto! the scene is changed. A
-space has been cleared in the barn, and lamps
-hung from the rafters and on the walls light it
-up in gipsy fashion, casting fantastic shadows
-into the far corners behind the great heaps of
-warm oat-straw. A skirl of the pipes, and in a
-moment partners are chosen. Then more than
-one secret slips out to the curious eye; for much
-there is to be read in the language of a blush
-and a look. The lads stand back to back, two
-and two, their partners facing them, and as the
-music takes to the air, featly they trip it in
-the merry figure-of-eight. Presently, opposite
-their neighbours’ partners, comes the chance for
-spirit and agility, and many a wild capering step
-is done by the lads with arm in air and a whirl
-of the tartans, while the lasses, more modest,
-with downcast look, hold back their skirts daintily
-as they foot it with toe and heel. Faster and
-faster the music gathers, faster flies the dance
-with its changing step, with the threading of
-eights and the Highland fling, while cheeks take<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-flame, eyes flash wildly, and the barn floor shakes
-in rhythm. More and more breathless grow lasses
-and lads, but no one will yield to stop, till at
-last, with a wild whoop, they fling themselves
-all at once upon the straw, and the music slowly
-runs out.</p>
-
-<p>Again and again it will be renewed, with the
-wilder “Reel o’ Hulochan” for a change, or some
-wonderful old-fashioned country dance; and only
-some time in the morning, long after the old folk
-have gone to bed, will the merry party break up,
-tired but delighted, to go home in twos and threes
-along the hills.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">154</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_22">AN ARRAN RIDE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Hamish</span> will just be putting the mare in
-the cart to drive over the ladies, so the
-need is not so great for hurrying.”</p>
-
-<p>The arrangement of the crofter’s wife is hospitably
-meant, if somewhat ominously expressed.
-Conveyance of any kind, moreover, will be most
-acceptable to the two ladies of our party after
-their long ramble on seashore and moorland;
-and the more primitive it prove, the more fittingly
-will it end the memories of the day.
-“Meanwhile ‘the need is not so great for hurrying,’”
-repeats one of the two slyly, out of hearing
-of her hostess, and, pulling off her gloves, proceeds
-to gather pleasure from the blazing chimneyful
-of peat. Leaning back in the warm light, she
-stirs the white feathery ash with a dainty boot,
-and discovers, to the boot’s cost and her own
-surprise, that the whiteness of the peat conceals
-a glow of burning red. It is a peculiarity of
-the Highland character, as of the Highland fuel,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-this fire within the grey exterior, needing only
-a touch or a breath to show itself.</p>
-
-<p>The light ash of the peat, they say, flies everywhere
-about a shieling. But it is a cleanly thing.
-It leaves no tarnish, at anyrate, on the snowy
-wood dresser or its high rack of shining delf.
-The tall old-fashioned mahogany case-clock in
-the corner, an heirloom much valued, may have
-absorbed more of the powder, perhaps, than
-conduces to regular intestinal working; but the
-open iron cruizie or cresset lamp hanging quaintly,
-though now unused, from the high mantelshelf,
-is kept clear enough for lighting yet if need
-were; and maybe the hams and “kippered”
-fish hanging from hooks in the blackened
-rafters are rather improved in flavour by the
-condiment.</p>
-
-<p>But look here. With true Highland hospitality,
-preparations for tea have been surreptitiously
-advanced, and the fresh, wholesome-looking
-daughter of the house and her mother lift into
-the middle of the earthen floor the table ready
-caparisoned with cloth-of-snow, glittering cups
-and knives, heaped sugar-bowl, and beaker of
-rich yellow cream. A lissome flower of the
-moors is this crofter maid. The oatmeal which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156">156</a></span>
-she has been baking is not more soft and fair
-than the skin of the comely lass, and, as she
-smiles reply in lifting the toasted oat-farles from
-the flat iron “girdle” swung over the fire, it
-needs no poet to notice that her eyes are bits
-of summer sea and her mouth a damask bud.
-The toasted farles of oat-cake from her hand
-send forth an ambrosial smell which, with the
-fragrance of the new-made tea, is irresistible to
-hungry folk, and no pressing Highland exhortation
-is needed to set visitors of both sexes to
-the attack of the viands.</p>
-
-<p>Not till every one has again and again
-declared sheer inability to pursue the attack
-further, does the announcement come that “the
-mare is in the cart.” A chair, therefore, is
-presently carried out, and the whole party of
-four mount into the rough vehicle among the
-straw. Hereupon follow a hand-shaking and
-repetition of hospitable invitations to return
-which begin to become almost embarrassing,
-before Hamish starts at his horse’s head upon
-the moor track.</p>
-
-<p>A long, memorable day it has been, amid the
-warm sunshine and the bright sea-breeze, a day
-to do the heart good and to tire the limbs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">157</a></span>
-royally&mdash;the morning draught of brave mountain
-air and life on the white moorland road before
-the inn; the forenoon ramble, rod in hand, on
-the warm gorse-path by the river; luncheon in
-quaint-flavoured, wit-haunted company by the
-blue Kilbrannan Sound, with nothing to interrupt
-but the beat of sudden outflying wings sometimes
-about the warm cliff crannies overhead,
-and, on the beach below, the soft caressing
-murmur of the secret-telling sea; the afternoon
-drive to the far hill-clachan, where the turf roofs
-were tied down with heather ropes, where the
-brown women were carrying sea-wrack to manure
-their fields, and where, as a back-sound to the
-quaint-turned Highland speech, was heard the
-thud-thud of the swinging flails; and, last of all,
-the return at evening by the high moorland path,
-with the amethyst fire dying out on Ben Ghoil
-in the east, and, in the west, the sunset heavens
-aflame with saffron and rose, and the sea a living
-splendour of generous wine.</p>
-
-<p>Now it is night, and the air comes cooler over
-the moor. No air is like Arran air at night,
-with its vague herb-perfumes adrift, for stirring
-old memories and desires in the heart and new
-ambitions in the blood. Upon its clear breath<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-old designs, old possibilities long forgotten, come
-back again to make life and hope. By it the
-vapours of worldly wisdom are blown aside, the
-cloud-wrack care of intervening years is lifted,
-and one walks again clear-hearted for a time in
-the April valley of his youth. Night anywhere
-has charms for those who think, but night upon
-the moors possesses an influence peculiarly its
-own. The primeval heath, wild and undesecrated
-by the hand of man, lies under “the splendid-mooned
-and jewelled night,” shadowy and mystic
-with the silence of the ages. Abroad upon the
-moor at such an hour seem to brood the imaginings
-of an older world, and the grey stone circles
-standing gaunt yet upon the Arran wilds are
-hardly needed to suggest the memory that along
-these wilds, once upon a time, wound processions
-of bearded Druids, to practise under the starry
-influences rites of a faith now long forgotten.
-At intervals upon the moor appear these grey
-menhirs and circles. Inscrutable as the Egyptian
-sphinx they stand with sealed lips, strange monuments
-of a buried past. For tens of centuries
-they have seen the dusks gather and the stars
-swim overhead, but no rising sun has wakened
-them from their silence, and still they keep the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-stony secret of their origin, though they could
-not keep the ashes of the dead committed to
-their charge.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Hamish makes way steadily, though
-by tortuous windings. None but a native bred
-on the spot could conduct a vehicle safely by
-night across these moors. Where unaccustomed
-eyes can make out no sign whatever of a track,
-and where a single mistake would send one
-wheel floundering into a peat-hag and the other
-spinning in the air, or capsize the whole equipage
-into the miry abysses of a bog, Hamish leads
-confidently on, with no worse result than the
-jolting of a rugged road. The mare is a sturdy
-beast of the small sure-footed Arran breed, now
-dying out, and she pulls away gallantly among
-rocks and heath-tufts that would bring any other
-sort of horse to quick disaster. It takes her
-master all his time to keep up with her on the
-rough ground, and he has breath left for no
-more than an occasional “Ay, ay,” or “’Deed,
-yes, sir!” in the true Arran accent. English is
-evidently the less familiar language to him; his
-remarks to the mare, <i xml:lang="it" lang="it">sotto voce</i>, are in Gaelic.</p>
-
-<p>All last month after nightfall tufts and sheets
-of flame were to be seen among the darkness of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-the hills; for in March they burn the heather on
-the sheep-farms to let the young herbage come
-up, and the conflagrations which appear then as
-pillars of smoke by day become pillars of fire
-by night. But in April the moorland birds have
-begun to build their nests, and the hills are left
-to them in darkness and in peace. The only
-light to be seen from the cart is that in the
-window of the croft far behind, which will be
-kept aglow by thoughtful hands as a guide till
-Hamish’s return after moonset. Over the brow
-of the moor, however, the shining lights of the
-clachan at the mountain foot before long come
-into sight, and away to the right, tremulous with
-silver and shadows, the sheen of the moonlight
-can be made out on the sea. Rapidly now the
-path descends, plunging presently through lanes
-of high thorn hedges where the stars are all but
-shut out overhead. The rush of a river is heard,
-the wheels grate harshly on the gravel, there is
-a sudden and vigorous splashing of hoofs, and
-the mare has passed the ford. Then a half-mile
-of climb uphill on a good road, and Hamish
-stands still with his charge at the door of
-the inn.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">161</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_23">BY A WESTERN FIRTH.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Good-bye, my</span> dear!”</p>
-
-<p>How beautiful the old lady looks as she
-stands in the porch overclustered with its tangle
-of budding roses and honeysuckle, a kindly smile
-on her lips, and her eyes shining, and her silver
-hair, in the last light of afternoon! For the sun
-is setting now, across the water, behind the hills
-of Bute, and the glory that fills the heavens and
-floods the full-ebbed sea casts about her, in its
-departing moments, a halo of peace serene as the
-hours of her life’s own afternoon. “Good-bye,
-my dear!”</p>
-
-<p>Sunshine and silence sleep now on the hillside
-strath above, where the woods hang motionless,
-and the sward here and there, in the open spaces,
-is lit with the golden flame of gorse in blossom;
-but across that hillside once long ago raged the
-tide of a relentless war. Here, blood-red in the
-setting sun, waved the standard of a Scottish
-king, and yonder, down to the shore and to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-wrecks of his ships, was driven back the shattered
-strength of the invading Norseman. The corries
-were filled then with the bodies of the dead, and
-the brown waters were stained a dreadful purple
-in the burn-pools where the trout leap now after
-the evening fly. That was the Scottish Salamis.</p>
-
-<p>No one is in sight upon the white road, and
-no sound to be heard of distant footstep or
-departing wheels. There is only the lingering
-lapse of the quiet ripples as the sea sows its
-pearl-seed along the shore. A perfect calm rests
-upon the waters while the light slowly leaves
-them, and the red sun goes down behind the
-hills; only, at one place, across the glassy surface,
-where the tide is stirring, run, on the tiny wavelets,
-a hundred flickering tongues of fire, and, far out,
-the reflection of the great yellow cloud aflame in
-the west shimmers like frosted gold upon the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Gently the gloaming falls. The last mellow
-pipe of the mavis floats from the garden shrubbery
-behind, and bats begin to jerk about with their
-uncertain flight under the trees, their wings
-making a curious eerie creaking in the air. Only
-a dim green light falls through the leaves interlaced
-overhead as the road leaves the bay and
-dips inland through the woods.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-The day’s work is over. It is the sacred hour,
-and, far from “the stir and tumult of the street,”
-in these still aisles, carpeted soft with fallen bud-sheaths
-and grass, roofed with the fretted canopy
-of branch and leaf, and hung with the fringed
-banners of larch and birch, ascends to heaven
-with the last notes of the woodland choristers
-the sweet incense of a thousand flowers. Mossy
-dykes run into the wood-depths here, and among
-the tall feathery grasses under the trees there
-are places purple with a mist of wild hyacinths.
-A crimson shadow, too, lies here and there, where
-the wood geranium throws its profusion; and
-pink and white sandflowers grow in the dry
-ditch-sides. By the clear mossy roadside well,
-and among the withered leaves in the glades, rise
-the first green spires of the foxgloves; a golden
-haze betrays the beds of yellow crowfoot; and in
-some sequestered spots pale primroses are still
-starring the rivulet banks.</p>
-
-<p>Amid the woods, a secluded nook, nestles a
-cottage&mdash;the gamekeeper’s lodge, with its low
-slate roof, and sweetbrier trained upon the white
-walls, yellow pansies asleep beneath its window-sills,
-and crimson fuchsia and wild dog-roses
-blossoming in the hedge. The little flower-garden<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-about it is trimly kept, with its southernwood
-and thyme, its clipped box edgings and gravelled
-path; and in the grassy hollow under the wood
-behind are the rows of boxes for breeding the
-young pheasants. A faint luscious smell hangs
-in the air of the spot&mdash;suggestive of frying trout
-freshly caught in the brown burn that gurgles
-close by in the darkness. The keeper, too, is
-sitting outside the quiet doorway enjoying his
-evening pipe; and the fragrance of the southern
-weed mingles with the sweet scent of the pink
-hawthorn flowering over the wicket. Tread
-softly, though, on the grassy edge of the road
-for a little way. The kennel is at hand, and
-the slightest sound will set every dog baying
-his loudest. The rattle of a terrier’s chain is
-enough, sometimes, to set the woods echoing
-for full ten minutes.</p>
-
-<p>The air grows less heavy as the road again
-approaches the shore, and there comes up with
-the murmur of the shingle the faint salt smell
-of the sea. Away in front the bright blaze
-streaming out in the darkness strikes from the
-lighthouse tower at the outmost sea-edge, receiving
-its signal, like the bale-fires of old, from
-the beacon on the opposite coast, and flashing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-it on to the next point up channel. Far out,
-too, on the firth a red light is moving, and the
-faint beat of paddles comes across the water. It
-is the last river-steamer making for the watering-place
-opposite. Singularly still the air is, to
-carry so distinctly the throbbing of that distant
-pulse. Not another sound is to be heard, and
-nothing astir is to be seen. Only, the moon
-has risen, a clear sickle, on the edge of the
-dark hill above. On such a night loveliness
-and mystery swim together on the air; the
-blushing of the rose is the fairer for being but
-half seen in the dim light; the woods above
-have ceased their amorous whisperings; and
-the sea amid the silence is kissing the shore’s
-wet lips.</p>
-
-<p>What white shadow comes yonder, though,
-moving under the high hedge in the darkness?
-It might almost be one of those wraiths of which
-the country-folk speak with bated breath&mdash;the
-awful Something seen moving in the dusk from
-the house where a man has died. There is a
-sound of hoofs here, however, and the spectre
-proves to be but the gaunt Rozinante of some
-wandering gipsies&mdash;the grey and pitiful counterpart,
-doubtless, of a once-gallant steed.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-Delicate hands may have patted the neck
-worn bare now by the collar, and sweet sugar-bits
-may have been offered by dainty fingers
-to the lips that tremble now as they crop the
-dusty roadside grasses. Does memory ever
-come to the brain behind those patient eyes?</p>
-
-<p>See! close by in the little dell among the flowering
-broom twinkles the camp-fire of the owners.
-Their dark figures lie about it asleep, for the
-night is warm, and they are a hardy race; while
-at hand stands their quaint house on wheels,
-overhung with baskets of all sorts and uses.
-A strange, lawless life they live in the midst
-of nineteenth-century civilisation, those Bedouins
-of the broomfields and commons.</p>
-
-<p>But here is our inn, a long-forgotten hostelrie,
-where one can sit at noon in the shade by the
-doorway with a book, and watch the ships far
-out go by upon the firth, while the cool sea
-glistens below, and all day long there is the
-drowsy hum of bees about the yellow tassels
-of the laburnums at the gable ends. A pleasant
-spot it is even now in the darkness. The lilac-trees
-in the garden are a-bloom, and the air is
-sweet with their scent. A pleasant place, where
-the comely hostess will welcome the tired<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-pedestrian, where his supper will taste the better
-for the fresh night air from the open window,
-and where, presently, he will fall asleep between
-sheets that smell of the clover-field, to dream of
-the firmly-grasped tiller, the snowy cloud of
-sails overhead, and the rushing of the water
-under the yacht’s counter of the morrow.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">168</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_24">AN ISLAND PICNIC.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Seven</span> o’clock, and a glorious morning! The
-sun is shining brightly on the coral-clustered
-rowan-tree outside, and the sky already is dazzling
-blue. A gentle air, too, just stirs the muslin
-curtain of the window left open overnight. With
-it comes in the scent of honey and the hum of
-bees at work in the garden below. No morning
-is this for laziness and a late breakfast. The
-impulse to be abroad is born of the sunshine;
-and a few minutes serve, after a hurried toilet, to
-snatch a towel, bound down stairs, and go tramping
-across the heather to the well-known pool.</p>
-
-<p>A magnificent day indeed it promises to be.
-The wreathing night-mists have already risen
-from the Bens, and the loch below gleams like
-melted sapphire round sylvan island and far-set
-promontory. Everywhere the mountains are clad
-in purple, and from the moor-bloom spreading
-its springy carpet underfoot rises a fragrance
-that fills air and heart alike with delight. And<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">169</a></span>
-the river pool&mdash;never was found more delightful
-bathing-place. Hidden deep between overhanging
-banks of heather in flower, with a clean
-brown ledge of rock to dive from, the depth of
-dark, clear water, like amber wine, sparkles with
-foam-bells, and the waterfall tosses from the rock
-above great showers of silver spray. No more
-invigorating plunge could be had. For a moment,
-as he breasts the brown depths, the bather feels
-something of the salmon’s exultant pride; and
-a dip like that sets one off high-hearted for
-the day.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast is a delight after such an appetiser;
-and fresh eggs and thin oatcakes, creamy porridge,
-golden marmalade, and all the wealth of Highland
-fare, disappear with startling despatch. There is
-no time to be wasted either, for Archie was to
-have the boat ready at half-past nine, and there
-is a Highland half-mile of road between the
-house and the loch. Archie would by no means
-scruple about expressing his candid, and perhaps
-not very complimentary, opinion if the party
-chanced to be late; and there is a kind of
-unwritten law in the house that the old servant
-is to be humoured as much as possible. So
-already the ladies are concerning themselves with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-the making and packing of sandwiches, the due
-stowage of cold provender, jellies, fruit, milk,
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et cetera</i>, and the apportioning to each his load.
-For the luncheon is to be, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">bonâ fide</i>, a true
-Robinson Crusoe affair, no servants interfering;
-and each man must make himself useful.</p>
-
-<p>“’Deed, and ye’re no that late, efter a’!” is
-Archie’s magnanimous reply to a deprecating
-remark of his mistress on reaching the loch-side.
-The sunshine has evidently thawed his usual
-crustiness. “Aye, mem,” he replies further, “it’ll
-be a fine mornin’, a very fine mornin’; the hills
-is quite clear.” After which deliverance he holds
-the boat steady alongside the little wooden
-landing-place, while provisions, kettles, and rugs
-are stowed away in the bow; and his grey eyes
-twinkle with pleased humour under their shaggy
-brows when the heir of the house whispers some
-bit of sly badinage in his ear. “Aye he iss a
-fine lad that, a fine lad!” the old fellow will be
-saying to himself when the boat has been pushed
-off, and he watches from the pier the stalwart
-object of his remark bestirring himself to haul
-up the sail.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_170" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30.375em;"><img src="images/i_201.jpg" width="486" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>There is just enough breeze to curl the water
-gently; and when the snowy sheet is hoisted the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-boat bends away gracefully before it, leaving a
-swirling track of foam and eddies in her wake.
-When the morning is so fine as this there is
-little fear of danger; but on these Highland
-lochs one never can foretell the moment when
-a sudden gust may come down from some
-hillside corrie; and cool nerves and a steady
-hand are needed to control sheet and tiller.
-The man who loses his wits on an emergency,
-who cannot slacken out sail or bring the boat’s
-head up to wind when a squall strikes her, is
-no fit pilot for these waters, and many a fair
-freight has gone to the bottom from such an
-one holding the helm. A strong and ready
-hand is in charge to-day, however, and “black
-care” is a thing impossible on board, as the
-little craft goes bounding out upon the bosom
-of the loch.</p>
-
-<p>And fair as a romance is the scene&mdash;the clear
-lake winding away among the mountains, its
-surface broken only by bosky islets that float
-in their own reflections&mdash;while the sunny air is
-full of the awe and silence of the Bens.</p>
-
-<p>The only spot in all the scene where silence
-reigns not is on board the little boat herself;
-and a continuous ripple of merry chat and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-joyous laughter floats away astern with her
-foam. From wild little islets passed by the
-way come breaths of pinewood and of heather
-in bloom, faint and delicious as the gales which
-drifted leeward of old from homeward-bound
-spice-argosies of the East. But the bright eyes
-on board are an inspiration themselves, independent
-of the sunshine and the pure and
-scented air; and the gladness of youth has
-broken forth&mdash;the contagion of happy and hopeful
-hearts. A sweet strain of melody floats
-once and again from the bow, where the singing
-throats are:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Speed, bonnie boat, like a bird on the wing!<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">&mdash;the Skye Boat Song, a farewell to Prince
-Charlie, that old-time idol of the Highland
-hearts. A sad melody it is, amid its sweetness,
-as are all the old Jacobite songs, with their
-breathing of hopes that were never to be fulfilled;
-and somehow, strains like that come to
-the ear with more real tenderness when sung
-as to-day by clear young voices among their
-native mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Too soon, almost, the boat’s keel grates upon
-the island beach&mdash;the strip of silver shingle under<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-the green-fringing trees. One would fain have
-prolonged especially the last part of the voyage,
-through the straits between the islands&mdash;straits
-like the miniature narrows of fairy-land, between
-whose near and bosky shores the fragile shallop
-of Oberon and Titania might almost be expected
-to appear, flying a web of the woodland gossamers
-for its sail. But other attractions enough lie
-within the island greenwood. There are delicate
-groups of birches to be sketched by those who
-have brought block and colours. In the rivulet
-dells some of the young ladies have been promised
-the discovery of the much-sought hart’s-tongue
-fern. And for those who wish to recall
-to fancy the place’s romance of the past, there
-are the remains of a ruined monastery to explore.
-But the merriest party of all, perhaps, is that
-retained for the preparation of luncheon; and it
-is wonderful in how short a time those dainty-fingered
-damsels have the tasteful display of linen
-and crystal and silver spread on a grassy plot,
-the clumsy-handed males being retained, after
-the fashion of the knights-errant of old, for the
-opening of baskets and boxes, and the seeking
-of leaves wherewith to decorate fruit-salvers,
-napkins, and the tablecloth’s centre.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">174</a></span>
-A merry meal it is, too, which follows, <i xml:lang="es" lang="es">al fresco</i>&mdash;“all
-in the greenwood free”&mdash;with the contortions
-of carvers on their knees, the popping of
-corks, and continual little explosions of mysterious
-laughter from the various groups perched on
-cloaks and rugs wherever a seat-hold offers
-round the roots of some gnarled oak or ash.
-Never more gallant do young men appear than
-when attending the wants of their fair comrades
-amid such a scene; and thrice happy is he who
-has such an opportunity of laying siege to the
-heart that he desires.</p>
-
-<p>Then away again over the island they go, in
-parties of two and three; and the flutter of a
-light dress is to be seen and the joyous ripple
-of merry laughter to be heard in many a nook
-and dell hitherto invaded only by the antlered
-and timid deer. Many a pleasant word is spoken,
-and many a heart mayhap lightened of its care
-on such an afternoon; for the anxieties of civilised
-life come not to a sylvan retreat like this, and
-it is impossible to be aught but joyous-spirited
-when the surroundings are all of gladness.</p>
-
-<p>But hark! they have caught a piper on the
-mainland, and have brought him over, and there
-is to be a dance on the grass. Yonder he goes,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-under the edge of the trees, pouring forth a
-torrent of Highland reels. A brave sound that,
-setting the blood on fire and making it impossible
-to sit still. And merrily go the twinkling
-feet on the greensward&mdash;“figures of eight,” and
-Reel o’ Tulloch, Highland Schottische and Highland
-Fling. Wilder and faster grows the music,
-as the piper catches the spirit of the scene, and
-faster and faster the dancers foot it, with swirling
-tartans and flying skirts, till, at a final blast of
-the screaming chanter, the last partners throw
-themselves panting on the grass. Then a cup
-of tea makes a kindly refreshment and prevents
-heated throats from catching cold, and the boat
-has to be got ready, and the furniture of the
-feast stowed away. Afterwards, as the clear
-young moon begins to sparkle in the sky, the
-sail is set once more and the prow pointed for
-home. And if the wind fails, and some rowing
-has to be done, the exercise is good for keeping
-off the chill; and with song after song floating
-out across the water under the stars, a fitting
-end is made of a day without regrets.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">176</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_25">TENNIS IN THE NORTH.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A</span> pretty sight they are, these two, this
-fair summer morning, among the dewy
-branches of the rose-garden, all unconscious that
-anyone is looking at them, Minna, the daughter
-of the house, her white hands wet with flowers,
-is cutting fresh blossoms for the breakfast-table,
-and that tall fellow, the Professor, who at home
-used to get up only when the college bell was
-ringing, has actually risen half an hour earlier
-than he need have done in order to hold the
-basket for her. He is not looking at the costly
-little circlet of diamonds sparkling upon her finger,
-but at the bright dark eyes swimming under the
-edge of that delightful straw hat, where, doubtless,
-he is getting some fresh light upon the Greek
-particles. For they are engaged, Minna and he,
-and he is coming back in the autumn to carry
-her off and transplant her, like some bright-petalled
-flower, in his dim old college city.</p>
-
-<p>But there is the voice of our host greeting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-them from the porch below, and the Professor
-comes forward eagerly to shake hands with him.
-Young Rossdhu has driven down to say that
-some friends arrived at their house last night,
-and his mother will be glad if we can go up
-to tennis and luncheon there this morning. No
-other engagement will be broken by this, and
-a day on that velvet lawn among the pine-woods
-will be delightful; so the carriage has
-been ordered for eleven o’clock. The day
-promises to be very warm here by the sea,
-but more air will perhaps be moving up among
-the hills, and there will always be the shadow
-of the old beeches to rest under. When breakfast
-is over, then, it will just be time to get
-ready, though it is tempting to linger in the
-quiet cool little room, at the white-spread table
-with its freshness of flowers&mdash;the full-blowing
-Maréchal Niel and the languorous yellow tea-roses
-set there by dainty fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the sunshine is very hot already,
-and the last dewdrop has long ago dried from
-the scarlet petals of the geraniums in the urns.
-The ponies at the door, too, are impatiently
-whisking their tails and twitching their ears to
-keep off the flies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-There could be no more enjoyable drive than
-that along this road of the far North, running
-a mile or two first within sight of the blue
-glistening sea, and then turning inland. The
-road itself, of that dazzling sandy whiteness
-peculiar to the district, is perfectly dry and
-smooth; and while from the deep grasses of
-the bank on each side, and from the warren
-beyond, come the hot passion-breath of the
-golden-flowered whin, and the soft amorous sigh
-of the milky-clouded thorn, there is ever in sight
-the broad country, rich in old forests, showing
-here and there the grey tower of some ancient
-castle, and stretching away to the mountains
-beyond, purple under the speckless sky. Then
-it turns off suddenly into the pine-woods of
-Rossdhu, and the wheels roll noiseless upon the
-soft bed of fir needles.</p>
-
-<p>Forty years ago, when old Rossdhu found
-that, owing to the repeal of the Corn Laws, it
-would no longer be profitable to grow wheat,
-like many another proprietor in the North he
-planted his lands with trees. And so, while
-the country buys its bread with the riches of
-ore and fossil stored up æons ago in Nature’s
-grim treasure-caverns underground, the soil, at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-rest from plough and harrow, is growing young
-again amid the forests, under the brown depth
-of mouldering leaf and cone.</p>
-
-<p>Deep quiet reigns among these warm pine-woods,
-a sort of enchanted stillness amid the
-yellow sunshine. In the bosky hollow where
-the brown butterfly is hovering, old Pan might
-be asleep among the fern. The feathery grasses
-everywhere are in flower, as high as a man’s
-shoulder; above them shimmers the great green
-dragon-fly, two inches long, with his gossamer
-wings; and from among their clouds at places
-little ladybird beetles, like pin-heads, spotted
-scarlet and black, fall into the carriage in their
-flight. The wild strawberry, with its tiny white
-blossom, is growing on the sunny banks of the
-road, and wild rasps spread their tangle in the
-undergrowth beyond.</p>
-
-<p>In the narrow meadow amidst the woods a
-lonely mower is at work, and the air is sweet
-with the scent of new-mown hay. He lifts his
-cap respectfully as the carriage passes, for the
-manners of the district have not been corrupted
-yet by contact with rude railway navvies, nor
-by the shortcomings of Board schools; and the
-peasant still exchanges a recognition with his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-superior. Much more real kindliness might
-exist between the social classes if in our schools
-there were a Government grant for manners.
-All store nowadays seems to be set upon the
-three “Rs”&mdash;reading, writing, and arithmetic&mdash;as
-if the whole sum of human felicity lay
-in a knowledge of the “black art” of books.</p>
-
-<p>The mower was singing to himself as we came
-up, a soft Gaelic song that kept time to the
-sweep of his scythe, and Minna blushes a little
-as she promises to translate it in the evening,
-for it is a song of confessed love. The man is
-happy, surely, singing as he sees the glistening,
-swathes fall by his side to ripen in the sun:
-and well he may be, for has he not, like the
-happy birds, a nest, too, somewhere in these
-woods, and a blue-eyed brood that will greet
-his home-coming at nightfall.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_180" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.0625em;"><img src="images/i_213.jpg" width="385" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>But the manor-house stands close by now, and
-there, on the smooth green lawn among the trees,
-the tennis nets are spread, and the courts marked
-with lines on the grass. A beautiful old place it
-is, its grey stone walls hot with the sunshine, and,
-among the thick-climbing jessamine and fuchsia,
-the open windows revealing tempting depths
-of shadow within. The sound of the wheels<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-on the gravel brings out old Rossdhu himself,
-the soul of hospitality, with half a dozen of his
-dogs barking a welcome after their fashion, and
-wagging their tails. Shaggy-bearded as some of
-his own peasants, the old gentleman is the pink
-of Highland courtesy, and he assists “Miss
-Minna” to alight as if she were a princess.
-“Alec,” that is his son, he explains, “is busy
-inside,” and the frequent popping of corks heard
-there intimates his occupation.</p>
-
-<p>The dark cool drawing-room is bright with
-the light dresses of young girls, and musical with
-the murmur of happy laughter, while the air that
-just stirs the creamy gossamer of the curtains
-brings in with it the fragrance of the dark
-velvety wallflower still flowering outside in the
-sunshine before the window. The lady of the
-house is an invalid, and Rossdhu begs that
-Minna will give her just one song before everybody
-goes out to the game. So Minna draws
-off her gloves, and the piano is opened. And
-it is very pleasant to sit in the deep shadow
-by the open casement, looking out upon the
-sunny lawn and woods, and listening to the
-melody of that sweet young voice. It is a
-Jacobite song she sings, “The Auld House”&mdash;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">182</a></span>some
-other such place as this, with low-roofed
-rooms, dark-panelled and oaken-raftered, where
-the hopes of gentle hearts blossomed and withered
-long ago with the fortunes of their fair, ill-fated
-Prince. The plaintive words linger with their
-air in the memory, how “the auld <span class="locked">ladye”&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i2">Here sheltered Scotland’s heir,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And clipped a lock wi’ her ain hand<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Frae his lang yellow hair.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Then, afterwards, when everybody has had enough
-of the ices and the claret cup, there is the tennis.
-And though it is somewhat warm work for those
-actually playing, there are seats under the leafy
-beeches and chestnut-trees, where a quiet <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i>
-can be enjoyed, and a lazy glance cast at the
-lithe, light-clad figures of the players out in the
-sunshine, and the white balls that fly to and fro
-across the nets.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">183</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_26">THROUGH THE PASS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Rain</span> is not to be heeded in the Highlands.
-It is the picturesque part of the weather
-here. The air grows fresher and sweeter in a
-shower, a richer fragrance comes out in the woods,
-and the true gloom and grandeur of the mountains
-can only be seen when the grey rain-veils are
-darkening and glittering among their glens. Even
-into the house steals the reviving freshness of the
-rain. The scent of the wet sweetbrier budding
-in the garden hedge enters at the open window;
-from the larch-wood near, the grateful thrushes
-can be heard sending forth more liquid trillings;
-and the daffodils, hung like yellow jewels along
-the lawn, appear fairer and brighter amid the
-shower. But better than wasting the day indoors
-it is to sally forth, strong-booted and roughly
-clad, breathe the freshness of the cool, new air,
-and start, staff in hand, for the hills themselves.
-It is worth while to defy the rain, for the road
-lies through woods dewy and dim as Keats<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-dreamed for his “Endymion.” In their deep-secluded
-ways sometimes may be seen the timid
-roedeer, and on the fragrant air be heard the
-amorous crooning of wild doves.</p>
-
-<p>In another month the quiet dells among these
-woods will be purple with dewy hyacinths, and
-many a sequestered nook will be dim with the
-blue forget-me-not. Already the open meads
-are sprinkled with patins of buttercup-gold, and
-a modest spot of cream here and there, under
-some mossy bank, betrays a late primrose. As
-yet, however, the delicate broidery of summer
-has not carpeted the forest floors. Under the
-dark, low-hanging branches of the spruce-firs&mdash;made
-a richer green by the rain&mdash;there is only
-a russet wealth of withered fern, with a warm
-depth of shadow such as Rembrandt loved to
-paint. Looking over a mossy old bridge parapet
-into the ferny dingle below, one can see the
-feathery grey larches powdered with sweet pink
-blossom, whose beauty few people know; and
-lower down, by the burn, the alders putting forth
-silky silver bud-tips&mdash;the “mouse’s ear,” which
-is the angler’s sign that perch are to be caught.
-In open spaces where some forest-clearing has
-been done, the few silver-barked birches left<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-standing begin to show a smir of green, their
-graceful drooping branches looking like trailing
-sprays of delicate maidenhair; whilst here and
-there a spot is lit up by the golden glory of
-the whin.</p>
-
-<p>The woods at this time of the year are full
-of life, for the cruel gun is silent, and many a
-happy home of bird and beast is hidden in the
-tangled undergrowth. In the elm-tops about the
-lodge behind by the river the rooks are giving
-each other much grandmotherly advice as to the
-rearing of broods. The cock pheasant’s crow is
-to be heard frequently in the covers, and sometimes,
-from his open feeding-ground beside the
-path, a splendid bird rises suddenly with whirring
-wings, and sails royally away to more secluded
-fastnesses. Among the thick-leaved tangle of
-wild rhododendron on either hand blackbirds are
-fluttering joyously about their nests. Overhead,
-occasionally, passes the heavy, rushing flight of
-a wild pigeon. And more than once across a
-gleam of sunshine on the path runs a red squirrel,
-like a bit of living gold.</p>
-
-<p>And while one treads on the brown, fallen
-needles of spruce and larch, the subtle forest
-scents fill the heart with many pleasant memories.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-Never are these forest scents richer than when
-brought out by a shower, and it is curious how
-vividly some faint perfume drifting on the air will
-recall the happy scenes of other days, memories
-that are themselves the pensive fragrance of old
-age.</p>
-
-<p>Through these ducal woods, and amid such
-pleasant sights and sounds, some seventy years
-ago wandered the “Wizard of the North,” gathering
-material for his work. Fairer scenes a poet
-could not have chosen to gather inspiration from.
-Everyone may feel the eloquence of those northern
-hills in front, as everyone may enjoy the fragrance
-of the meadow violets: it needed a poet, however,
-to turn into speech the eloquence of the hills, as
-it needs a bee to turn into honey the fragrance
-of the flowers. Hither, therefore, fitly came Scott
-to his work; and over clachan and mountain alike
-he has woven the golden net of romance.</p>
-
-<p>One may wander for miles through these woods
-and out beyond upon the old Highland road, with
-its low, mossy dykes, without meeting a single
-wayfarer. Only Nature herself, with gentle and
-sweet suggestion, speaks to him of the past or of
-the future. For the touch of the fresh cool air
-upon the face clears away all cobwebs of sordid<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-thought, and braces the faculties for new endeavour.
-Here, too, may be witnessed many a matchless
-transformation scene. For presently the rain
-ceases, the grey mist melts into the lucent blue
-of the sky, and wet hill and woodland sparkle
-and glow in a flood of hot sunshine. Immediately
-the shallow trout burn that comes down to the
-stepping-stones under the edge of the wood
-laughs gaily and dances over its pebbles; the
-mountain in front becomes a great sapphire
-burning gloriously under the blue; the larks
-rise, true sun-worshippers, pouring forth rills of
-song, libations to their God, at heaven’s own
-gate; and from the twittering coppice flutter the
-vain chaffinches, with purple velvet heads, gold
-breasts, and silver-barred wings, to show themselves.
-Never do the vaunted birds of the tropics
-sing so joyously as the sweet hedge-warblers of
-Britain; and, ages before the alchemists came,
-thrush and robin and yellowhammer had found
-out Nature’s own philosopher’s-stone, and sang
-the praises of that sunshine which, like love
-and like human genius, turns all it touches into
-gold.</p>
-
-<p>Steep as a wall in front rises the mountain
-barrier of the Highlands, its wooded and inaccessible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-shoulder projecting far into the loch. Only
-one passage is to be found through that rocky
-wall, and the road to it winds perilously round
-a little bay, between darkening precipice and
-lapping wave, before ascending the narrow and
-unseen defile. Daring would the assailant be
-who tried that steep and narrow path with a
-Highland foe above him! Scarcely more than
-a bridle-path, and steep as a staircase, it winds
-upward between rugged mountain walls. A
-single clansman, posted with gun and claymore
-behind one of its jutting crags, might hold
-the road against a regiment. High and dark
-overhead against the sky rise sombre pines and
-immemorial holly-trees, which from their torn and
-shattered girth might <span class="locked">be&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Seedlings of those that heavenward sprung<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">While yet the maiden moon was young<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">&mdash;ancient enough, at anyrate, to have looked down
-on many a Highland foray. No one need marvel
-that the Macgregors thought themselves safe when
-they had driven their spoil through the Pass of
-Balmaha.</p>
-
-<p>And glorious as well as welcome was the sight
-that met these clansmen when once actually<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-through the defile. For away to the north, Ben
-beyond Ben, far as eye could range, rose the
-fastnesses of their native mountains&mdash;silver waters
-flashing below round islands of fern, and the blue
-sky laughing above. Every glen had its memory,
-and every corrie was their inheritance, and even
-the traveller of the present day can know no
-more gorgeous spectacle than Ben Lomond after
-sunset burning in amethystine fire. For more
-reasons than one, therefore, might these rough
-old warriors rejoice when they had scaled the
-pass and beheld before them this wild but lovely
-vista of the country they called their home.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">190</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_27">A HIGHLAND MORNING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Breakfast</span> is over&mdash;a Highland breakfast.
-Full justice has been done to the pleasant
-porridge and warm creamy milk, the fresh
-herrings that were alive in Loch Fyne a few
-hours ago, salmon from the splash-nets at
-Eriska, fragrant coffee, excellent home-made
-scones, and rich butter, tasting of the clover-field.
-The day is superb, and no one will spend more
-of it indoors than he can help; besides, the
-boat will be almost afloat now, and it will take
-a little time to bale her out. Bring the lines,
-then, with their gaudy red and yellow flies&mdash;it
-may be that a mackerel or two are to be caught
-in the loch; a novel of William Black’s, “The
-Princess of Thule” or “MacLeod of Dare,” and
-a pocketful of good cigars. It is hardly nine
-o’clock, yet the sun is dazzling and hot in
-the doorway. There is just enough air moving
-to bring up the fresh smell of the seaweed
-stirred by the rising tide. The white sandy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-road is almost dry again after the rain which
-has fallen in the night, and as the kine, after
-their morning milking, are turned into the clover-field
-alongside, the foremost will hardly move
-from the gate to allow the others to enter, but
-bury their muzzles at once in the fresh, wet
-grass. The sea lies flashing and sparkling
-in the morning sunshine, and, on the dark
-Kingairloch mountains opposite, here and there
-the silver streak of a torrent still shows the
-effects of the morning shower. A sunny quiet
-fills the air. The faint screaming and splashing
-of gulls and sea-swallows far out over some
-shoal of fishes, and the sound of the oars in
-the rowlocks of the distant boat, can be distinctly
-heard, while the leisurely movements of the
-horse and cart going down the road a quarter
-of a mile away are quite distinguishable. The
-driver is whistling pleasantly; the tune is
-“Mo nighean donn bhoidheach.” The last mists
-are leaving the mountain sides, and everything
-promises a hot day. Even the soft white clouds
-far up in the sky are every moment growing
-fainter, and already the thin shimmer of heat
-is ascending from the dry-stone dyke beside
-the road. The brambles on the other side of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-the dry, grassy ditch show profuse clusters of
-bright red fruit, but there are no ripe berries
-to be seen&mdash;the children pluck them long before
-they are black. The scarlet hips, too, shine
-bravely on the sprays of hedgebrier, the tips of
-whose leaves are just beginning to turn brown.
-A small blue butterfly flickers across the road,
-and, rising at the dyke, is lost in a moment
-against the blue of the sky; while a silent
-humble-bee comes by, alights on the last empty
-bell of a seeded foxglove, and immediately
-tumbles out again disgusted, to continue his
-researches farther on. Over the hedge there,
-on the other side of the road, the oats seem
-yellow enough to cut, and among them are still
-in flower a few yellow Marguerites. The hill
-beyond glows purple yet with the heather,
-although its full bloom is past. Here and there
-plants of it are flowering close to the dyke
-by the roadside. It is the small sort, the kind
-the bees frequent, for they can get into it&mdash;the
-bell heather flowers earlier, and is over
-now.</p>
-
-<p>But here is our boat. She is already afloat,
-the mainsail and jib are soon hoisted, there
-is just enough wind to carry her against the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">193</a></span>
-tide, and Appin and Castle Stalker, the ruined
-stronghold of the Stewarts of Appin, are slowly
-hidden by the point behind. On the right is
-the green island of Lismore, low lying and
-fertile, with few houses visible upon it; only the
-slate roof of Lady Elphinstone’s lodge flashes
-in the sunlight like a crystal. And beyond and
-above tower the dark mountains of Morven.
-To the south, in the offing, lie the islands of
-Easdale and Luing, famous for their slates.</p>
-
-<p>Down we drift, past the Black Isle, to the
-narrows of Eriska. The tide is still running
-in towards Loch Creran, and the passage, which
-otherwise would have been difficult among the
-eddies and currents, is easily and quickly made.
-An immense volume of water must pour to
-and fro through that narrow channel to fill the
-loch at every tide. At these times the current
-rushes like a mill-race. We are inside presently,
-and as the air is very warm, and a pleasant
-little bay with a sandy beach lies close at hand
-on Eriska, there could be no better opportunity
-for a bathe.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner said than done. The boat is
-anchored a little way from the beach, where
-through the clear green water the sandy bottom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-can be seen some few fathoms below, and one
-after another enjoys a header from the bow, or
-slips gently over the stern. Pleasant as Arcady
-and utterly secluded is the spot; not even the
-crack of a gamekeeper’s fowling-piece is to be
-heard on shore.</p>
-
-<p>But what is this&mdash;that jig-jig-jigging of
-engines? A small steam yacht is coming into
-the loch, and&mdash;gracious goodness! there are
-ladies on board. To cover, all three, behind
-the boat, hang on by the gunwale, and
-trust in Providence to keep the yacht at a
-respectable distance. One has no ambition at
-such moments to court the suffrages even of the
-most delectable society. But the danger moves
-past, and though the fair ones on deck do
-smile at the phenomenal movements of our boat,
-and the ominous absence of occupants, who is
-a whit the worse? They will laugh with us,
-rather than at us, should we meet.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze has freshened a little now, and
-will be enough to carry us up the loch amongst
-the currents and against the outflowing tide.
-Yonder goes the ferry-boat, crossing from Shian.
-It has a waggonette and horses on board, and
-the sweeps carry it over but slowly. The long<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-low island there, with its few stunted bushes,
-is seldom visited, and remains a favourite haunt
-of the graceful sea-swallows. Two months ago
-every grassy ledge upon its sides would have
-its couple of sea-swallow’s eggs. See yonder,
-just beyond the rocky point, swimming quietly
-about, with watchful, intelligent eyes, there is
-the black head of a seal.</p>
-
-<p>As the boat gets round the end of Craigailleach,
-the ruin of the ancient castle of Barcaldine, on
-the low neck of land across which the road
-winds from Connal, comes into sight. In the
-days of which Sir Walter Scott speaks in his
-“Lord of the Isles,” when against the Bruce
-in Artornish Castle “Barcaldine’s arm was high
-in air,” there was scantier cultivation around
-the site of that black stronghold. The shrub
-ivy was not waving then from its beacon turret,
-and the retainers whose thatched cottages are
-still scattered among the fields around were rather
-caterans and pirates than peaceful crofters. Now,
-however, as Mr William Freeland puts <span class="locked">it&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">The freebooters, reiving and killing,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">No longer swoop down from their glens,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But delve by the bothie and shieling,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Or shepherd their flocks on the bens.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-The mountains in front seem to rise higher as
-we approach, and to cast a deeper silence on
-the narrowing water and motionless woods at
-their base. Barcaldine House, as secluded and
-delightful a spot as any in the Highlands, with
-its old-fashioned gardens and vineries, lies hidden
-among these woods.</p>
-
-<p>Far up on the purple hillside at the head
-of the loch the eye can make out a lonely
-burying-place. A stone dyke guards the little
-enclosure of quiet graves. The spot is visible
-for many a mile around, and its presence ever
-in sight must have a tender and solemn effect
-in keeping alive the memory of the dead.
-Every day, as the crofter toils in his little field,
-or the shepherd takes the hill with his dogs,
-his eyes will turn to it, and he will think of
-wife or child who lie in that still, peaceful place,
-asleep under the calm sunshine and among
-the heather. Only sometimes will it be hidden&mdash;when
-the soft, white, trailing mists come down
-and weep their gentle tears upon the spot.</p>
-
-<p>Directly in front, away beyond and above the
-other mountains, towers Ben Cruachan, a monarch
-among the peers. And below, on the shore of
-the loch, appears the long, low-roofed cottage,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-half covered a month ago with crimson tropeolum,
-and half smothered among its roses, where lives
-the author of the humorous and valuable “Notes
-from Benderloch.” Here is our destination.
-Let down the mainsail, let go the jib, and we
-will run ashore. It is not yet noon, and there
-are many hours before us to spend in the
-beautiful Barcaldine woods.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">198</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_28">TILL DEATH US PART.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Is</span> she better, Doctor?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; worse. Can’t last through the night,
-I’m afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>The forester’s wife pauses a moment, looking
-after the physician’s carriage as it whirls out
-of sight in the gathering darkness along the
-road; then, exclaiming sadly, “Poor, dear young
-lady!” she closes again the heavy iron gates,
-and retires to her own happy hearthside within
-the lodge.</p>
-
-<p>Night has all but fallen, and though it is still
-only dusk upon the open road outside, within the
-avenue the gloaming is already deepening into
-mirk, and under the shadows of the limes it will
-soon be quite dark. A quiet spring night. When
-the wheels of the doctor’s carriage have retreated
-in the distance, no sound is to be heard amid
-the shadows but the twitter of a blackbird settling
-itself again to roost in its perfumed dreaming-place
-among the spruce branches, and the silvery<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">199</a></span>
-tinkle of a streamlet making its way at hand
-through the ferny under-tangle of the wood. The
-air is rich with the fresh sweetness of budding
-life&mdash;the breath of unseen primroses opening
-their creamy petals upon dewy moss-banks in
-the darkness. Born amid the stillness, new,
-vague hopes stir within the heart; everywhere
-seems the delicious promise of the time of blossom
-and leaf that is to be; and the motionless night
-itself seems conscious of the coming of desire.
-It is a night to inspire a poet or a lover; every
-faint wood-scent, the cool touch of the night air
-itself upon the cheek, bringing with it some
-subtle suggestion, the more delightful that it
-is undefined, setting the pulse of youth a-beating
-with thoughts of a glad to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>Alas for those to whom no morrow will
-come!</p>
-
-<p>At the upper end of the long avenue a faint
-light is shining yet in two windows of the many-gabled
-mansion-house. One of the windows is
-open, and within, at a small table, leaning his
-head upon his hand, can be seen the figure of
-a man. It is the master of the house. He has
-just received the last sentence of the physician,
-“I can be of no further service. The end will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-probably come before to-morrow”; and the words
-are still in his ears, beating like a leaden pendulum
-against his heart. Straight before him into the
-dark night he is gazing; but the eyes that look
-are tearless; only the drawn line about his mouth
-and the pitiful twitching of his lip bespeak the
-emotion that is working within. Yet he is not
-altogether left to himself. The air from the
-open window stirs his hair and fans his pale
-cheek&mdash;Nature, like a sweet and gentle friend,
-would offer him the soothing of her sympathy.
-Probably he is unconscious of it&mdash;drowning in
-the hopeless flood-tide of his grief; but, with the
-gentle air stealing in from the darkness outside,
-the influence of the great Reconciler, mother-heart
-of all mankind, is already touching him.
-While his ear takes in the soft movements of
-the nurse in the next room, tending all that is
-dearest to him on earth, his heart, stirred unconsciously
-by the subtle suggestions of the incoming
-night-scents, is travelling, torn with regret, through
-the tender avenues of the past. And strangely
-fresh in every detail reappear those scenes imprinted
-upon the pages of memory by the
-sunshine of love.</p>
-
-<p>He is in a cottager’s garden, listening, amid the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-hum of the hives and the glory of old-fashioned
-wallflower borders, to the gossip of the simple
-old soul who is showing him her little domain.
-There is the quick trotting of a pony. A low
-phaeton drives past on the road beneath. And
-he has seen and shared the smiling glance of a
-gentle, lovely face&mdash;a sunny glimpse to be
-remembered. Again, he has been picnicking
-with friends, a family party, on the shore of a
-Highland loch, and has noticed with mingled
-admiration and resentment that while all others
-have been seeking their own enjoyment, one pair
-of frank and willing little hands has wrought
-the whole comfort of the group. They are in
-the shallops, rowing home, and as, pulling at
-his oar, he listens to the innocent freshness of
-a shy young voice singing some Highland boat-song,
-he becomes conscious for the first time of
-a vista before him of wondrous new and fair
-possibilities&mdash;of a path in life which is not to
-be trodden alone. Once more. It is a secluded
-spot. He has wandered in happy company,
-from his party. Clear as yesterday comes back
-the memory of the scene. In front some tented
-waggons, rust-brown with wandering years, trail
-down the woodland by-road. The gipsy woman<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-has taken his silver coin, and, with a keen,
-shrewd glance, has wished the “lady and gentleman
-a happy bridal!” He has seized the
-moment, has whispered the secret which was no
-secret, and has read in shining eyes the answer
-of his hopes.</p>
-
-<p>All that was a year ago, little more&mdash;woodland
-and lake and garden, with a hundred other
-scenes and episodes as tender, which, crowding
-back, fill his heart to bursting; and <span class="locked">now&mdash;&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>He rises, closing the window, and passes into
-the adjoining room.</p>
-
-<p>Treading softly on the thick carpet, a glance
-assures him that nothing has altered in the sick-chamber
-since he left it with the physician. Only
-amid the momentous stillness, in the subdued light
-by the fire, the trim, white-aproned nurse is trying
-to read. A whisper to her&mdash;she will be called if
-required; and, closing the door noiselessly behind
-her, she leaves him to watch alone.</p>
-
-<p>Alone, for the last time, with all that is dear
-to him, the flower that is fading out of his life
-so soon! He turns to the bed. There, pale
-with preternatural loveliness, her dark hair spread
-like a cloud upon the pillow, lies the sunny
-sweetheart, the shy bride of a year ago. A<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-faint moan, the glistening of a tear between the
-closed eyelids, betrays the grief that is haunting
-that strange shadowland between this world and
-the next&mdash;grief for that which was not to be!
-He can look no more! Sinking into a chair by
-the fire, he buries his face in his hands. It is
-the hour of his despair.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight has long passed; the fire is sinking
-unheeded in the grate; and he has not moved.</p>
-
-<p>“Arthur!”</p>
-
-<p>In a moment he is by the bed, that thin, hot
-hand in his, gazing heartbroken into the face of
-his wife. In those grey eyes of hers there is no
-second thought. Love, for the time is short, has
-dropped his last disguise, and looks forth from
-them with unutterable tenderness and regret.
-“Arthur!” She lingers fondly upon his name,
-and her fingers push the hair tenderly from his
-brow&mdash;“Arthur!”</p>
-
-<p>But there is a sudden change. A look of terror
-springs to her eyes, and she clings wildly to his
-arm. Is this the end? She would have fallen
-back upon the pillow had not his arm been
-round her. With a despairing effort, her eyes
-filling with tears, she articulates, “We have&mdash;been&mdash;very&mdash;happy&mdash;my
-dear!” Their lips meet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-for the last time&mdash;a long, long farewell. Then
-a second shadow passes over her face. He lays
-her gently back upon the pillow. The wistful,
-eager look dies away out of her eyes. It is all
-over. He is alone, kneeling by the bed, his
-face pressed deep into his hands. A gust of
-wind, rising outside, shakes the sash of the
-window; the crow of chanticleer is heard far
-off at the stables: it is three o’clock, the coldest
-hour of the night.</p>
-
-<p>And in the lodge at the foot of the avenue,
-at that hour, the young forester’s wife, stirring
-softly in her sleep, presses the month-old babe
-beside her closer to her heart.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_204" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;"><img src="images/i_239.jpg" width="600" height="405" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">205</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_29">A FOREST WEDDING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Though</span> it is not yet seven o’clock, the
-winter night, in this northern parish, has
-quite closed in, and it is already very dark.
-When the sun set, far in the south, some hours
-ago, its disc gleamed coppery red through brown
-mist veils as of rising smoke, and the shepherd’s
-wife on the moor, as she brought in her peats
-for the night, said she thought there would be
-more snow before morning. It has not yet
-begun to fall, however, when the minister,
-wrapped up to the ears in his heavy coat, and
-his feet encased in strong, thick-soled boots,
-pulling on a pair of rough worsted gloves, and
-calling his spaniel from her place on the study
-hearth, sets out from his comfortable manse.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, as he turns from the beaten highway
-into the snow-clad woods of the manor,
-hearing the bell of the distant town steeple
-behind him striking the hour, he gives an
-encouraging word to his dog, and quickens his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">206</a></span>
-steps a little. As he passes the humble window
-of the gate-lodge, he pauses a moment&mdash;there
-was a sound; yes, it is audible again&mdash;a mother
-crooning softly over her child; and his eye
-glistens as his ear catches the lullaby, old
-bachelor as he is. From the chimney on the
-low roof, too, there steals down among the trees
-the savoury fragrance of the evening meal. The
-father, one of the under-gamekeepers on the
-estate, evidently has not come home yet, and
-his young wife is waiting for him.</p>
-
-<p>The sky hangs soft and very dark overhead, the
-tree-tops are all but lost in it, and one can almost
-fancy he hears the drifting of the coming snow.
-But all is silent, not a branch in the forest stirs,
-and between the black tree-trunks the white sheet
-can be seen stretching stainless and undisturbed
-on either hand into the mysterious depths of the
-woods. The trees themselves, unshaken all these
-weeks by wind or squirrel or woodbird, raise into
-the night their branches robed to the remotest
-twig in the matchless lacework of the frost.</p>
-
-<p>But see! Along the hollow, to the left, can
-be caught a glimpse of the manor-house, its
-windows, most of them, aglow with light. A
-grey, stately old place it is, in the midst of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-its woods, eloquent with the memories of long-past
-centuries. Royalty has been entertained
-there in bygone days, and in the woodland aisles
-around has echoed merrily the laughter of many
-a gay party from the Court, distant only a
-morning’s ride. But storm after storm has swept
-the land since then; that gay Court’s palace lies
-a ruin now; and while the race of the humble
-peasant still thrives in the manor woods, the
-race of the manor lord and the race of the
-kings themselves of those days have passed
-from the earth for ever.</p>
-
-<p>There is no spot in so old a land but has its
-memories, sad and gay. Somewhere in these
-woods, in days still farther gone, a national hero
-was betrayed, and on the moorland ridge, a mile
-away, a king’s army suffered defeat. But the
-minister passes on. His errand to-night is neither
-to palace nor castle, yet it may be that the
-simple hearts he is presently to unite will beat as
-happily under a lowly roof of thatch as do those
-of the gentle owners in their mansion yonder.</p>
-
-<p>By degrees, as he presses on, the path becomes
-rougher, the trees deepen the darkness overhead,
-and hardly a former footstep has left its trace in
-the undrifted snow. The solitude might almost<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-be primeval, so absolute is the silence in these
-untrodden recesses. The solitary snapping, once,
-of a rime-laden branch has only testified amid
-the stillness to the intensity of the frost. At
-last, however, the path widens somewhat, there
-is a little clearing and a forsaken lodge, and
-beyond, here and there in the open, gleam the
-scattered lights of the village. A sequestered
-spot it is, bowered in summer by the whispering
-woods, and in winter buried in the forest solitudes
-by the swathing snow.</p>
-
-<p>But there is merriment enough to-night in
-the little community; and the frequent ring of
-laughter from the nearest cottage, as well as
-the warm glow of firelight streaming from its
-threshold and windows, deep-set under the thatch,
-tell where the festivities are going forward. It
-is the cottage of the bride’s father: all the
-village has assembled here to assist in the
-ceremony, and they are waiting now for the
-minister. The laughter subsides as he lifts the
-latch and enters, stamping in the doorway to
-shake the snow from his feet; and all eyes
-are turned upon him, as the goodman of the
-house, a grizzled forester of sixty winters, hastens
-forward with a welcome to help him out of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-coat. It is a comfortable scene, the interior
-of the low-raftered kitchen, lit up rather by the
-warm glow of the open fire than by the candles
-set on table and window-shelf. By the hearth
-are gathered the older folk&mdash;the many-wrinkled
-granny, in comely white mutch and kerchief;
-the few matrons, with smoothly-braided hair,
-and little ornament, except a well-worn ring
-or two; and the men in decent homespun;
-while farther back are grouped the more youthful
-members of the party&mdash;broad-shouldered young
-fellows and merry-eyed lasses, excited a little
-by the somewhat infectious inspiration of the
-occasion. Everything in the humble apartment
-is as clean as housewifely care can make it;
-not a speck is to be seen on the brown stones
-of the floor, and above the black shining chimney-piece
-the brass candlesticks glitter like gold.
-On the snowy dresser, below the well-filled
-plate-rack, is piled in profusion the substantial
-fare which will do duty later on. Meanwhile,
-on the white deal table in the middle of the
-room is set only the well-worn family Bible.</p>
-
-<p>The minister, with a kindly word, has shaken
-the hand of the somewhat embarrassed bridegroom,
-and stands now, inquiring pleasantly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-after granny’s eyesight, by the fire. There is
-a pause of expectancy, a hurried messenger
-or two pass between the rooms, and then the
-bride, a handsome young woman of twenty-two
-or so, is brought in by her mother from “ben
-the hoose,” as the only other apartment is called.
-With a look of happy pride at the object of his
-affection, the bridegroom takes his place by her
-side at the farther end of the table, and the
-minister, glancing round to see that all is ready,
-opens the Bible.</p>
-
-<p>After a brief but earnest prayer, and the
-reading of a short passage of Scripture, the
-good old man addresses them in a few solemn
-yet kindly words. They are taking the most
-serious step in life; let them look to Heaven
-for a blessing upon it. The future may bring
-them prosperity; let them see that it does not
-cool their affection. It may also have trials
-in store for them; let these be lightened
-by being shared between them. Above all, let
-them remember to be open-hearted to one
-another. Then he asks if they are willing
-to be wedded “for better or for worse,” bids
-them join hands, engages in another most
-momentous prayer, and finally declaring them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-man and wife, with the solemn injunction,
-“Whom God has joined together, let no man
-put asunder,” ends the short ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately there is a great stir, shaking of
-hands with the bridegroom, and kissing of the
-bride; the gallant “best man,” somehow, unwarrantably
-extending the salutation to the
-blushing bridesmaid. The mother sheds a few
-quiet tears, and granny, by the fire, wakens up
-to speak of her own wedding day.</p>
-
-<p>But the proper papers have been signed, and
-the minister, followed to the door by the overflowing
-thanks of the little family, and refusing
-all offers of escort, leaves the homely company
-to its enjoyment&mdash;for the dance will be kept up
-till a late hour in the morning. The night air
-is bracing, after the warmth inside, and, as the
-sky has cleared a little by this time, the pathway
-back through the woods will be better seen
-by the silvery sparkle of the frosty stars.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">212</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_30">LOCH LOMOND ICE-BOUND.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">There</span> could hardly be a greater contrast
-than that between the fog-laden atmosphere
-of Queen Street Station, Glasgow, on a winter
-morning, and the frosty, bracing air of the country
-outside. Ever since the train emerged from the
-murky gloom of the long city tunnel into the
-open freedom of the frost-covered fields, the sense
-of exhilaration has been increasing. Sounds of
-laughter from the compartments before and behind
-bespeak the high spirits of the occupants; while
-at every roadside station along the Clyde valley
-fresh parties of pleasure-seekers, their cheeks red
-and eyes bright with the cold, have added to the
-freight, and swelled the merriment. The ice on
-Loch Lomond is “bearing,” and the clash of
-skates is in the air.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly at last the train, crammed by this time
-with skaters of both sexes and all ages, pants
-into the station at Balloch Pier. Before it has
-stopped, the doors of the carriages swing open,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-and an eager crowd swarms out upon the platform.
-The throng chokes the stairway down the face of
-the pier, so many impatiently hasten back to the
-shore; there is a scramble over a wire fence, a
-stampede across a well-trodden stubble-field to the
-loch, and then the stream of enthusiasts disperses
-in all directions to don the necessary foot-gear.</p>
-
-<p>Different indeed is the scene now from what it
-was in summer! Then the clear water glistened
-and twinkled in the sunshine, the white sail of a
-boat slowly moved across the dark green of a
-distant island, and the mountains beyond rose,
-purple and grey, into a fleckless sky; while one
-of the little loch steamers at the pier blew clouds
-of steam noisily from its funnel, as it took on
-board its gay crowd of tourists. Now no lapse
-of water is to be heard upon the pebbles, not a
-whisper moves among the frosted fretwork of the
-trees. The landscape everywhere is draped and
-lifeless, the loch itself lies a level sheet of snow,
-and far up yonder, above the dark narrows where
-the waters are still unfrozen, Ben Lomond raises
-his shoulder, ermine-clad, into a darkling heaven.
-The twin steamers, too, lie prisoned in the ice,
-crusted white, and motionless as Lot’s wife.</p>
-
-<p>If Nature herself, however, is crystallised into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-silence and stillness, there is both movement and
-sound of another sort about. Here at a run
-over the field to the ice comes a schoolboy, as
-eager as if the whole day were not before him, his
-wooden skates clashing together as he stumbles
-on the molehills. Farther off a young man and
-a maiden are transacting in orthodox fashion the
-idyll of the ice, she seated on what has ordinarily
-been a mooring post, and holding out a dainty
-boot, while he, kneeling devotedly in the snow,
-buckles on her skate. All along the shore, on
-every hillock that affords a seat, are groups of
-eager enthusiasts, busy with straps and buckles;
-and the shrill whirring sound of the ice tells
-that many of the new-comers are already moving
-over it.</p>
-
-<p>But the last refractory screw-nut is adjusted&mdash;Mercury
-has buckled on his wings; and yonder,
-two miles away, lies Inch Murren. Each winter,
-when the loch is frozen, the first person who
-crosses on foot to the island receives a pair of
-deer antlers as a trophy; and often, before the
-ice is very strong, the efforts of some bold skater
-to win the honours are exciting enough. Since
-the trophy was won this year,<a id="FNanchor_C" href="#Footnote_C" class="fnanchor">C</a> however, thousands
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">215</a></span>of pleasure-seekers have crossed the loch; venders
-of hot coffee and biscuits have established themselves
-on the shore of the island, under the ruined
-keep; and a rink of curlers has taken possession
-of the little bay. Where the deer came down to
-drink in summer, there mingles now the crackling
-roar of heavy stones hurled along the ice, with
-shrieks of vulgar laughter as some conspicuous
-skater comes to grief. The cries of the curlers
-themselves are loud and puzzling enough. At
-the near end of the rink the leader, a stout,
-grizzled countryman, shouts with many explanatory
-gestures to the player at the far end to
-“Tak’ a wick aff the fore stane, and lie in front
-to gaird.” The person addressed, evidently a
-clergyman (for on the ice social distinctions are
-forgotten), sends his cheese-shaped block of
-granite “birling” towards his instructor, and, as
-it comes along, the cries of the players stationed
-on either side of the rink with brushes to “soup
-her up,” and their vigorous efforts to smooth the
-path before it, are exciting as well as amusing,
-until the stone comes crashing in at last among
-the others round the mark.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_C" href="#FNanchor_C" class="fnanchor">C</a> 1882, I think.</p></div>
-
-<p>The “roaring game” is perhaps more interesting
-to the player than to the onlooker, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">216</a></span>
-the enthusiasm it excites, and the exertion it
-requires, are exactly suited to the season, and
-prepare its votaries to enjoy most heartily the
-traditional “curler’s dinner” of corned beef and
-greens.</p>
-
-<p>One soon grows tired of the noise and stir
-around this oasis of the ice. Indeed, the laughter
-and the movement seem almost sacrilege in a
-place where so lately the autumn leaves dropped
-silently into the clear brown water below, where
-the plash of a trout made stillness felt, and the
-solitude was unbroken by the step of man. Away,
-then, from the coffee-stands and the curling-rink,
-from the shouting of the shinty-players, and the
-fragrance of intolerable cigarettes! The loch is
-frozen all the way to Luss; last night’s wind
-has swept every particle of snow from the surface;
-and to the little loch village, out of sight
-in the bay ahead, stretch seven miles of ice,
-smooth as black glass.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_216" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;"><img src="images/i_253.jpg" width="600" height="535" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>Easily as thought the skates curl over the
-keen ice. The air is clear, cold, and bracing,
-with just a faint odour of the shore woods
-upon it; and curve after curve on the “outside
-edge” adds, every moment, to the exhilarating
-sense of power and the conscious poetry of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-motion. It is a new and strange sensation,
-this flight for miles over ice whose surface has
-till now known no invasion. One feels as an
-astronomer must, when exploring new depths of
-<span class="locked">Heaven&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Or like stout Cortez, when, with eagle eyes,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">He stared at the Pacific&mdash;and all his men<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Looked at each other with a wild surmise&mdash;<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Silent, upon a peak in Darien.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">Lonely and far stretches the level realm of ice
-away northward to the dark narrows of the loch,
-where, under the steep dark sides of the mountains,
-the water is too deep to freeze. To terrible
-tragedy have the black depths under foot been
-witness. Here it was that Sir James Colquhoun,
-returning from a hunting party on one of the
-islands, in his boat, deep-laden with deer, was
-caught by a sudden squall on the loch and
-drowned, and it was long before the hidden
-depths gave up their prey. For the waters that
-lie motionless now in their icy prison are given
-to rise and rage at a moment’s warning; and
-many are the fair pleasure freights they have
-swallowed. Across these waters, too, in the days
-when might was right, and the Highlands lived
-by helping themselves, have not the boats of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-the Red Macgregor swept down by night from
-the narrows to pillage and burn? For the Rob
-Roy country lies opposite among the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>But away! away! this is the joyous motion
-of a bird, and the miles fly under foot without
-effort. It is seven miles from Balloch; and the
-fatigue of the distance has been trifling. A point
-of land, covered with trees, runs out into the
-loch, and a mile beyond lies Luss. Another
-turn, and a little bay is discovered, most like,
-in all the world, a miniature scene from fairy-land.
-The glassy ice sleeps on the crusted shore;
-birch and beech and hazel hang motionless around,
-a delicate tracery of snow; not a squirrel moves;
-the silence is perfect. The spot is under the spell
-of the Frost King. Not altogether, though, for
-a robin flutters down with a twitter from a shaken
-spray, and, proud of his scarlet breast, hops bravely
-out upon the ice.</p>
-
-<p>At hand, however, appears the chimney of the
-inn, and&mdash;inspiring sight!&mdash;there is smoke rising
-from it. The air of the loch is appetising, and,
-as it is now almost five o’clock, something more
-solid than a sandwich seems desirable. Unbuckle
-the skates, therefore, and, following the windings
-of that narrow loch-side road among the trees, let<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-us awaken the hospitality of mine host. It will
-be dark before we start for home; but the sky
-is clear, there will be a full moon, and, under
-the scintillations of the frosty stars, it will be a
-merry party that skims back over the ice by
-night to Balloch.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">220</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_31">HALLOWMAS EVE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“The</span> good old customs of the country are
-passing away.”</p>
-
-<p>No speech, perhaps, is oftener heard than this
-when, over the walnuts and the wine, about
-Christmas time or Hallowe’en, the talk has
-turned upon the subject of old-fashioned festivities.
-And the sentiment seldom fails to evoke a sigh
-of regret, and to awake recollections of frolic
-mirth enjoyed in lighter-hearted days. But while
-there is, without doubt, truth in the remark,
-happily it is not altogether true. The portly
-old gentleman who animadverts upon the subject
-is generally too apt to take for granted that,
-because for some decades he has ceased to share
-in these festal sports, the sports themselves have
-ceased to be observed. If, however, the speaker
-were to return upon such a night as All Hallow’s
-Eve to the village where perchance his youthful
-years were passed, he might find that the
-quaint and merry customs he laments do not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-altogether belong to the golden dust of long-forgotten
-days. Though he himself has grown
-older and graver, the great heart of the world
-has remained ever young; and ever still, as the
-traditional occasions come round, there breaks
-forth amid its long-accustomed scenes the ancient
-madcap carnival of mirth.</p>
-
-<p>Not, indeed, quite as in bygone times is this
-festival of Hallowe’en now observed. The witches
-no longer, as in days of yore, are believed to
-hold their revels then upon the green-sward,
-and something of the ancient superstition which
-otherwise lent awe to the eve of All Saints’
-Day has been dispelled by modern education.
-But enough remains of uncanny feeling to lend
-interest to the more mysterious proceedings of
-the night; and the spirit of simple enjoyment
-may be trusted to keep alive for its own sake
-most of the mirth-giving functions of the feast.
-An institution which took its origin probably
-from some strange rite of far-back pagan times,
-which has managed to survive countless changes
-of thought, and, like a rolling snowball, to
-incorporate in itself traces of the Crusades, of
-the mediæval church mysteries or miracle plays,
-and of later witchcraft and elfin superstitions,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-must have a strong hold somewhere upon human
-nature, and is not likely to disappear quite at
-once even before the blast of the steam-engine
-and the roll of the printing-press.</p>
-
-<p>If one wishes to know how lads and lasses
-spent their Hallowe’en in Ayrshire a hundred
-years ago, he has but to read the famous description
-of the occasion written by the glowing
-peasant-pen of Burns; and cold indeed must
-be his imagination if he does not catch from
-that description something of the frolic spirit of
-the night. In these lines he may hear the timid
-lasses “skirl” as their sweethearts surprise them
-pulling the fateful corn-stalks; he may watch
-Jamie Fleck secretly sowing his handful of
-hemp-seed, and waiting for the image of his
-destined true-love to appear behind him in the
-act of harrowing it; he may see Meg in the
-empty barn, winnowing her “wechts o’ naething,”
-and likewise waiting for her true-love’s presentment;
-and he may laugh at the mishap befalling
-the wanton widow as she dips her left sleeve
-in the rivulet at the meeting of three lairds’
-lands. But one must not think that these time-honoured
-rites are all unpractised now.</p>
-
-<p>Let him step into some great farm-kitchen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-of the Lothians, with its red fire roaring up
-the chimney, its plate-racks gleaming on the
-walls, and dressers, tables, and chairs clean as
-scrubbing can make them, and he will find in
-practice bits of traditional folklore and traits of
-human nature equally worthy of the poet’s pen.</p>
-
-<p>The place for the moment is empty, the lamps
-shining from their bright tin sconces on the
-walls upon unoccupied wooden settles and chairs;
-for lads and lasses together have betaken themselves
-to pull each his particular prophetic stock
-in the kailyard at hand. But presently, with
-shouts of laughter, they come streaming in from
-the darkness; and shrieks of merriment greet
-the discovery of the fortune which has befallen
-individual members of the company. For,
-according as the stock lighted on in the dark
-turns out to be straight or crooked, and its
-taste sweet or bitter, so the appearance and
-disposition of its possessor’s future mate will
-be; and according as earth has clung to the
-uptorn root or not will the pockets of the future
-pair be well filled or the reverse. A merry party
-these men and maidens make, bringing in with
-them, as they enter, a breeze of the cool night
-air, and a breath of the sweet, fresh-smelling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-earth. And from the flaming cheeks and
-sparkling eyes of at least one of the laughing
-girls, it is to be doubted that she has met outside
-with somewhat warmer and more certain
-assurance of the personality of her future
-partner in life than is likely to be afforded by
-her stock of curly kail.</p>
-
-<p>Another method of divination, however, presently
-engrosses all attention indoors. Three
-bowls are set out on the hearth&mdash;one full of
-clean water, one muddy, and the remaining
-vessel empty. One after another each lad and
-lass is blindfolded, the position of the bowls is
-changed in thimble-rigging fashion, and he or she
-is led forward and invited to place a hand in
-one. According as the dish chosen proves dirty,
-clean, or empty, will the inquirer of the Fates
-marry a widow or a maid, or remain a bachelor;
-and shrieks of merriment are occasioned by
-the appropriate mishaps which befall the most
-confident.</p>
-
-<p>Then there is the burning of nuts to be done
-in the great kitchen-fire&mdash;a method of discovering
-whether the future wedded state is to be one of
-peace or discord. And it is amusing to see the
-quietest of the maids drop two nuts side by side<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-into a red corner of the coal, blushing at the
-guesses made by her merry companions, but
-shyly whispering to herself, “This is Patey and
-this is me,” and watching with bashful eagerness
-as the two take fire together. Puff! Alas for her
-hopes, poor child! “Patey” has shot away from
-her side; and the hot tears are woefully near her
-eyes as she notices that he has settled down to
-burn by the nut of her neighbour. May her
-sorrows, sweet lass, never have darker cause than
-this imaginary presage of losing a fickle lover!</p>
-
-<p>And now, by way of supper, a mighty platter
-of “champed” potatoes is placed upon the table&mdash;a
-pile mountain high, in which are hidden
-somewhere a ring, a sixpence, a thimble, and a
-button. The lamps are put out, each person is
-armed with a spoon, and in the uncertain light
-of the glowing fire the mystic procession moves
-round the table in single file. Each one as he
-passes the platter takes a spoonful of potatoes,
-and he or she who finds the ring is fated to be
-first married. The sixpence is an augury of
-wealth, and the finding of the thimble or the
-button is, according to the sex of the finder, an
-indication that he or she will marry a maiden
-spouse or will die single.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">226</a></span>
-But, listen! There is a sudden loud knocking
-at the door. It heralds the time-honoured visitation
-of the Guizards, a ceremony annually renewed
-by each succeeding generation of village boys.
-In they stalk, got up in grotesque improvisations
-of mumming costume, each armed with a
-wooden sword, and carrying a ghostly lantern
-hollowed out of a giant turnip. “Here comes
-in Galoshin,” as that individual himself informs
-the company&mdash;being doubtless the traditional
-representative of some forgotten Templar Knight;
-and presently he is engaged in a sanguinary hand-to-hand
-encounter with another wooden-sworded
-champion upon the floor. Many are the bold
-words that are said and the doughty deeds that
-are done; and through the whole performance
-one may see, as Scott remarked in a note to
-“Marmion,” traces of the ancient monkish plays
-and the revels of the mediæval Lord of Misrule.
-At the end the players are contented with a reward
-of apples and nuts, and a share in their elders’
-merriment.</p>
-
-<p>Tubs full of water are placed on the floor, and
-dozens of red-cheeked apples set swimming in
-them; and immediately a wild scene of revel
-ensues, as all and sundry, men and maids, on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-their knees, seek to snatch the floating apples
-with their teeth. Many an unexpected ducking
-is got, and shrieks of laughter greet each mishap
-and each ineffectual effort to secure a prize.
-Then there is a wild game of blind man’s buff,
-led off by Galoshin himself, who turns out, now
-that his burnt cork and whiskers have been
-washed off, to be one of the younger men of
-the house, and the soul of all the fun. And
-from the sly fashion in which he avoids other
-quarry, and keeps hemming one rosy little maid
-into corners, compelling her to spring shrieking
-over settles and chairs, it may be gathered that
-the knowing fellow is no more blinded than he
-wishes himself to be.</p>
-
-<p>And so the night goes on, a night of whole-hearted
-and innocent mirth&mdash;enough to prove
-that the spirit of old-fashioned revelry is by no
-means dead, and that, for at least one night
-in the year, the young blood of Lowland and
-Lothian still can make as much and as joyous
-merriment as ever did its progenitors a hundred
-years ago.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">228</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_32">HOGMANAY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Conspicuous</span> among the folk-customs
-which, north of the Tweed, have survived
-from the remotest antiquity, remains that of
-welcoming with wassail and good wishes the
-birth of the New Year. To all appearance a
-pagan custom, dating from the pre-Christian
-past, it probably owes its permanence to instincts
-acquired amid the superstitions of the Dark Ages.
-Of late years, it is true, under the influence of
-southern fashion, the festival of Christmas has
-seemed to be superseding that of New Year’s
-Eve. But, as with many other picturesque and
-interesting customs of Scotland, the older observance
-remains yet deeply rooted in the heart of
-the people, and, having already survived so many
-changes of habit and creed, may be expected to
-outlive even this latest inroad.</p>
-
-<p>There is much to be said, too, for the keeping
-of Hogmanay. Christmas, indeed, is the commemoration
-of a great religious event, and even<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-in the North it appears interesting and appropriate
-enough as a Church festival; while to those with
-whom its observance has been a national and
-family custom it contains, of course, an ample
-significance. But to people who have inherited
-the instinct with their blood, the end of the year
-remains a more fitting time for recalling the
-deeds and the days that are past; and the
-keeping of Hogmanay awakens, north of the
-Border, a subtle train of early feelings and
-associations&mdash;the pensive charm and sweetness
-of “auld lang syne.” Scarcely a dwelling is
-there, cottage or hall, in the breadth of all broad
-Scotland, which has not, time out of mind, on this
-night of the year witnessed some observance of
-the ancient and pleasant festival. Alike under
-gilded ceilings and roofs of thatch there is to
-be heard then the toasting of old memories and
-the pledging of health and fortune to the house
-and its occupants throughout the dawning year.
-About every village cross, too, as the last moments
-of the year approach, the young men of the
-neighbourhood have ever been wont to gather to
-greet the incoming day with shouts of rejoicing
-and with the curious traditional custom of “first-footing.”
-Even in the cities, where contact with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-the world tends greatly to obliterate such folk-customs,
-it is curious to see the ancient festival
-year after year assert itself, its observance the
-better assured, probably, because it brings back
-to those who attend it the scenes and memories
-of earlier, and, perhaps, happier days.</p>
-
-<p>Ever with the same details the time-honoured
-proceeding may be witnessed on the night of
-any 31st day of December at the Cross of the
-ancient city of St Mungo.</p>
-
-<p>Some time before midnight the roar of the
-day’s traffic has died out of the streets. The
-great warehouses are closed, and their windows
-gaze, like sightless eyes, into the deserted
-thoroughfares. To one imbued with the spirit
-of the hour, it is as if the city herself were
-thinking of the past; and the sudden sweep of
-wind that comes and dies away seems a sigh of
-regret for her departed glories. Many memories
-cluster about this ancient heart of Glasgow; and
-at such an hour, and upon such a night, it would
-seem little more than natural if the historic figures
-of the past should move again abroad. Strangely
-enough, too, the creatures of imagination present
-a no less tangible presence to the mind’s eye
-than the real persons of bygone days. Behind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-the tall, limping figure of Sir Walter Scott, a
-curious visitor here, the equally immortal Bailie
-picks his steps; and as the bold Rob Roy strides
-past into the shadow, there is heard the tramp
-of Cromwell’s bodyguard and the clatter of the
-Regent Moray’s cavalry. For it was out by
-the Gallowgate here, and across the river by the
-Briggate, that the troops of the Protestant lords
-marched in 1568 to the battle of Langside; and
-at the head of Saltmarket the Protector Cromwell
-quartered himself in 1650, issued his orders, and
-held levees. In the Gallowgate yet, though sore
-transformed from its ancient glory, stands that
-once-famous inn, the Saracen’s Head, at which
-the learned Dr Johnson put up while passing
-through Glasgow on his Hebridean tour. Close
-by the Cross, where the street lamps shine on
-the shuttered windows of a great east-end warehouse,
-stood the town-house of the Earls of
-Lennox; and past it, up the gentle hill, and
-still wearing something of its old-world look,
-bends the High Street with its memories. Out of
-sight up there the façade of the venerable College,
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">alma mater</i> of Campbell the poet, Smollett the
-novelist, Archbishop Tait, and a host of great
-divines, was wont for over four hundred years<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">232</a></span>
-to frown upon the pavement. The Vandal, however,
-has at last prevailed against it. A few
-paces farther and the gigantic form of Sir William
-Wallace still seems to slaughter his enemies at
-the Bell o’ the Brae. And beyond all, on the
-slope of the hollow where the classic Molendinar
-once flowed, surrounded in the darkness by its
-city of the dead, stands the grey cathedral of
-St Kentigern.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_232" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.625em;"><img src="images/i_271.jpg" width="426" height="600" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>The spot itself, however, has indeed changed
-with time, and but few links are left it to recall
-bygone days. The loud tramp of Dundee’s
-dragoons long since died away in Rottenrow.
-No longer do the rustling gowns of bishop and
-dean sweep through the cathedral choir. Even
-the house from which the ill-fated Lord Darnley,
-sick to death, was carried to the lonely Kirk o’
-Fields three hundred years ago, has disappeared.
-Cavalier and Covenanter and Virginia merchant
-have given place to the petty trader and the
-artizan. The house at the foot of Glassford
-Street, where Prince Charlie put up in the ’45,
-has been pulled down; and of the walls which
-witnessed the rejoicing bonfires of the Whig
-burgesses after the news of Culloden, few are
-left but those of the dim cathedral. Even the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-Saltmarket at hand has been so altered of late
-years, that if worthy Bailie Nicol Jarvie were to
-step out again on the causeway he would find
-no trace at all of the narrow, ill-paved, unlighted
-lane of his day, with its high, rickety houses,
-and creaking shop-signs.</p>
-
-<p>Rather must the city pride herself now upon
-her glories of the present. Far off, upon the
-great Clyde artery at Govan, where the nets of
-the salmon-fishers once hung in the sun to dry,
-the noise of a myriad hammers has just ceased
-for the holiday, and the iron skeletons of a
-hundred ships stand silent in the darkness&mdash;spectres
-not of the past but of the future.
-Overhead, between the high house-roofs, the
-heaven is very dark, and above the lanterns of
-the clock the Tron steeple is hidden from sight;
-but one side of the neighbouring tower&mdash;that of
-the ancient Tolbooth in High Street&mdash;reflects the
-red glare, from a mile away, of the iron furnaces
-at Hutchesontown&mdash;those undying vestal fires of
-the nineteenth century; and the golden vane
-upon the spire shines, strangely lit, alone in the
-dark heaven. Significant indications, these, of
-the strong modern life that throbs in the veins
-of the ancient city.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-But the great gilt hand of the clock overhead
-is approaching midnight, and along the streets,
-from the four points of the compass, comes the
-sound of innumerable hastening feet. It is the
-crowd gathering to observe this immemorial
-ceremony of “bringing in the year.”</p>
-
-<p>Few of the revellers, probably, reflect upon
-the antiquity of the custom they are observing;
-if they did, it might, perhaps, lend the proceeding
-a deeper interest in their eyes. To survive so
-many vicissitudes of history, the rite must once
-have possessed a solemn religious meaning. On
-the bank of the river below, the rough Norse
-rover has shouted “Wæs hael” to Thor; on
-the crest of the hill above, the Roman warrior
-has poured libations to Jove. Bishops of a
-feudal church within the storied cathedral walls
-have said the mass of Christ; and the spires
-of many a Presbyterian kirk now rise round
-the ancient Cross. But through all changes,
-through the ebb and flow of Faith and Fear,
-has come down the relic of an older worship,
-and in the mistletoe and the New-Year mysteries
-the Druid lives among us still. These people
-are gathering now, as for ages their race has
-gathered, to bid farewell to the old year and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-welcome to the new, and to pour their mystic
-sacrifice to Time&mdash;not, indeed, as of old, upon
-the unconscious earth nor within the stone circle
-of a rude astronomy, but at least under the
-open sky, and with something of the ancient
-wish-rites of the runes.</p>
-
-<p>Hundreds in number they come, and over all
-the open space&mdash;at corners where in the daytime
-knots of loafers are for ever to be seen, as
-well as on the Trongate pavement, where, all
-day long, recruiting sergeants, splendid in red
-and gold, pace magnificently to and fro&mdash;in
-little groups they wait the stroke of twelve.
-Each man has brought with him a bottle, and
-in each man’s pocket there is hidden a glass,
-one that has seen service and lost its stem being
-the popular variety.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly enough the final seconds of the year
-run out. The hand of the great clock reaches
-and touches the hour. At last it strikes, a
-single bell&mdash;one, two, three&mdash;a bold sound in
-the silence; and immediately it is answered by
-a bewildering clangour from all the city belfries.
-Before the last stroke has died away, a wild
-cheer bursts from the throat of the waiting
-crowd below. There is a great commotion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-among the little groups; and, as cheer after
-cheer rings up into the sky, from the belfry
-overhead the city chimes ring out upon the
-night their welcome to the New Year.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile everyone is drinking the health of
-everyone else, Celt and Saxon, countryman and
-citizen; and as no one can pass an acquaintance
-without hospitality offered and taken, and as,
-moreover, the dew of Ben Nevis is somewhat
-potent, the shaking of hands and wishing of good
-luck soon become fairly exuberant. Presently,
-however, everyone sets off to first-foot his
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>The origin of this ceremony it is difficult to
-suggest, unless it be to represent some priestly
-visitation, a sacrament assuring to the people
-throughout the coming year the blessings of food
-and drink. A door-to-door proceeding, at anyrate,
-it is&mdash;accompanied by much eating of cake
-and drinking of whisky, and it will last well into
-the morning hours. Lucky, for this performance,
-are accounted those dark of skin. If the first-footer
-be fair the tradition runs that it bodes
-ill-fortune for the year to the house whose
-threshold he or she has crossed; and often
-enough a door is shut in the face of such a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-friend, simply because of his complexion. Moreover,
-the visitor must not come empty-handed;
-and so the bottle and broken wine-glass which
-each carries serve as a double introduction.</p>
-
-<p>And now all who sat up till the city bells
-struck twelve, as well in the crowded tenements
-here as in the far-off suburbs of the rich, have
-wished each other a good New Year, and are
-retiring to rest. Among them, doubtless, there
-are many thoughts of sadness. Many a widow
-was a wife last year; many a ruined home was
-prosperous; many a soiled heart still was pure.
-But the old year, with its sorrow, has passed
-away in the night, and with the New Year’s
-dawn a glimmer of hope comes in at the darkest
-casement.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller">
-<i>Printed by</i> <span class="smcap">M’Farlane &amp; Erskine</span>, <i>Edinburgh</i>.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak p1"><a id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.</p>
-
-<p>Text uses “humble-bees”, not “bumble-bees”.</p>
-
-<p>Page <a href="#Page_170">170</a>: “he iss a fine lad” was printed with two s’s.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-</pre>
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