THE geographical position
of St Kilda, and its distance from various points in the Outer Hebrides,
have already been referred to. Its remote and remarkable situation is
thus described by Mallet, in the opening lines of his “Amyntor and
Theodora:”—
"Far in the watery waste,
where his broad wave
From world to world the vast Atlantic rolls
On from the piny shores of Labrador
To frozen Thule east, her airy height
Aloft to heaven remotest Kilda lifts,
Last of the sea-girt Hebrides that guard,
In filial train, Britannia’s parent coast.”
Unfortunately, St Kilda
has not yet found a place among the trustworthy sheets of the Ordnance
Survey. In the ordinary maps of Scotland, its position is indicated by a
note in that portion of the Atlantic called by the old geographers
Oceanus Deucaledonius, owing to the scale not being sufficiently large
to embrace the remote island. So far as I am aware, its earliest
occurrence in a map is in the ‘True and exact hydrographical Description
of the Sea-coast and Isles of Scotland, made in a voyage round the same
by that great and mighty prince James the 5th published at Paris in
1583, and at Edinburgh, by John Adair, F.R.S., in 1688. It there appears
as “St Kildar,” and is incorrectly placed a little to the north-west of
West Loch Tarbert. Macculloch compares its shape to that of a “ leg of
mutton; ” and if the map of the island which he gives in the third
volume of his earlier work is anything like a correct representation, it
no doubt bears a considerable resemblance to that familiar object. He
explains, however, that his plan merely conveys “a general notion of the
form of the island,” besides illustrating the hydrographical details of
his narrative. Mr Wilson’s ‘Voyage’ also contains a map of St Kilda,
furnished by Sir George Mackenzie of Coul, which indicates a much more
compact configuration, and bears a general resemblance to the map given
by Martin. It appears that Sir George measured a short base on Mulldoh-More,
and took angles from its extremities of all the principal points in
sight, filling up the remainder by the eye; but he regarded his plan as
only approximately and not absolutely correct The three maps have been
reproduced for the purpose of comparison. It will be observed that
Macculloch’s map gives no indication of the west bay, and that the
north-east portion of the island, embracing Conagher, presents a very
different appearance from what is indicated in the two other plans. Both
Martin and Macculloch represent the adjacent islet of Soa as almost
circular, while in Sir George Mackenzie’s map its length is nearly three
times greater than its breadth. The extent of St Kilda is considerably
understated by Martin, who makes it only two miles long by one broad,
and five miles in circumference. In point of fact, however, the island
is about three miles long from east to west, by two miles broad, the
circumference being somewhere about seven miles. According to
Macdonald,1 if we include the adjacent islands, the group comprehends
nearly 3000 acres of superficial extent; while in Johnston’s ‘ General
Gazetteer’ the area is given as 4000 acres, or upwards of six square
miles.
Except at the east or
village bay, the island is almost entirely surrounded by stupendous
cliffs, rising like walls of adamant out of the dark Atlantic. These
cliffs are indented by numerous caves and fissures of very remarkable
aspect, many of them bearing descriptive names, such as Gto-na-h-airde,
or the creek of the eminence, and Gio-natt-plaideachan, or the creek of
the blankets, where the natives lie all night, watching the arrival of
the fulmar, covered with thick blankets to protect them from the ocean’s
spray.
The number of hills, or
rather tops, is variously stated by different writers, of whom some
enumerate as many as six. The more important, however, are four in
number—viz., Conagher, or Conna-gkdir, the name being descriptive of the
increasing noise (gair) of the surrounding waves; Mulldch-scail\ or
bald-top; Mulldch-geal, or white-top; and Mulldch-osterveatil, or
east-top, sometimes written Mulldch-Oshival, or the top of Oswald. The
highest of these is Conagher, which is stated in the Admiralty Chart to
be 1220 feet above the level of the sea, consisting of one gigantic
precipice (according to Mr Sands the loftiest in Britain), and
constituting the summit of the uneven ridge which forms the island.
While Martin pretty accurately describes it as 200 fathoms high,
Macaulay has the audacity to state that its height exceeds 5000 feet,
styling it the “Teneriffe of Britain!” “I made a shift,” Colonel Bayly
of the Ordnance Survey Office informs me that the cliff, called the Kaim,
at the western extremity of the ridge on the island of Foula, in
Shetland, is exactly the same height as Conagher—viz., 1220 feet; but it
is not quite perpendicular, having a break in its face. It appears that
in consequence of numerous accidents, the practice of fowling was
abandoned in Foula about twenty years ago, fishing being now the
principal occupation of the inhabitants. The island is from six to seven
miles in circumference; and at the last census the population amounted
to 257—125 males and 132 females. he says, “to take its height with some
degree of exactness, and found it no less than 900 fathoms. Had I never
seen the immense mass” (he adds), “I should very probably dispute the
credibility of the account now given, just as much as any one else may
do after perusing this account” In referring to this grave statement,
Wilson sensibly remarks: “Our having seen it is our chief reason for not
only disputing but denying the point in question.”
“Not many yards beneath
the summit of Conagher,” says Macculloch, “the hill is cut almost
abruptly down to the water,—a dizzy height to the spectator who looks
-down upon the almost inaudible waves dashing below. At the foot of this
fearful precipice some lower rocky points project, which in any other
situation would attract notice, but are lost in the overpowering
vicinity of the cliffs that tower above them.” “On reaching the summit
of the same mountain,” says Morgan, “a startling prospect opened before
us. Behind, the moss-grown sides of the hill gradually terminated in the
richer hues of the village pastures; before, in outstretched majesty,
the wide Atlantic foamed and eddied at our feet—one step beneath our
feet—but what a step! 800 feet—without a break— without one
resting-place—steep, mural precipices, adamantine ramparts of this
sea-girt isle. To obtain a good view of the cliffs, we lay down on a
large flat slab of rock, and looked over its side. A plumb-line
suspended from the spot would have alighted in the sea. . . . These
cliffs vary considerably, both in height and abruptness, ranging from
about 1200 to 400 feet,—here cold and bare, there padded with narrow
moss-clad terraces, rising one above the other, their sides decked with
yellow primroses.” ,
It is not easy to convey
anything like a correct or adequate conception of the magnificent and
fantastic outlines presented by the rugged promontories and beetling
headlands of St Kilda and the adjacent islets. The vast variety of form
and colour which delighted the party on board the “Dunara Castle” on the
afternoon of the 2d of July will not soon be forgotten. Being in water
of forty fathoms, we were able to keep very close to the shore ; but the
rate at which we steamed round the island—although probably not
exceeding nine knots an hour—was not sufficiently slow to enable the
most rapid observer fully to realise the grandeur of the remarkable
scene. I almost feel disposed to summarise my impressions by quoting
part of an American author’s description of Inspiration Point in the
Yosemit6 Valley. “In all my life,” he says, “let it lead me where it
may, I think I shall see nothing else so grand, so awful, so sublime, so
beautiful. ... It was only yesterday evening;—I cannot write of it yet.
How long I sat there on the rocks I never shall know. I brought the
picture away with me. I have only to shut my eyes, and I see it as I saw
it in that hour of hours! ”
The first object that
presented itself, as we left the crescent-shaped bay, was the Dune, a
long craggy islet, separated from Mulldch geal by a narrow rocky
channel, nearly dry at low water, and forming the southern horn of the
bay. Although not particularly lofty, its jagged peaks exhibit a very
striking appearance; and, like the remarkable rock in the Shevroy range
of mountains in Madras, it has been compared to a vast cathedral, with a
central tower and flanking spires, the resemblance being increased by a
lofty opening, not unlike an arched doorway, through which the ocean
flows.
Rather more than a mile
and a quarter south-east of the extremity of the Dune is the bare,
flat-topped, and inaccessible islet of Levinish, of which the summit is
about two hundred feet above the level of the sea. Martin considerably
underestimates the height of Levinish, but his description of its form
and position appears to be tolerably correct He mentions that it has a
spring of fresh water, and that, by an ancient custom, it belonged to
the crew of the steward’s galley; but it is not easy to conjecture what
practical benefit could have been derived from an inaccessible rock.
About a hundred and fifty yards N.N.E. from the northern end of Levinish
is the only dangerous rock—a low-water one—in the neighbourhood of the
St Kilda group. It is, however, generally visible, except in very smooth
water.
After coasting along the
southern side of the island, with a continuous line of rocky battlements
of nearly two miles in length, we reached the little island of Soa, or
the sheep-island, at the western extremity of St Kilda, and near the
southern entrance to the west bay. About a mile in length, and with an
average breadth of a quarter of a mile, its greatest height is 1031
feet:; and on every side, except at the south “nose,” where the natives
effect a landing in moderate weather, the cliffs are steep and lofty.
Like the well-known table-rock of the Quirang in Skye, it has a grassy
top, which affords goods pasturage to a large flock of sheep. When
viewed from a certain quarter, Soa is thought to resemble a tiger
couching for its prey. It is separated from St Kilda by a narrow passage
or sound, about four hundred yards in width, from which rise three lofty
needles or “ stacks,” of very peculiar form, one of which is perforated
by an arched opening. They are respectively named Stack Biorrach, or the
pointed stack, (from four to five hundred feet high, and regarded by the
fowlers as the most difficult rock to climb,) Stack Soa, and Stack
Donadk, or the bad stack, from the circumstance of its sea-birds not
being very numerous. At the northern extremity of Soa is another small
but highly picturesque rock, bearing the name of Plasta. One of the
former, from a particular point of view, “presented the appearance of a
gigantic nondescript animal trying to wade across to Soa; while another
assumed at times a somewhat complex aspect, presenting as it were
alternately the character of an old beggar-woman, a Scotch preacher, and
an Egyptian sphynx!” Having rounded Soa and the western extremity of St
Kilda, we shaped our course in the direction of Borrera —called by
Mallet “ the lesser isle ”—situated about three and a half miles to the
north of the principal island, between the two remarkable rocks Stack an
A rmin, or the hero’s rock, and Stack Lii (Leathad), or the sloping
stack. About a mile and a quarter long, by a quarter of a mile broad,
its formation is somewhat similar to Salisbury Crags, with a verdurous
slope towards the east, but without any water; while its dark and
precipitous cliffs face westwards, and reach the height of 1072 feet.
With its adjoining stacks, it forms a highly picturesque group of rocky
islets; in the opinion of Macculloch, “ far eclipsing St Kilda in the
landscape, by their more elevated and decided characters.” Stack Lii is
a huge insular mass, about the height of the Bass Rock, nearly one-third
of a mile from the west side of Borrera, and tenanted by myriads of
solan geese. From Harris, to the naked eye, it appears like a ship under
sail leaning to the northward. It is described by Wilson as exhibiting
on one side “ a sharpish edge, and then a gradual descent a certain way
downwards, as if a sloping slice had been cut off it, after which it
descends again in a more rugged and precipitous form into the sea. On
the other side, it falls at once from the sharp upper edge already
mentioned, straight down into the ocean, with a variety of rents and
rocky ledges, which do not interfere with its general character of
abruptness.” The lofty peaks of Stack an Armin, one-third of a mile
N.N.E. from Borrera, form a very striking feature in the group, which
presents an endless variety of most magnificent marine views.
For two or three hours
after we steamed away from Borrera in the direction of the Sound of
Harris, the bold outlines of St Kilda and its satellites continued more
or less in sight; and the last glimpse of the wonderful group was
eagerly regarded by every member of our enchanted party.
With regard to the noble
cliffs on the northern side of St Kilda, it is hard to believe that
their height is so great as has been indicated; but it is generally
admitted that mere ocular measurements of such objects are very apt to
be under the mark, and in other localities my experience has been the
same as at St Kilda—viz., a difficulty of persuading one’s self that
such cliffs actually reach their ascertained altitude. In coasting along
the well-known cliffs of Hoy, in Orkney, about a fortnight after my
visit to St Kilda, I had the same sceptical feeling; and on a previous
occasion, the stupendous precipices of the Romsdal Fiord, in Norway,
failed to impress me with an unhesitating belief in their enormous
height. Macaulay seems to have been gifted with a much more imaginative
mind, inspired, perhaps, by his classical recollections of Pelion and
Ossa! “A view of Conagher from the sea,” he says, “fills a man with
astonishment, and a look over it from above strikes him with horror.” I
fully concur in the latter part of the minister’s statement; but grand
as was the appearance of the cliff from the sea, my sensations partook
more of admiration than of astonishment.
In more than one
instance, the actual appearance and general features of St Kilda seem to
have greatly differed from the preconceived notions of its casual
visitants. Mr Morgan says that “the whole character of this solitary
isle was less like what I had pictured to myself than any other place I
ever beheld. There was a strange, indescribable look about all we saw,
as though we had sailed into another planet, or made a voyage to one of
the little asteroids.” In like manner, in the case of Mr Wilson, the
group of islands far transcended his previous expectations; in alluding
to which he states that “ the whole combined form a really magnificent
mountain-range, as seen from the sea, and assume a vast variety of shape
and aspect in relation to each other, as the vessel from which they are
beheld turns round the various points, and passes through the
intermediate narrow seas by which they are surrounded.” Dr Angus Smith
appears to have first seen St Kilda under a cloudy aspect, the dusky
precipices jutting out on every side from the mist, and appearing like
huge pillars beneath an impending roof. “Had it been an island of
demons,” he says, “it could not have appeared more dreadful, and had we
not heard of it before, we should have said that, if inhabited, it must
be by monsters.” Speaking of the sublimity of the atmospheric effects
produced by the isolated position of St Kilda, Macculloch says: “Fertile
as are the other islands of this sea in all the accidents of colour and
light that arise from these changes, they fall far short of this one,
where the variations of the atmosphere are incessant, where they are
accompanied by effects, equally various and changeable, of light and
shadow, of rain, and mist, and storm, and of clouds in a thousand new
and romantic forms, and colours such as neither poet nor painter ever
imagined; the whole producing the most splendid and unexpected
combination with the land, and with an ever-restless and changing sea.
... If the uniform tints and outlines of grey precipices or brown
mountains require splendid contrasts to give them interest, so the wider
sweep of hill and dale must be rendered effective by shadows, not by
shade, which it seldom displays with advantage. It is to the pencil of a
Turner alone that St Kilda will furnish employment. A dizzy height from
which the eye looks down over jutting crags, retiring till they are lost
in air; a boiling sea below, without a boundary ; dark cliffs beaten by
a foaming surge, and lost in the gloom of involving clouds; the mixed
contest of rocks, ocean, and sky,—these are the subjects which it offers
to him who, seeing with the poet’s eye, knows how to speak the language
of poetry with his pencil.”
Glen Mor, or the Amazon’s
glen, is situated at the west end of St Kilda, affording extensive
pasturage for sheep and cattle. The cliffs at the extremity of the glen
are comparatively low; and at that point a landing can sometimes be
effected, when the weather is too boisterous on the eastern side. The
bay on which the village stands is divided from Glen Mor by a lofty
ridge, and presents the appearance of a crescent or half-moon, of which
the southern horn is the Dune already referred to; while on the northern
horn is the mountain of St Kilda proper, with its steep but not
altogether precipitous aspect. The intermediate semicircular shore
slopes gently upwards to the village, which stretches in a line nearly
parallel to the curve of the bay, from the margin of which it is
separated by an interval of two or three hundred yards of ground, all
under cultivation. About thirty-nine years ago, the Rev. Drs Dickson and
Macleod paid an ecclesiastical visit to St Kilda, besides making many
active exertions in behalf of the inhabitants, by whom the eastern or
village entrance has since been sometimes called “ Dickson’s Bay,” while
the western bay has been named after Dr Macleod. Mr Wilson justly
regards these designations as “ a fine illustration of the good spirit
which pervades the people. They knew nothing,” he continues, “ of Lords
of the Admiralty, or of great circumnavigators, or other * men of
renown; ’ but they knew that two kind-hearted, pious individuals had
come to their almost forgotten shores with ‘glad tidings,’ seeking to
diffuse the blessings of the Gospel, at their own personal inconvenience
and discomfort; and they seek to mark their sense of that holy kindness
by the names in question, which are at least as appropriate as Melbourne
Mount, or Russell’s Reach, or Point Palmerston.”
Many of the published
descriptions of the island give a far too unfavourable account of the
means of landing. This circumstance is referred to by both Macculloch
and Wilson, the former of whom furnishes the following encouraging
information to future visitors respecting the Argonautics of St Kilda. “
The whole shore of St Kilda is so clean that vessels of any draught may
range it within gunshot; and the stream of tide is so inconsiderable
that there is no danger from calms, if a moderate offing is secured. The
bay opens to the south-east, and is perfectly sheltered on three
quarters of the compass. Hence it is exposed to few winds, and those not
the predominant ones; while, from its depth and semicircular form, the
westerly swell cannot often raise such a sea on the shore as to prevent
a boat from landing. In this operation, indeed, the natives are
uncommonly alert and dexterous; and, with a tolerable steersman, there
cannot often be a sea in which a boat might not land, unless that were
from the westward. There is good clean holding-ground in depths ranging
from four to seven fathoms, where a vessel of any size may lie for a
tide or more, with fully as great security as in most ordinary harbours;
nor is there any difficulty in weighing and running to sea on either
tack, should the wind shift so as to blow in shore.” The only
landing-place is under the manse, a little to the northward of the
store. Captain Otter informs us that the head of the bay is sandy and
deepens gradually from the shore. He considers that the best place to
anchor is in the middle of the bay, “with the narrow sound of the Dune
open in ten or eleven fathoms, with a sandy bottom and good
holding-ground. Great care must be taken to keep the anchor clear, as,
except in southerly winds, terrible squalls veer all round the compass,
and frequently, in northerly winds, a vessel will be lying with her head
out. It is scarcely necessary,” he adds, “to warn the careful seaman to
leave this exposed position the moment the wind comes to the south.”
Macculloch states that it is high water at St Kilda when the moon is
south-east, and that the course of the flood is northerly. According to
Captain Otter, “ it is high water, full and change, at 5I1. 30m. The ebb
sets S.W. by W., and the flood in the opposite direction; near the
islands, and especially at point of Dune, it runs at the rate of three
miles an hour.” With certain southerly or easterly winds, it is
difficult, and sometimes impossible, to land; and consequently, in the
case of sailing vessels at least, it is not desirable to have a fair
wind for the voyage. On the other hand, if the wind happens to be
favourable, vessels of the same description find it very difficult to
get out of the bay, owing to its being open to the south-east—a
circumstance which also makes it a dangerous anchorage when the wind
blows strongly from that quarter. Accordingly, as Mr Sands informs us,
the few adventurous yachts that find their way into the bay usually
adopt the precaution of remaining not more than a few hours. In his
description of the bay, Martin says that “ the only place for landing
here is on the north side, upon a rock with a little declination, which
is slippery, being clothed with several sorts of sea-weeds; these,
together with a raging sea, render the place more inaccessible, it being
seldom without a raging sea, except under favour of a neap-tide, a
north-east or west wind, or with a perfect calm; when these
circumstances concur, the birlin, or boat, is brought to the side of the
rock, upon which all the inhabitants of both sexes are ready to join
their united force to hail her through this rock, having for this end a
rope fastened to the fore part; a competent number of them are also
employed on each side ; both these are determined by a crier, who is
employed on purpose to warn them all at the same minute, and he ceases
when he finds it convenient to give them a breathing.”
On the occasion of my
recent visit to the island, both wind and weather were sufficiently
favourable to render our landing a matter of easy accomplishment On
re-embarking, however, most of our party took their places in the large
boats belonging to the islanders, which were drawn up on the shore, and
supported on each side by two or three of the natives, who ran the craft
down into the sea, on entering which the rowers immediately dipped their
oars into the surf. Leaving Obb, in the Sound of Harris, about 3 A.M.,
we soon emerged from the Hebridean archipelago into the wide Atlantic;
and between four and five, the islet of Borrera and its adjacent stacks
began to disclose their picturesque outlines. Masses of white clouds
were resting on the summits of St Kilda as we approached its rocky
shores from the north-east side. We dropped anchor at half-past eight,
in smooth water, within a gunshot of the shore, and the impression
produced by the surrounding scenery was heightened by the stillness that
prevailed. After breakfasting on board the “Dunara,’' the passengers
began to land in detachments about half-past nine. Heavy rain fell
during breakfast; but the weather speedily improved, and the sun shone
forth most auspiciously. Some of the party landed in one of the boats of
the islanders which came out to the steamer, while others went in the
gig belonging to the “Dunara.” We received a warm and hearty welcome
from the inhabitants, who had all assembled on the beach when the
steamer entered the bay.
Judging from the effect
of the surging waves of the Atlantic upon the rocky shores of' St Kilda
in a comparatively calm day, a storm must be a very magnificent
spectacle, On the 28th of January 1877, Mr Sands witnessed a violent
gale, when the wind blew from the north-east, accompanied by heavy
showers of sleet “The huge waves came rolling into the bay against the
wind, which caught them as they fell on the shore, and carried them off
in spindrift.” The author of‘ Sketches of St Kilda’ gives the following
description of the war of the elements against the bulwarks of the
lonely isle: “If one would see Nature in her giant gambols, let him go
to St Kilda. When the liquid foe, which knew no opposition from the time
he left the North Pole—except perhaps an unfortunate ship, which he
swallowed—sees St Kilda determined upon breaking his line, he retires a
little, swelling as he retires in sullen wrath, and hurling with him
stones, or rather fragments of rock, some of them twenty-four tons in
weight; then with these rude bullets in his grasp, hurling them against
the rocks, he makes one desperate charge, as if in hope to push the
island from its seat! The war is vain ; but the noise would drown a
thousand thunders. The purpose of the assailant is answered, however, in
so far that, having mounted a rampart 1500 (?) feet high, he gets sheer
over the island in white spray ; dropping salt tears of disappointment
upon the natives as he passes. His old grudge may also be satisfied so
far that these fragments of rock, thus battered, have literally
perforated the island through and through at its foundation.”
Both Morgan and Wilson
appear to have been struck by the bright, fresh colour of the
vegetation. The former was greatly surprised by the rich green hue of
the crops in a place where he expected to find a “howling wilderness;”
while the prevailing verdure, the gradual uprising of the land, the
absence of trees, and even a certain smoothness and uniformity of aspect
and outline in the hills which formed the intermediate background,
rather reminded the latter of the pastoral uplands of Peeblesshire and
the far-inland shores of “still Mary’s Loch,” than of a remote and rocky
sea-girt isle. Forewarned of the verdant appearance of the island, I was
not, of course, surprised by the brilliancy of its emerald hue, which
the rains of the preceding weeks had probably rendered even brighter
than usual.
Martin gives a detailed
account of the “excellent fountains or springs ”—called by old Isaac
Walton the “eldest daughters of Creation”—with which the island abounds.
One of these, named “St Kilda’s Well,” is near the little village,
between the manse and the factor’s house; while another, of which the
Gaelic name signifies the “Well of Qualities or Virtues,” in consequence
of the supposed efficacy of its water, is situated in Glen Mor, beside
the house of the “Amazon” or “Female Warrior,” to be afterwards referred
to. “The taste of the water of these wells,” says Martin, “was so
pleasant, that, for several weeks after, the best fountains in the
adjacent isles did not relish with me.” Macaulay speaks in equally
strong terms* besides alluding to the “inexhaustible quantities” of
water in every corner of the island. “The whole island,” Martin
elsewhere states, “is one hard rock, formed into four high mountains
(already enumerated), three of which are in the middle, all thinly
covered with black or brown earth, not above a foot, some places half a
foot deep, except the top of the hills, where it is above three feet
deep, and affords them good turf; the grass is very short but kindly,
producing plenty of milk.”
According to Macculloch,
who briefly describes the geology of St Kilda in his earlier work, the
rocks are all of modern volcanic origin, consisting principally of a
dark trap, with a small proportion of syenite, of which the latter
occasionally presents cavities containing crystals of both quartz and
felspar. As the state of the weather prevented him from approaching
Borrera, he only conjectures, from its form and colour, that it consists
entirely of the first-mentioned rock. His observations, however, were
probably not sufficiently exact to satisfy the accurate research of
modern geologists, none of whom, so far as I am aware, have as yet paid
a professional visit to the island. Macculloch seems to be quite at
fault when he asserts that no stratified rocks can be discovered. Mr
Sands states that, “ for several hundred feet, the hills are composed of
sandstone; the stratification very distinct, and of different colours.
Cliffs of igneous rock, trap, or granite, arise on the top of the
sandstone, marked with vertical furrows, ploughed apparently by the
weather. The ridges are brought into bolder relief by the rock-plants
which grow in the flutings. To an unscientific eye, it would seem as if
the island of St Kilda had been much larger at some time, and that the
land had sunk into the sea all around it. It looks as if it had been
chopped into its present form by the axe of an earthquake— chopped
indifferently through hill and glen,” Professor Geikie informs me that
all the specimens of St Kilda rocks submitted to him by Mr Sands were of
igneous formation. Along with Mr Dudgeon of Cargen, he contemplated a
geological expedition to the island in the course of last summer; and it
is to be hoped that, at no very distant date, he will be able to carry
his intentions into execution. |