DISTINCTIONS between different races, which depend on varieties of
character, customs, or means of livelihood, require discriminating study
for their apprehension. But a different language and an unusual dress are
marks which present themselves to all observers—the one to the ear and the
other to the eye—even on the briefest scrutiny. The inhabitants of
Gairloch have still a language entirely different to that of the lowland
Scotch, and they used not long ago to wear a dress only known in the
Highlands.
To this day the Gaelic language is universal among the people
of Gairloch, and they cling to it with the utmost affection. In it are
embalmed all the traditions, and stories of the days that are gone, and
the songs and* poems of the bards both past and present.
Gaelic, which
in the old books is called "Erse" or "Irish," has many dialects. The
language of the natives of the west coast of Ireland is not materially
different from that of the Scottish Highlanders. The Gaelic of Gairloch is
considered tolerably pure, though William Ross, the Gairloch bard, who
studied the subject closely, thought the Gaelic of the Lews par excellence
the purest form of the language.
In the Old Statistical Account the Rev.
Daniel Mackintosh stated that Gaelic was in his time the prevailing
language in Gairloch.
Sir George Steuart Mackenzie, in his "General
Survey," expressed the opinion that Gaelic was dying out; but the Rev.
Donald M'Rae, minister of Poolewe, in his paper on the parish of Gairloch
in the New Statistical Account, stated that the language then (1836)
generally spoken was the Gaelic, and added, "lam not aware that it has
lost ground within the last forty years." Mr M'Rae's remarks on the
admixture by young men of English or Scotch words with their Gaelic, and
on the purity in other respects of the language as spoken in Gairloch,
will be found in Appendix E.
The Gaelic language is as prevalent in
Gairloch to-day as it was when Mr M'Rae wrote his paper nearly fifty years
ago, notwithstanding the near approach of the railway (within five miles
of the parish boundary), and the greatly increased communication by
steamers, which has taken place during the interval. The religious
services of the people are conducted in Gaelic (though short English
services are often added); there are scarcely any houses where English is
spoken round the table or by the fire-side, though comparatively few are
able to read Gaelic. At the same time the knowledge of the English
language is undoubtedly on the increase, and the schools are taught in
that language. Nevertheless even children fresh from school seldom speak
English when playing together.
Some ten years ago there was a great
agitation for the restoration of Gaelic teaching in the Highland schools,
and the movement has recently been revived, with the result that the
Government are about to sanction instruction in Gaelic as part of the
curriculum, or at least as an " extra subject." It was stated during the
early stage of this agitation that in many places Highland children learnt
English only as a parrot would, and did not understand its meaning. I took
the trouble to see how this was in Gairloch schools, and I can only say
that the imputation did not apply to the children I examined, for not only
did many of them read English remarkably well, but searching
cross-examination proved that they thoroughly understood the meaning of
what they read.
There are still many of the older people who are unable
to speak English fluently, and some who do not understand it at all. The
English spoken by the young people as well as by most of the older natives
who speak it is a particularly pure form, untarnished by provincialism or
Scottish brogue. The smattering of Scotch occasionally to be met with is
confined to those who come in contact with persons from the Lowlands.
Occasionally a curious phrase occurs, the result of a literal translation
of some Gaelic expression. For instance, wondering whether a grouse which
flew behind a hill was the worse of a shot that had been fired at it, I
asked a stout young gillie, whose position enabled him to see further
round the hill, whether the bird had come down. He replied, " When she
went out of my sight she had no word of settling."
Gaelic literature has
been well represented in Gairloch. John Mackenzie, the author of the "
Beauties of Gaelic Poetry," and many other works in Gaelic (Part II.,
chap, xxii.), was a native of Gairloch ; and Mr Alexander Mackenzie, the
editor of the Celtic Magazine, and the author of many valuable works (some
containing Gaelic pieces), is also a Gairloch man. The Gaelic books
especially pertaining to Gairloch are the poems of William Ross, the
Gairloch bard, edited by the late John Mackenzie, and the poems of Duncan
Mackenzie, the Kenlochewe bard, edited by Mr Alexander Mackenzie.
There
has been much diversity of opinion upon the question whether it would not
be better that the Gaelic language should be discouraged and be assisted
to die out. I believe some few of the Highlanders themselves have adopted
this unpatriotic view, but the contrary opinion, so ably advocated by
Professor Blackie, now appears to be gaining ground. It seems quite
possible that the Highlander may not only have a thorough command of
English, but may also retain his own expressive language with its
ennobling traditions. No doubt a knowledge of the language which is the
medium through which most of the business of the kingdom is conducted has
its importance; but surely the retention of their own tongue by
Highlanders must tend in great measure to foster a patriotic feeling,
which should lead them to do credit in their lives and conduct to their
native glens.
There is no separate record of the dress anciently worn by
the natives of Gairloch, but it was unquestionably the same as that of all
the other inhabitants of the Highlands of Scotland, viz., the Breacan an
Fheilidh, or .belted or kilted plaid. In the Celtic Magazine, Vol. VIIL,
is a treatise on the "Antiquity of the Kilt," by Mr J. G. Mackay. One
curious, fact he mentions is, that the Norwegian king Magnus, in his
expedition to the Western Isles of Scotland in 1093,. adopted the costume
then in use in the western lands, which no* doubt included the parish of
Gairloch; so that we may if we please picture our prince of the Isle Maree
tragedy as wearing the Highland dress. From this notice of King Magnus,
and more particularly from the account given by John Taylor (Part IV.,
chap, xviii.) of the deer hunting at Braemar, we learn that the
Highlanders in old days expected all who came among them to adopt their
peculiar garb.
Sometimes the belted plaid was worn along with the "triubhais,"
or "truis," or trews, a prolongation upwards of the tartan hose, fitting
tightly to the skin and fastened below the knees with buckles. These trews
were very different in appearance and make from the tartan trousers worn
by some Highland regiments in the present day. Oddly enough the only
representation extant of a Gairloch man of the old days, viz., Donald
Odhar, exhibits him in the tartan trews. This representation is in the
Mackenzie coat-of-arms on the Sabhal Geal at Flowerdale. It was doubtless
executed by a southern sculptor, long after Donald Odhar lived and fought.
But unquestionably the most usual—almost universal-^form.of the Highland
dress was the tartan plaid gathered into pleats round the waist, where a
belt kept it in position (thus forming the kilt), the rest of the plaid
being brought over the shoulder. The name of the dress thus formed (Breacan
an Fheilidh) means the plaid of the kilt.
The present form of the
Highland dress, in which the kilt—sometimes called "philabeg"—is made up
as a separate garment, has given rise to much controversy. The strife is
said to have originated in a letter in the Scots Magazine in 1798; it was
stated that about 1728 one Parkinson, an Englishman, who was
superintendent of works in Lochaber, finding his Highland labourers
encumbered with their belted plaids, taught them to separate the plaid
from the kilt and sew the kilt in its present form. Others say that the
inventor of the kilt was Thomas Rawlinson, of the Glengarry ironworks, who
about the same date and for the same reason introduced the supposed new
dress.
Mr J. G. Mackay, in the treatise already referred to, proves
in-contestably that the separate form of the kilt is very ancient, and
cannot have been the subject of a comparatively modern invention. The
truth seems to be that, whilst the belted plaid was most generally worn,
as requiring no tailoring, the separate kilt is of equal or greater
antiquity, and was at all times occasionally used on account of its
superior convenience, especially in those localities where the tailor's
art was practised. An incidental corroboration of Mr Mackay's view is to
be seen in a plan of Aberdeen, dated 1661, preserved in the municipal
buildings, of that city. In a corner of the plan three figures are
represented, two of them in the lowland costume of the seventeenth
century, and the third, a young man, dressed in a kilt and short coat
without plaid, being exactly the form of the Highland dress as now
generally worn. The Highland figure was probably introduced to record the
then semi-Highland character of Aberdeen.
In order to repress the
Highland esprit, an act (20th George II., cap. 51) was passed after the
battle of Culloden, which rendered it illegal for any man or boy after 1st
August 1747 to wear the Highland dress. The effect of this law was
various. In some parts it was rigidly enforced, and the kilt was generally
abandoned, whilst those few who persisted in wearing it were severely
punished. In other places evasions of the act were winked at by the
authorities; men who procured the legal breeches would hang them over
their shoulders during journeys; others used the artifice of sewing up the
centre of the kilt between the legs; whilst others again substituted for
the tartan kilt a piece of blue, green, or red cloth wrapped round the
waist, and hanging down to the knees, but not pleated.
In the Old
Statistical Account (1792) there are many references to the Highland dress
and to the effect of the passing of this act. In the account of the parish
of Petty, Inverness-shire, we read, "The Highland dress is still retained
in a great measure. The plaid is almost totally laid aside; but the small
blue bonnet, the short coat, the tartan kilt and hose, and the Highland
brogue, are still the ordinary dress of the men. The women in like manner
retain the Highland dress of their sex, but have adopted more of that of
their low country neighbours than the men."
The Old Statistical Account
tells us nothing of the dress of the inhabitants of Gairloch; but in the
notice given of the neighbouring parish of Kincardine, in the same county,
is the following:—"The act 1746, discharging the Highland dress, had the
worst of consequences. Prior to that period the Highland women were
remarked for their skill and success in spinning and dying wool, and
clothing themselves and their households, each according to her fancy, in
tartans, fine, beautiful, and durable. Deprived of the pleasure of seeing
their husbands, sons, and favourites in that elegant drapery, emulation
died, and they became contented with manufacturing their wool in the
coarsest and clumsiest manner, perhaps thinking that since they must
appear like the neighbouring lowlanders, the less they shone in the
ornaments of the lowland dress they would be the more in character. Their
favourite employment thus failing them, rather than allow their girls to
be idle they made them take to the spinning of linen yarn, in which, few
are yet so improved as to earn threepence per diem, and much, if not the
most of the small earnings of these spinners, is laid out upon flimsy
articles of dress; whilst that conscious pride, which formerly aspired at
distinction from merit and industry, is converted into the most ridiculous
and pernicious vanity."
The act forbidding the kilt was repealed in
1772. It had in many parts done its work, and though its repeal was in
some places hailed with joy and celebrated by the bards, the Highland garb
does not appear to have generally regained its former position as the
ordinary dress of the people.
In the early part of the nineteenth
century, as James Mackenzie and others inform me, the kilt was still the
dress of many men in Gairloch, who never put on the trews until old age
came, and in some cases not even then. As an instance, he says he
remembers seeing Hugh M'Phail, a Gairloch man then living at the head of
Loch Broom, measuring out herrings from his boat on a cold day in a hard
winter, with four inches of snow on the ground and thick ice. Hugh wore
only his shirt and kilt; he had put off his jacket for the work. He and
his two brothers always wore the kilt; they were all fine men, and two of
them were elders of the church of Loch Broom, under the Rev. Dr Ross.
Other incidental references to the Highland dress of Gairloch men will be
found in James Mackenzie's stories in Part II., chap. xxv.
Up to the
present generation the kilt was still occasionally worn in Gairloch,
especially at festive gatherings. That it had become infrequent, yet was
not altogether abandoned, may be inferred from the following advice given
upon dress in his " Hints" by the late Sir Francis Mackenzie, Bart.:—" The
nature of this must depend upon your local situation, since it is evident
that what is fitted for our mountains would be ill suited to the wants of
the fisherman. As an inland labourer or shepherd, the ancient costume of
the country, the kilt, hose, plaid, and bonnet, with a warm stout cloth
short jacket, will be found the most serviceable, since it admits of a
pliancy in the limbs admirably adapted either for labour or climbing our
bare and heathery hills. No danger can possibly arise from exposing the
limbs to the wet and cold, whilst the loins and back are protected by the
thick folds of a kilt and plaid from severity of weather. I may too,
without being liable to the charge of national vanity, say, that however
much the dress of our ancestors has been lately laid aside, it gives a
manly and graceful appearance at all times to the wearer. I have witnessed
its attractions amongst the sons and daughters of peace in every country
of Europe, and it has marked our bravery in battle wherever a plaid has
appeared. It has the sanction of antiquity in its favour; it is associated
with the virtues and triumphs of Roman citizens; and I should regret its
being laid aside, because I am decidedly of opinion that national dress is
everywhere a strong incentive to the wearer not to disgrace trie region
which he proudly claims as the country of his birth."
The Highland dress
is now only worn in Gairloch by a few gentlemen, pipers, keepers, and some
of the better-to-do schoolboys. Its disappearance from among a people who
cling so tenaciously to the Highland tongue is passing strange. By some it
has been attributed to the inferior hardiness of the modern Highlander,, a
reason which is perhaps suggested by the following remark in the "General
Survey" of Sir George Steuart Mackenzie (1810):— "The first indications of
the introduction of luxury appeared not many years ago, in the young men
relinquishing the philabeg and bonnet, which are now almost rarities."
The Gairloch company of rifle volunteers originally wore the kilt, but
about the year 1878, in common with the majority of the battalion to which
they are attached, they agreed to substitute Mackenzie tartan trousers.
The change was made partly on the ground of economy. After the review of
the Scottish volunteers at Edinburgh on 25 th August 1881, which was
attended by the Ross-shire battalion, including the Gairloch company, a
general wish was expressed that the example of the volunteer battalions of
the adjoining counties should be followed, and the kilt resumed. The
Gairloch company unanimously petitioned their gallant colonel to restore
the kilt.
The ordinary dress of most Gairloch men is now the same as in
the lowlands, except that some of those engaged as shepherds, keepers, and
gillies wear knickerbockers, which display the hose; some men still carry
plaids and don the blue bonnet.
Gairloch is justly celebrated for its
hose, which are knitted in immense variety of pattern and colour, some
being in imitation of old forms of tartan. In the old days the hose worn
with the Highland costume were cut from the same web as the tartan of
which other parts of the dress were made, but now all hose are knitted.
The " diced " patterns are relics of the old tartans.
The Dowager Lady
Mackenzie of Gairloch writes as follows regarding the Gairloch hose:—"At
my first visit to Gairloch, in 1837, I employed a lady from Skye who was
staying at Kerrysdale to instruct twelve young women in knitting nice
stockings with dice and other fancy patterns. When I came to act as
trustee, and to live constantly at Flowerdale, I started the manufacture
of the Gairloch stockings in earnest, having spinners, dyers, and
knitters, all taught and superintended during the ten years I resided
there; on my leaving and going abroad, Sir Kenneth gave the concern into
the hands of the head gamekeeper, Mr George Ross. Now, dozens of pairs are
brought by the women to the hotels and steamers, and large quantities go
to Inverness, Edinburgh, and London; £100 worth has been sold in one
shop."
The dress of the women of Gairloch scarcely varies from that of
the country women in any other part of the kingdom. The principal
distinction is to be seen in the retention by some women of the mutch, or
mob-cap (see illustration), which they still wear, and make up with
considerable taste.
Maidens until the last few
years never wore caps, bonnets, or other headgear, only a ribbon or snood
to keep the hair in place. Any other headdress was considered a disgrace.
Even yet a few girls go to church without bonnets; and within the last
dozen years this was almost universal. Now, however, the majority of the
young women try even to surpass their sisters in towns in following the
fashions of the day; some girls appear on Sundays with almost a
flower-garden on their heads. The Rev. Donald M'Rae truly remarked, in his
statement in the New Statistical Account fifty years ago (and it is still
true), that " when a girl dresses in her best attire, her very
habiliments, in some instances, would be sufficient to purchase a better
dwelling-house than that from which she has just issued."
Dr
Mackenzie writes on this point as follows:—"In my early days about six or
eight bonnets would be the number on Sunday in , our west coast (Gairloch)
church in a five or six. hundred congregation, and these only worn by the
wives of the upper-crust tenantry. The other wives wore beautiful white 'mutches/
i.e. caps, the insides of which were made up with broad pretty ribbons,
which shewed themselves through the outside muslin. Oh! what a descent
from them to modern bonnets! The unmarried women always had their hair
dressed as if going to court, and were quite a sight, charming to see,
compared with their present abominable hats and gumflowers. But when a
visitor at Tigh Dige (Flowerdale) expressed wonder how they contrived to
have such beautiful glossy heads of hair, set up as by a hairdresser,
every Sunday, my father would say, 'No thanks, the jades stealing the bark
of my young elms !' It seems a decoction of elm bark cleans and polishes
hair marvellously; which accounted for many a young elm of my father's
planting having a strip of bark, afoot long by say six inches wide,
removed from the least visible side of the tree, as an always as an
welcome present from a 'jade's ' sweetheart on a Saturday. I don't believe
they ever used oil or grease on their shining heads. So universally were
mutches worn by all in the north of the working classes who were married,
that when we settled in Edinburgh in 1827, my widowed nurse was drawn
there by a well-doing son to keep house for him, and my mother having
given her a very quiet bonnet to prevent her being stared at in Princes
Street when wearing her mutch and visiting us, on her first appearance in
a bonnet the dear old soul declared she nearly dropped in the street, for
everybody was just staring at her for her pride in wearing a bonnet as if
she was a lady!"