Priest Farquharson—Last Chief of the Invereys, etc.
ONE of those who left Braemar in
‘45 to return no more, was Alexander Gordon, priest at Gairnside.
' His
successor was Charles Farquharson; and some account of ‘ Father
Charles ’ and his brother Maighistir
Jan, i.e. Master
John, also a priest, brings down the traditional history of Braemar to
1799.
John and Charles Farquharson were the sons of Lewis of Auchindryne,
younger brother of John the Black Colonel. He was at first intended
for a minister of the recently established Protestant Church; but
while pursuing his studies for that purpose, he became a convert to
the Roman faith.
After that event Lewis seems to have been more inclined to a
soldier’s life than a clerical one; but his two sons, John and
Charles, supplied his lack of service, as both became priests and
Jesuits.
Alastair, the eldest son of Lewis, was killed at
Falkirk. His
son, a youth, succeeded to the estates; and William, the youngest
son of Lewis, became tutor to the young laird his nephew.
John Farquharson, the elder of the two brother priests, was a
missionary at Strathglass. He
had not gone to the wars in ’45 like priest Gordon; for about that
period his spare time seems to have been occupied in making a
collection of Gaelic poetry—the first ever made—but which
unfortunately was lost at Douay, where
John lived for a number of years. He had hard times of it while he
was in Strathglass. But
his history, though interesting, is not connected with my subject;
so I merely notice concerning him, that he spent the last years of
his life as chaplain to his nephew Alexander Farquharson of Inverey, Auchindryne,
etc., and died at Balmoral, 22d
August 1782.
‘Both the fathers, John and Charles,’ says one of their own
persuasion, ‘were held to be saints. Many persons possessed by
devils were brought to them from far and near, and by them restored
and cured. They had also, we are told, the gift of prophecy. Their
piety gained them the veneration, their learning the esteem, and
their urbanity the love of all who knew them.’
My old friend in Braemar,
who remembers him very well, says of Father Charles : ‘He was a
great big man, with long white hair curling down his back, and a
bonnie man as ye would have seen. A clever man too; for he had
learned philosophee and astro-nomee,
and understood things so weel that fouk thought he had the second
sight: he could have told them even when a storm was coming, etc.
‘He had great fame, too, for casting out spirits. There is a case
that I min’ weel, for I saw it wi’ my ain een; an’ that was three
stout men that brought their brither from Athole,
possessed wi’ an evil spirit, as they thought. They had a rope about
him, an’ ane o’ them gaed at the back wi’ a great stout cudgel to
belabour him, for he broke out sometimes terrible.
‘Weel, they took him to the priest’s door, and he came out to them,
an’ they telt him what was the matter. “Pit him into my room,” says
he. “They couldna dee that,” they said, “ for he was so outrageous.” “ it
ye him in,” said he, “an’ leave him to me; I’ll manage him.” So they
pat him in, and gaed awa owre to the inn, for the priest said they
would need to leave him twa or three days. An’ in little mair than
that time, I min’ as weel as ony-thing o’ seeing him gang doon the
road hame, as
weel as
ony o’ them.
‘That was a great case wi’ the fouk, o’ casting out the deevel. But
his housekeeper telt me after hoo he did. He examined a’ his head,
an’ then he pat a blister on the back o’ his neck. Then he mixed up
some herbs and gae him to drink ; and that was the way that the evil
spirit was cast oot.’
As the laws against the priests were very stringent, and pretty well
enforced about Braemar,
Charles had not a few difficulties at the beginning of his ministry.
One escape from capture is thus related :—
As Invercauld and his coachman were coming along the banks of the Dee one
day, they saw on the opposite side Father Charles sitting among the
trees at the foot of Craig
Choinnich. The
coachman proposed to arrest him, and gain the Government reward.
Invercauld durst not oppose. So the man crossed the water at some
little distance; and going up stealthily behind the priest, took him
by the collar, saying at the same time,
“You are my prisoner in the king’s name.”
“Stop a minute, then,” said he, “till I finish my prayers.” So he
went on quite leisurely, until he came to the end; then shutting the
book with a slap, he stared the man hard in the face as he repeated
very sonorously, “In
nomine Patris, et
Filii, et
Spiritus Sancti. Amen? Then
he rose up to go with his capturer. But he would not enter the
river, to cross over to the other side, but at one particular place.
So the coachman gave in to that, and they plunged into the water
together.
‘It was not the shallowest part of the river certainly, for they
were soon up to the arm-pits; then in a moment Father Charles seized
the man by the collar and nether garments, dipped his head into the
water, allowing him to kick and struggle at full scope. Then,
letting him breathe for a minute, he dipped him in again, and
continued the process until he was within an inch of his life ; and
carrying him in that state through the water, laid him down beside
his master, who sat on the bank witnessing the whole transaction in
an agony of laughter.’
Many of the sayings and doings of Father Charles go far to prove
that he had a considerable spice of humour in his character. His
mode of giving reproof also was often very original. One example
will make this evident:—
‘One of his own people, a Mrs. Gordon, had a terrible fashion of
prigging wi’ fouk that gaed to see her, to eat, eat, till they
couldna even get eaten for her. Weel, the priest was at her house ae
day, an’ she was just, as usual, tormenting him about eating. So he
turned to one of the servant lads that was sitting at the fireside,
and said, “Gang out, Alastair, an’ see if my pony is taking onything.”
In a minute the lad comes back, an’ says, “The pony has plenty o’
hay, and it’s eating fine.”
‘“Ay, you see,” said the priest, looking to Mrs. Gordon, “the
pony has mair sense than its master: it can eat without
a. bidding.”
‘Oh! mony a mony a time has she telt me that story, and loughin’
owre it; but it didna cure her,’ said the old man who told me this
quaint account.
As a physician, Charles was little behind his relative Fear
na Bruach. His
mode of treatment was original; but detail would not be very
pleasant. Cancer he could cure without any operation, simply by
applying a lotion prepared from herbs by himself. A gamekeeper of
Lord Fife’s, Munro by name, is said to have been cured by him, after
he had been treated by the most skilful doctors without effect. Pity
he has not left the prescription.
The end of Priest Farquharson’s life was more settled than the early
part of it, as he got a‘little croft at Ardearg,
where he was permitted to live without molestation.
The Bible of Father Charles—the Douay version
of course, with lengthy notes—is still in the possession of some
relatives in Auchindryne,
and bears evidence of careful perusal. At length he died at Ardearg,
on Nov. 30, 1799, and was buried in the churchyard at Castleton.
After the death of Farquharson laird of Balmoral, and
of Finla the imbecile laird of Inverey, the
estates pertaining to both passed to the laird of Auchindryne, the
son of Alastair Farquharson, who fell at Falkirk. Under
the tutorship of his uncle William, he had grown up as strongly
Jacobite as any of his ancestors. There was, however, no way of
showing this now, but by resisting the innovations introduced after
’45. This he did not do in his own person, but by encouraging his
tenants to resist as far as possible the stringent enactments
against poaching, fishing, etc.
Alexander seems to have been what the people say of him—‘a real old
Highland chief, a man according to the peoples hearts ;’ the last
one also, occupying as it were the transition point between the
genuine feudal system and that regular state of matters which after
his death was induced. And under his auspices, the broken remnants
of the past, sullen and sore, wearied themselves in fruitless
efforts to break the toils which held the old system in death-grasp.
From many stories relating to this point, one example may not be
tedious:—
‘Alexander of Auchindryne by
no means agreed with Duff of Braco; neither
did the Braemar people
generally. In olden time they were welcome to go out and bring home
a bird, hare, or even deer, “to keep the pottie bilin.” But it was
changed times now ; for any of Braco’s own tenants caught poaching
were at once expelled the estate, and those of other landowners
fined or imprisoned. Alexander of Inverey and Auchindryne was
greatly disgusted at such proceedings.
“Never mind, billies,” he would say, “poach, poach away on Duff’s
lands as much as you like ; but oh, boys, have clever feet. Only get
to the middle of the Dee when
his keepers are after you, and I’ll stand good for you.”
‘The tenants were not slow to take such advice, and poach on Duff’s
moors and forests they did with a vengeance. Some of them were
caught from time to time, and sent into Aberdeen; but
Alexander, true to his word, was there to pay the fines, and take
them home with him again.
“Just try yourself, Duff,” he would say; “you may put them in, but
I’ll take them out as
fast as Braco.” And so he did.’
One laughable little episode occurred during one of these
rencounters. A number of young men were out one evening, doing the
laird’s bidding; and Lord Fife’s head gamekeeper came upon their
track, gave chase, and finally fired upon them. One of the young men
narrowly escaped death. The rest of them resolved to give the keeper
a fright, as he had no right to fireupon
them. He had taken his stand upon a “fell dyke,” possibly to
reconnoitre. Observing this, one or more of them fired, aiming at
the wall, exactly below where he stood. A perfect cloud of dust was
raised, and part of the wall displaced. Losing his balance, he
tumbled over, shouting at the same time.
“Murder! murder! I’m shot, I’m shot!” etc.’ ‘You may be sure,’ said
the octogenarian who gave me this account, ‘we didna wait to help
him up. They tried sair to fin’ out wha had deen’t, but we keepit
gey quiet. But mony’s the guid lauch we took to oursels on the heads
o’ it.’
But though Alexander was thus unscrupulous in regard to the property
of others, he did not like to be encroached on himself, as the
following letter of his will show. I copied it from the original
letter a few months ago :—
‘Balmoral,
14th
May 1777.
‘DEAR Uncle,—The
bearer James Lamont in Dalagowan,
tells me that Margrat Gordon in Dalvoror,
and her son John Farquharson, are, in Difiance of all the orders I
have given to the contrary, keeping their sheep in my fforrest of Conyvron,
by which means I am like to lose my glen rent, as nobody will send
cattle to graze when it is eaten with their sheep. I have wrote to
John Gordon, my ground-officer there, to seize on them and poind
them ; but I am afraid that perhaps he may not execute my orders
right. I hear his wife is very bauld. I must therefore beg of you,
that when the bearer requires it, that you’ll take with you three or
four of the Auchindryne tennents,
as I can trust in them, having you at their head, and seize upon
their sheep, or upon the sheep of any other person you shall find
within the bounds of my fforrest, and bring them down directly here,
and I shall take care of them till they are relieved. I desire that
they be brought here,
as I’ll be sure they won’t steal them away till they relieve them by
paying for them as the law directs. You may tell the men you bring
with you, that I’ll mind them for their trouble, besides being
obliged to them. I was at first thinking of going up myself to take
them ; but on second thoughts I reckoned it would be better to send
you in my place, as perhaps, if they saw me and a few men with me
going to the glen, they might take them out of the fforest before I
reached. But they won’t suspect you ; only it is necessary to keep
this order secret till you have execute it. I beg you’ll behave
yourselves like men, and not let me be affronted.—I am, dear Uncle,
‘ our most affect, nevew,
‘Alexr. farquharson.’
The finale of
the Anchindryne history
is thus given :—
‘James, the laird’s son, was, alas, not of the same stamp as his
father. He associated with the Duffs; and their son, a James also,
taught him expensive habits. . . .
‘This did not at all please the old man, who foresaw a dark future;
but he could not change his lad’s heart. But what he could do, he
tried. He offered every one of his tenants leases of their holdings
while grass grew or water ran, at the same rents they then paid. But
they little understood his generosity or true motives. They thought
the laird must see that land was to get cheaper, and they feared
they might be ruined. Only one of them, the farmer of Dalbreckachy,
Alastair Lamont, could be prevailed on to accept a lease of the
kind. Having prevailed with one, he did not give up with the others.
So every time they came to pay their rents he renewed his offer, but
in vain ; and even Dalbreckachy, who had accepted, often begged the
laird to cancel his lease, and put him on the same footing as the
others.
‘“Na, na, keep it, laddie,” the laird would reply; “it will do you
and your family good when I am in the mools. Keep ye it, laddie.”
‘He had sore misgivings; but he kept it on, just not to displease
the good old man. By and by word reached Braemar that
the laird was dying. Lamont took alarm, and hurried off to
Balmoral with
the obnoxious lease. He was ushered into a room where the old man
sat alone in his chair, very “ wae ” and sad.
“O laird!” cried the farmer, “as ye hope to meet God in mercy, tak’
this lease off my hands, for it will be the ruin of me and of my
family.”
“ Well, well,” said the poor laird, with a sigh of resignation,
“God’s will be done.” And he threw it into the fire. “But,
Alastair,” he continued, “the day will come when the men of the Braes
of Mar would
dig me out of the grave with their teeth, could they get such leases
as you all refuse. God protect ye, my bairns, for I’ll soon be
away.”
‘Too soon that day came, alas! James succeeded in his place. He had
before his accession contracted a debt of eight thousand pounds, due
the greater part to the Duffs. They came for a time to a kind of
settlement, by James letting the Earl have part of his hill Craig
an Fehithich,
opposite Mar
Lodge,
which the Earl planted to beautify the view from his windows.’
The sum which the Earl allowed for it was then considered
extravagant; and when some one expostulated with the Earl on his
prodigality, he is reported to have said very jocularly, ‘ That he
knew what he was about, as that hill would serve as a key to the
rest.’
‘The evil day came at length. Pressing demands were made by the Earl
of Fife, and James determined to sell off the estate and clear away
his debts. The tenants, on learning this, came forward in a body and
offered themselves to clear off the debt to the Duffs, provided
James would not sell his lands. But it would not do. In spite of all
their devotion, the estates were sold to the Earl of Fife, and
Inverey left Braemar. He
gave Ballater and Tidlich to
Monaltrie for his estate of Bruxie,
whither he himself retired.
‘Afterwards we read in the newspapers: “Died at Jock's
Lodge (near Edinburgh:),
James Farquharson, the last of the Invereys.”
‘Lewis Farquharson, his brother, who had married the heiress of Ballogie,
was once present at the Braemar gathering,
and he was made very welcome for auld langsyne. The hearts of the
people yearned to him ; and they felt sad and wae when the memory of
old times came over them. But it was Mr. Innes with them ; Mr. Innes
this, and Mr. Innes that.
“Not Innes,” replied he; “I am that at Ballogie; but
I am Farquharson in Braemar.”
‘That went to the people’s hearts; there was a tear in every eye.
But they cheered him ; yes, they did it heartily, though their
cheers were like to choke them ; and then he went away. .
‘The next thing—ay, there it is, as I picked it from the blank leaf
of a missal belonging to the family:—“27th September 1830. — Obiit
Dominus Ludovicus Innes (quondam Farquharson deInverey),
novissime autem de Balnacraig et Ballogie,
anno aetatis suo 67.” Lewis had a son, who died young and unmarried
; and so the race is nearly extinct.’ |