EE, Page 217. Influence of Public Opinion
Instances are common in the Highlands, even to this
day, of the influence of public opinion operating as a powerful restraint
on crimes, nay, even as a punishment, to the extent of forcing individuals
into exile. Of these, two have occurred within my own remembrance. Several
years ago, two men, one old and the other young, stepped into a small boat
to cross Loch Tay. In the middle of the lake they were seen to stand up,
as if struggling, and then quickly to sit or fall down, the people from
the distance could not distinguish which. When the boat arrived at the
shore, the young man was missing. The account which his aged companion
gave was, that the youth was in liquor, and wished to quarrel with him,
and got up in the boat to strike him, but his foot slipped and he fell
overboard. This story was not believed. The man was sent to Perth jail,
tried at the ensuing assizes, and acquitted for want of evidence. The
impression of his guilt, however, was not to be effaced from the minds of
the people. This belief was farther confirmed by the character of the man,
who was quarrelsome and passionate. On his return to Breadalbane no person
would speak to him. He was not upbraided for his supposed guilt, nor was
any attempt made to insult or maltreat him ; but he found every back
turned upon him, and every house he entered instantly emptied of its
inhabitants. He withstood this for a short time, when he left the country,
and never returned, or was seen afterwards. I was present at this man's
trial. His name was Ewen Campbell, or Ewen Laider, or the Strong, from his
great strength. The other instance happened some years afterwards in
Strathbrane, the most southern valley in the Perthshire Highlands. The
circumstances were in part similar to those which occasioned the late
proposed trial by wager of battle in the case of Thornton, accused of the
murder of Mary Ashford. A young woman was found drowned in a small pool of
water used for steeping flax, having considerable marks of violence on the
body, and traces of struggling being discovered on the grass round the
pool. There was not a doubt but she had been murdered and forced into the
water. Suspicions fell upon a young man supposed to have been her
sweetheart. He was sent to Perth jail, tried, and acquitted for want of
proof. In the minds of the people, however, there was proof sufficient. He
happened to reach home late on a Saturday night, and next morning went to
hear Divine service, and took his seat in one end of the church; but in a
moment he had it wholly to himself. Every person moved away to a distance,
and left the whole range of seats empty. When he came out after service,
and stood in the church-yard, all shunned him, and when he walked
homewards, those that were in his front hurried on, and those behind
walked slow, leaving the road to himself. This was too much to bear, and
his resolution not holding out so long as the old man's, he disappeared
that night, and, like him, has never since been heard of.
The laws are now sufficiently strong to punish all
crimes in the Highlands. When such was not the case, these were the
institutions and habits of thinking which these illiterate people
established for themselves, to punish and prevent transgressions.