Our thanks to John Henderson for sending
this in. TASTER NOTES ON 'THE
HEATHER ON FIRE'
A TALE OF THE HIGHLAND CLEARANCES.
A POEM
BY
MATHILDE BLIND.
1886
DEDICATED
TO
CAPTAIN CAMERON,
WHOSE GLORY IT IS TO HAVE THROWN UP HIS PLACE
RATHER THAN PROCEED IN COMMAND OF THE STEAMER
" LOCHIEL." WHICH WAS TO CONVEY THE POLICE EXPEDITION
AGAINST THE SKYE CROFTERS IN THE WINTER OF 1884.
"THE FOXES HAVE HOLES, AND THE BIRDS OF THE AIR HAVE NESTS BUT THE
SON OF MAN HATH NOT WHERE TO LAY HIS HEAD."
A Tale of the
Highland Clearances
[Page 55]
XXVI.
So on from glen to glen, from hut to hut,
The hated factor came with arrogant strut
And harsh imperious voice, and at one stroke,
Of house and home bereft these hapless folk,
Bidding all inmates to come forth in haste:
For now shall their poor dwellings be laid waste,
Their thatch be fired, walls levelled with the leas,
And they themselves be shipped far o'er the wide, wild seas.
XXVII.
Thus through his grasping steward bids the chief.
In whom hereditary, fond belief
Honours the proud head of their race - the man
Whose turbulent forbears their devoted clan
Had served in bloody wars, nor grudged to yield
Their lives for them in many a battle-field:
But in these latter days men's lives are cheap.
And hard-worked Highlanders pay worse than lowland sheep.
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Duan Third, Stanza xxvi., Page 55
Ref…. In "The Highland Clearances”, Alexander Mackenzie (pages 267,
268) writes,
"The tenants of Knoydart, like all other Highlanders, had suffered
severely during and after the potato famine in 1846 and 1847, and
some of them got into arrear with a year's and some with two years'
rent, but they were fast clearing it off. Mrs. Macdonell and her
factor determined to evict every crofter on her property, to make
room for sheep. In the spring of 1S53 they were all served with
summonses of removal, accompanied by a message that Sir John Macneil,
Chairman of the Board of Supervision, had agreed to convey them to
Australia. Their feelings were not considered worthy of the
slightest consideration. They were not even asked whether they would
prefer to follow their countrymen to America and Canada. They were
to be treated as if they were nothing better than Africans, and the
laws of their country on a level with those which regulated South
American slavery. The people, however, had no alternative but to
accept any offer made to them. They could not get an inch of land on
any of the neighbouring estates, and any one who would give them a
night's shelter was threatened with eviction themselves. It was
afterwards found not convenient to transport them to Australia, and
it was then intimated to the poor creatures, as if they were nothing
but common slaves, to be disposed of at will, that they would be
taken to North America, and that a ship would be at Isle Orsay, in
the Island of Skye, in a few days to receive them, and that they
must go on board. The Sillery soon arrived, and Mrs. Macdonell and
her factor came all the way from Edinburgh to see the people hounded
across in boats, and put on board this ship, whether they would or
not. An eye-witness who described the proceeding at the time, in a
now rare pamphlet, and whom I met last year at Nova Scotia,
characterises the scene as indescribable and heart-rending. The wail
of the poor women and children as they were torn away from their
homes would have melted a heart of stone! Some families, principally
cottars, refused to go, in spite of every influence brought to bear
upon them, and the treatment they afterwards received was cruel
beyond belief. The houses, not only of those who went, but of those
who remained, were burnt and levelled to the ground. The Strath was
dotted all over with black spots, showing where yesterday stood the
habitations of men. The scarred, half-burnt wooden couples, rafters,
and bars were strewn about in every direction. Stocks of corn and
plots of unlifted potatoes could be seen on all sides, but man was
gone. No voice could be heard. Those who refused to go aboard the
Sillery were in hiding among the rocks and the caves, while their
friends were packed off like so many African slaves to the Cuban
market.”
Duan Third, Stanza xxvi., Page 55,
Ref….Hugh Miller writes,
"The clearing of Sutherland was a process of ruin so thoroughly
disastrous that it might be deemed scarcely possible to render it
more complete. Between the years 1811 and 1820, 15,000 inhabitants
of this northern district were ejected from their snug inland farms
by means for which we would seek in vain a precedent, except,
perhaps, in the history of the Irish massacre. A singularly
well-conditioned and wholesome district of country has been
converted into one wide ulcer of wretchedness and woe.”
Duan Third, Stanza xxvii., Page 55.
Ref….In "The Highland Clearances^' Alexander Mackenzie (pages 320,
321) writes,
"Yearly the Highlands have sent forth their thousands from their
glens to follow the battle-flag of Britain wherever it flew. It was
a Highland ‘rearlorn’ hope that followed the broken wreck of
Cumberland's army after the disastrous day at Fontenoy, when more
British soldiers lay dead upon the field than fell at Waterloo. It
was another Highland regiment that scaled the rock-face over the St.
Lawrence, and first formed a line in the September dawn on the level
sward of Abraham. It was a Highland line that broke the power of the
Mahratta hordes and gave Wellington his maiden victory at Assaye.
Thirty-four battalions marched from these glens to fight in America,
Germany, and India ere the eighteenth century had run its course ;
and yet while abroad over the earth Highlanders were the first in
assault and the last in retreat, their lowly homes in far-away glens
were being dragged down, and the wail of women and the cry of
children went out on the same breeze that bore too upon its wings
the scent of heather, the freshness of gorse blossom, and the myriad
sweets that made the lowly life of Scotland's peasantry blest with
health and happiness.
Ref….In “Storm-Clouds in the Highlands” Sept. 1884. J. A. Cameron
writes,
"Few Englishmen even now seem to be aware, notwithstanding all that
has been written on the subject, that not very long ago, in many
instances within the memory of living men, most of the Highland
counties were the scene of evictions on a wholesale scale, compared
with which the forced emigration of the Irish peasantry sinks into
insignificance. Entire communities, from the patriarch of two
generations down to the newly-born babe, were banished en bloc to
Canada, and thrown there on their own resources to establish new
homes or to starve. And although the people, except in a few cases,
submitted to expatriation quietly if unwillingly, where they did
manifest any reluctance to accept their fate, their houses were
burned down over their heads, and they themselves were turned adrift
on the bleak hill-sides, and on the wild and inhospitable sea-shores
of that northern region, to seek subsistence as best they could.
Until 1745, the year of Culloden, the clan system of land tenure
prevailed in the Highlands, under which the ground belonged not to
the chief alone, but to the community. A clansman could not be
dispossessed of his holding by his chief. After 1745, however, the
English system was introduced. The clans that had remained loyal to
the Crown, as well as those that had thrown in their lot with Prince
Charles, had their lands practically confiscated. The Highland
chiefs, in short, were assimilated in position to English landlords.
They were by the central government invested with the fee-simple of
the land which was once held by the laird and the clansmen in
common, and so a great wrong, amounting to a national crime, was
done to the Highland population."
Ref….Dr. D. G. F. Macdonald writes,
"I know a glen, now inhabited by two shepherds and two gamekeepers,
which at one time sent out its thousand fighting men. And this is
but one of many that might be cited to show how the Highlands have
been depopulated. Loyal, peaceable, and high-spirited peasantry have
been driven from their native land as the Jews were expelled from
Spain, or the Huguenots from France to make room for grouse, sheep,
and deer. A portly volume would be needed to contain the records of
oppression and cruelty perpetrated by many landlords, who are a
scourge to their unfortunate tenants, blighting their lives,
poisoning their happiness, and robbing them of their improvements,
filling their wretched homes with sorrow, and breaking their hearts
with the weight of despair."
Ref….Article on "The Crofters' Revolt” by J. S. Stuart Glennie, in "
Our Corner" (p. 202).
"We come now to the third stage in the history of land-lordism in
the Highlands, the stage which I have distinguished as that of the
Nineteenth Century Clearances. In consequence of the English
clearances of the sixteenth century, the spread of commercial
principles, and the dying out of the old notion and fact of
collective and limited ownership of land, the notion of individual
and absolute ownership had got pretty well established in England by
the middle of last century. So, after the Rebellion of 1745, the
Highland chiefs being greatly impoverished, the devil came to them
in three different shapes, one after another. First he appeared in a
guise he very often assumes the guise of a pressing creditor; then
he came as a jolly sheep-farmer from the south, with lots of tin in
his pockets ; and, said the jolly sheep-farmer to the impecunious
Highland chief: ' Clear out these rascals, who call themselves your
clansmen. Sheep will pay you better than men, and if you will let
the hills and glens to me, I'll double, triple, quadruple your
rental.' And last of all the devil came to the Highland chief in
another shape he very often assumes that of a sharp lawyer. The
chiefs knew very well that they were but joint-owners with their
clans of the land they occupied, and that crofter townships had
rights of grazing on the hills sanctioned by immemorial custom; and
they knew very well that, though many a chief's estate had been
forfeited by Acts of Attainder, by no Act of Parliament had their
clansmen's customary rights been forfeited. 'But,' said the devil in
the shape of the sharp lawyer, 'never mind that. In England they act
now on the notion of absolute ownership, and we'll just assume that
your people are tenants-at-will, and that you can do what you like
with them and theirs.' And it was simply on this assumption, a pure
legal fiction, directly in the teeth of all historical facts, that
the Duke of Athole began the Highland Clearances in clearing Glen
Tilt, just one hundred years ago (1784), and worthily have followed
suit the Dukes of Sutherland and of Argyll.”
Notes
from Heather on Fire
The Poem,
Heather on Fire |