The light ash of the peat,
they say, flies everywhere about a shieling. But it is a cleanly thing. It
leaves no tarnish, at any rate, on the snowy wood dresser or its high rack
of shining delf. The tall old-fashioned mahogany case-clock in the corner,
an heirloom much valued, may have absorbed more of the powder, perhaps,
than conduces to regular intestinal working; but the open iron creuzie or
cresset lamp hanging quaintly, though now unused, from the high
mantelshelf, is kept clear enough for lighting yet if need were; and maybe
the hams and "kippered" fish hanging from hooks in the blackened rafters
are rather improved in flavour by the condiment.
But look here. With true
Highland hospitality preparations for tea have been surreptitiously
advanced, and the fresh, wholesome-looking daughter of the house and her
mother lift into the middle of the earthen floor the table ready
caparisoned with cloth of snow, glittering cups and knives, heaped
sugar-bowl, and beaker of rich yellow cream. A lissome flower of the moors
is this crofter maid. The oatmeal which she has been baking is not more
soft and fair than the skin of the comely lass, and, as she smiles reply
in lifting the toasted oat-farles from the flat iron "girdle" swung over
the fire, it needs no poet to notice that her eyes are bits of summer sea
and her mouth a damask bud. The toasted farles of oat-cake from her hand
send forth an ambrosial smell which, with the fragrance of the new-made
tea, is irresistible to hungry folk, and no pressing Highland exhortation
is needed to set visitors of both sexes to the attack of the viands.
Not till every one has
again and again declared sheer inability to pursue the attack further does
the announcement come that "the mare is in the cart." A chair,
therefore, is presently carried out, and the whole party of four mount
into the rough vehicle among the straw. Hereupon follow a hand-shaking and
repetition of hospitable invitations to return which begin to become
almost embarrassing, before Hamish starts at his horse’s head upon the
moor track.
A long, memorable day it
has been, amid the warm sunshine and the bright seabreeze—a day to do the
heart good and to tire the limbs royally; the morning draught of brave
mountain air and life on the white moorland road before the inn; the
forenoon ramble, rod in hand, on the warm gorsepath by the river; luncheon
in quaint-flavoured, wit-haunted company by the blue Kilbrannan Sound,
with nothing to interrupt but the beat of sudden outflying wings sometimes
about the warm cliff crannies overhead, and, on the beach below, the soft
caressing murmur of the secret-telling sea; the afternoon drive to the far
hill-clachan, where the turf roofs were tied down with heather ropes,
where the brown women were carrying sea-wrack to manure their fields, and
where, as a back-sound to the quaint-turned Highland speech, was heard the
thud-thud of the swinging flails; and, last of all, the return at evening
by the high moorland path, with the amethyst fire dying out on Ben Ghoil
in the east, and, in the west, the sunset heavens aflame with saffron and
rose, and the sea a living splendour of generous wine.
Now it is night, and the
air comes cooler over the moor. No air is like Arran air at night, with
its vague herb-perfumes adrift, for stirring old memories and desires in
the heart and new ambitions in the blood. Upon its clear breath old
designs, old possibilities long forgotten, come back again to make life
and hope. By it the vapours of worldly wisdom are blown aside, the
cloud-wrack care of intervening years is lifted, and one walks again
clear-hearted for a time in the April valley of his youth. Night anywhere
has charms for those who think, but night upon the moors possesses an
influence peculiarly its own. The primeval heath, wild and undesecrated by
the hand of man, lies under "the splendid-mooned and jewelled night,"
shadowy and mystic with the silence of the ages. Abroad upon the moor at
such an hour seem to brood the imaginings of an older world, and the grey
stone circles standing gaunt yet upon the Arran wilds are hardly needed to
suggest the memory that along these wilds, once upon a time, wound
processions of bearded Druids, to practise under the starry influences
rites of a faith now long forgotten. At intervals upon the moor they
appear, these grey menhirs and circles. Inscrutable as the Egyptian sphinx
they stand with sealed lips, strange monuments of a buried past. For tens
of centuries they have seen the dusks gather and the stars swim overhead,
but no rising sun has wakened them from their silence, and still they keep
the stony secret of their origin, though they could not keep the ashes of
the dead committed to their charge.
Meanwhile Hamish makes way
steadily, though by tortuous windings. None but a native bred on the spot
could conduct a vehicle safely by night across these moors. Where
unaccustomed eyes can make out no sign whatever of a track, and where a
single mistake would send one wheel floundering into a peat-hag and the
other spinning in the air, or capsize the whole equipage into the miry
abysses of a bog, Hamish leads confidently on, with no worse result than
the jolting of a rugged road. The mare is a sturdy beast of the small
sure-footed Arran breed, now dying out, and she pulls away gallantly among
rocks and heath-tufts that would bring any other sort of horse to quick
disaster. It takes her master all his time to keep up with her on the
rough ground, and he has breath left for no more than an occasional "Ay,
ay," or "‘Deed, yes, Sir!" in the true Arran accent. English is evidently
the less familiar language to him; his remarks to the mare, sotto voce,
are in Gaelic.
All last month after
nightfall tufts and sheets of flame were to be seen among the darkness of
the hills; for in March they burn the heather on the sheep-farms to let
the young herbage come up, and the conflagrations which appear then as
pillars of smoke by day become pillars of fire by night. But in April the
moorland birds have begun to build their nests, and the hills are left to
them in darkness and in peace. The only light to be seen from the cart is
that in the window of the croft far behind, which will be kept aglow by
thoughtful hands as a guide till Hamish’s return after moonset. Over the
brow of the moor, however, the shining lights of the clachan at the
mountain foot before long come into sight, and away to the right,
tremulous with silver and shadows, the sheen of the moonlight can be made
out on the sea. Rapidly now the path descends, plunging presently through
lanes of high thorn hedges where the stars are all but shut out overhead.
The rush of a river is heard, the wheels grate harshly on the gravel,
there is a sudden and vigorous splashing of hoofs, and the mare has passed
the ford. Then a half-mile of climb uphill on a good road, and Hamish
stands still with his charge at the door of the inn.