Many races have left their mark on Arran, have spilt their blood
to hold it, have left their romances behind upon its hill-tops
and its shores to redeem it from the commercialism of our time.
The men of the Stone Age, of the Bronze period, the early Keltic
period, did each some little to emancipate it from barbarism,
till the splendid Dalriadic colonists came and finally broke its
chains, making it partaker for a time of the noblest
civilisation the world has yet known. But alas! its very wealth
brought the Norse sea-rover who destroyed all, all but the
righting, clannish instinct of the "Kelt" which was to overcome
the Northman in the end, so that not one fragment of all his
conquests should remain to him. Of course, it is always more
easy to destroy than to create, and so a rough hammer may
shatter the Portland vase, a rough sword the monastery of Iona,
and all the promise of good that lay in Dalriada.
Arran was
at that time no wilderness; it was only six miles distant from
the capital of a race who had been Christians for some 500
years, and whose blood it undoubtedly shared: a race who were
skilled in the arts as their forbears in Ireland had been for
centuries, and possessed some of the learning and the refinement
which had made Ireland famous, and attracted to her shores
scholars from every nation. The immense difference between them
and the Norse intruders is curiously illustrated in the
following passage from Mr. Henderson's Norse Influence on Celtic
Scotland—"The kindly temperament of King Brian of Munster,
heightened by his belief probably, was noticeable to the Saga
writer, and I may adduce it as a parallel to the softening
influence which contact with the West men sooner or later
produced in the fierce followers of Odin. 'He (Brian),' says
the Saga, 'was the best-natured of all kings; thrice would he
forgive all outlaws the same offence before he had them tried by
the law, and from this it will be seen what a king he must have
been.'"
KING ROBERT BRUCE
Arran is also
famous as the place where Robert Bruce sought shelter when in
hiding from the soldiers of Edward of England. Tradition has it
that to avoid his pursuers he moved about the island, sheltering
at one time in the famous King's Cave at Drumadoon, and at
another at the ancient prehistoric fort in beautiful Glen Cloy,
called Tor na' shian, or Mound of the Fairies, from which a view
is obtained of the whole of the glen. There, too, it is said,
when hunted by bloodhounds, he used to take exercise by wading
up and down the Glen Cloy burn at High Glen Cloy, where it runs
under the fine woods of Kilmichael, the home of the MacLouies or
Fullartons.
Whether or not the name of Glenrickard, which lies
above the grounds of Kilmichael, refers to the story of Bruce in
Glen Cloy, I cannot say, but the name seems to have no
connection with the word "Rickard," as the Ordnance Department
seem to have supposed. The pronunciation of a friend, who has
lived in the glen all his life of some sixty or more years, is "Glenreegart,"
a name derived probably from the Gaelic words glen and righ
andgart, which give us the glen of the king's sanctuary or
enclosure. The name may, of course, be of earlier origin than
the time of Bruce, and might have been acquired from some legend
invented to account for the great, twenty feet long, chambered
cairn in which were buried our remote forbears, chiefs, and
kings. It is now a children's plaything.
"Imperious Caesar, dead and turned to clay, Might stop a
hole to keep the wind away."
The site of the original
Kilmichael house was on the spot where Dr. Robertson-Fullarton
has erected his observatory, and the ruins of Kilmichael Church
were still visible a little to the north-east of this spot,
close to the Glen Cloy burn, in Pennant's time.
Arran has also
long been regarded as the scene of the exploits of Fion (Fune)
or Finn, and many place names tell of him and his followers, and
of Ossian and Malvina. Indeed, many persons have held that the
much disputed name, Arran, is from Ar Finn, the land of Finn,
while others state that it is from Ar rinn, or land of the
peaks; but the evidence seems insufficient to warrant a decided
judgment in favour of either of these theories. It is clear that
Fion and Ossian never had an existence in actual fact, but are
of purely mythological origin, like the great Gaelic legend in
which they figure; but so strong was the influence of the old
mythology in the West at one time, and so saturated were the
Arran people with the legends of the Feinne, that one is
inclined to favour the definition of Ar Finn. The name of the
hill Suidhe Feargus, in Glen Sannox, is that of Fion's son, and
its beautiful outline is well worthy of the great romance linked
with its name.
CROMWELL AND ARRAN
During the
wars of Charles I. the Hamiltons stood for the King, but Brodick
Castle was held at different times by both parties, and when the
Earl of Stafford was about to reduce the West of Scotland to
obedience, Argyll, with the Covenanters, took possession of
Brodick. In 1644 the Marquis was created Duke of Hamilton for
his services to Charles, but paid for his loyalty with his head
when the Parliament finally overthrew the King. The Dutch ships
were at that time hovering about the Outer Hebrides, and
Cromwell's government had fear of them seizing the islands. They
therefore garrisoned Brodick, and built the tower on the
north-east side. The islanders, however, were enraged at the
execution of their chief, and resented also the rough manners of
the soldiery, who insulted their wives and daughters. They
therefore set a trap for them when they were out foraging, and
after chasing them along the Corrie shore, caught them at Sannox,
and put them to the sword, the last being slain, according to
tradition, at the "Killing Stone," on the Sannox shore. The next
duke fought and died for Charles II. at Worcester, and with him
were present the islanders, together with the other Highland
clans. |