What a noble privilege
art thou, O Clyde! to the denizens of our vast and smoke-enveloped city.
To thee our stately Glasgow is indebted, in no limited measure, for its
greatness among the industrial and commercial centres of the land. Thou
art the channel through which Fortune has so lavishly poured her golden
favours amongst us—the outlet by means of which the produce of our
industries and skill is diffused unto the uttermost ends of the earth.
Thy ships have breasted the billows of every sea, thy merchandise has
enriched the children of every clime, and wheresoever the benign
influences of trade are appreciated, thy honoured name is familiar as a
household word. But it is not merely as the drudge of commerce that we
admire thee, sweet river of our boyhood! Thy beauty excelleth even thy
usefulness; and whether we trace thy many winding pathway towards thy
distant mountain source, or follow thee until thy brown waters are lost
in the blue of the vast Atlantic, we shall ever find thee arrayed in a
vesture of rarest loveliness. There is no “ crude surfeit ” in the
charms of Clydesdale. The upper, the middle, and the lower wards, into
which it is divided, are widely diversified in their landscape features,
presenting, in their infinite variety, an endless succession of charms
to the gaze of the observant wanderer. Well, indeed, might the poet
exclaim in reference to the Clyde,—
“Majestic Clutha! as a
princess moving,
From the pavilion of thy morning rest,
To where the Atlantic heaves with smile approving,
And folds his daughter to his ample breast,
Throned in the sunset, monarch of the west;—
On thee he pours the treasures of his reign,
And wreathes Columbia’s riches round thy crest
The Indies love thy name, and the long train
Of myriad isles that gem the azure main.”
How sweetly suggestive
are the simple words, “A day at the Coast!” Heard even amidst the living
currents of the ' city’s heart, walled in from nature by miles of stone
and lime, what a rush of sunny or shadowy memories they excite! Again
the gliding steamer is churning its watery way adown the Clyde, with its
freight of happy faces; again the noise and the bustle and the smoke of
twice ten thousand chimneys are left behind, and the fresh face of
nature reflects its freshness on our yearning spirits. Again the hills
seem hastening to the river-side, to greet us with their green crests of
foliage; again the stern old Castle-rock looms over the spreading frith,
and the blue ripple is dancing in light, and the snowy wing of the
sea-bird is flashing in the cloudless air. Under the wild gray hills
which girdle the horizon, we see again, “in the mind’s eye,” the
scattered towns and villages nestling in sheltered bays, and whitening
the sunny shores as if they were smiling a welcome to us from afar. Let
the magic phrase “A day at the Coast” be but whispered in our ear in the
bustling street or at the silent hearth, and immediately in fancy we are
ploughing once again the bosom of some mountain-shadowed lake, or
circling the shores of some isle of beauty, which gladdens with its
presence the glittering waste of waters. Once again we are strolling on
the foamy beach, threading the flickering mazes of the rustling woods,
lingering by the u howlet-haunted biggins” of other days, or climbing
some height which towers in proud command, and where, 44 sole monarch of
all we survey,” our senses are steeped in the sweetest influences of
nature’s loveliness. Twice blessed is the beautiful to him who scans it
with a loving eye. In the present it is a joy unspeakable, and from the
dimness of the past it sheddeth on the eye of memory a never-ceasing
lustre of gladness. In our Days at the Coast, gentle reader, if thou
wilt but vouchsafe us thy welcome companionship, we shall be thy guide
into many a lovely, many an impressive scene. We shall (so to speak)
circumnavigate with thee the glorious Frith into which our Clyde expands
ere it melts into the vasty deep; we shall familiarize thee with every
feature of our noble estuary, from Dumbarton to Goatfell; we shall
thread with thee its branching lochs, and linger with thee by its towns
and villages, its bays and creeks, its isles and promontories; and we
shall tell thee tales of this and many another day to cheer thee as we
go. Old chronicles shall be ransacked, and Tradition shall be made to
gossip, that thou mayest know the story of each time-honoured edifice,
and of every spot which is associated with the doings of the olden time.
We shall call thee to halt in thy onward course by castles old and gray,
in lone kirkyards, where, underneath the heaving sward, the rude
forefathers of the hamlet sleep, and in nooks of sweet or savage beauty,
which have been rendered sacred by the enchantments of the poet or the
painter’s art. As the seasons pass, we shall mark their silent marches
in the changes of leaf and flower, and our ears shall be open to the
pipings of the wilding birds, as with ever-varying strains they greet
the alternations of the year. In these our devious pilgrimages, doubt
not, congenial reader, that we shall, ere long, become even as familiar
and confidential friends. There is nothing like mutual communion with
Nature and her works for opening and expanding the affections. We shall
taste together of those elevating and refining influences which flowr
from pensive wanderings by wood and wild, and we shall inherit in common
a rich legacy of joyous memories. "Therefore,” to borrow from Wordsworth
when addressing his sister at Tintem Abbey,—
“Therefore, let the moon
Shine on thee In thy solitary walk;
And let the misty mountain winds be free
To blow against thee; and in after years,
When these wild ecstacies shall be matured
Into a sober pleasure; when thy mind
Shall be a mansion for all lovely forms,
Thy memory be as a dwelling-place
For all sweet sounds and harmonies—oh, then,
If solitude, or fear, or pain, or grief,
Should be my portion, with what healing thoughts
Of tender joy wilt thou remember me,
And these my exhortations! Nor, perchance,
If I should be where I no more can hear
Thy voice, nor catch from thy wild eyes these gleams
Of past existence, wilt thou then forget,
That on the banks of this delightful stream
We stood together; and that I, so long
A worshipper of Nature, hither came,
Unwearied in that service; rather say,
With warmer love, oh I with far deeper zeal
Of holier love.”
To resume the prosaic,
however, we may state that it is our intention, in the present volume,
to give a series of sketches, descriptive, historical, and traditional,
of the principal towns, villages, and watering-places, on the Frith of
Clyde; with delineations, drawn from personal observation, of the more
striking landscape features in the vicinity of the several localities.
Such, in brief, is the purpose of our Days at the Coast. In the
meantime, however, before proceeding with this our labour of love, we
shall take a kind of bird’s-eye glance at the origin and progress of our
river through its upper reaches.
The Clyde is a native, if
we may be allowed the expression, of what old Heron felicitously
denominates “ The Southern Highlands of Scotland.” Forming the boundary
of Lanarkshire to the south, and dividing it from the shire of Dumfries,
there is a scattered range of lofty mountains, consisting of the
Lowthers, Leadhills, and Queensberry Hill, with a chain of considerable
elevation connecting the latter with HeartfelL These are the feeders
which nurse the infant Clyde, and among which it first receives “a local
habitation and a name.” According to popular belief, the Clyde has its
source in the same hill from which, in different directions, issue the
original springs of the Tweed and the Annan. The idea is rather a pretty
one; but we suspect it may be said of the Clyde, as of many other
streams, that it is quite impossible to prove from what particular
source it takes its rise. Rodger-law, the accredited parent of the
river, is a hill about 1,400 feet above the level of the sea, and
situated about five miles eastward from the village of Elvanfoot, in the
parish of Crawford. The Clyde is here a rapid, frolicsome streamlet,
flowing through lonely pastoral moorlands, and receiving every here and
there a succession of foamy tributaries from the adjacent heights. The
most important of these is the Daer, which, according to some
authorities, is really the better entitled of the two streams to the
honour of originating our stately river. In the vicinity of Elvanfoot,
the Clyde receives the waters of the Elvan, and for some miles pursues a
highly eccentric course, turning in succession towards nearly all the
points in the compass, and running hither and thither at its own sweet
will, and with the most beautiful disregard of consistency. In the
course of a few miles it passes the lonely village of Crawford,
receiving the Camps and afterwards the Glen-gonar waters, and gradually
assuming a beautiful sylvan character, pursues a more leisurely and
sedate course. It now divides the parishes of Crawfordjohn and
Lamington, and sweeps away in a north-east direction for a distance of
eleven miles, during which it is successively increased by the Roberton
Bum and Garf Water on the west, and by the Wandel Bum, Heartside Bum,
Lamington Bum, and Cults Water on the east. Leaving Roberton, the Clyde
pursues a devious and far-winding course round the spurs of the Tinto
mountains, receiving by the way the contributions of the Medwin and
Douglas, the latter of which nearly doubles its volume. Approaching
Lanark, the Clyde finally turns towards the west, a direction which,
with partial and comparatively unimportant deviations, it continues to
maintain until it assumes the proportions of an estuary below Greenock.
Swelled by the
contributions alluded to, with those of countless other burns and rills
of lesser note which debouch into its channel as it twines along its
devious way, the Clyde has now become a large and beautiful river. After
entering Lanarkshire it flows with a scarcely perceptible motion through
a lengthened tract of level country, amidst verdant haughs and flowery
meadows, which, in spates, it frequently overflows. Lazily and slow it
draws near the upper fall, as if it were loath to take the leap. About
two miles and a-half above the town of Lanark, it reaches Bonnington
Linn, and, in a rock-divided stream, is plunged over a precipitous crag
from an elevation of thirty feet. This is reckoned the least beautiful
of the Falls. It really forms, however, a most picturesque and imposing
spectacle, and in any other locality would excite the warmest
admiration. A bridge has been constructed over the northern branch of
the river at this point, and the various glimpses which it commands of
the rugged channel and its tortured waters are exceedingly grand,
especially if seen, as we last gazed upon them, in the light of a
setting sun, and overhung with the brilliant tints of a miniature
rainbow. Roaring and foaming along its fretted path, the Clyde now
rushes with great rapidity through a narrow gully, the rocky sides of
which are from eighty to a hundred feet in perpendicular height. At one
point the stream is so compressed between its banks that an adventurous
leaper has been known to clear it at a bound. At a distance of about
half a mile below Bonnington, the second and finest of the Falls occurs.
This is the famous Corra Linn. The Clyde is here precipitated in three
distinct leaps over an acclivity of about eighty feet, between
overhanging banks of the wildest and most bosky character. On a
precipitous cliff on the southern side the cascade is overlooked by the
ancient castle of Corehouse, while on the northern bank the rock is
hollowed by a dreary cavern in which, according to tradition, Scotland’s
great hero, Sir William Wallace, at one period concealed himself from
the ken
of his Southern enemies.
The accessories of this most romantic cataract possess, therefore, the
combined charms of sentiment and wildest natural beauty. The poet and
the painter have ever delighted to do honour to Corra Linn; and probably
no other spot in “the north countrie” has figured more frequently in the
verse of the one or on the canvas of the other. Wordsworth commences a
beautiful efliision, which was “written in sight of Wallace’s Cave at
Corra Linn,” with the following lines:—
“Lord of the vale!
astounding flood!
The dullest leaf, in this thick wood,
Quakes—conscious of thy power;
The caves reply with hollow moan;
And vibrates to its central stone
Yon time-cemented tower.”
The author of “Clyde,” a
descriptive poem of the last century, waxes beyond measure magniloquent
in praise of Corra, Listen to the venerable bard:—
“Where ancient Corehouse
hangs above the stream,
And far beneath the tumbling surges gleam,
Engulfed In crags the fretting river raves,
Chafed into foam, resound his tortured waves;
With giddy head we view the dreadful deep,
And cattle snort, and tremble at the steep,
Where down at once the foaming waters pour,
And tottering rocks repel the deafening roar;
Viewed from below, it seems from heaven they fell!
Seen from above, they seem to sink to hell!»
The poetic license has
here been strained to the verge, or rather, we should perhaps say,
considerably beyond the verge of bombast. Honest John Wilson is in
general no-ways stinted in his praises of our stream, but in this
instance he has certainly far exceeded himself. In consequence of
swallowing such marvellous descriptions as he and others have given, our
imagination in youth was excited to such a degree, that, on our first
visit to the spot, we felt completely disappointed with the actual
appearance of Corra Linn, so diminutive did it seem in comparison with
the cascade of our dreams. We felt inclined, with the Cockney tourist,
to pronounce it a miserable failure, and it was only after repeated
inspection that its real beauties became manifest to our mind, and took
up their permanent abode amongst our
dearest memories. Passing
from the fierce agitations and the din of Corra, the Clyde again assumes
a smooth and tranquil character, which is scarcely ruffled by a sportive
leap of a few feet over a shelving rock at Dundaf, about a quarter of a
mile farther down. It now glides gently away by Lanark and its mills,
and pursues it course amidst softly sloping banks, which are partly
covered with wood, partly arable, and partly of a rich pastoral green.
The Mouse, a wild brook from the picturesque Cartland Crags, here joins
the river on the north side with its murmuring tribute. Clyde’s peaceful
progress is again interrupted at Stonebyres, a few miles from Lanark,
where it passes through a confined and rocky channel, and is once more
dashed over a precipice of eighty feet. This Fall, although unequal in
picturesque effect to that at Corehouse, is both impressive and
beautiful,—
“Clyde, foaming o’er his
falls, tremendous roars! ”
and again proceeds in
quietness, through sylvan shades and haughs of freshest verdure, upon
his seaward pilgrimage. Before the descent at Bonnington, the surface of
the stream is reckoned to be about 400 feet above the level of the sea;
and when it leaves Stonebyres it has only an elevation of 170 feet. By
its successive leaps in this vicinity, therefore, the Clyde is brought
down in the world to the extent of nearly 230 feet.
The course of a stream
has often been compared by the poet and the moralist to the life of man.
Leaving its source, the tiny rill is a thing of purity and seeming
playfulness, a happy type of innocent and merry boyhood. Gradually, as
it progresses towards its destined bourne, its waxes greater in volume,
and becomes, as in youth and manhood, less frolicsome and less pure,
until at length it finds oblivion and rest in the bosom of the great
deep. The Clyde has now “sown its wild oats;” its days of daffing and
jollity are past, and henceforth we shall find it a staid and sober
stream, engaged in the serious business of existence, and ministering
alternately to the useful and the beautiful. Lovely are the scenes
through which it now takes its stately march. Sweet, in the early
summer, are the orchard blooms of apple, and pear, and plum, at this
part of the vale, where for miles and miles Clyde seems to stray in one
continuous garden. Rich in the autumn are its banks, thick-strewn with
trees low bending beneath their loads of golden or of blushing fruit.
Green lawns and yellow fields, at frequent intervals, creep down unto
its fertile marge; while towns and villages, and castles old and gray,
interspersed with spacious modem mansions, adom and enliven its verdant
slopes. Scotland has certainly nothing which can compare with this
Middle Ward of Clydesdale for fertility and simple loveliness; and we
have the authority of good old William Lithgow, the celebrated traveller,
for stating that there are even few localities in the world which are
superior to it in these respects. The value of Lithgow’s opinion may be
estimated by the following extract from the title-page of his most
curious book, which was published in 1640:—“The total discourse of the
rare adventures, and painful peregrinations, of long nineteen years’
travels, from Scotland to the most famous kingdoms of Europe, Asia, and
Africa. Perfited by three dear-bought voyages in surveying forty-eight
kingdoms, ancient and modem; twenty-one republics; ten absolute
principalities, with two hundred islands, &c.” Whether it was because
there was no place so dear as home to the old man’s eyes that he spoke
so favourably of his native vale we cannot tell; but assuredly he
conferred the palm of superiority, over all that he had seen in his many
wanderings, on this portion of our valley. For a distance of about
eleven miles the Clyde divides the parishes of Carluke, Cambusnethan,
and Dalzell on the north, from those of Lesmahagow, Dalserf, and
Hamilton on the south; and receives by the way the waters of the Nethan,
the Avon, the Calder, and several other streams of lesser magnitude and
note. It now approaches the ducal palace at Hamilton, sweeping in
numerous graceful curves and windings through its finely-timbered
domains, and dividing them from Bothwellhaugh, passes the bridge where,
in other days, the soldiers of the Covenant were put to rout by the
forces of Monmouth and Claverhouse. Bothwell bank, still blooming fair,
and its picturesque Castle on the one hand, with Blantyre Works and the
ruined Priory on the other, are successively left behind, with all their
garniture of woods and braes, and, swelled by the tribute of the Rotten
and North Calders, the Clyde steals slowly round Daldowie to Kenmuir and
Carmyle. Not in all its course does the river wear a sweeter aspect than
it presents here within a few miles of the city. Downward still it hies,
turning and twining as if it would avoid the pollution which it has to
encounter. There is no remede, however, and successively separating the
parishes of Cambuslang and Monkland, Rutherglen and Barony, it touches
at length the eastern suburb of the city, and with a fine bold curve,
bounding the public Green, finds itself between the bridges in a bed of
densest mud, and speedily becomes dim and drumlie with the outpourings
of fetid sewers. Attempting to escape from this defilement, it falls
into the hands of the River Trust at the Broomielaw. Henceforth the
Clyde is in harness, “cabined, cribbed, confined,” and doomed to bear
our burdens to and fro until it passes from control into the liberty of
the great deep. According to a calculation in the late Dr. Thomson’s
excellent treatise on heat and electricity, it appears that, at the date
of that publication, the breadth of the river at the new bridge was 410
feet, and its average depth 3½ feet. The velocity of the water at the
surface was 1.23 inch, and the mean velocity of the water 0.558.132 inch
per second. From these data, the Dr, inferred that the total quantity of
water discharged per second was 76 2/3 cubic feet. This amounts to
2,417,760,000 cubic feet, or 473,017,448 imperial gallons, or 1,877,053
tons of water poured down by the Clyde every succeeding day. Of course,
during the prevalence of spates, the quantity will be indefinitely
increased. The Clyde drains about one-thirtieth of Scotland, or about
one-eighty-third of Great Britain.
And now, having conducted
our readers in imagination down the tangled and most picturesque mazes
of the upper section of the Clyde, we trust they will be prepared to
sympathize with us in the subjoined address to our noble native river—an
address which we penned in our youthful enthusiasm, “long, long ago:”—
TO THE CLYDE.
O'er all the streams that
Scotia pours
Deep murmuring to the sea,
With warmest love my heart still turns,
Fair, winding Clyde, to thee!
Through scenes where brightest beauty smiles,
Thy placid waters glide,
Linked to a thousand memories sweet,
My own, my native Clyde!
Let others love the
tangled Forth,
Or mountain-shadowed Spey;
The Don, the Dee, wake others’ glee,
Fair Tweed, or queenly Tay;
From all their charms of wood or wild,
I ever turn with pride
To where the golden apple gleams,
On thy green banks, sweet Clyde!
It is not that thy heaving
breast
A kingdom's wealth has borne,
That pregnant barks, a gorgeous crowd,
Thy spacious ports adorn;
Tis not thy cities fair to see,
Thy castled homes of pride,
That knit this heart in love to thee,
Thou proudly rolling Clyde!
An heir of poverty and
toil,
Thy wealth to me is naught,
Yet thou hast treasures to my soul
With deepest pleasure fraught.
The homes of living, and the graves
Of parted friends are thine—
The loving hearts, the tried, the true,
Bright gems of sweet “Langsyne.”
Oh! honied were my joys, I
ween,
When ’side thee, lovely stream!
Life dawn’d upon my wak’ning soul,
Bright as a poet's dream.
Then daisied fields to me were wealth,
Thy wateTs were a sea,
And angel voices in the clouds
The larks* far showers of glee.
How loved I, on thy
pebbled marge,
To watch the minnows play!
Or on thy rippled breast to set
My tiny bark away!
Or chasing wide the painted fly,
Along thy skirt of flowers,
While on the swallow-wings of joy
Flew past the laughing hours.
Each smiling season then
had charms—
Spring came with buds and flowers,
Ana wild-bird nests, with bead-like eggs,
Leaf-screened in woodland bowers;
Summer brought aye the rushy cap,
The dandelion chain;
While hips and haws, like gems were strewn
O'er Autumn’s yellow train.
But years of mingled weal
and woe,
Like bubbles on thy wave,
Have passed: and friends are scattered now.
Or slumbering in the grave;
The dust of time has dimmed my soul,
And ’neath vile passion’s sway,
It’s freshness and its bloom have pass'd
For evermore away.
Yet still I love thee,
gentle Clyde;
For aye, as with a spell,
Thou bring’st me back the cherished forms
In memory’s haunts that dwell!
Like sunshine on the distant hills,
Life’s early joys I see:
And from the brightness of the past,
I dream what heaven may be.
Dear stream! long may thy
hills be green,
Thy woods in beauty wave,
Thy daughters still be chaste and fair,
Thy sons be true and brave!
And, oh! when from this weary heart,
Has ebbed life’s purple tide,
May it be mine, 'mongst those I’ve loved,
To rest on thy green side. |