Amongst the many
beautiful features of our own romantic stream, a foremost place is due
to the stately group of islands which frets its spacious bosom, as it
mingles its brown waters with the blue of the all-encircling sea. We
have already taken a loving glance at the most important—the most
spacious of these insular children of the far-winding Clyde. Upon the
grizzly brow of Goatfell we have placed our triumphant heel, and drank
with swelling soul of Arran’s rude sublimity. We have also wandered with
an insatiate delight over the lovely breast of the gentler and more
feminine Bute, and gathered, as it were, into an imperfect posie the
sweeter flowers of land, and sea, and shore, which she presented to our
gaze. “The harvest of a quiet eye,” as Wordsworth would have said, has
been gleaned in these sister isles, and we now turn, with undiminished
zeal, to scan the juvenility of the Cluthean family. We have been in
love with the elder and bigger sisters, and every one knows that the
tender passion is apt to throw a charm even over the tiniest member of
the sacred household in which the lovely she has lived and moved and had
her being. It is with some such feeling that we turn from the wild
grandeur of Arran, and from the more chastened loveliness of Bute, to
cultivate an acquaintance with the twin Cumbraes, in which the choicest
features of both are discernibly blended as the lineaments of the parent
are in the mingled miniature of childhood.
Most of our readers are
doubtless aware, from personal observation, of the situation occupied by
the Cumbraes. They are probably ignorant, however, of their exact
geographical locality, and we therefore beg leave to inform them, that
they are "laid down,” or more properly are "upheaved,” in the 55th
degree of north latitude, by 4 deg. 55 min. of western longitude. They
are both included in the shire or county of Bute. This junction is only
in a civil or political sense, however, for, ecclesiastically, the two
islands are separated, the larger constituting the parish of Cumbrae,
while the lesser (in direct violation of all natural relationships has
been linked to the parish of West Kilbride in Ayrshire. The parochial
divisions of Scotland, indeed, are often sufficiently absurd. Portions
of parishes are disjoined in the most fantastic manner, and occasionally
considerable tract? of territory intervene between one section of a
parish and another. The Craig of Ailsa, for instance, belongs, not to
the nearest portion of the mainland, but to the parish of Dailly, which
is at least two miles from the nearest shore. Paddy’s milestone would,
in fact, have to wade or walk a distance of about seventeen miles if it
ever dreamed of going to its own parish church. The old brown Craig is
not likely, however, to go upon such a fool’s-errand, although, if we
may believe tradition (that prince of liars), it actually got itself
removed from the said parish of Dailly, and cast into the sea. The folk
of the parish, indeed, still point out a vast hollow in a certain hill,
from which Ailsa Craig was actually scooped out, it is said, by the
Devil, Sir Michael Scott, or some other potent maker of mischief. But we
are forgetting our friends, the bigger and the lesser Cumbraes. The name
of these islands has, of course, furnished a bone of contention to the
etymologists. One of these men of words holds that it is derived from an
ancient principality named Cumbria; another that it is from the Gaelic
term Cumbray, Cambray, or Cimbrae, signifying 44 a place of shelterwhile
a third is quite positive that it comes from a Celtic word denoting 44 a
bold cliffy coast Springing suddenly from the sea.” Both of the latter
derivations are possessed of a certain degree of descriptive truth, and
we must just leave it to the option of our readers which they will
choose. "Vich is the donkey, and vich is the lion?” says the inquisitive
urchin to the showman; “Vichever you please, my little dear,” replies
the bland exhibitor; and even so say we in reference to the etymology of
the Cumbraes.
The larger island is
about three miles and a-half in length, by about two miles on the
average in breadth. Its girth, following the various points and
indentations, is estimated at about eleven miles. The superficial area
is 5,100 square acres, of which only 3,000 are reckoned arable, although
there is a continual invasion of the moorlands and bogs going on under
the superintendence of the farmers. There are also about 150 acres under
timber, which is partly arranged in clumps and masses, and partly in
lengthened belts for the protection of the crops. The surface of the
island is beautifully undulated, the hills swelling at one point to a
height of nearly 500 feet. The principal range runs from north to south,
and extends at various elevations nearly the entire length of the
island. It is called the Shoughends, from a deep ravine, or shough, by
which it is intersected at a short distance to the north of Millport,
and which has a peculiarly wild and picturesque appearance. All the
other hills are connected, less or more, with this principal chain, and
diverge from it in various directions. The Big Cumbrae is about four
miles east of Bute, and nearly two miles west of Largs in Ayrshire. The
Little Cumbrae is situated to the south of the larger island, from which
it is separated by a channel of nearly a mile in width. It is about a
mile and a-half in length by nearly three-quarters in width. The
superficial extent of the island is estimated at about 700 acres, and it
rises in a series of trap steps, or gradations, to a height of nearly
600 feet. With the exception of a few unimportant patches, it consists
entirely of a wild and barren moorland, which has been from time
immemorial the haunt of rabbits and a few scattered sheep.
Having thus glanced at
the principal physical outlines of the Cumbraes, let us now take a brief
survey of their annals previously to landing on their shores and
spending a long autumnal day in wandering within their precincts. The
Cumbraes, however, have little or no history; the old chroniclers having
apparently reckoned them of too little consequence to engage their
attention. All that we know, indeed, of their past story consists of a
few incidental allusions in the public records of the “neighbouring
island” of Great Britain. At an early period the Cumbraes, along with
the Western Islands generally, were held by the Norwegian invaders.
Tradition still points out the site of a camp or fort which was held by
the rovers of the sea; and it is stated, on what authority we know not,
that the army of Haco celebrated mass on the larger Cumbrae before
embarking for the fatal field of Largs. The deity whom they worshipped,
however, was unpropitious, and few of those who shared in the ceremonial
rites of that day ever returned from the Scottish shore. The Hebrides,
and also the islands of the Clyde, were soon after formally ceded to the
Scots, and have ever since remained under their sway. Subsequently, the
Cumbraes were included in the extensive domains of the Stuart family,
who afterwards were elevated to the throne of these realms. It is on
record, at all events, that on the establishment of the principality of
Scotland, in favour of his eldest son, by Robert the Third, in 1404, the
lesser island was specially included in the grant. A century afterwards
there is an entry in the register of the privy seal which shows that the
little Cumbrae was considered a kind of royal preserve for game. The
passage, which is of date October 28, 1515, is as follows:—“Lettre to
Hew Erie of Eglintonne, makand him and his assignais keeparis,
oversearis, corre-karis, and suplearis of the Isle of Litill Comeray,
and the dere, cunyngis, and wild beasts being therein, quhill the kingis
perfite age of xv yere; because Robert Huntare of Huntarestonne,
forrestar of heritage of the said isle, is nocht of power to resist the
personis that waistis the aamyn, without gupplie and keep, etc. From
this time the Eglinton family would appear to have retained the island
in their own possession, and, for aught we know, they may have no better
title to it than the commission thus conferred upon them to watch the
royal game. Strange that the gamekeeper should thus, through the mere
lapse of time, become actual proprietor of the soil. We should really
like to see the title-deeds by which some of our great land proprietors
hold their estates. The larger Cumbrae, also, seems to have been a
recognized breeding-place for the hawks or falcons used by the Scottish
kings. In the minutes of the Privy Council, of date Feb. 2, 1609, it is
noted that Sir Wm. Stewart, Captain of Dumbartane Castle, complains that
Robt. Huntar of Huntarston, and Thomas Boyd, provost of Irwyn, had gone
to the isle of Comra, with convocation of the leidges, and tane away all
the hawks thereon. The lords of council therefore declare, ((that all
the hawks quhilk bred on ye said isle do propirly belong to the king,
and ocht to be furthcomand to his majestie; and that the capitane of
Dumbartane Castle intromit therewith yeirlie, and deliver the same to
his majestie; and discharges the said Robert Huntar and all otheris from
meddling thairwith.”
We know not what effect
this decree had upon the breeding of the hawks, but now-a-days they are
not at all common on the island. The Robert Huntar alluded to, however,
seems to have been fruitful exceedingly; for, at the present day, the
name is perhaps the most common in the Cumbraes. The island was
afterwards divided into a number of small baronies, and several of these
were held by families of the name of Hunter. Latterly, by fair means or
foul, these little baronies have been all swamped, and the large Cumbrae
now belongs entirely to two titled proprietors, the Earl of Glasgow and
the Marquis of Bute. About two-thirds are in the possession of the
former, while the remainder is in the hands of the juvenile lord of
Mountstuart. The small lairds of Bute and of Cumbrae are now, with an
exception or two, among the things that were.
But we are now about to
make our personal descent upon these lovely little isles, and must
therefore invite thee, gentle reader, to step with us on board the “
Lady Kelbume,” and pursue with us our way adown the Frith.
We have just passed Largs,
and are rapidly steaming along shore towards Fairlie. The afternoon is
dull, cheerless, and dripping. October has thrown his dark and dreary
wing over the earth, and,
“In the scowl of heaven,
each face
Grows black as we are speaking.”
There is a gloom that can
positively be felt on the bosom of the Frith; and as we gaze over its
leaping infinitude of undulations, our mind becomes painfully oppressed
with shadowy recollections of direst maritime disaster; of ships that
went to sea and “ne’er were heard of more" and of lonely sailors
buffeted by storm and rain upon the hungry billows, or clinging to the
cold and plashy rocks until the watery death had seized them in its
chill embrace. The very sea-birds have a weird and ominous aspect as
they sweep past us in the haze; and the distant ships, amidst the rainy
waste of waves, loom ghastly as the shadows of coming evil. How
different from the sunny expanse of the Frith when last we ploughed the
bright blue of its autumnal watersI Then all was radiant, and joyous,
and beautiful as a summer dream, but “the wind and the rain” have
brought about a sad change; and, in the gloom which surrounds us, the
eye of fancy recognizes the gloaming of that wintry night into which the
aged year is fast descending. The landward features of the passing scene
(between Largs and Fairlie) are equally depressing in their influences.
There are weeping clouds along the ridges of the hills which, at a short
distance flank the river, clouds among the Kelbume woods, and clouds in
the adjacent glen, which seems in consequence half-filled with snow. We
can see, however, as we pass, the marshalled sylvans of Kelburne
arranged in dim lines and squares, in hoary phalanxes and battalions,
upon the green sloping braes, and around the old baronial mansion. Like
a vast host of shadowy warriors they seem to stand, awaiting the coming
foe. Among them, here and there—appearing and disappearing amidst the
dark masses, with each successive gust—are those vague and misty forms
in which the inspired eye of Ossian saw the spirits of the mighty dead.
As we have not the second sight, however, we can only take them for
simple films of cloud. White streaks of more determinate character also
scar the heights at intervals, and indicate the channels down which the
high-born torrents are dinsomely flowing. We cannot hear their voices,
nor can we see their flow for distance, which, as Wordsworth says,
freezes the stream to the eye, can also rob it of its music. So we pass
along the frowning shore as we would pass a picture u seen through a
glass darkly,” unto the sweet little village of Fairlie, with its neat
villas, its pleasant gardens, and, above all, its grim old castle, which
dwells apart upon the bosom of the hill, and seems to look with dim,
lack-lustre eye upon the upstart edifices below. Of course it looks
doubly gruff on such an evening as this; and, while we gaze upon it, our
friend, Alexander Smith’s sonnet to Inversnaid Castle, comes floating
through the mind, and we find ourselves repeating the lines—
“’Bove me I saw, at
pointing of my friend,
An old fort, like a ghost upon the hill,
Stare in blank misery through the blinding rain,
So human-like it seemed in its despair—
So stunned with grief; long gazed at it we twain.
Weary and damp, we reached our poor abode;
I, warmly seated in the chimney nook.
Still saw that old fort, o’er the moorland road,
Stare through the rain with strange, woe-wilder’d look.”
This old structure
belonged to an ancient Ayrshire family, named Fairlie, in whose
possession it# remained until the beginning of the eighteenth century,
when, with the adjacent lands, it passed by purchase into the hands of
the Earl of Glasgow, whose descendant is the present proprietor.
The larger Cumbrae lies
quite parallel to the course along •which we have just been passing, and
at Fairlie the Lady Kelbume turns her prow athwart the channel, and
steers in a transverse direction towards the bay of Millport. This
spacious indentation is situated at the south-west end of the island,
and in a brief space our steamer makes her way within its ample jaws,
and avoiding certain small islets by which its capacious mouth is
fretted, is soon safely moored to the pier, and discharging her
passengers to the lusty music of the roaring funnel. By this time the
gloaming is thickening into night, the red lights are brightening in the
windows of the town, and through the still pouring rain we hasten to the
hospitable domicile of a friend, where a warm welcome, a blazing fire,
and a comfortable cup of tea soon make us forget the dreariness and the
discomfort without. After a few hours of crack, and tale, and auld world
reminiscence, we take an outward glance before bed-time, to see if the
skies afford any hope of a bright to-morrow. The rain in the meantime
has passed away, the winds have fallen low, and through a bright,
unclouded atmosphere the stars are twinkling with as brilliant a
radiance as if the fair face of heaven had never known a frown. It seems
to be with the stars as with the eyes of youth—they are always brightest
after a fit of weeping. The bat also is abroad—an excellent
prognostication; and while we skirt the rippled sands, and listen to the
faint vespers of ocean upon the beach, the little aerial hunter of the
gloom darts merrily around our heads, and we are reminded of a quaint
address to the creature, written by Hew Ainslie, a lyric poet whom
Scotland might well have been proud to retain on her shores, but who has
long been an exile in the far West. The composition, which must be as
good as new to the majority of our readers, appeared in a strange book
called A Pilgrimage to the Land of Burns, which was published in
Edinburgh before Mr. Ainslie had crossed the “saut sea faem.” Let us
repeat it to that little creature who is now so merrily playing between
us and the stars as we tread “these yellow sands:”—
“Thou queer sort o’ bird,
or thou beast—
I’m a brute if I ken whilk’s thy title—
Whaur Rang ye when morning comes east?
Or whaur get ye water or rittie?
“Thom bait lang been a
ferlie to me,
An* a droll ane as e'er I inspeckit;
How Is Nature deliver'd o’ thee?
I say, thing, art thou kittl’t or cleckit?
“By my banes, it looks
rlcht like a lee
For to say that without e*er a feather
A creature should offer to flee
On twa or three inches o’ leather!
“The sangster wha says
thou art sweet,
Or roozes thy fashion or featness,
Maim be blin’ as the soles o’ his feet.
Or ha’e unco queer notions o’ neatness!
“Tet at e’en, when the
flower had it’s flll
O’ the dew, an’ was gather’d thegither—
Lying down on it*s leu safe and still,
Like a babe on the breast o’ its mither—
“Then we aft ha’e
forgather'd, I trow,
When my back ’gainst the birk-bush was leaning
As my e'e raked the heaven’s deep blue,
In search o' the sweet star o’ e’enin’,
“For its glint tauld my
ain kindly Kate
That her laddie was down in the plantin’;
Sae I lo’ed thee as ane lo’es the freet
That proffers the weather he’s wantin’."
Ay, there was a genuine
dash of the quaint old Scottish muse in Hew Ainslie, and we are blythe
to hear that the world has gone well with him in the land of his
adoption. But “ to bed, to bed, to bed!” and may the morrow awake on a
couch of streaky gold!
Taking time by the
forelock, we are up and stirring at an early hour. The morning is none
of the brightest, but it promises to “rax up” as the day advances.
Ascending a range of heights to the westward, which are partly covered
with hedgerows, pasture fields, and copsewood, wo have a fine bird’s-eye
view of the town and the surrounding scenery. Millport forms a kind of
semicircle along the margin of a large bay, which is bounded on either
side by a bold promontory, terminating in both instances in a flat
continuation to the Crater lerel. This capacious inlet, at its inner
extremity, is subdivided—-or, we might say, notched— into several
smaller indentations, the easternmost of which is called Kames Bay, and
is flanked by a beautiful sandy beach. The village consists principally
of one irregular line of two-storeyed edifices:—neat, but plain—which
extends along the shore, with occasional breaks and interruptions, for a
distance altogether of about a mile. There is also a small street or two
branching off from the main crescent or row, and a considerable number
of detached cottages and villas are situated on the gentle slopes which
rise immediately behind the town, and which command a most pleasing view
of the bay and the scenery beyond. Nearly all the houses indeed overlook
the water, and every window almost may be said to be enriched with
glimpses of beauty by sea and shore, which might well rejoice the eye of
the most fastidious spectator, and furnish a study of loveliness over
which the landscape limner would hang with never-ceasing delight. Near
the western extremity of the village is a neat and commodious
pier—erected by a subscription, to which the late Marquis of Bute
contributed handsomely, besides giving a free gift of the site. At low
water there is about six feet of depth here, which is increased, when
the tide is full, to about fourteen feet. This structure affords
abundant accommodation to steamers and the ordinary vessels which
frequent the locality. There is also good ground for anchoring at a
short distance to the east, which is sheltered by two small islets named
the “ Allens.” To these natural breakwaters there are iron bolts or
rings affixed for securing the cables of vessels at anchor. Once in the
rear of the sheltering “Allens,” the storm-tossed bark may bid a bold
defiance to the wildest equinoctial that Boreas ever blew. Besides these
little islands of refuge, there are three other rocky projections from
the waters of the bay, which are respectively named the Spoig, the Luac,
and the Clach. These are rather incumbrances to the navigation than
otherwise, and their company could be, p therefore, very well dispensed
with. A few years ago, this group of fairy isles was the haunt of a
certain species of bird, which, from its cry, was locally known as the
Pyrr. The frequent passage of steamers and the general increase of
boating on the bay, has frightened them all away of late, and it is said
they have now emigrated en masse to the more solitary shores of the
Little Cumbrae.
The principal
architectural features of Millport are the Parish Church, a plain
edifice with a handsome quadrangular tower, which is situated on the
brae-face immediately above the pier, and has an imposing appearance
from the water; the Priory, an elegant structure, which is now the
residence of the Hon. Mr. Boyle, and which is pleasantly seated on a
green terrace about the centre of the village, and the Episcopal
College, a beautiful Gothic erection of recent origin, which rises in a
commanding position (adjacent to the Priory), and which contributes
materially to the picturesque aspect of the locality. There are several
other places of worship in the village, but none of them have the least
pretensions to architectural elegance. Among these are a Free Church and
a Baptist Meeting-house. There are also several schools in Millport, a
public library, and a post-office, so that the residents would appear to
be well supplied with the materials of religious, educational, and
literary study, in addition to the advantages of beautiful scenery,
fresh air, and retirement from the bustle and din of city life. Millport
is, indeed, a pleasant place in which to dwell, and we do not wonder
that ever as summer comes round it is filled to overflowing with
migrants from less happy scenes, in search of health, or
health-inspiring recreation.
Our readers are well
aware that we have a sad penchant for “meditation among the tombs,” and
that we seldom leave a locality without paying our respects to the “rude
forefathers of the hamlet,” among the green mounds wherein they have
taken up their silent abodes. We accordingly wend our way to the
sequestered kirkyard of Cumbrae, which lies about a quarter of a mile to
the northward of the village. It is a large square enclosure, surrounded
by a wall, and overlooked by a comfortable looking manse, which stands
modestly apart amongst its gardens and trees. We know this edifice to be
the manse, not only from its cosie aspect (and most of the manses we
have seen are the veriest pictures of comfort), but from a little
incident which occurred a goodly number of years ago, when we last
visited the spot. With a companion we had made oilr way into the field
of graves, not by the gate, which was securely locked, but by a “ slap
in the dike,” and were pensively sauntering among the grassy
undulations, and spelling, as best we might, through their crusts of
moss and lichen, the simple legends of the dead. In the midst of our
solemn musings upon departed mortality we were startled by a shrill
voice from the vicinity of the manse, exclaiming, “Gentlemen, gentlemen,
wull ye speak a word?” Approaching the source of the disturbance, we saw
a pretty girl peeping over the wall, and blushing most lustily as she
met our gaze. “Beg your pardon, gentlemen,” she continued, as we drew
near, “but I’m the minister’s servant, and the minister has sent me out
to gi’e you his compliments, and to tell you that you maunna gang aboot
there on ony account, tramplin’ the gerse; for the gerse is his
property, and the coo ’ill no eat it if it’s tramplit doon that gate.”
We were of course rather taken aback at this ungracious message from the
holy man; but as we were not prepared, with all our reverence for the
church, to acknowledge the exclusive right of the minister's cow to
pasturage on the rank herbage of decaying mortality* our companion, who
was somewhat nettled, at once, and with great suavity, replied, “My
bonnie lassie, gang your wa’s back, and gi’e your most reverend master
my compliments in return, and tell him frae me that we’ll leave the
kirkyard when it suits our own convenience, and not one moment sooner.
Tell the good man, also, that if he has onything mair to say, thathe
shoulfl by all means come with his ain message} for, upon my word, I wad
really gi’e something to see the man’s face who not only taks his milk
and butter frae the sap o’ dead men’s banes, but has the unfeeling
assurance thus to interrupt the solemnizing studies of his brother
worms.” The poor girl, who was evidently ashamed of be* mission, turned
with a hanging head towards the manse, and we pursued our researches
among the tombs. We heard no more of his reverence. “ I’m thinkin’,”
says our companion, as we turned frpm the spot, “Mess John has got an
instructive flee in his lug this morning, and muckle gude may he get
frae its lesson.”
On the present occasion
we And the gate of the kirkyard open, and no one comes to say “ what
doest thou?” while we are lingering within its dreary precincts. There
is little of a remarkable nature in the literature of the Cumbrae
burying-ground. “ He was born and he died,” is the commonplace, but by
no means unaflecting, burden of the tale indicated by the majority of
the silent stones. There is one tablet, however, of rather more than the
ordinary degree of interest. It is placed over the grave of an eccentric
minister, and bears the following inscription, which is understood to be
from his own pen
Erected in Memory of
REV. JAMES ADAM,
Late Minister in Cumbray,
Born in the Tear 1748;
Licensed in 1778;
Ordained in 1799;
Died in June, 1881.
Fidelis moralis et
innnptus,
Side natis, sine curls,
Vixit obiit et snrgit.
Tho’
Here on a cold, damp bed he lies,
Without a friend to close his eyes,
Wrapt in his usual unsocial pride,
Indifferent to all the world beside.
Seid quid fu.it est yel erit
Magnus dies declarabit
Feeling somewhat curious
to know if anything was remembered in the village of this self-styled
misanthrope, we instituted an inquiry on the subject on our return. The
result of our investigation is briefly as follows:—"Ay,” says one
informant, “he was a queer yin the auld minister, but weel likit for a’
that. He was never married, but leev’d in the manse wi’ a housekeeper,
and farmed his ain glebe. I aflen mind, when a callant, o’ seem’ him
chasm’ like mad the bits o’ laddies wha cam* frae the toon to steal his
turnips. A capital hand he was on the farm himsel' tae, and could ha’e
kempit on a hairst rig wi’ the best o’ them. He was ance, as Tve heard
tell, ower in Ayrshire aboot the shearin’ time, and no bein’ like a
minister ava\ a band o’ shearers began to gi’e him some afflakin’ jaw.
He said they needna craw sae cruse, for he could beat ony o’ them himsel’
at the heuk. A wager was the consequence, and Mess John cuist his coat,
and set to wark against the best man in the core. At the close o’ the
day the minister was far ahead. ‘ Didn’t I tell you,* quo’ he, ‘what wad
be the upshot? and noo, if there’s ony o’ ye that wad Kke a bit wrastle,
I wadna care to try some o’ ye a bit fa’.’ Ane o’ the gang thocht he wad
try, and in twa minutes the minister had the fallow on the breed o’ his
back. Ay, he was a droll ane, aald Mr Adam. In the pulpit, though, he
was aye counted a geyan timber hand, and strange folk (gude forgie us!)
cam whiles to hear him, as it were, for fun like. Ae Sabbath mornin’,
for instance, ane o’ your big professors in Glasgow cam a’ the way frae
Largs, wi’ some o’ his lang-headed cronies, to hear the queer Cumbrae
minister, and dootless thinkin’ to hae a bit laugh in their ain sleeve
ower his hameart style o’ preachin’. Mr Adam was at prayer when the wise
men frae the east cam into the kirk, but he aye pray’d, honest man, wi’
his een open (watchin’, ye ken, is whiles as gude as prayin’), and the
moment they cam in he kent them, and jaloosin there was something in the
wind, he made up his mind what he wad dae to get the better o’ them. Wi’
the utmost gravity he concluded wi’ his 'Amen,’ and at ance, addressing
the congregation, he said —^My beloved brethren, I have just observed
that the great and learned Professor So-and-So (I really dinna mind his
naoie), has favoured us this day wi* his presence, and as it's no often
we hae sic an opportunity o’ heatin' the Word expounded T>y a Maister in
Israel, I feel bound to vacate my puklpit 3n his favour.’ So saying, Mr.
Adam forthwith left the rostrum, and although the Professor made ever so
many wry faces and tryt to evade the request, he had even to tak’ the
book and haud forth as best he micht. His cronies, I’m tauld, could
hardly conteen themselves to see how nicely he wfes trickit, and it was
a sair hair in his neck for mony a day. Ay, he was a queer chiel our
auld minister, and mony a gude hotshin’ lauch he used to tak' to himsel’
at the way he had diddled the great professor. There’s a heap o’ ither
stories about Mr. Adam, if I could only mind them; but my memory’s no
worth a preen sin* I had that fever o’ the cauld at the hinend o’ last
winter. Ye’ll hae heard, though, that he aye used to pray in the first
place for the twa Cumbraes, ahd then for the neighbouring islands o’
Great Britain and Ireland. Ay, ay, sir, he had his ain bits o’ tantrums
and funny gates; but, decent man, he was weel likit, as I hae said, in
spite o’ them a’, and he is noo whare the Lord will.” Another individual
informed us that Mr. Adam, notwithstanding his assumption of “unsocial
pride,” was at bottom a generous-hearted man. In proof of this, he
mentioned the facts that he had left at his death a sum of money to
assist in the education of poor children belonging to the parish; that
he had given £250 to the Presbytery of Irvine for behoof of deserving
widows; and that he had established three bursaries in the University of
Glasgow by the bequest of £1100. So much for the self-styled misanthrope
of the Cumbrae kirkyard. It is not often, certes, that epitaphs fall
short of the truth, but the specimen alluded to has surely not
overstepped the line of strict verity.
The most magnificent, if
not the most useful of Millport institutions, however, is unquestionably
the Episcopal College. It attracts at once the attention of every
visitor to the locality; and, on closer inspection, excites the
admiration of every one who has the slightest pretensions to
architectural taste. The people of the village seem never to weary of
talking about this strange seat of learning, and are full of marvellous
tales about the vast sums expended on its erection and decoration. When
questions are asked about its purposes and tendencies, however, the
interrogator is generally answered with a knowing shake of the head, and
a cautious, "Weel I’m no sae sure about that; but they say it’s a kind
o’ half-way house atween Oxford and the hizzie that sits pn the seven
hills.” With that enlightened curiosity to which our readers are so much
indebted, we resolve, if possible, to have a peep for ourselves at the
sacred structure. Accordingly, when the matin chimes are inviting the
faithful to prayers (which they do every morning), we repair to the
chapel of the College. The grounds are extensive and beautifully laid
out in lawns, terraces, and parterres, which are adorned with the
choicest shrubs and flowers. Everywhere there are evidences of the most
correct taste. The walks are neatly trimmed; the lawtis as carefully
shaven as the beard of an exquisite, while the borders are perfect
models of floricultural skill. On a gentle elevation overlooking the
town and bay, and commanding a noble prospect beyond, are the collegiate
buildings. They are of the purest Gothic; every characteristic feature
being as strictly embodied in the design as if the salvation of the
artist depended on the perfection of his work. Everything is on a small
scale, however, and the effect upon our mind is rather the delight which
a pretty model might produce, than the solemnizing influences which do
hedge about the grand old piles of other years. But the bell has ceased,
and we must enter the sacred edifice. Within, there is a perfect picture
in miniature of the mediaeval chapel. We have the stained glass windows
“casting a dim religious light,” the tesselated floor, the naked oaken
beams above, the altar with all the prescribed accessories, crucifixes
of gold, and of stone, of various fashions, with we know not what all
besides. It is, in fact, quite a little gem of a chapel. The
congregation on this occasion consists of some half-dozen of females,
two men besides ourselves, and a boy. The officiating party consists of
two clergymen and two stout fellows who make the responses. They are all
dad in surplices, variously figured, and of unimpeachable purity,
producing a most pleasing effect upon the eye. We could almost fancy
ourselves, indeed, gazing on a fragment of the Middle Ages. In the
chanting which succeeds we can observe that the harmony of the several
voices has been carefully studied. The entire service occupies
half-an-hour. We cannot say that it impresses us in a special manner;
and, indeed, if truth must be told, we several tunes detect our
attention wandering out at the open door to marie the flowers which are
nodding in the sunshine, or to listen to the liquid chant of a redbreast
among the adjacent leaves, who actually seems to invite us—the heretical
rogue!—to join in his morning hymn in preference to that which is being
chanted within the pale of the church. Of course we instantly recall our
vagrant fancies until the service is concluded, when, with a clear
conscience, we mingle for a brief space with the worshippers under the
vast blue dome. After walking round the structure and again admiring its
fair proportions, particularly those of the spire, which is a perfect
study of elegance, we take our leave of the hallowed grounds, and return
once more to the every-day world.
We have referred to the
gloom of October, but October has its days of glory as well as its days
of gloom. It is indeed, “take it for all in all,” the most splendid of
the months, with its rich woodland robes, its oft-recurring rainbows,
and its gloamings of purple and gold.
TO OCTOBER.
Gorgeous are thy woods,
October
lad In glowhig mantles sear;
Brightest tints or beauty blending,
Like the west when day’s descending,
Thou’rt the sunset of the year.
Beanteous are thy row’n
trees, gloving
With their beads of coral dye;
Beauteous are thy wlldrose boshes,
Where the hip in ripeness blushes,
Like a mala whose lover’s nigh.
Sweet to see thy dark eves
peeping
From the tangled blackthorn bough
Sweet thy elder s pnrple fruitage,
Clustering o’er the woodland cottage;
Sweet thy hawthorn’s crimson glow.
Fading flowers are thine,
October!
Droopeth sad the sweet bine belL
Gone the blossoms April cherish’d—
Violet, lily, rose, all perish'd—
Fragrance fled from field and deli
Songless are thy woods,
October!
Save when redbreast’s mournful lay
Through the calm gray morn is swelling,
To the list’ning echoes telling
Tales of darkness and decay.
Saddest sounds are thine,
October!
Music of the falling leaf;
O'er the pensive spirit stealing,
To its inmost depths revealing—
“Thus ail gladness sinks in griet”
I do love thee, drear
October!
More than budding, blooming sprtag
Hers is hope, delusive smiling,
Trusting hearts to grief beguiliftjg;
Memory loves thy dusky wing.
Joyous hearts may love the
summer,
Bright with sunshine, song, and flower;
But the heart whose hopes are blighted.
In the gloom of woe benighted,
Better loves thy kindred bower,
'Twas in thee, thou sad
October!
Death laid low my bosom-flower,
Life hath been a wintry river,
O'er whose ripple gladness never
Gleameth brightly since that hour.
Hearts would fain be with
their treasure,
Mine is shimbTing in the day;
Wandering here alone, uncheery,
Deem t not strange this heart should wear
For its own October day.
It is true the weather of
old October is fickle as that of hit sweet young aster April. He also
has his tears and his smiles, his gusts and his gleams, following each
other in rapid succession, and bidding defiance to anything like
consistency. Like a wayward and a grim old carle he is everything by
turns and nothing long. In April, however, we have the sweet shifting
moods of a playful girl, radiant with hope, and love, and joy, busking
herself with leaves, and buds, and opening flowers; and, midst her very
weepings, smiling the little birds into cheerfulness and song. To hail
her presence the lark soars high above the half-brairded furrow, while
the cuckoo and the swallow, to do her homage, come hastening over the
sea. The very bat leaves his wintry den to flit through her genial eves,
and the woodmouse peeps out from his moss-hidden cave, and chirps a
faint welcome to the mother of primrose and violet. Alike only in the
attribute of change, how different are the accessories and the
influences of October! “Mine ancient” is moody, and even his smiles have
a dash of divinest melancholy. He is prone, moreover, to saddest
memories, and there is ever a dreary suggestiveness of coming winter in
his weather-beaten face. At his approach
“Heavily hangs the
hollyhock,
Heavily hangs the tiger lily.’'
The old fellow has
“fallen into the sear and the yellow leaf,” and every passing wind robs
him of his treasure. His ear was never gladdened by the cuckoo’s joyous
call; and the swallow, sweet summer's harbinger, flies from his presence
as in fear. Back to their crevices and their subterranean cells he sends
the sleepers of the stormy season. According to our boyish creed,
“The bat, the bee, the
butterfly.
The cuckoo, and the swallow/*
betake themselves to
their long slumbers at the stern behest of October. What a testy old
churl it is, to be sure, thus to frighten away the pretty little
children of departed summer!
But, hush! why should we
grumble at the mission of October? It is all for the best; and see the
good old fellow is actually getting up a glorious day, as if for the
express purpose of showing us the Cumbrae coast to the greatest
advantage! The sun has mastered the thin blue haze of morning, and the
ripple of the bay is tinged with living gold. As we pass round the
eastern shoulder of the spacious inlet, and reach the bold rocky
headland of Farland Point, we obtain a pleasant glimpse of the village
of Millport, with its white houses gleaming in the sunshine, and the
blue reek rising in curiing wreaths through the clear air of morning. To
quote with our habitual accuracy—
“Oh the sweet town of
Millport,
It shines where it stands;
And the more we gaze on it
The more our heart warms
and the more we think
that w their lines have indeed fallen in pleasant places who are so
happy as to call it their home. In the very embrace of its own swelling
hills it sleeps secure; and “of a’ the airts the wind can blaw,” only
one has the privilege of visiting its face unkindly. This visitation
even is a benefit, as the wide-spreading portal through which it comes
unfolds a prospect of land and sea which, even on our own beautiful
Frith, is but seldom equalled. This huge precipitous rock, however, with
its picturesque group of startled goats, hides the bay and the town and
the encircling hills at once from our gaze, and we betake ourselves to
our task of putting a girdle round the isle.
The shores of the larger
Cumbrae may be said to be literally iron-bound. On every side the island
is girt with irregular cliffs, varying in height, and occasionally
relaxing into slopes of a gentler character, but still preserving a
remarkable degree of continuity. This rocky wall is principally composed
of the old red sandstone, and bears evident marks of the action of
water, as if it had been for ages exposed to a fierce conflict with wind
and wave. The struggle, however, is now at an end. The surrounding
water, as if vanquished, has retired from its former letel, and the
cliffs alluded to stand high and dry; while a belt of level land,
containing deposits of sand and shells, intervenes between the base of
the precipice and the present sea margin. Along this natural terrace,
between the rocky wall and the deep sea, lies our devious route. There
is no road, however —not even so much as a legible footpath—eo that we
are enabled, in the course of our rugged walk, to form a pretty Correct
notion of what the Highland ways must have been before the Advent of the
ever-blessed General Wade. Now we are wading cautiously among fern and
bog myrtle, again we are breaking our shins over huge stones and
boulders, and anon we are ploutering in a morass, or zig-zagging in
speculative leaps from one tuft of rushes to another, in the vain hope
of escaping the luxury of wet feet. The effort is fruitless, however,
and we have soon the pleasure of feeling the insinuating fluid oozing
through the seams of our treacherous 44 brogues,” and diffusing a most
refreshing coolness over what a puny companion most villainously
denominated our 14 solar system.” And then just to think how easily a
splendid carriage drive could be formed abound this beautiful beach.
One-half the money, we’ll be bound, that was expended on yon practical
anachronism of a Puseyite college, would have done the entire work, and
conferred a real and lasting blessing on the island. The staking 6f a
road, or the building of a bridge, was reckoned, even in the Middle
Ages, as good a method of earning a passport to heaven as the erection
of a church; and as the Hon. Mr. Boyle has already gratified his
mediaeval partialities by performing the last mentioned good work, let
us hope that he may shortly purchase a double claim to favour up-stairs
by "mending his ways.”
Our course is now
interrupted by a curious geological formation called the "Fairies’
Dike.” This is a gigantic wall of dark crystalline trap, extending from
the sandstone diff we have previously mentioned towards the sea.
Originally it must have been upheaved in a molten state, penetrating the
sandstone like a huge wedge, and remaining imbedded in the
superincumbent rock. In process of time the sea, when at its former
level, has washed away the soft and friable sandstone over the entire
breadth of the level terrace we have mentioned, while the harder
substance of the trap, having almost entirely resisted its action,
remains comparatively intact. It is indeed a huge black wall of rock,
grim-looking and obdurate to the last degree, and presenting in a
horizontal direction the same columnar appearance as the basaltic
formations. The length of the dike, from its apparent termination
toward# the sea to it? junction with the adjacent hill, is 200 feet;
while its elevation at the highest point is said to be 70 feet. In
thickness it varies from 12 to 14 feet. The surface of this remarkable
phenomenon is partially covered with a dense mantle of ivy, and its
seams are fringed with a beautiful profusion of minute ferns and mosses,
while large lichen stains of various tints lend it an aspect which is
wild and somewhat weird in its effect. It might almost be taken, indeed*
for the shattered ruins of a vast wall “built by giant; hands,” and
struggling triumphantly with decay. A politic congregation of daws seem
to have taken up their residence among the ivied clefts and crevices;
and while we are examining) the structure, we can observe them eyeing us
suspiciously, a*id every now and again we hear them bursting put into a
dinsome and prolonged clamour. Relieving these dusky and somewhat
quaint-looking watchers of our unwelopme presence, we pursue our way,
and are presently startled by the appearance of a tremendous lion, or
rather we should say a sphinx, couching a few hundred yards before us on
the way we are going, and gazing towards the centre of the island, .
“With calm eternal eyes.”
The image is striking in
the extreme, and we do not wonder that, apart even from its interest in
a geological sense, it is reckoned one of the curiosities of the
locality. Gaunt, grim, and large, it cumbers the beach, and almost
creates a terror in that lonely place. The savans of Cumbrae call this
the “Deil’s Dike.” In material and formation it is entirely identical
with the trap wall we have just passed. It is less in its dimensions,
although immensely more picturesque. By our measurement it is about 100
feet in length by 40 in height, and from 10 to 12 in thickness. A pretty
considerable size for a lion truly! The material of the dike is more
shattered and disjaskit, if we may use a good Scotch word, than the
other wall, and thereby hangs a tale, which, if thou wilt seat thyself
with us, gentle reader, on the haunch of the lion king, we shall briefly
relate to thee.
Once upon a time, as the
story books have it, there were a race of beings in this country called
fairies. Little creatures they were, clad in green raiment, and wearing
quaint comical caps made of rushes from the bog. Invisible by day, they
sported in the glimpses of the moon, when they were sometimes seen by
belated travellers or shepherds who had to attend their flocks on the
lone hillside between the gloaming and the crowing of the cock. A colony
of these fairies had a settlement on the larger Cumbrae; and as the
members of it were naturally desirous of occasionally visiting their
friends on the mainland, it was agreed in their nocturnal parliament
that they should construct a bridge across the intervening channel for
the purpose of facilitating the communication. They accordingly set to
work, and the largest of the dikes we have mentioned was the result.
While the tiny builders, however, were busy at their architectural
labours, who should chance to come past one fine evening but an old
night-walking gentleman who is well known in Scotland by a great number
of aliases, such as—Auld Homie, Satan, Nick, and Clootie? On seeing what
was going on, the Knight of the Cloven Foot began to cheer the “good
people,” while a sneer of peculiar pungency played over his “reistit
phiz.” “Do you call that clumsy thing a bridge?” he tauntingly inquired,
and, without waiting for a reply, continued, “that it was no more like
the thing it aimed to be than a Presbyterian bam was to a Gothic
cathedral. If they wanted,” he said, “to see bridge-building, he would
show them an example,” and with his caudal appendage raised to its
utmost altitude, he came marching to the very spot where we are now
sitting, and casting off his coat, at once set to work. The fairies
clustered in clouds upon their own dike to see the progress of the
diabolical erection. Notwithstanding his alleged familiarity in “Masonic
Lodges,” however, the old enemy did not appear to be quite at home in
the practical use of the compass and square. His wall speedily began to
exhibit leeward tendencies (like a teetotaller over his first stolen
tumbler), and when the line was applied, it was found to be very far
indeed off the perpendicular; On observing this, a tiny but shrill
chorus of laughter burst from the fairy onlookers, which so enraged the
“Grand Master” that, without saying a word, he ^gave his workmanship an
indignant kick, and at once vanished like a gleam of summer lightning—
“A moment bright, then
lost for ever.”
Such is the popular myth
attached to these curious trap dikes, and if the visitor ventures to
express any doubts on the subject, his rustic cicerone will at once shut
his mouth by pointing out the very breach which was made by the hoof of
the mortified Deil.
About half a mile to the
north-west of the “Deil’s Dyke,” and on the farm of Billikellet, the
site of an ancient mansion is still pointed out, which was for several
centuries the residence of a family named Montgomery, to whom a large
portion of the island at one time belonged. The family has been long
extinct.; and of their once stately dwelling-place not one stone now
stands upon another. So recently as 1835, a remnant of the edifice
existed in a tolerably good state of repair; but it has since been
removed to make way for certain modern improvements. Amongst the last
links of the family was a Dame Margaret Montgomery, who, according to
tradition, lost her life by a kick from her horse on the green of Largs.
It appears the lady had been thrown from the back of the animal, and
that, trying to seize it again, she received a kick which instantly
deprived her of life. Her remains, there is reason to believe, were
deposited in the burial vault of the Skelmorley family, in the
churchyard of Largs. At all events, there is a carving in one of the
compartments of that august funereal pile representing a lady and a
furious steed, which is said to refer to the tragedy of the Dame
Margaret. Lord Glasgow is now possessor of the lands which of old
belonged to the Montgomerys of Billikellet.
Pursuing our way along
the shore, we have a beautiful prospect of the Ayrshire coast, with the
village and castle of Fairlie; the castle of Kelburne, with its dark
woody glen, and its finely timbered braes; the town of Largs, and the
green hills beyond, with the blue Frith heaving in many a crested wave
between, and stretching away into the haze of distance on either hand.
Landward, our view is “ cabined, cribbed, confined”—the precipitous
rocks sometimes approaching churlishly, as if they would fain shoulder
us into the water; at other times complacently retiring, as on set
purpose to leave us “ample scope and verge enough ” for our wildest
frolics. Now the margin of the sea is fretted with fantastic rocks,
wave-worn and honeycombed; again it is thickly strewn with boulders and
rough gravel, and huge bunches of tangle;. and anon it softens into a
smooth, sandy beach, where the surge curls over as in play, and gently
glides along with it£ glittering bells of foam until the last faint
breath of impulse dies away. Sea-urchins, and starfishes, and little
crabs are discovered as we pass along, and countless pretty shells, with
their curious molluscous tenants, either moving about in the restless
waters, or lying high and dry on the beach, like stranded mariners
waiting for the tide. What a profusion of life there is on the margin of
the great deep! What endless fields of study there are in its vegetable
and animal products! Every rock and every pool is a little world of
itself, in which the observant naturalist may read strange matters.
Every headland and every bay is as a book unfolded, wherein he that
rambles may read.
Passing Balloch Bay,
where a board of oysters may be procured at certain states of the tide,
and where a safe anchorage may be obtained in any wind; and leaving
behind us the ferry-house (now almost deserted by its former traffic), a
few minutes’ walk brings us to the north-east termination of the island,
which is locally known as “the Tomont End.” A spacious level terrace is
here environed by a wall of rugged and precipitous cliffs, forming, as
it were, a kind of natural amphitheatre. In this retired and really
picturesque spot, a green mound is still pointed out as the burial-place
of certain Norse warriors who fell at the battle of Largs. Another
undulation in the vicinity is popularly known as the u lady’s grave,”
and, according to tradition, is said to contain the ashes of a fair
Norwegian maid whose lover perished on the same fatal field. On
receiving the sad tidings, the faithful fair, according to use and wont
in the balladmongers’ world, at once fell sick and died of a broken
heart. If she had lived in our day, poor thing, a less romantic fate
would probably have been her lot. Hearts, now-a-days, are made of
sterner stuff, and we are, therefore, rather incredulous when we read
such fine pathetic finales as,—
“Yestreen ye died for my
sweet sake,
This nicht I’ll die for thine;
And she laid her doon a clay-cauld corp,
The last o’ a* her line.
“They buried him at ae
kirk neuk,
And her intill anither;
Bnt lang before the gray cock crawed,
The deid had crept thegither.” ,
But a tragedy of more
recent date, “an ower true tale,” is associated with the Tomont End. The
event is comme* morated by an elegant but plain obelisk, which has been
erected here on a gentle eminence overlooking the sea. The inscription
we copy as follows:—
“To the Memory
of
Mr. Chajm.es D. Cayley, aged 17 years, and
Mr. William N. Jewell, aged 19 years,
Midshipmen of H.M.S. Shearwater,
Two promising young officers drowned by the upsetting of their boat near
this place, 17th May, 1844;
This monument is erected in token of their worth by Captain Robinson and
Officers of the above-named vessel.”
The two lads had been
amusing themselves on the Frith one beautiful day in May, when a stiff
gale suddenly arose and drove them out of their course. Approaching this
point their boat was in danger of being dashed against the rocks. Making
every effort, however, to weather the headland, the little craft, with
her sails set, was seen at one fell swoop, to go right under water.
There was no assistance *at hand, and the sea was roaring white,—
“No human ear heard
William’s drowning cry.”
The melancholy occurrence
was observed, however, from the "Vulcan ” war steamer, which was lying
off Largs. As soon as the steam could be got up, she proceeded to the
spot, but by this time all was over. Not a vestige of the boat or of the
two young men could be discovered, save the caps which they had worn,
which were found floating upon the waves. One of their bodies, we
understand, was found some weeks afterwards; but the other awaits the
time when the sea shall give up its dead.
One would have thought
that such a memorial stone as this would have been safe from all injury
from human hands. We are sorry to say that the reverse is the case. Some
of those mischievous fools, who, in defiance of all decency, are
eternally scribbling their worthless names on trees and public edifices,
and especially on objects which are sacred to pure and elevating
emotion, have laid their unclean hands upon this solitriy and
unprotected monument. Not content with merely scratching their horrid
initials on the surface of the stone, several of them have had the
disgusting impudence actually to carve their names in full, and to a
considerable depth within the surface, as if they had actually brought
tools to the spot for the express purpose. Let us pillory one or two of
the most presumptuous. Foremost is a J. M‘Leish, of Perth, who dates his
crime in 1855. Then we have a Jas. Orr, and a W. Jack, and a host of
other nobodies, who prudently refrain from prating of their whereabouts,
and who fail to give us the Anno Domini of their misdeeds. We are only
sorry that the boatswain of the “ Shearwater” has not the privilege of
using these fellows—one and all—according to their deserts, and
administering to them the only argument in favour of better behaviour
they could possibly appreciate in the shape of a good round dozen.
We now turn the corner of
the island, and resume our walk along the north-western shora The
character of the coast in this direction is exactly similar to that on
the opposite side. We have the same range of cliffy heights, the same
level terrace intervening between their bases and the water, and the
same alternations of rock, and gravel, and sandy bay, along the
immediate margin of the sea. There is this difference,
however—everything is on a larger scale. The precipices are higher and
more rugged, the plain is more spacious and better adapted for culture,
and the bays are of greater extent; that is to say, excepting Millport
Bay, which is by far the finest and most commodious in the island.
Instead of the Ayrshire coast, we have now on the opposite side of the
channel the Isle of Bute, with the mansion and lawns of Mountstuart,
Kilchattan Bay, and the bold range of hills that terminates in the
Garriochhead. All round the Cumbrae, indeed, we have a series of
ever-shifting prospects, and each new scene seems to vie with the others
in the excellence of loveliness.
At a gentle little bay,
which rejoices in the name of Portrie, or the King’s Port, a tiny
streamlet steals down from the hills and athwart the sands in many a
playful link. Running waters are anything but numerous in the Cumbraes,
and as this one is cool and clear as crystal, we resolve to have our
mid-day pic-nic upon its banks. Our fare, as befits a rambler, is frugal
and wholesome, and the brambles of old October lend it a welcome and
most abundant addition. Who ever saw such blackboyds; so large, so
lustrous, and so profuse? We could actually gather a bushel in the
course of a few minutes. Then the bushes seem actually to strive with
each other which shall minister to our desires, and stretch out their
long, jagged arms, as if tempting us to partake. Like a dark eye in
woman is each glittering blob, and, then, the purple clusters of the
South could not to our palate be more delicious. What a picture our
party would make! Just fancy, gentle reader, a green and sunny link of
the bum, with a tiny waterfall in the background making a pleasing din.
Over our heads, a rowan-tree, with its red bunches gleaming in the sun,
hangs gracefully from a bank of tangled hazel, and fern, and brambles,
and rose* bushes blushing with scarlet berries. A pert wee robin, with
his bright black eyes and a bosom that wears the tint of the falling
leaf (as if the searing finger of autumn had been laid upon it to mark
the bird her own), sits perched upon a massy stump ayont the bum, and,
after an introductory bow or two, bursts sweetly into song. Our
companion is stretched upon the sward, while we, upon an old gray-lichened
stone, sit calm and dignified, leaning upon our pilgrim staff. At one
moment we are munching our bread and cheese, at another we are listening
to the singing bird; now we are paying our respects to the jetty
brambles, and anon, perhaps, we are vacantly musing upon the falling
lea£ Suddenly our companion presents his pocket-pistol, and we shrink
not from the charge. A teetotaller would have fainted at the dreadful
sight; but when, either in peace or in war, have we shown the white
feather? The contents of that little tube we can take without wincing,
and let the enemy say what he likes, without injury. The mystical words,
“Here’s to the Cumbraes and the neighbouring islands! ” are heard
resounding through the dell, and next moment there is an odour upon the
breeze which might well give new life to the fading flowers, and which
certainly seems to lend a deeper melody to the redbreast’s melting
strain.
And now, having disposed
of this little matter, we resume our walk with renovated vigour. It
needs not, however, that we linger by the way. Passing Fintry Bay—a
beautiful curve of yellow sand about three-quarters of a mile in length,
with fine natural terraces rising from it in gentle gradations,
exquisitely adapted for the site of a future watering-place—we hasten
round the isle, and arrive once more at Millport, just as our kindly
hostess has overcome the preliminaries of a comfortable dinner.
“Now bring to me a trig
wee boat
To breiat the waves o’ Clyde,
For I this day maun cleave the faem
To yon brown island’s side.
"Swith ower the dancing
tide we gang,
Swith ower the white and the blue,
A groat we'll win wi' ever a bark,
Less gleg than the wild sea-mew,”
Landing on the Little
Cumbrae, and mooring the boat to a huge water-worn boulder, we at once
proceed overland to the old castle. Our time is but a span, and we must
make the most of it. The surface of the island is wild and barren, as it
came from the hand of nature. The bracken is the predominant plant, and
at the present season, when it is seared and dun, it actually gives a
rusty tinge to the very hills. Over heighs and howes we push our right
onward way, pausing, however, every now and then, to watch the rabbits,
which are here in vast myriads, as they scud away through the fern on
our approach, with ears and fud erect, and with every symptom of a
pretty alarm. The castle is situated at the south-east end of the
island, immediately opposite Port-Crawford on the Ayrshire coast. From
their lengthened conflict with the wind and the rain, the walls have an
exceedingly weather-beaten aspect. At one period it must have been a
place of great strength, there being still some vestiges of a strong
rampart, with a fosse or ditch, and a drawbridge to be raised in time of
danger. Even the ruins have a stem and, withal, sturdy appearance, which
indicates a prolonged struggle with decay. In some places the walls are
upwards of seven feet in thickness. The structure is now roofless, and
the windows afford a free entrance to the storm. On the first floor
there is one chamber in a tolerable state of preservation. This was the
great hall and doubtless it has often rung with the pleasant din of
festivity and social merriment. Its dimensions are twenty-six feet by
fourteen and a-half. Underneath it is strongly arched, and altogether it
promises to retain its proportions entire for many years to come. The
stair by which it is entered, however, is somewhat dilapidated, and to
effect an entrance it requires a steady head and a firm foot. There is
nothing known regarding the origin of this tower, but it is supposed
that it was erected simultaneously with another edifice of the same kind
on the Ayrshire coast, immediately opposite, for the purpose of guarding
the entrance of the Clyde at a time when marauders were in the habit of
visiting our shores. It has almost no history. Occasionally it was a
residence of the Eglinton family; and in times of distress their fiends
were sometimes sent here to be out of harm’s way. Principal Baillie of
Glasgow having fled from the city on the approach of Cromwell, after the
battle of Dunbar, sought refuge here, and remained in the old keep for
several months. Whether in revenge for this or not, we cannot say, but
the tradition is that the castle was ultimately surprised by a party of
Cromwell’s troops, who burned the wood-work and otherwise damaged the
building. In the vicinity of the castle is the house of the tacksman,
with another cottage or two and a few patches of garden and other arable
ground. At a short distance from the castle also are the remains of an
ancient chapel, which was dedicated to St. Vey, and the spot where the
same saint is buried is still pointed out by the antiquary. This edifice
is supposed to have been a dependency of Icolumbkill in Iona.
Ascending a pretty steep
hill, we at length arrive at the summit of the island, which is said to
be about 400 feet above the level of the sea. At this point there is a
tower erected as a lighthouse in 1750. This was the second structure of
the kind which was ever built on the Scottish coast. It was lighted by a
coal fire placed in a huge grate, and in its time was reckoned a great
benefit to the shipping interests of the Clyde. From its lofty
situation, however, it had the disadvantage of being rendered invisible
in foggy weather, when its services were most wanted. This induced the
Commissioners to erect another lighthouse on the west side of the
island. The prospect from the summit of the old tower is one of the most
extensive and varied which it is possible to conceive.
Descending to the
lighthouse on the western shore, we are charmed with the neat and tidy
manner in which everything is kept. The tower, which is of a snowy
whiteness, was erected in place of an older and less convenient
structure in 1826. Its elevation is 115 feet above high-water mark, the
base being a rock of 80 feet in height, while the altitude of the
building is 36 feet. The lighting apparatus consists of 15 oil lamps,
respectively provided with a silver reflector, which each cost £60, and
which are admirably adapted for the diffusion of the light. At sea the
appearance of the light is that of a brilliant star, and in certain
states of the atmosphere it can be seen, it is said, at a distance of
nearly thirty miles. From the Toward lighthouse the Cumbrae one is
distant about ten miles, and from that at the Cloch sixteen miles. The
keeper’s house is a comfortable looking edifice, with a large and
tastefully kept garden around it. Everything, indeed, about the place is
in apple-pie order, and the effect which it produces on the visitor,
after he has traversed the bleak cliffs and dark mossy braes of the
primitive parts of the island, is beyond measure grateful and pleasing.
The sun is now touching
the western horizon, however, and amateur mariners as we are, we must
not be overtaken by darkness on the waters. We hurry, therefore, to our
tiny bark, which we find all right, in charge of the boulder. Getting
afloat, we ply the oars again with all our lustihood, and are soon
dancing in the red light which gloaming flings upon the Frith. It is
indeed a gorgeous evening. The west is suffused with a glow of crimson,
which is heightened in effect by vast streaks and masses of midnight
darkness, like the wing of the tiger-moth on a scale of celestial
magnitude. Dim and more dim it waxes as we proceed, and by the time we
have reached the quay, there is a greenish and a clay-cold pallor in the
sky which reminds us of the face of death. And thus it ever is—the blush
and the bloom pass away; and “Prithee, why so wan, fond lover?” is the
sad, the final question. Never mind: when the day goes to sleep the
stars are awaking; and see even now how beautifully the eye of Hesper is
beaming in the deepening blue. |