With hunts up, with hunts up, It is now perfect day.
* * * * * Ace cursed fox lay hid in rocks This lang
and mony a day, Devouring sheep while he micht creep, Nane might him
schape away.
Wedderburne's Ballads.
IT has been truly remarked that "in Scotland, where, from
the character of the country, fox-hunting is often impossible, it never has
become a national sport to the same extent as in England." At an early
period the Scots did not reckon the fox among their beasts of chase, and
neither did the English. For other sport was afforded by the pathless
forests, the brown moors, the bosky glens, and heathy mountain of the north,
where the "mighty hunters" of old, who contended with the wild white bull,
the wolf, and the boar, and revelled in the chase of the deer, disdained to
pursue the mean and cowardly fox—the madadh ruadh, the red dog, as it was
called in the language of the hills. By skill in hunting, the young chief of
a clan gave the first proof of capacity to head his tribe; but the red dog
was not the quarry against which he bent his adolescent energies. The fox,
which abounded in the the country, proving most destructive to flocks and
domestic poultry, was counted as vermin, and was trapped and otherwise
distroyed by the rural population who suffered severely frorn its ravages.
Hear what Roderick Dhu said—
"Though the beast of game The privilege of chase may
claim, Though space and law the slag we lend, Ere hound Nye slip, or bow we
bend, Who ever reck'd, where, how, or when, The prowling fox was trapp'd or
slain.
Unlike the wolf, however, the fox never had the honour of
being denounced by statute, but in various quarters dogs were kept specially
for its extirpation. Thus, for example, the Register of Tacks of the Abbey
of Cupar Angus, which had extensive domains in Glenisla, contains leases,
dated between 1539 and 1559, in which the larger tacksmen were severally
held bound to maintain and feed a leash of good hounds, with a couple of
raches (sleuth- (logs) for tod (fox) and wolf, and shall be ready at all
times when we (tile abbot and convent) charge them to pass with us or our
baillies to the hunts;" and the smaller tenants were in like manner bound to
keep "one hound for tod and wolf."
Hector Bocce, in his History, tells a marvellous story of
how the inhabitants of Glenmore (in the shires of Inverness and Moray)
protected their fowls against the wily plunderers. "The wolves," he says,
"are right noisome to the tame bestial in all parts of Scotland, except one
part thereof, named Glenn-more ; in which the tame bestial get little damage
of wild bestial, especially of tods. For each house nourishes a young tod
certain days, and mixes the flesh thereof, after it be slain, with such meat
as they give to their fowls or other small beasts, and so many as eat of
this meat are preserved two months after from any damage by the tods, for
tods will taste no flesh that tastes of their own kind and be there but one
beast or fowl that has not tasted of this meat, the tod will chase it out
among a thousand." No comment on this mode of protection is needful.
At what period the chase of the fox came in favour with
Scottish sportsmen cannot be ascertained with any exactness. \Ve know how
ardent a votary of Diana and St. Hubert was King James VI., but buck-hunting
was his ruling passion in the field. An early notice of fox- hunting as a
sport, however, on the part of the upper class, is given in the Black Book
of Taymoulk, occurring in the shape of a letter, dated in 1631, from the
Earl of Mar, while residing at Stirling, to Sir Cohn Campbell of Glenurchay,
whose father had died that same year :-
"To my very loving cousin, the Laird of Glenurchay.
Loving Cousin,
"Being come in to stay in this town a good part of this
winter, I think my greatest sport shall be the hunting of the fox, therefore
I will earnestly entreat you to send me with this bearer a couple of good
earth dogs. This is my first charge since your father died, and I pray you
use me as familiarly as I do you; for without ceremony, cousin, you shall
not have a friend over whom you have greater power than over me. Your loving
Cousin to do you service.
"MAR. "Stirling, the 5 of November, 1631.
"What you send me, let it be good, although it should be
but one."
Doubtless Sir Colin sent a leash of his best dogs, with
which he had scoured the hills and glens of Breadalbane, and the Earl could
scarcely fail finding good sport around Stirling.
Captain Burt, in his amusing Letters, speaks of
fox-hunting as he saw it in the highlands. " There are numbers of foxes," he
says ; "but they take to the mountains, which are rocky, and sometimes
inaccessible to the clogs, of which several have been lost by falling from
precipices in the pursuit ; for the fox in his flight takes the most
dangerous way. But when we happen to kill one of them, it is carried home,
through the blessings of the people, like a dangerous captive in a Roman
triumph." It was common, indeed, to nail a fox's head to the door of stable
or byre, along with a horse-shoe, as a counter- charm against the
mischievous pranks of the fairies and the malicious spells of the witches.
The Captain writes again that one of the chief complaints of the
Highlanders, after being disarmed in 1725, was "that they were deprived of
the means to destroy those noxious animals," foxes and wild-cats, which did
them " much more hurt in their poultry, etc., than they yield them profit by
their furs; and the eagles do them more mischief than both the others
together." But in this complaint the Highlanders the Captain, because in
obeying the order for disarmament, they had only given up their worst
weapons, the others being carefully concealed fora future rising.
After the middle of last century, when the country had
settled down from the disasters of the Rebellion, it came to pass that the
people of districts infested with foxes engaged and paid a class of men to
root them out. This system prevailed in various parts of Scotland clown to
the earlier years of the present century. The remuneration of the hunters
was sometimes a fixed salary, and sometimes rated at so much per head of the
slaughtered foxes, ill both cases being provided by a general assessment oil
the district. When Dr. Johnson was in the Hebrides, in 1773, lie found that
in the Isle of Skye the head of a fox was worth a guinea to the killer of
the animal. The Old Statistical Account of Scotland conducted by Sir John
Sinclair, gives interesting details of the working of the hired- hunter
system at the time the work was issued, namely from 1791 to 1799: and a few
extracts may be made
In the united parishes of Lochgoilhead and Kilmorich,
Argyleshire, "foxes were formerly very numerous; but since the land has been
chiefly stocked with sheep, the destruction of these animals has become an
object of great attention. For this purpose, two, three, or more parishes,
according to their cxteiit, join in supporting a fox-hunter, and a pack of
dogs. The fox-hunter receives a fixed salary: he is continually
perambulating the country, and lives upon his employers; every tacksman and
tenant being obliged to entertain him and his dogs, a specified number of
nights in the year, according to the extent of land which he possesses. In
consequence of this establishment, a fox is seldom seen."
In the parish of Kirkpatrick-Irongray, Kircudbrightshire,
when foxes " begin to kill the sheep any where in the parish, the huntsman,
who is paid by the country, is sent for, and lie seldom fails to unkenncl a
fox on that hill, or in the woods around it."
In the parish of Lochlcc, Forfarshire, poison was used in
addition to the operations of the paid huntsman: this being done, "in the
winter season, by dragging a piece of salted fish well spiced with powdered
nux vomica, along a hill side, and leaving it near water. If the fox comes
upon the tract, he soon finds the bait, cats it, drinks and expires
instantly. The only difficulty lies in finding open water in time of a
severe storm, and without this, the nux vomica does not kill."
In the parish of Western, Perthshire, "the foxes, before
the year 1760, made great havoc among the sheep, goats, &c.; but from that
time, regular fox-hunters have been employed at fixed salaries, by whose
diligence and skill vast numbers of foxes have been destroyed; so that their
number is now greatly reduced."
In Golspie parish, Sutherlandshire, " the fox has still a
footing ... But, much to the honour of this county, upwards of £100 sterling
is yearly expended by it for the purpose of extirpating that noxious animal.
Every man that chooses may become a fox-hunter: and for every grown fox
killed, there is a premium of 5s. out of the sum above specified; for every
fox-cub 2s. 6d.; for every female fox having milk in her teats, or being
with young, 20s. When a fox-hunter kills a fox, he is obliged to come
immediately and present the dead animal to the sight of a Justice of the
Peace, or the Minister of the parish; and to obtain an attestation, in terms
of his own declaration, of the parish and the name of the place where he
killed the fox, specifying also whether it is male or female, old or young ;
and if a female, whether or not it had milk in its teats, or was with young.
After this ceremony is over, the huntsman cuts off the ears of the fox, in
sight of the inspector, and carries them away carefully, to be kept in
retentis till the 30th of April, on which clay the premium is to be paid. On
time 30th of April, unless it falls on a Sunday, the Commissioners of Supply
and Justices of the Peace meet in the county burghs, chiefly for the purpose
of transactinq the fox-business, where all the fox-hunters in the country
attend, and produce before the court all the fox-ears they have, with the
attestations aforesaid and after every examination that may be thought
necessary, and their deposition to the truth of the facts contained in their
attestations, they receive their money in full. The man that kills the
greatest number receives a premium, over and above the modified allowance
for each fox."
Dr. Charles Rogers tells us that, in the times of the
hired huntsmen, "several days were occupied annually in the pursuit of the
fox, when the entire inhabitants of the district turned out. In Forfarshirc
these gatherings were convened by the parish beadle while the congregation
left church. An ancestor of the writer heard a beadle in Strathmore summon a
dispersing congregation to attend at the hunting field, in these words:
Ilka man and mither's son, Come hunt the tod on
Tuesday.
The section of Somerville's (base, which describes the
English fox-hunting, is rivalled in spirit and graphic interest, in a
forgotten Scottish poem, The Grampians Desolate, by a Perthshire poet,
Alexander Campbell, of Tombea, published in quarto, at Edinburgh, in 1804.
The author explains that " a mountain fox-hunting differs greatly from the
ordinary exertions and pleasures of the chase in situations less elevated,
or in an open country where horsemen can follow the pack in the doublings of
the game they are in chase of. There are regular fox- hunters in almost
every district, that are employed at a yearly allowance, collected as
regularly as the minister's stipend." And the hunt among the hills is thus
depicted:
The hunter to the upland wilds is come, A welcome
guest —each bothan is his home His hounds and terriers keen, a yelping
train, The mountain echoes now salute again. Far out of view, among
the airy peaks The wily prowler into covert sneaks The wary cubs
alarm'd, instinctive creep Hard after, scarcely breathing, silence keep.
Ere peep of (lawn, all ready for the sport, Forth from the airdhi to the
wilds resort And hunters, hounds, and shepherds' dogs rove wide, From
knoll to knoll, from hill to mountain's side The heath-cock shakes his
wing—'tis dawn of day Halloo the hunt is up—away—away He breaks full
speed away—swift, swift he flies The yell of opening hounds ascends the
skies Away, away o'er many a shaggy steep, Fox, hounds, and huntsmen
swift as lightning sweep; Beyond the midway far, where cliffs meet sky,
See the sly villain doubling oft on high,— The pealing pack at
fault, impatient, keen, Range o'er the mountain's brow,—unheard, unseen
The hunters follow, darling swift along, And fearless bound the
craggy wilds among: From bending heights they far beneath the eye,
Deep in the vale below the thief descry. Huzza again the hounds have
gain'd the scent Unheeding danger, on their prey intent, They dash
'midst duly windings, shelving rocks, And rouse the peaceful herds and
roving flocks The timid mountain-hare, the roe, the hind Start from
their shelter, secret haunts to find. Ye harmless tenants of these
mountains wild, They thirst not for your blood—ye meek ye mild Your
crafty neighbour of the cavern-rock, The foe bloodthirsty of the
harmless flock, The canine rangers, full of vengeful fire, Fain
would him worry in instinctive ire. Lo, now close in upon his utmost
speed, The sanguine pack to mouth him now proceed Without a groan
the hardened culprit dies, The hills resound the hunters' joyous cries
They pause—and panting (logs stretch'd on the heath Repose the
while, and soon regain their breath And on a dark-brown knoll all now
recline, A homely feast is spread, on which they dine Heart-cheering
whisky, oat-cake, goat's milk cheese, (High cheer that might an ancient
hero please!) Compose use hearty meal—they rest the while Anon to
urge anew the pleasing toil, The huntsman gives the word—and up all
spring And to their holla mountain-echoes ring— The game is up
again—full speed they fly— Ere night fall, hunted down, more prowlers
die.
Four years after the issue of Campbell's quarto, an
extraordinarily-protracted fox-chase came off in the Highlands. The story
goes that on the 8th June, 1808, a fox and a hound, trotting at a slow pace,
were observed coming southwards along the highway above Dunkeld, in
Perthshire—the fox about fifty yards ahead, but both animals being so
fatigued as not to be able to gain upon each other. A countryman on the road
easily caught the fox alive, and took both it and the dog to a gentleman's
house near by, where poor Reynard drew his last breath through sheer
exhaustion. It was afterwards ascertained," says the narrator, "that the
hound belonged to the Duke of Gordon, and that the fox was started on the
morning of the King's birthday (4th June), on the top of those hills called
Mona-/lad!,, which separates Badenoch from Fort Augustus. From this it
appeared that the chase lasted four days, and that the distance travelled,
from the place where the fox was unkennelled, to the spot where it was
caught, without making any allowance for doubles, crosses, and
tergiversations, and as the crow flies, exceeded seventy miles."
We have now seen the sort of fox-hunting that was so long
in vogue in Scotland, and the paucity of early notices of fox-hunting as
sport. It was not till about the end of last century that the first pack of
hounds was formed for regular sporting purposes, after the English fashion,
and this appears to have taken place in the "kingdom of Fife," as shown by
Colonel Babington's Records of tile Fife Foxhounds, published at Edinburgh
in 1883, Other counties followed the example. But it cannot be said that
fox-hunting was ever a national sport north of the Tweed, notwithstanding
the distinguished patronage with which it has been honoured.
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