WHEN the London
season of 1894 reached the stage when one’s friends began to ask
“What are you going to do this summer?” we derived a certain
amusement from the reception of our announcement that we were going
to the Island of Tyree. Some committed themselves to nothing and
hoped we should enjoy it; some supposed it was in the Mediterranean
somewhere; and when, to a few of vaguely inquiring mood, we
explained that it was about thirty miles south of the Long Island,
such as knew their geography concluded that it must be somewhere
within reach of New York.
As a matter of fact,
the island does lie next to America, but in the sense in which, in a
volume of the reign of Good Queen Bess, Cornwall is described as “a
country on that side of England next to Spain,” and had we explained
that it was an island of the Hebrides, fifty miles west of the
mainland of Scotland, few would have been much the wiser. Even the
“Ideal Ward,” with all his learning, abandoned an attempt to write a
poem on the subject, having exhausted his available information in
the lines—
There are some islands in the
northern seas—
At least, I’m told so—called the Hebrides;
These islanders have very little wood,
Therefore they can’t build ships—they wish they could.
At last, however, we
came across a man who, having met our statement with the
observation, “But isn't it too early for snipe?” showed that he was
really in touch with the subject. He knew a man who had been
there—to shoot snipe—and he would get to know all about it. In
course of time he communicated the fact that there was a mail boat
which went twice or three times a week, weather permitting, and that
we must be sure to take a case of soda-water.
The great MacBrayne’s
official handbook to the west coast of Scotland, had nothing to tell
beyond the name of the pier-master, a fact which, later, became the
more interesting to us that there is not a pier. Of other literature
upon the subject we could find nothing written within the last
hundred years, except an Agricultural survey of the year 1811.
It was therefore with
some sense of adventure that we started on our journey on July 11,
1894, my friend, myself, and our dog Scamp, a Dartmoor terrier of
admirable muscle and a pedigree to boast of even in the Highlands.
After a night or two in Edinbro' and Glasgow we reached Oban, the
Charing Cross of the north, where every second house is an hotel and
every one has either just come or is just going away. At this period
we knew nothing of the Royal Hotel, which, later, in moments of
hunger and weariness we came to think of as homo, and we were
thankful to escape, as soon as might be, from German waiters and
extortionate charges, and to find ourselves at sunrise on board the
little Fingal—tonnage 123; Neil McArthur, Captain; J. McTaggart,
Purser. That one should remember and write down the names of passing
friends like these, is a feature of the life upon which we were
entering, a life so primitive that those who ministered to us became
for us, as in the childhood of the world, our fellow creatures, men
and women of like passions; a strange sensation to reflect upon in a
life in which a tradesman is a necessary hindrance to the acquiring
of goods, and a cab-driver, like his horse, part of the means of
locomotion.
We had been warned
that we were unwise to travel at the time of Glasgow Fair, and that
the boats would be crowded, but we were unable to see the connexion
of ideas, and did not know, till later acquaintance with the Fingal
revealed the fact, that our dozen or so of fellow passengers was
such a crowd as we were never likely to see upon her deck again.
The morning was grey
and chilly, and the piled-up hills of Mull and Morvern were clothed
in mist on either hand, but by degrees the sunlight broke through,
and by the time we reached Tobermory the unbroken water-line of the
Atlantic stretched blue and clear before us. Away to the south lay
the dream-lands of Staffa and Iona, and further still to the north
were the dim peaks of Ben More in Uist and the Cuchullin hills in
Skye.
The sea was clear and
blue, not a sail was within sight, and in the entire selfishness of
mere animal enjoyment and anticipation, we were almost thankful to
the dancing waves for causing the withdrawal, into private life, of
most of our fellow passengers. In Oban we had heard fearful tales of
the dangers and horrors of a journey to Tyree, but those nine
sun-lit hours still stand out in happy memory although only the
first of many of a like kind.
The little boat, with
her orange-coloured funnel, seemed to manage all her business for
herself, for the crew had nothing to do but look picturesque, the
Captain and Purser but to make themselves agreeable. Towards
afternoon we peeped into the tiny cabin below, but roast beef and
batter-pudding seemed an anticlimax, and we begged for something
more ethereal on deck. Little guessed we how long it would be before
we should look upon their like again!
As the afternoon wore
on, a long straight line made a shadow on the sea, and we learnt
that Coll was in sight, but somehow even memories of Dr. Johnson
could not distract our thoughts from Tyree, and we were glad to
pause no longer than was necessary to drop a whole family overboard,
into a wide boat which rowed out to meet us, and carried off some
half-dozen of the consequences of Glasgow Fair.
Soon we were in sight
of Tyree, “the kingdom just emerging from the summits of the waves,”
as one of its old names has it, in terse Gaelic, Rioghachd-bham•-thonn.
Slowly the little Fingal wound herself into a long narrow creek.
There was no pier, not so much as a “slip,” and so far as we could
ever discover, the only high ground on this side of the island,
which is nowhere more than 350 feet out of the sea, rises most
precipitately at the spot at present selected for a landing-place.
How we were to get to shore was not obvious, but we cared little, so
absorbed were we in the novelty of the scene. On the rocks above us
some fifty people at least were collected, and with much shouting,
laughing, gesticulating, two small boats apparently already quite
full of people were boarding our little vessel. Later we learnt that
there were other reasons besides the desire to meet friends, to get
the mails, to fetch the cargo, why some of the islanders greet
MacBrayne with such eagerness—but of that anon. The tiny mail boat
heaved and tossed in the water below—it seemed to us as if the very
letters would upset it, but in went the bags. The parcel post, a
great institution in the islands, followed—could she possibly
survive? we wondered, and we modestly declined when courteously
asked if we would care to take our places in her, instead of waiting
for the cargo boat. Being Glasgow Fair, we were told, the boats were
“rather” full. The cargo boat certainly was. Large baskets like
laundry travelling-baskets, full of Glasgow bread, we learnt, went
in first, then sundry crates for the “Mairchant,” then some luggage,
including ours, then all our fellow passengers, finally half a dozen
sheep. We remained modest and retiring. We knew that the handsome
young Minister, who after a long disappearance was now again on
deck, would have to get on shore somehow, and that another boat
would surely appear from somewhere. By-and-by the cargo boat
returned, more cargo went in, but few passengers, and no sheep, only
the Minister and the men who had so mysteriously come on board and
who now came out of the deck-cabin wiping their mouths and smelling
of whisky. The Purser advised us to take our seats, the kindly
Captain shook hands with us, obviously perplexed as to our business
there, since we were no off-shoot from Glasgow Fair, and we were
off. We drew up at a perpendicular rock upon which some scratches
were pointed out to us as steps. Many kindly hands were offered to
help us to shore. The dog was hauled up, and we found ourselves
standing beside our luggage in a wilderness of sand with not the
faintest idea what to do next. Most of our companions had already
climbed into carts and disappeared, and a group of men shouting in
Gaelic over the “cargo” at a little distance, alone remained.
The Minister had
looked at us, paused, looked again, and with true Highland shyness
walked rapidly away. It was no time for ceremony. I ran after him,
and breathlessly presented a piece of paper on which was the address
of the house where, so we had been told, we might hope for shelter.
I had written some days before, I explained—was it likely any one
would come to meet us? The polite young Minister smiled at our
simplicity. The letter was probably in one of the bags still lying
on the rocks, or perhaps, if it arrived last mail, in the
post-office, waiting to be fetched : the farm in question was nine
miles off, there was no road for most of the way, there was no
vehicle to be had, and being Glasgow Fair they were “likely full.”
We began to feel anxious, not so much for shelter on so glorious an
evening, as for food. Could we telegraph anywhere? we asked,
glancing at a single wire overhead. No, that only went to the
mainland, but the Minister would send a message for us from the
post-office whence it would be taken with the letters, or the bread,
and meantime could we not go to the hotel? We looked around at the
wilderness of rock and sand and short, scant herbage, at the group
of men still shouting in a strange foreign tongue, at the funnel of
the little Fingal disappearing in the blue distance, at some tiny
huts scarcely distinguishable from the rocks among which they seemed
to hide, at the “road ” a foot deep in loose white sand, at the
bare-legged boy driving a herd of cows which clambered awkwardly
among the rocks, and found the notion of an hotel somewhat
bewildering. He would go with us, this kind young Highlander, and
turning back, soon conducted us to an unenclosed house overlooking
the harbour, destitute, like most Highland inns, of signboard—and
being conducted on strictly teetotal principles, destitute also of
everything else—open doors, loafers, sound of human life, which one
associates with inns. A kindly landlady, a quiet sitting-room, a
clean bedroom, and a welcome tea soon made us feel that home life in
Tyree had begun.
We have long
remembered that tea; after nine hours’ feast of the eye only, it was
very welcome. It certainly was excellent, but we remember it the
better because we sat down to its counterpart every time we called
for food during our stay in the island, and after a time it palled.
Good tea, good cream, good eggs, Glasgow jam, Glasgow bread (it was
long before we convinced our kind friends that we preferred their
own home-made scones), Glasgow cake, and from time to time something
of the nature of meat out of a tin. Our sitting-room window opened
on to the moor or common, that is on to unenclosed space, and the
cows often looked on at our meals, sheep and fowls came in at the
door, and presumably fish swam about in the sea which lay almost at
our feet; but none of these things found their way to the table
except once, when we had an orgie of chops — what became of the rest
of that sheep we could not discover—and once when we had a fish of
species so perplexing that ,we tossed up who should first venture
upon it. It was finally rejected by the dog, and given, through the
window, to a cow, who apparently thought it an interesting
experiment.
Except for some
potatoes, which we were assured were excellent, but which differed
in some essentials from those which we were accustomed to, we
moreover never saw either vegetables or fruit during this visit. On
a later occasion, when the hotel had got into more experienced hands
(into kinder it could never come), our bill of fare was greatly
enlarged, and now every necessary of life is amply provided for.
After tea we of
course went out, and first learnt something of the glory of evening
in the Hebrides. Tyree is so flat, that a considerable tract of
country in the middle, known as the Reef, is said to be below
sea-level. The island slopes from south-west to north-east, and its
average width is about two and a half miles; though, according to
the Government Survey, it varies from seven miles to one. There is
not a single tree, not a hill worth mentioning, and as we looked
straight out into the open glory of the July sunset it seemed
somehow to belong to us in some especial manner, so isolated did we
feel on this little shelterless sand-bank in the wide Atlantic
Ocean.
It was a pageant of
which we never tired, but what followed was to us an even greater
miracle. Elsewhere, when the sun has set, “ at one stride comes the
dark,” but here, in these low-lying islands, the darkness hardly
came at all, and at half past ten we could see the time by the tiny
watch on my wrist, or read the Evening psalms from the smallest of
pocket prayer-books. And again, when the change came at dawn, and
colour, rather than light, returned to the sky, we were awakened by
a rush of wings, and strange sounds overhead, as the sea-birds flew
over the island from their home on the western side to seek for food
in the more sheltered waters, between the island and the mainland.
Later we came to know
that home of theirs, a precipitous cliff, not above 300 feet high
perhaps, but absolutely perpendicular, where, on almost
imperceptible ledges, the sea fowl dwell in thousands. Long before
we came in sight we heard their voices in the cliffs of Ceann a
Mhara, which for convenience I spell—phonetically— Kenevara; and
though we have since seen even more wonderful sights of the kind,
none have seemed more impressive than those bare cliffs fronting the
ocean, a world of feathered life with all the freedom and
independence which is its birthright. One evening too, we were so
fortunate as to see the return of the sea-fowl. Towards the western
side of the island, we found a house with a garden, a rare
phenomenon in these treeless isles, and, still stranger anomaly, a
garden enclosed with such a fuchsia hedge, as one seldom looks for
out of Devonshire—probably the only shelter of the kind within fifty
miles. Standing silently near by, we heard a rush of wings; and a
sudden cloud coming towards us, resolved itself at our feet into
myriads of small birds; starlings, sparrows, chaffinches,
stone-chats, thrushes, larks, alighting upon, and below, and around,
the green and crimson hedge. There was no chirping, none of the
usual chatter of small birds, the invasion was sudden and almost
silent. In a few minutes the sky was again swept, this time by a
very different concourse. Far, far aloft there sailed a mighty
fleet, looking like a vast white cloud, so far above, that the
shrieks of the great sea birds, gulls, cormorants, guillemots,
seemed a phantom sound. Almost in a moment, they were out of sight,
and then, as suddenly as before, there awoke a whir of small wings
close beside us, and the little birds arose from their hiding-place,
and this time, with much clamour and talk, dispersed again into the
fields of air, once more left open to them, as the crowd again
closes in after a royal procession has passed by. We wondered what
became of them all, and where they found homes for the night whore
there is no vegetation, and even where roofs and chimneys have, for
the most part, so little elevation as to afford no protection from
cats, and dogs, and even sheep. Strange shifts are they put to,
these feathered exiles, and we have since found them crouching in
holes in the rocks, or under tufts of grass, or even in ruts on the
road.
It was not indeed
upon this, our first visit to the island, that we discovered that
fuchsia-hedge, and all we could learn in these earlier days, was
that the Free Kirk Minister had a tree. We never saw it, and we also
never saw the policeman, one third of whom, it was alleged, belonged
to the island. A story is told of some old woman who, having been
taken to the mainland, was much perplexed by the “big kail,”
cabbages having been the nearest approximation to trees in her
limited experience.
As to the fractional
policeman, we could, on one or two occasions, have found a use for
him, as 011 this island alone of the whole range of the Hebrides we
saw signs of drunkenness. No licensed house is allowed;
consequently, on occasions of weddings and funerals, the host
imports or otherwise obtains his whisky in larger quantities than
would in other circumstances be the case, and this, one gathers, it
is considered hospitable to furnish. The results are generally
obvious enough. There is moreover we are told, a considerable
amount, among the fairly well to do, of that “ close drinking ”
which comes of the private consumption of what, in public places and
with companionship, would probably be taken in moderation only.
As long ago as 1811
it was stated, in the Agricultural Survey of the Hebrides, that
“there were formerly large sums of money drawn by Tyree for whisky,
distilled from the excellent barley of this fertile island; but of
late this branch of industry has been suppressed, and that too, very
probably, to the ultimate advantage both of proprietor and tenants.”
We ourselves could
not speak with the same conviction either as to the entire
suppression of the commerce, or the advantage derived, at all events
by the people, from the alleged abolition of the “shebeen.” The
Highlanders cannot be expected (apparently) to drink beer, but to
assume that because the Duke of Argyll has suppressed licensed
houses that they will necessarily abstain from whisky, is like other
attempts to make people good by Act of Parliament, assuming too
much. The Fingal is of course allowed, though at a special price, to
sell whisky to her passengers; and, as we have seen, affords a
frequent opportunity for a little mild conviviality while she lies
in harbour; and remote and lonely as is the island, the inhabitants
are visited by an occasional cargo-boat, the Dunara Castle or the
Hebridean, which carries cargo direct from Glasgow, a journey of
from twenty-four to thirty hours, and have thus the opportunity of
importing whatever they desire for their private consumption,
possibly sharing it with friends. Not to seem censorious, nor to
speak de haut en bas, I freely acknowledge that we obtained a bottle
of excellent whisky with little difficulty, and with the gratitude
that one feels for luxuries, when necessaries are somewhat scarce.
One of us who had an appetite for dairy-food did very well (though I
fear the cheese was Glasgow, not to say American), but the other, an
eater of dinner rather than tea-meals got, after a time, what old
women call ‘ rather low,’ especially as we were taking an immense
amount of exercise and the sea air was strong and exhausting. We had
forgotten the case of soda-water, and the water of the island was of
quite too doubtful a quality to drink when not boiled, but after we
possessed that bottle of whisky wo felt that we were in touch with
life and not more, perhaps, than eighty miles from a lemon.
The size of the
island is roughly estimated at about thirty-four square miles, but
it is so indented by the sea, that the coast is probably over fifty
miles long. It measures about thirteen miles from NE. to SW., and
lies in latitude 56°. The population is about 2,000. The superficial
contents are said to be about 17,000 acres; of which over 2,000 are
water, rock, and marsh. There is but one road worth mentioning,
which leads from a dairy-farm in the north-east of the island to the
factors house in the middle, and which, at one point, touches the
harbour, or rather runs away right and left of it in the shape of a
V. The greater number of the inhabitants therefore have houses
reached only by rough tracks across grass or sand. They will however
tell you that they have “the best of good roads which is mended
twice a day,” which means, that no one being in a hurry in Tyree, it
is usual to go from point to point along the sea-shore.
For some distance
along the best part of the road, one sees on either hand heaps of
stones, all that now remain of comfortable homes on fertile ground,
now part of one of the large farms, of which there are some half
dozen in the island : three of them let to a Lowlander, and three
being in the hands of the Duke’s factor or his relatives. The theory
is, that by giving the land to strangers, the natives receive an
object lesson in good farming, though how that is to benefit those
with no land to farm, one fails to understand. The whole subject of
the rights of land in the islands is a difficult one, and must have
a chapter to itself.
The islanders, when
questioned as to the ownership of the island, will almost invariably
reply that it belongs to the Macleans, “but the Duke has it now
whatever.” The island originally belonged to the Lord of the Isles,
one of whom, says the story, had a daughter who married a Maclean of
Duart or Dowart, whose ruined Castle is one of the most notable
beauties of the Sound of Mull, and of whose family history most know
something from Scott’s Lord of the Isles, if not from Miss Joanna
Baillie’s Family Legends. When this lady was visited by her father
he was surprised to see no linen cloth upon her table, and on
learning that her husband’s estate yielded no lint, he endowed her
with the island of Tyree to grow flax upon, which for a long period
was successfully done. Thus the island passed into the hands of the
Macleans, who kept it till what is euphemistically called the
“forfeiture” of the clan, at the end of the seventeenth century. The
island sympathies are still in every sense with the old family, and
they have a good many songs and stories not exactly complimentary to
the Cailean Mor and his clan. [Macdonald, author of the Agricultural
Survey (1811), quaintly remarks: “The natives of Tyree are like the
generality of their countrymen, a brave and hospitable race, and
make a good figure among the other Hebrideans, notwithstanding many
disadvantages to which they have long been subjected. The Duke of
Argyll is proprietor of the whole island, his ancestors having
obtained it in consequence of the misfortunes of the ancient and
gallant family of Dowart.”] Over, and over again, when I was asking
for stories from the people, I was told, with variations, that of a
certain dark John Campbell, a hated tax-gatherer, who among other
misdeeds seized a pair of plough-horses belonging to a man named
Dewar, who was away at the smithy mending his plough. This led
naturally to a fray between the two men, in which Dewar s policy was
to drive Campbell backwards away from the sea and his boats, till
they reached the burial ground of Soraby, where still stands a
beautiful Celtic monument known as Maclean’s Cross. Here Campbell
fell, but on begging for his life was allowed to rise, on giving his
promise never to return to the island on the same errand. Meantime
his boat had gone, and the horses with it, so, on his return to
Inverary, he had to sell the horses and remit their value to their
owner. The ghost of Black John still “walks” among the scenes of his
former misdoings.
Tyree is the land of
song and story, and when the people come to look upon one as a
friend, they will never weary of telling the traditions of their
island, stories of the Fians, or as they call them, the Fingalians,
stories of the Maclean Chiefs, and the old Bards, stories too of
Witch-craft and Second-Sight and Fairies. Many an evening have we
listened to these tales, told in quaint, precise, literary English,
which has nothing in common with the language of Donald and Mairi in
the story books which the unsuspecting Saxon imagines to be pictures
of Highland life. But of these tales we shall have more to say
later. Tyree was the first chapter in our collection, and during
this summer we came for the first time under the spell of a new life
and a new world, and a new people with a history and a past of
strange limitations. In our life, too, they took an interest which
was something more than that kindly courtesy in which they never
failed. Every Highlander is a gentleman, and in the poorest homes,
under the roughest circumstances, we never met with anything less
than a courtesy, kindliness, and what I can only call a savoir faire
which one misses in many a drawingroom of the rich and great. They
were interested in everything we would tell them, as to our aim and
object in coming to the island, and as to our life and interests at
home; but they were far too polite to show any curiosity except on
subjects of acknowledged publicity, such as the health of the Queen
or the fate of “Jack the Ripper” who, even seven years ago, was
ancient history and of whom we could tell little.
Later, in other
islands more remote, we fancied we could trace definite
physiological distinctions, as typical of certain parts of the
Hebrides, according as the Celtic, the Pictish, the Scandinavian, or
even the Scot, predominated. In Tyree the types are less apparent,
partly on account of this island’s much more frequent connexion with
the mainland, than upon those more inaccessible. The yellow-haired
Scandinavian (not to be confounded with the high-cheeked,
yellow-haired laddie of the Lowlands) was we fancied
distinguishable, and the dark-haired, bright-eyed Celt, again not to
be confounded with the almost Jewish, aquiline type which we came to
call “Pictish.”
The obviously Celtic,
i.e. the Irish type, is very likely to be found in Tyree, for the
island seems to have been early colonized from Iona, having served
as a farm for the Monks. “Wherever there was a farm there was a cow,
and wherever there was a cow there was a woman, and wherever there
was a woman there was mischief! ” was their ungallant explanation of
their choice of so distant a site. Tir li, the land of I or Iona, is
the most commonly-received derivation of the name, though Tire, a
country, and iy, an isthmus, is almost equally plausible, and, says
Martin (in 1695), “the rocks in the narrow channel, seem to favour
the etymology.” The “land of corn,” the land of barley, the flat or
level land, and “the land of wood,” are also given as possible
derivations, the last being less improbable than would appear at
first sight; for, though not a stick as thick as one’s wrist grows
on the island at present, there are remains of abundant woods,
probably cut down on account of the scarcity of fuel, the peat-bogs
which so adequately supply the outer Islands being exhausted, if
they have ever existed, in Tyree. The author of the Agricultural
Survey relates that in 1809 the islanders “exhausted one third of
their annual industry in procuring peats”—mainly it is said from
Mull. When, however, the population, or it may be the proprietor, of
Mull demurred at such a tax upon them, and the outer Isles, alleged
to contain 250 square miles of peat-bog, were found too inaccessible
for such traffic, the natives of Tyree fell back upon coal, which is
now imported at great expense from Glasgow by means of The Primrose
and other special steamers.
The absence of peats
should certainly be held, among other causes, to account for what we
afterwards came to value as the very superior cleanliness of the
persons and homes of the inhabitants of Tyree, as compared with any
other island of the Hebrides. The burning of coal has necessitated
the use of a chimney, and this, in most cases, has led to putting
the fireplace at the side instead of in the middle of the room, so
that the skin and clothes and belongings of the inhabitants do not
become stained with peat smoke as in the other islands. This
encourages a degree of “ house-pride ” which we never saw elsewhere,
and the houses, though quaint enough, are often beautifully clean
and orderly, both within and without.
They are built of
rough unhewn stones piled up in large masses which might almost be
called rocks. Within this wall is another separated from it by a
clear space often of several inches, which, as well as all
interstices, is then filled up with the fine white sand which is so
abundant in the island. It will be easily seen that the walls are
thus from a foot to eighteen inches wide at the top, and as the roof
springs from the inner edge there is a considerable ledge all round
it, which in the fertile climate of Tyree, soon becomes clothed with
flowers and verdure, and has the effect of a garland round the roof;
and as the house is only one story high, affords a resting-place for
dogs and cats, and even a promenade for sheep and goats. The
windows, for the same reason, are sunk in deep embrasures which are
generally carefully whitened, and give an air of neatness and finish
to the house. The most curious feature, however, is the roof,
especially in the case of older houses built before increased
facility of access made the purchase of timber a possibility.
In former times the
only source of timber was a shipwreck, and there is a story of a
pious man in the island of Barra, who used to pray, “If ships must
in any case perish, do Thou, O Lord, guide their timber with their
tackling and rigging to the island of Barra and the Sound of
Watersay,” a prayer at which one wonders the less, when one knows
that the roofs and doors of many a home depended upon the flotsam of
the Atlantic ocean. Seen from inside, one notices all sorts of
extraordinary devices to supply couplers, and old oars, parts of
boats, and parts of masts are in common use. The thatch is of great
thickness, and in view of winter storms is secured by old fishing
nets, by means of which the roof is literally tied to the chimney,
and pegged down to the projecting wall all round the house. As wood
is again required for this last purpose, ingenuity is called into
play, and we have seen the ribs of sheep thus utilized, and houses
decorated with, as it were, the skeletons of departed mutton-chops.
Inside, the houses
are warm and comfortable, the system of double walls, if somewhat
clumsy, being probably warmer than that of mortar and hewn stones,
in a climate which, though not cold, is as boisterous and humid as
one might naturally expect upon a treeless sandbank in mid-Atlantic.
There is hardly any
frost in the island, perhaps because it is not very far removed from
the Gulf Stream, and snow falls seldom and never remains. The winds,
however, are very violent, and as there is no pier it is quite
common, even in summer, for the Fingal to have to return to Bunessan
or Oban, unable to deposit her mail-bags or passengers. One
inhabitant told us that his newspaper, which should reach him three
times a week, often accumulated in the mail-bags to the number of
thirty before he opened them, and Mr. Stanford, the late manager of
the kelp industry, gave us another instance of the difficulties of
traffic. He said that when a young man, in the prosperous days of
kelp-making (of which more in a separate chapter), he would at times
remain for some months on the island, and that on occasions of a
family gathering in his father’s home, various members came from
far-away places—I forget exactly where, but let us say America,
India and the Continent — when it was impracticable for him to come
from Tyree.
During this very
summer of 1901, in the first week of June, during weather so fine
that we spent the entire day out of doors, it happened that twice
over the mail-boat, and twice the cargo-boat, came within sight of
the island but was unable to land either passengers or mailbags. The
small boats, accustomed to go out to meet the steamboats, were quite
unable to put off, and for lack of a pier the larger boats could not
come in. One boat indeed came into Gott Bay, east of the usual
entrance, the site frequently recommended for the building of a
pier, and remained there in shelter for some hours, landing a man
and a horse. The boat was going north, but for the sake of the
passengers put back to Mull, leaving them at Tobermory on the chance
of their coming on in three days by the Fingal, the Fingal herself,
with her crew, having also turned back from Tyree. After obtaining
accommodation from Friday to Monday with considerable difficulty,
the Mull hotel having, rightly or wrongly, refused to take in one
passenger because she was ill, they were transferred to the Fingal,
a boat with no saloon accommodation worth mentioning, and already
occupied by two sets of passengers of her own, and once more, on a
sunny June day, a landing was attempted. At first the case was
considered hopeless, and we were told that when, for the third time,
the unlucky sufferers were in danger of turning back, the sobs and
screams of the women and children were piteous to hear. However,
with great difficulty, a landing was effected, and very thankfully,
but in a sadly exhausted condition, the unhappy passengers, and our
delayed mail-bags, were put ashore.
Almost the entire
wealth of the island is in cattle and horses, and it may easily be
imagined what is the loss of life and limb in transit of stock.
Often the farmers arrive in Mull or at Oban too late for the market,
and have to sell their beasts at any price they will fetch. At the
best of times it is of course obvious that good prices can seldom be
obtained, as naturally the Tyree farmer is known to be anxious to
sell when the alternative is the risk of attempting to convey his
cattle once more to so inaccessible an island. The extreme necessity
for a pier has of course been long obvious, and the case represented
again and again as strenuously as possible. The Crofters’ Commission
recommended it, engineers have pointed out more than one suitable
site, the people themselves are ready and anxious i to contribute
all the help they can in money or voluntary labour, and to submit to
be heavily taxed in pier dues for a privilege which would be so very
great an advantage to all concerned; it is even said that, as in the
case of Uig in Skye, where an excellent pier has been put up under
considerable difficulties in a very remote place, a Government grant
would be given—but all to no purpose. The fact remains, that even in
a sunny week in June, four times over, a landing may be impossible
and discomfort and inconvenience and even heavy loss continue. Among
other unfortunate results of the difficulty of transportation may
also be mentioned the abandonment by the Company which undertook the
working of the marble quarries at Balephetrish. The stone is of very
beautiful appearance, judging from some dressed specimens in the
possession of the late Mr. Edward Stanford, and is said to be varied
and abundant, but, under the circumstances, competition with the
mainland and the continent is of course out of the question. The
fact is the more to be regretted as the quarries are said to have
employed one hundred men.
With such advantages
as excellent golf links, a comfortable hotel, miles of sands which
are an ideal nursery for children, a happy hunting ground for the
antiquarian, botanist and ornithologist, Tyree might become, as Mr.
Stanford, who had known and loved the island for over thirty years
used to say, “the sanitorium of the west.” That a proprietor should
have the power to perpetuate a state of things contrary to every
elementary law of civilization, is a relic of barbarism, a far
greater anachronism than “black houses*’ or the Gaelic tongue. |