Outer Isles Chapter XVII. Harris and Smaller Islands
FOR twenty-four miles
after leaving Stornoway there is little to interest one. The road is
bordered on either side by a gloomy moorland, varied occasionally by
small, shallow grey lakes; and only the distant view of the grand
hills of Harris encourages one to persevere in exploring a country
so dreary and so featureless.
After passing two or
three small villages, at one of which, Ballallan, we change horses,
we come nearer to the land of promise, the purple glory of the
Harris hills, and about a mile short of the border—for Lewis and
Harris, be it remembered, are not two separate islands—we reach
Athan Linne (pronounced A-Leene) when the ground suddenly rises, and
we enter upon a mountain pass. Up and up we go, till at some 800
feet above sea-level, with great walls of mountains still
surrounding us on either hand, we turn and look behind us, on
perhaps the grandest view in the outer Hebrides. We are on an
isthmus between Loch Seaforth and Loch Tarbert, both salt-water
inlets, strewn with green islands, while also nearer at hand are
various small lochs, upon which the shadows of hill and cloud are
painting fairy islands of purple and blue, adding yet fresh beauty
to a picture more varied in colour and outline than anything we have
yet seen among the Hebridean greys and sepias. Across the front of
the hills are giant terraces, the path of some moving glacier, and
from deep clefts come the sounds of rushing waters forcing their way
down to the sea. The great wall of mountain, which has been our goal
almost since leaving Stornoway, is the Forest of Harris, which one
cannot grudge to the deer, for those bare peaks, towering each of
them well over 2,000 feet, could serve no other purpose, and the
sport which involves such climbing, is, unlike a good deal of
“sport” one hears of, at least fair play, man’s wit and endurance
pitted against the beast's experience and agility. In places, even
the high road makes some demands upon the fortitude of the nervous
traveller, and the merciful one will certainly travel some miles of
the journey on his own feet, though the excellent horses sent for us
from Tarbert are an equine pleasure such as we have not enjoyed
since we left Tyree.
Perhaps none of the
Islands has a name so English, so commonplace in sound as this. Till
after the first half of the eighteenth century it was known as
Kilbride, the Church or cell of St. Bridget, but how it came by its
later name Na Heradh, i.e., the Herries (plural), or what the name
means, it is difficult to ascertain. The alleged explanation that
the reference is to na hardubh, “ the heights,”—the mountains of
this parish being higher than any in the Long Island—is said by
etymologists to be purely fanciful, though it is worth observing
that the same name, Na Heradh, is given to the highest part of the
island of Rum.
As a matter of fact,
Harris is not an island—only the southern half of the Lews, but it
is difficult not to separate them in one’s thoughts, so utterly
unlike are Lewis and Harris in every natural feature; the one flat,
desolate, colourless ; the other mountainous, varied, rich with
colour and beauty of form. Moreover, Harris, though not an island,
is set in a numerous Archipelago of islets of which some half-dozen
only are inhabited, though many measure a mile or more in length.
They seem to have been named by the Danes ; the larger, to the
number of about a score, having names ending in ay. Ensay, to the
south, was made famous for Highland cattle by the late proprietor,
Major Stewart, and there is one celebrated bull with whom most of
those we met in the Islands are anxious to call “ cousins,” as other
Highlanders with other chieftains. South-west of Ensay is Berneray,
smiling and fertile, of which more elsewhere, and we note too Pabay,
one of many of that name, “priest’s islands ”—possibly in old times
part of the endowment of the Church—Calligray, Hermitray, Hulmitray,
Gilisay, and so on. Some of the smaller islets have a different
termination, Tuem% Cuadera, Coddem9 Heste?n, etc, Scandinavian, too,
are the names of most of the farms; Nisabost, Horgabost, Shelabost,
and the many points in Nish—Renish, Noranish, Groad-nish, and the
like.
Far away to the south
we note the most northerly point of Skye, and the hills of North
Uist seem mere hillocks seen from amid the great mountains which
tower around us here. A characteristic, though unconscious
testimony, to the hilly character of the roads, is presented in
various parts of the island, by the number of cairns marking the
resting-places of coffins on their way to the burial - grounds,
which here, as elsewhere, generally surround the ruins of some old
Columban church.
Tarbert, which is our
destination, is an exceedingly neat, well-kept village, perhaps the
most orderly in all the Hebrides. The houses are not only
well-built, but, unlike those of Loch Maddy, for instance,
well-placed, having some relation to each other and to the roads and
neighbouring buildings. There are trees, too, and about the hotel
and one or two comfortable private houses there are well-kept
gardens, which yield excellent fruit and vegetables, in spite of the
usual difficulty of rough salt winds and sand drifts, and poverty of
soil. There are neat little shops and a well-arranged pier, two
Churches and a police station, which, not forty miles from Stornoway,
would strike one as superfluous as official arrangements go in this
island, only that one is being constantly reminded of the fact that
here we are in the county of Inverness and not in Ross, as we were a
few miles back; a fact which introduces extraordinary complications
into common things, and sends one’s letters to mysterious and
apparently irrelevant places.
Harris appears to
have belonged originally to Mac-leod of Macleod, by whom it was sold
in 1778 to a relative, a native of Harris, one Alexander Macleod,
and to have passed later into the hands of Lord Dunmore, who, it is
said, gave £60,000 for it, not apparently a satisfactory bargain, as
a considerable portiou of the property has again changed hands, and
now belongs to the well-known bankers, the Scotts. The present
representative is reported to be much in favour of emigration, and
even to offer special facilities to steady and capable young men,
but this liberality is not quoted to his disadvantage, as the fact
that Harris is wholly unadapted for agriculture is too obvious to be
disputed ; moreover, the deer forests are less injurious to the
country than sheep farms, because, among other reasons, the ground
they occupy would, here at least, be for the most part valueless for
other purposes. Such complaints as one hoars are mostly of old
standing, and bear reference to former depopulation in the early
days of Lord Dunmore. The island contains about a hundred and
forty-six square miles of land, being about fifty miles in length
and from eight to twenty-four in breadth, rock being the
predominating feature of the country, instead of the watery wastes
of other islands.
Even the Old
Statistical Account which, as a rule, gives such golden pictures of
former fertility, admits that “ Harris can never be enriched by
agriculture.” The prominent reason, then, lay in the fact that in
the anxiety to make kelp, the land had degenerated from want of
manure, the seaweed being otherwise utilized, but the underlying
cause for the necessity of so much manure still remains—that of the
extreme shallowness of the soil which lies often but a few inches
deep over the gneiss rock of which the island is, for the most part,
composed. The only possible system of cultivation is by “lazy beds,”
which, upon any extensive scale, is extremely laborious, but except
at the south end of the island, near Rowdill, seems to be almost a
necessity. Munro, nevertheless, tells us that in his time “Harris
was very fertill and fruitfull of corne, store, and fisching,” but,
he adds mysteriously, that there is “twisse more of delving in it
nor of teilling.”
Harris, like Lewis,
seems to be largely under Free Church influence which, acting upon
the essentially religious temperament of the people, appears to have
taken real hold of their life, not only on the aesthetic side which
one cannot but regret, but in regard to more practical details as
well. There was a powerful religious revival about 1835, “in
consequence of which,” says a contemporary writer, “the Sabbath is
strictly observed.” The inhabitants have been recently subjected to
a Christian Science Crusade, under the leading of Lord Dunmore
himself, but the results do not appear to be conspicuous. It is said
that in the whole of Harris there is hardly any tradition of crime ;
theft is uncommon, and murder wholly unknown. The Statistical
Account speaks of “two licensed houses seldom frequented by
natives.” Of one licensed house at Tarbert we can testify that it
is. considerably frequented by visitors as a convenient and
comfortable centre for fishing, the only abiding place between Loch
Maddy and Stornoway.
There are some stone
circles in Harris, two of which are near Tarbert and, we are told,
are spoken of by the people as “clach na grein” (stone of the sun),
an interesting testimony to the tradition, doubtless very ancient,
as to their original purpose.
Perhaps the most
interesting monument *in Harris if not, of its kind, in the Outer
Islands, is the Church of St. Clement at Rowdill. Its records go no
further back than the sixteenth century when, according to Buchanan,
it served as the Church to the monastery built by Alexander Macleod,
who died in 1527. It was restored by another Alexander Macleod, who
began work upon it about 1784, but during this restoration the
building took fire and had to be reroofed. The Church was again
repaired by Lady Dunmore and appears to have been in use when the
family were at Rowdill in the “mansion-house” of the proprietor. Of
late years it has, however, fallen into a state of most unfortunate
neglect; the windows are broken and the damp sea-air has coated the
stones with moss, to the threatened injury of the curious and
beautiful carvings upon the tombs of the Macleod chieftains. An
occasional service is held, we were told, but the people have their
suspicions of the Popish tendencies of the architecture, and it is
but little frequented. The body of the Church is a narrow oblong
about eighty feet, seven inches long, by fifteen feet wide. It is
correctly orientated, and has north and south chapels, and a western
tower the width of the church. Even the New Statistical Account, so
recent as 1841, written by the Parish Minister, entirely ignores the
existence of the Church, though it makes mention of a plague of rats
in the parish and of an alleged stone-circle under the sea. The
Church itself, however, hints at a story much older than has been
preserved for us in history, or even in the traditions of an
indifferent population and an uninformed public.
Rowdill is certainly
remote; it is in the extreme south of the island, but is easily
reached by the help of the mail-boat which brings letters from Skye.
As there is no pier
one has to row to the shore in a small boat, but except in bad
weather, or when the boat is more than usually crowded with cattle
and stores, it is easy enough, especially if the tide admits of the
choice of a convenient landing-place. There is a little coffee-house
at Obbe, three miles away, where one can spend the night if
necessary, as of course the mail steamer leaves at once and may not
return for some days. To drive from the hotel at Tarbert is really
the easiest plan for the non-adventurous, and the visit may be made
in a day.
There are the remains
in the churchyard of some handsome tombs enclosed by carved-stone
screens, all in a state of disregarded dilapidation. The Church
tower tells the story of a structure older than even the Macleod
monuments or the ancient font, for built into the walls are some
fragments of a much earlier building, figures which suggest to the
learned, traces possibly of Phallic worship, or at any rate of
something pre-Christian.
Rowdill probably
dates, as a Church, from the flourishing times of Iona when, it is
said, the lands of Harris belonged to the Columban territory, and it
is not unlikely that some missionary named Clement, “sainted by the
courtesy of after ages,” may have been sent there and may have
turned to Christian use some existent sacred spot, in the same
spirit which we find amoug the earliest religious teachers in all
parts; the same spirit indeed, which we have met with in other
islands prompting the burial of the dead on the sites of old
Columban Churches, and even of Scandinavian barrows and brochs. The
subject matter of the carvings is, in some cases, of a nature which
makes their exalted position, removed from public gaze, desirable
where their deeper purport is not perceived, but to the student they
are suggestive of the mysteries of an older faith, of faraway times
more remote even than the simpler nature-worship which the “Standing
stones” may possibly commemorate. Sex worship, sun worship,
Christianity itself, in its older forms, are to the uninterested
alike all part of the forgotten errors of our fathers, to be ignored
by a pious present and allowed to fall into decay, as belonging
merely to the ancestors of somebody else.
In visiting the
ecclesiastical sites of the western Highlands one becomes accustomed
to meet with the names of various unfamiliar saints, from Jeremiah
whom one is not used to hearing of as such, to Pharaer, Lennan,
Cutcheon, Aula or Kiaran, whom one is unused to in any capacity. But
St. Clement, it seems, is not a saint at all. Two Clements are known
as belonging to the period of the Columban missionaries, one who was
persecuted about 747 by Boniface, Archbishop of Mentz, and the other
who was entertained by Charlemagne in 784, and who taught the first
Grammar School in Paris. Neither was canonized, and the latter is
probably the one commemorated by the Church at Rowdill.
No account of Harris
would be complete without some reference to the “Harris tweeds,”
though, as a matter of fact, they are in no sense peculiar to Harris
and may be bought in almost any part of the Long Island, more
especially in Lewis and North Uist. The process of fulling the
cloth, with all its attendant ceremonial, can be seen in perfection
only in the Catholic Islands, where the romance of life still
lingers, and indeed much so-called “Island” tweed is made wholly or
in part in “power-looms” on the mainland, thus losing all its
distinctive character, as well as its especial attributes of being
waterproof and changeless in colour by wind or sun. Those who want
the real thing should trust no London or mainland agencies, but
apply direct to the local dealers in Tarbert (Harris) or Stornoway
(Lewis) as the method most satisfactory to oneself, and most
beneficial to the weavers. The cloth is of excellent quality, and
endless in wear, both for men and women, besides being often
beautiful in combination of colouring, or in pure tints, all of
local, and mainly vegetable, extraction.
In South Uist and
Barra, the people have long given up any attempt to make cloth for
the market, as they have been compelled to give up other advantages
common to happier islands, but a little is made in Benbecula, and a
good deal in North Uist, and now that the land question is under
consideration, the people are likely to have opportunities of
obtaining wool among themselves without resort to the factor or
general merchant. Moreover, by selling the tweed to the tweed
merchant, of whom there are now many in various parts of the
Islands, the truck system is avoided, and the weavers are honestly
paid in cash, which enables them to pay ready-money for wool, and at
once establishes trade on a just and reasonable basis, as they can
obtain their goods at market value, and “philanthropic” stimulus is
rendered superfluous.
The entire
manufacture is done by the people themselves, often by different
members of one family. In Tyree, where, from the land famine, the
people have, as in South Uist, given up making cloth, even (to a
great extent) for their own use, there are but few looms, and it is
common for people to bring their home-spun wool to the weaver, and
to pay by the yard for the labour of weaving, but in the Northern
Hebrides, where looms are common, most weavers undertake the entire
work. This includes washing the wool, drying it (often on the roof),
dyeing, carding, spinning, running on to the spindles, setting the
warp, weaving, washing, drying, fulling (or waulking), baling, and
delivering the goods to the merchant, often carried in a creel,
perhaps on the weaver s back, for many miles.
As a rule the cloth
is woven in lengths of from thirty to forty yards,—the shorter the
length the greater the multiplication of labour in setting the warp,
which from personal experiment is, I can testify, a somewhat tedious
proper, and trying- to the sight. Cloth of good quality weighs, when
finished, and dried, very nearly a lb. per yard, say 28 lbs. to a
length of thirty yards. The loss in carding and washing the wool is
at least thirty per cent., so that about 8i lbs. must be allowed for
waste.
The piece will
therefore require at least 38 lbs. of wool, which costs at present
value (October, 1891) about ten shillings a stone of 14 lbs. for
black-faced sheep, and about fifteen shillings for the superior
Cheviot; the cost of raw material therefore is in itself
considerable.
The intrinsic value
of the dye is trifling, as it is generally some local
product,—seaweed, sundew, lichen, dandelion, iris, heather,
blaeberries, tormentil, bog-myrtle, and various other simple herbs.
This is assuming that
the dye is one of those characteristic of the Islands, which is by
no means always the case unless the tweed is bought direct from the
dealers, who, honesty apart, would never so far kill the goose that
lays them golden eggs, as to rob the cloth of what to the expert is
one of its especial “ points.” The colours of the “ Harris tweeds ”
one meets in London drawing-rooms are certainly surprising. The real
cloth is dyed ingrain and will wash and wear “for ever.” That the
art of faking is confined to alien sources of supply is illustrated
by the following story, quoted in The Nicolson Institute Annual, as
pure humour—
“At another time one
of the standards was getting a lesson in nature knowledge, the
subject being the tweed industry. They had found out the details of
every process in the tweed-making, till it came to the question of
dye and its source, when one little fellow, who thought he was sure
of this at any rate, answered, They'll be buying it down in Mr. John
Maclean s shop!”
The people themselves
are extraordinarily ignorant of the value of time and labour, mainly
because they are not accustomed to receive payment for it in cash,
and it is therefore extremely difficult to arrive at any estimate of
the additional cost of the labour of spinning and weaving. A recent
article which received the Mod prize and is published in the Celtic
Monthly gives the cost of carding and spinning at 8d. per lb. (raw
material) and Id. per yard for weaving, thu9 adding another
thirty-five shillings to the cost of the web. Elsewhere we heard of
a shilling per Highland yard of eight feet, and were told that this
was about a day’s work, though sometimes a good weaver might earn as
much as Is. 6d. Even the New Statistical Account (1845), written
when wool and labour were alike cheaper than now, quotes the value
of Lewis Kelt cloth at about 48. per Highland yard (four feet).
However, in buying from these unsophisticated people through the
local merchants, one may, as a rule, make sure that they will be
fairly dealt with on straightforward business lines with none of the
superfluous “ philanthropy ” which the time Highlander so properly
resents.
It is possible that
English readers may expect to hear something of the islands of Skye
and St. Kilda, not knowing that neither of these comes under the
category of Outer Isles. There is some question whether Tyree does
not fairly belong to the Inner Hebrides, but at least it has, in
common with islands geographically more remote, the characteristic
of not having yet attracted the tourist, and therefore of, so far,
avoiding the commonplace.
In Skye there are
some delightful districts, wild, beautiful, and romantic ; glens of
which we think with gratitude for happy days spent among kind
friends; mountains and moors still possessed by the old families,
and sacred from vulgar intrusion. But also in Skye there are
electric light and Tottenham Court Road furniture, and the
exorbitant, even worse, the pretentious and incompetent innkeeper,
with other blessings of civilization. Something in the direction of
return to old times may be hoped for from the deviation in the path
of the tourist, by the opening of the new route to Mallaig; though
the inhabitants of the quaint little town of Portree may not at
present regard this as other than a doubtful blessing. Here, as
elsewhere, the alien landlord is in possession, and the least
observant cannot fail to trace his handiwork in depopulated glens
and an incredibly poverty-stricken populace. One district was
pointed out to us near the town of Portree where, at the time of the
threatened Napoleonic invasion, 200 able men were raised in a
fortnight, and now a single farm, twelve miles by four or five,
occupies the site of scores of homesteads, and, as the local phrase
is, “the smoke of a hundred hearths goes through a single chimney.”
Now and then one
realizes that better times are coming. A few months ago a certain
landlord moved his tenants from the sunny to the shady side of the
hill, where good grass was to be found only near the top, and which
was therefore better adapted for sheep that could climb, than for
cows. The people accordingly exchanged their cows for sheep in the
usual proportion of six sheep to a cow, but the County Council
having given a licence for cows and not sheep, the tenants were
ordered to remove them just at a time when the patriots of the
crofting township were away: some at the “front,” some at their
“depots,” some in the Naval Reserve, having, as they supposed,
arranged their home affairs according to such poor best as was
possible under the circumstances. The County Council supported the
rule, and an enforced sale was ordered. Fortunately the people of
Skye are not so friendless as those in more remote islands. An
appeal was made to Lord Balfour, who declined to order out the
militia or even the police, and let us hope the sheep are still
evading the arbitrary rules of unreasoning officialism.
St. Kilda, like Iona,
has become the happy hunting-ground of the Lowland tourist, and
nearly every year some irresponsible book or magazine article,
founded on a week’s observation plus a Kodak camera, is added to the
“literature” of the subject. When we were last in Eriskay where,
during the two years of our previous absence only three strangers
had landed, we observed from the newspapers that during the
fortnight of our solitary stay in that lonely island, over 300
visitors had arrived in St. Kilda.
The natives are
deteriorating under the foolish treatment of those who “take an
interest” in them; who bring them presents of silver teaspoons,
confectionery, silk aprons, mantelpiece ornaments, and silk
handkerchiefs of tartans belonging to no clan in the island. A lady
on her return showed me with much delight an old Celtic brooch she
had “picked up” for five shillings. It was made, doubtless, in
anticipation of such purchasers, out of a brass safety-pin and a
penny key-ring (both new). Such an incident, I venture to say, could
occur in no other island, not even in Iona.
Elsewhere we found
that the district nurse had lately left a certain island, quite one
of the most comfortable of the Hebrides, because she missed the
conveniences she had been previously accustomed to in St. Kilda! Mr.
Richard Kearton, whose volume (beautifully illustrated) With Nature
and a Camera is quite the best of its kind, testifies :
“The houses are
substantial one-storey buildings with zinc roofs securely fastened
down by iron bands. . . . They are far ahead in point of comfort and
conveniences of nearly all the crofters’ dwellings I have been into
in Harris, Uist, and other Hebridean Isles.”
The birds of St.
Kilda are its most interesting feature, but even they can be more
than paralleled elsewhere in lovelier spots, and where the hand of
man is less violent against them.
We remember with far
more interest than St. Kilda can invoke in us, at least half-a-dozen
islands which, if geographically nearer to the world, are at least
much more “far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife.” The Old
Statistical Account observes in its stately fashion:
“The compilers of the
Encyclopaedia Britannica will do well to correct their error in
calling Barra a rock half a mile in circumference, inhabited only by
solan geese and other wild fowls.”
The Encyclopaedia was
evidently referring not to Barra at all, but to Barra Head; but how
the author of the article knew anything of that remote island is
difficult to conjecture. It is a solitary rock, from 600 to 700 feet
high, boldly defying the Atlantic, difficult of access, and yet it
seems to have been long inhabited, for there are the remains of a
dun testifying to Danish occupation, and of a graveyard possibly
older still. That half-a-dozen brave men should consent to risk
their lives in the service of the Lighthouse one can understand, as
one understands other deeds of like heroism. One I remember, who
described for us the spectacle of an Atlantic storm as seen from
within the shelter of the light-room: how at that elevation, some
700 perpendicular feet, one could look down into the storm and see
it raging and swelling below. He said the sensation was of
extraordinary security ; there w$s no sense of movement, and even
the roar of wind and wave seemed apart and afar in another world.
The birds were in
former times the wealth of the islands, and the natives were
extraordinarily skilful in collecting them. The cliffs are more
precipitous and inaccessible than those of St. Kilda, and yet the
islanders used no ropes but climbed over the rocks. Perhaps the
grandest cliff is that of Biolacreag in the bay of Aoineag on the
west coast, which used to be the crest of the Macneills, and “Biolacreag!”
their rallying cry.
The islanders used to
pay their rent to Macneill in these birds, called fachaich,
fatlings, principally the young of the Manx shearwater, now
well-nigh extinct since the arrival of the puffin, a comparatively
valueless creature and very vicious, who, according to modem custom,
has evicted the older and more profitable inhabitants. Fortunately
careful observations have been taken of the birds of these islands
by the eminent naturalist Macgillivray, a native of Barra.
No words can describe
these wonderful precipices and the long marine arcades which
intersect the solid rock, so that one may wind in and out among the
grim stone pillars and perpendicular walls which uphold their
endless subterranean galleries—the little island-world overhead, the
reverberant waters of the Atlantic beneath, a marvellous aquatic
aviary all around; the black walls gleaming with myriads of
feathered creatures standing erect in close-serried rows,
motionless, and so tame that one might handle them could we approach
near enough. Sometimes the ledges are so narrow that one wonders how
they obtain any foothold at all, while in other spots, on some few
inches of vantage, the birds are standing three and four deep, their
white breasts and red bills shining weirdly where an occasional ray
of sunlight chances to pierce from above into the mystic gloom.
Sometimes we seem to
be making direct for a blank wall of rock, leaving behind us the
last spark of daylight, return in so narrow a space being
impossible; when suddenly, with a deft movement, our skilful oarsmen
guide the little boat down some sudden opening to right or left, and
a now gallery in the great crypt opens out before us. The
immensities of Nature’s architecture, the silence, the mystery, the
sense of one’s own helplessness and the rich glory of the deep-toned
colouring, combine to make an experience we can never forget, and
which we cherish with all the more gratitude that it might not be
easy to repeat.
On account of the
strong currents running between them these islands are very
difficult of access, and landing is so hazardous that it is not
unusual for even the native sailors and fishermen to have to return
and land elsewhere. One of our party, whose home was within some
twenty or thirty miles, told us that during twelve years he had made
many fruitless attempts to reach the caves we visited, sometimes
waiting within reach even in fair weather for a whole fortnight, but
until we brought him good fortune, in vain. A particular combination
of wind and tide, a good boat, experienced boatmen, and steady
nerves are certainly requisite.
Bernera used to be
known as Bernera of the Bishops, Bearnaraidh an Easpaig, probably to
distinguish it from several other islands of the same name ; and it
seems probable that it was—perhaps in Columban times —once Church
property. In Mingulay is a well, known as the well of Columcille,
which the people regard with such especial reverence that, left
often for months together without any religious privileges, or any
means of consecrating water for devotional purposes, they use the
well as “holy water,” and will cross themselves with it as they go
by, and carry it at the prow of their boat, as is the pious custom
among the fishermen.
In Mingulay also are
the remains of what may have been a hermit’s cell or “bed of
devotion,” of which little more than the ground plan is now left. It
is spoken of as “the Cross,” but is really a circle enclosing three
rectangular cells, and a solid heap of stones in the centre, upon
the use or origin of which, so far as I know, no expert has yet
pronounced.
These islands are the
remotest corner of the Gordon estate, having passed to it as
appertinents of Barra with the rest of the Macneill property ; but
they are so inaccessible, so remote from the centre of things, that
the people seem exceptionally well-off and comfortable. They
welcomed us with the utmost cordiality, and their kindness and
cheerful readiness to take any trouble for our pleasure or
convenience, we can never forget. So far are they from exploiting
the stranger, as is the custom in St. Kilda, that we had the
greatest difficulty in persuading them to take payment even for
laborious services, and to prevent them from robbing themselves to
give us such necessaries as added greatly to our comfort.
“This now is the
Atlantic,” said Dr. Johnson. “If I should tell at a tea-table in
London that I have crossed the Atlantic in an open boat, how they’d
shudder, and what a fool they’d think me to expose myself to such
danger.’’
The visitor to Barra
Head must travel in the same fashion as Dr. Johnson; the convenient
mail steamers which travel to St. Kilda or the Orkneys know nothing
of these solitary islands, and it need hardly be said that one does
not travel with much luggage. We had a dog and a “hold-all,” our
companions (three priests and a doctor) carried, they alleged, a
razor and a Breviary. We made our headquarters in Mingulay, in some
rooms under the new chapel in process of building. It was bright
August weather, and the scanty furniture was quite sufficient for
our needs. There was a bedstead and bedding, which, with the aid of
a lavish loan of clean home-spun blankets, we were enabled to
distribute into three separate rooms; there was a board and trestles
left behind by the workmen, and a good cooking stove, with a pot and
kettle as part of its fittings. Within an hour of our arrival we
were supplied with chairs, cups, plates, the inevitable teapot, and
abundance of blankets. A burn trickled down the hill behind the
house, the sea lapped gently on the white sands in front; we had
abundance of water for drinking and ablution. What more could one
want?
The day of our
arrival was Friday, and we had excellent fresh fish in abundance,
though there is a tradition that the sea-birds taste so strongly of
their natural food, that we should not have transgressed had we
dined off them. Our companions, the men, both of religion and
medicine, found plenty of occupation, for the people naturally took
advantage of their visit to supply their needs spiritual and bodily.
At an early hour next
morning Mass was said in the little unfinished chapel, with such
fittings as could be arranged. There were no seats, but we were glad
to bring up our four chairs for the very old and infirm. Almost
every adult in the island was present, except a retired Presbyterian
schoolmaster, and outside, a little group of awe-stricken children
silently awaited the dispersion of such a gathering as they had
never beheld.
The schoolmaster
interested us greatly. He was a scholarly man from the mainland, and
could speak English. He came to the island somewhere about 1860, and
the story is told that on his arrival the children crowded round to
see the school they were going to have! I believe he has never been
away ; he married a woman of the island, and after teaching for, I
think, over thirty years, was pensioned, and now is “passing rich”
on half the income of the village preacher. His little croft
supplies him with food and clothing; his house is well-furnished
with blankets, his fire with peats; and his one luxury is tea—which
he imports— of the very best. He has books, and is quite an
accomplished botanist, having observed and classified the flora of
the island without knowing the names of a dozen flowers. We had tbe
privilege of being of some use in naming his collection, and left
him, feeling as one so often does among the Highlanders:
Alas! the gratitude
of man Hath often left me mourning!
The island is so
little known that no Martin or Buchanan, not even a contributor to
the Statistical Account has been found to write its history. We had
an interesting talk with “the oldest inhabitant,” which can be but
inadequately reproduced in English.
“Caluni Macphee is my
name,” said he, “son of Donald, son of John, son of Rory, son of
Rory, son of Rory, son of Donald, and I can’t go further back than
that; but the man we came from was big Kenneth, who was an
unrighteous man, and came from the island of Colonsay or from Eigg.
In any case there were men slain in a cave in the place where he
came from.
“Kenneth and his son,
with a crew of three, fled to Barra, but a storm came on them with
great cold, and the three men perished; but big Kenneth and his son
got ashore at Oronsay in the Sound of Vatersay. He had a crock of
gold, and he took his son under his arm, and tried to spring across
to the bigger island. In springing over, the crock fell, and was
broken, and it has been cast up to the Macphees ever since, and
there is a raun about it. I might have learnt it, but I would not;
it was a reproach to us. Next day ho went back at low tide and
picked up the gold.
“The Macneill of the
day liked to have all the stalwart young men about him at Kisimul,
and it was either the son or the grandson that was along with him
there, when the people died of the plague in Mingulay.
“Macneill at Kisimul
had noticed that it was long that the people of Mingulay were not
coming to the mainland, and he sent out a crew to see what was
wrong, and the stalwart descendant of big Kenneth was with them.
They landed over there at Sloe nan Druisdan [chasm of brambles].
Macphee jumped ashore and came up to the township, and every house
he went into he found clean swept and the fire out, till he came to
the last house, where the people lay dead, for there had been none
to bury them. The township was then up above to the north-west, and
I think that there must have been houses where the chapel is built,
because they found many stones and some ashes when they opened the
ground there.
“Macphee hurried back
to the boat, and called to the crew to put back for him. ‘You must
tell us your news first,’ they said, for they were surprised no
person had come down to welcome them to shore.
“When he told them
how things were, they were afraid, and pushed off and left him
alone; but when they got to Kisimul and told Macneill, he was angry,
and told them to go back at once to fetch Macphee, with the coit [a
Gaelic word for “boat,” now falling into disuse, but the lingering
use of which in this remote island is worth noting].
“However, it was
seven weeks before they could land in Mingulay because of the
weather. All this time the poor man had no fire, but he was yet
alive before them ; some say he had killed a sheep, and lived on raw
flesh and sheep’s blood. Every day he used to climb to the top of
the highest hill, looking out for the boat, and the hill has been
called Ben Macphee ever since.
“When they returned
with him to Kisimul, Macneill asked if he would be willing to go
back again and stay in Mingulay, and he said He would if he could
choose his own companions. Macneill told him he would get that, and
among those he chose was an ancestor of Michael there, and of Angus,
son of Donald, who lives at the back of the schoolhouse.”
“Did he take a
Campbell?” asked one of the group mischievously.
“And Michael’s
ancestor a Macneill of the chief s own blood! No!”
“Macneill went with
them, and on landing climbed up Ben Macphee as far as the place
since called Macneill’s Bed, yonder ” (pointing to where a
projecting rock made a sort of cavern-like shelter), “so as to be
away from the smoke and disease, while Macphee, who was not at all
afraid, set fire to every house, and the township was built in the
new place. Macphee got free land for himself and his descendants.”
As elsewhere in the
Islands the inhabitants had plenty of time for ceilidh, and another
kind friend was ready to give us a further unwritten chapter of
Mingulay history. We had often heard of a certain pious priest named
James Grant, who had been stationed in South Uist at the time of
Prince Charlie’s visit. He was then about thirty-nine years of age.
He was betrayed, and had to seek shelter in Mingulay, whence, after
some time, he tried to escape to the mainland. It was at this point
that our friend’s story began.
“It was at nightfall
that he set sail, and when he got to Vatersay he went ashore to
enquire news, and heard that the red soldiers [i.e. the Hanoverians]
were in Barra, so he returned to Mingulay, and went alone to the
cave of Hoisp.”
I note as thoroughly
characteristic of a Highland ceilidh that at this point a bystander
interrupted to add, “And a man brought him an egg to eat.” There is
always a received method of telling a story, from which no deviation
is permitted without reminder, which, in the interests of history,
has its advantages.
“The red soldiers
came to Mingulay, and the first two men they met were put under oath
at the point of the sword. The first man said he had seen the priest
leaving the island the day before, and the second said he had seen
him come back and go over the hill. The soldiers struck the first
man on the face with their muskets, and his nose was crooked till
the day of his death. The other man they took with them, and they
got the priest, and he was bound, and brought down to the village,
and thrown into a barn near the house where John Mackinnon, son of
Donald, son of Niel, now lives. Two young lads came in, one after
another, where he was, and he asked the first to bring him some
thatch to put under him, for the ground was very wet; and the lad
went out, but was unable to return. And he asked the second to bring
him an egg, but he too could not return. Thereafter the priest was
taken away, and the next thing they heard was that he had been made
a bishop.”
James Grant did
happily escape from his enemies,, ultimately became Bishop of the
Lowland district, and died in Aberdeen in 1778 at the age of
seventy-two.
We were next informed
why this particular story belonged to our informant. His mother, who
died at over 100 years old, remembered the two lads. She was “a
praying woman,” and Father Allan himself communicated her at Easter,
1885 or 1886. Her son is now seventy-one, and she married late in
life.
A cave in Ben More in
Uist, which also sheltered Bishop Grant, is still known as TJamh a
Ghranndaich, the Cave of the Grant.
From yet another
chronicler we gleaned a further note to our little chapter of
Mingulay history.
“There was about this
time a soldier, who had been in the ’45, who belonged to Mingulay.
He was great-uncle’s son to Ian yonder, the son of Hamish, and he
had some money, and the soldiers were coming after him. His brother
advised him to put away the money in case of what might happen, but
he said, ‘They’ve not done with me yet.’ However, he was surrounded
by soldiers, and Captain Scott [whose name is execrated in the
islands] ordered him to be shot, and he was robbed and murdered at
the back of the house where the stackyard is.
“Captain Scott, with
some more of his kind, went off in a ship to Tyree. He was only just
in time, for his superior officer, on coming to Mingulay, was
shocked to hear of his brutality, and said that if he had been
there, it was Scott himself would have been shot.”
“And there is no more
story about Mingulay,” said one of our friends, “till we shall begin
to tell about the time when the two ladies with the wise white
doggie came to the island.”
Sometimes—when our
thoughts go back to those hours of golden sunshine on the little
green bank in the Atlantic Ocean, where men and women lead simple
lives and talk of golden deeds, where they visit the fatherless and
widows in their affliction (alas! how many are bereaved each stormy
winter!), and keep themselves unspotted from the world—theirs “seems
the real life and this the dream.”
But if they had no
more stories to tell us, we could always talk about the birds, and
to us that seemed an endless fairy tale.
About the 1st of
February they come. There is snow on the hills, it may be, or at
least far away to the east one can see on a clear day that the Scaur
of Eigg and the hills of Cuchullin are crowned with silvery white.
The lighthouse men talk of wrecks, and the fishermen’s boats are on
shore, and at night the winds wail and moan about their homesteads ;
but the birds have come, and it is the first promise of spring, just
as surely as when, with us, the brown of the winter woods takes on a
veil of purple.
The birds have come,
but not to stay. They will visit the old nests and clear them of
rubbish, and clean and repair them, and then, in great flocks and
clouds, they fly away and melt into the grey distance. But now and
then, on bright days perhaps, or when the wind sets towards the
island, a few will be seen here and there—advance guards of the
great army. About the last week of April they again reconnoitre
their nests, and in a few days they are all about the islands in
thousands ; and then the great nursery is opened, and each hen lays
one egg on ledges so narrow that but for their extraordinary
balance—which one realizes only by experiment—they must inevitably
be destroyed. They are so close together too that it is wonderful
how each bird can distinguish her own. About the end of July all are
hatched, and soon they disappear—some say that each hen with her
young one on her back plunges into the sea, and is no more seen.
Each tribe keeps, year by year, to its own quarters— the oily
puffin, the rare shearwater, the various gulls, the guillemot, the
cormorant and a dozen others.
The island of
Mingulay is rough and hilly, but the pasture is good. Naturally life
is not easy, and expedients have to be resorted to. There is a high
rock called Bennichorn close to the island, with very fine grass
upon the top, up which men climb at the risk of their lives, and
then draw their wethers up after them to fatten. In another place we
were shown a very narrow cleft in a rock, the jagged edges of which
just make it possible for a sheep to obtain a foothold, but it can
never turn round. The men bring their sheep in boats to the bottom,
and start the poor beasts on their upward path, which eventually,
after some hundreds of feet of danger and darkness, brings them out
into green pasture and the light of day.
These islanders are a
fine-looking race, the men as usual superior to the women; some were
of definitely Scandinavian appearance, veritable Vikings, with
grand, fair, well-shaped heads and big voices. They are notoriously
long-lived, unless, as so often happens, they fall victims to the
hungry sea. Mingulay has lately boasted two giants: one Peter
Campbell of six-foot-nine, and Duncan Sinclair nearly as tall.
We heard of a monster
that inhabits the caves of Mingulay at the north end opposite Pabbay,
and interviewed one man who had seen it, but could only tell us it
was not a water-horse but very like it. Of the water-horse we were
constantly hearing in many islands, but here we found something very
like what the Society for Psychical Research would call “collective
evidence,” i.e. a whole boat’s crew, who saw the beast following
them for a quarter of a mile. Big Ian, grandest of Vikings, whom the
Atlantic in all its fury could not daunt, himself described it. It
was bigger than a common horse, and of a dark grey colour; he
couldn’t see whether it had hoofs, but its action was that of
swimming.
We would gladly have
remained among these friendly people, and were really grieved to be
told suddenly that it was best that we should be off in half an
hour, with barely time for leave-taking; but our friends were right,
and we learnt afterwards that had we not left just when we did we
might have been detained three months. We were almost becalmed, and
the men had constantly to row. We went ashore on the islands of
Pabbay and Sandray, on both of which are traces of ecclesiastical
buildings; and the evening fell before we reached Barra, after some
eight hours’ dream-like floating over a moveless silent sea, with
not a sail in sight, only here and there when we neared an island we
exchanged greetings with some solitary fishermen setting their nets
in the golden twilight.
Many things we talked
of in that dream-journey, and now and then some of the men would
sing to us, especially when their companions were rowing. We talked
of the kindness we had received, and to illustrate their assurance
that visitors were welcome in these lonely places, one of the party
quoted the speech of a man in Iochar to a priest who was visiting
him, and who was detained by a snow-storm, “I wish it would snow so
that there wouldn’t be room for a little bird below the heavens!”
that is, in order that the visit might be prolonged.
We heard more about
the water-horse—one had been seen not long since by four men who
were fishing lobsters only sixty yards from shore. The creature came
within two oars’ length of them, and looked at them fixedly with
great eyes like cups. It had a very broad head and a mane. No one
present would own to having seen a mermaid, but they said that when
one was reported it was a sign of bad weather, apparently
distinguishing between veridical and non-veridical hallucinations,
as the learned in such things would say.
We stayed in Barra
for the night, and next day resumed our voyage back to Eriskay, a
fact which I mention only for the sake of recalling our sight of the
Stack Islands’ wave-worn rocks, now only occupied by sheep. One—Creag
Mhor, the big rock, romantically crowned with a ruined tower—is the
subject of weird legend, and is indeed suggestive to the
imagination. Nothing more absolutely solitary could be imagined, and
the utter loneliness of the position is accentuated by the extreme
minuteness of the island, which seems as if the rush of the
surrounding sea might any moment dash it to pieces. Yet even the
miniature castle on its summit has defied the Atlantic for untold
centuries, while nations and empires have been swept away and whole
races of mankind forgotten.
A nameless mystery
clings about the Flannan Islands, lately the scene of the terrible
disaster which has been already referred to, and which occasioned
the death of all the men of the lighthouse, their sole occupants.
The islands, seven in
number, are accessible from Lewis, about twenty-five miles to the
west.
They have long been
uninhabited, though apparently at one time an ecclesiastical
settlement of sufficient importance to invest the islands with a
reputation for special sanctity. There are the remains of chapels:
one, still in some degree of preservation, known as Teampul
Beannachadh, the House of Blessing, about 11 ft. by 10 ft. 2 in.,
may have been the abode of some penitential hermit. It is of the
usual Columban variety, built without mortar, and ascribed by
Buchanan to the Druids. He calls the islands Insu-lae Sacrae, and
the “Indweller,” John Morison, also regards them as especially
sacred. “When the people go there,” he says, referring to the
depredators of the sea-fowl, “they use every two men to be comrades.
They hold it a breach of the sanetitie of the place (for they count
it holier than anie other) if any man take a drink of water unknown
to his comrade, or eat ane egg or leg of anie fowl, yea, take a
snuff of tobacco.” Martin gives quite a long and very curious
account of the customs associated with the Flannans, which in his
time were held so sacred that “it was not right” to call them by
their name, and they were always spoken of as “the countrie.” In the
same way to this day green is in certain districts constantly spoken
of as “blue,” to avoid naming the colour of the fairies. The St.
Kildians do not speak of their island as “Hirta,” but as “the high
country” (cf. chapter xi. “ The Powers of Evil ”). Martin quotes
other instances—that water must be called burn, not visk; a rock,
should be called crueyy or the hard thing; cladach, the shore,
should be called vah, a cave; gort, sour, should be called gaire,
sharp ; and a bog, a constant source of peril, “the soft thing”—all
of these instances being just examples of the Hebridean tendency
towards “dodging” the powers of evil, on the principle that “ill
will come if mentioned,” and that those things will be injured to
which the attention of the listening powers is even accidentally
called.
Those who landed must
do so sun-wards, thanking God for safety; and they always held a
special service, morning and evening, in the ruined chapel, for
three days before the work of fowling began, for “there was none
ever yet landed, but found himself more disposed to devotion there
than anywhere else.”
The Hebrideans have a
way, worthy of the mediaeval saints, of including their dumb friends
in their recognition of sacred times and places. At certain
festivals extra food is given to the cattle, and it was part of the
religious celebration to refrain in the Flannans from killing any
bird after evening prayer, or with a stone, a belief which, even
associated with the almost necessary work of taking life for a
liveli hood, included the idea of—
He prayeth well who
loveth well
Both man and bird and beast.
Weir's Way: Mingulay & Berneray
Tom Weir was a writer, broadcaster and an environmentalist. Tom
wrote and presented this classic Scottish TV series Weir's Way which
ran from 1976 to 1987
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