The Old Coaching Inn - The
Earl of Moray's Meal Mill - I Explore Doune Castle - The Prince at Old
Newton - Beside the Loch of Watson - I Cross Kincardine Moss and Meet the
The Most Fervent Jacobite in Scotland - Over the River Forth.
THE hotel where I slept
that night had once been a coaching-inn that belonged to the Earl of
Moray. The old stables had been beaten, as it were, into garages, and the
water-troughs into petrol-pumps: and a very handsome job has been made of
it all. Every few weeks you will read in some newspaper a letter,
devotedly signed "Lover of Nature," wailing about the ugliness of
petrol-pumps on the countryside. I always disagree, because I can see
nothing ugly about a petrol-pump. Sensitive aesthetes object to them
because they so brutally catch the eye. But surely that is part of their
function: the petrol-pump that coyly hides behind a woodshed would be of
little service to the passing motorist. Besides, the opinions about beauty
in any generation are often sneered at in the next. For example, I
personally can see no beauty whatever, but only a chaotic mass of
disjointed ideas, in Mr. T. S. Eliot's famous poem, The Waste Land.
Petrol-pumps, I take it, are a little like modernist verse: some of us
have not yet got accustomed to them. That they are necessary in the
countryside cannot be denied, and the first man who put a clock on a
church tower was probably told that he was spoiling the look of the
church. Often we use the word ugly when we mean unfamiliar.
As soon as I had finished
breakfast I went to explore Doune Castle, which had left upon my mind the
night before so vivid an impression of vastness and strength. After
crossing a hundred yards of green turf to the knoll above the
meeting-place of the rivers Ardoch and Teith, I found the big oak door
locked. Beside it I read a notice announcing that "Visitors inspecting
Doune Castle do so at their own risk and must therefore EXERCISE DUE
CARE." Another notice told me that I must apply to the castle-keeper
before I could get in, so I began to retrace my steps to his cottage. It
was then that a happy clatter across the Ardoch caught my ear, and I saw a
mill with its water-wheel spinning beside a dark pool. The drumming of it
was good to hear, and I made for the bridge and descended the opposite
bank. A collie dog dashed out of the door and cut friendly circles round
me, and I hoped that his warning bark would bring out the miller himself.
But the noise inside was so loud that I had to raise my voice to a yell
before he appeared. He was a short man with grey eyes that twinkled under
his dusty eyebrows, and he invited me in with a friendly gesture. He led
the way up a ladder, pausing to shout a warning in my ear not to "bash my
croon" on the beams, and I emerged into a dim chamber with dozens of bags
set around the walls.
The miller's boy was
working like a black, staggering across the floor with bags of oats, and
fastening them to a chain that came down from above at quick intervals for
fresh supplies. "Come and see the kiln," said the miller, opening a door.
We stepped into the semi-darkness of a big room, the floor of which was
six or eight inches deep in oats, and the heat was terrific. Steam began
to settle on my face like wet mist as the miller stooped and scraped aside
the oats. I saw that we were standing on thin wire-netting laid across
iron beams, and in the chamber beneath I discerned the red glow of an
inferno. That sudden glimpse through the wire floor was slightly
terrifying, and I thought how that kiln would have made an exquisite
torture-chamber in the Middle Ages: I pictured a pair of ruthless eyes
looking through a slit in the door at prisoners writhing upon that wire
grill as the flue was opened in the furnace room underneath and the great
crimson mouth of the fire belched up its blinding heat: I would have
preferred the thumbikins or the boot any day, and I was glad to get back
into the cool air. I tried to pick up the different noises, the swish of
the grinding-stone, the thud of the wooden levers, the whirr of spindles,
and the bang-bang of trap-doors that opened and closed. I was amused at
the distance the oats travel before they emerge finally as meal. From the
kiln on the second floor they are shovelled into a chute down which they
drop to the ground level, to be carried on a tiny elevator to the sifters,
from which they fall to the first floor to be cleaned in a riddle; then up
they go once more to the roof, to drop to the "shieling-stone" where the
husks are crushed and blown off. Up again they go, and fall through a pipe
to the oatmeal-stone, from which the meal itself goes down in a steady
stream through the riddles. The stuff that fails to pass makes another
journey to the roof, to be recrushed, while the perfect oatmeal sets out
on its final ascent and then drops down to the waiting bags. An amazing
process: a lighthouse keeper's work is a flat crawl compared with the
journeys of the oats before they reach the storeroom. As for the miller
himself, it was obvious that he loved his job. At each bin, as he raised
his voice to explain the process, he scooped up handfuls of the stuff that
earned him his living and let it trickle through his fingers with pride as
though each oat were a pearl, and the meal itself he tasted and rolled
round his tongue like a man savouring a vintage port. "There's no' a
healthier job in Scotland," he declared. "D'ye see yon boy that's helping
me? Ay, a fine big chap. Aweel, he came here a poor-like thing, but he's
off next month to join the police. It's the healthy work and the good
porridge that's set him up. Ay, it's a grand life."
The miller came to the door
and stood in the morning sunshine. We talked of the days when people
burned the husks from the grain, and beat it into meal in a
"knocking-stone," or ground it in the hand-mill they called a quern. There
was a time when a tenant held his land on condition that he had his crops
ground at the laird's water-mill, and the profits of the mill went into
the laird's pocket. To-day at Doune it is the farmers themselves who have
clubbed together to keep the old mill going for their mutual benefit. The
water is taken from the Ardoch about half a mile upstream, and glides
swiftly down the "lade" to the wheel at the riverside.
I said good-bye to the
miller, and went to the castlekeeper's cottage. He had recently been
appointed, I found, and had not acquired the irritating habit of -
spouting forth his story in the turgid stream that usually flows from the
mouth of an official guide. Far from being a peripatetic hose-pipe, he was
human, and answered my questions in a simple way; and he was as proud of
his job as the miller across the burn. "If ye like old castles," he said
confidently, while he unlocked the door below the arch, "ye'll like Doune."
For half an hour I became a boy again, the same boy that had cycled out
from Edinburgh scores of times and had scrambled dangerously upon
Craigmillar's ruined walls.
Doune is one of the most
impressive castles I have ever explored. It is built of the same reddish
sandstone I had noticed in the village, and it gives a vivid idea of the
lay-out of a medieval fortified palace. There is the guard-room, the
prison, the baron's hall, the banqueting-hall, the living-rooms, the
cellars, the lodgings for domestics, the kitchens, the chapel with its
piscina and credence-niche and ambry, and the courtyard with its well.
When a medieval nobleman travelled from one of his castles to another, one
of the items in his baggage was tapestry for the bare stone walls, and in
the banqueting-hall at Doune you can see the hooks where these tapestries
were hung. The castle was built five hundred and fifty years ago by the
first Duke of Albany (brother of the rascally Wolf of Badenoch), and his
son Murdoch may have added to it. Murdoch was the king's cousin, and soon
after James I came to the throne he arrested him and seized the castle.
Convicted of many crimes, Murdoch was executed with two of his sons on the
Heading Hill at Stirling, and the last view that met his eyes was his own
castle of Doune looking down over the wide valley of Menteith. Thereupon
James gave the castle to his queen, that "high born English lady" Joan
Beaufort; afterwards it was owned by three other Scots queens, the fickle
Mary of Gueldres, the young Margaret of Denmark, and Margaret Tudor,
sister of Henry VIII; it passed back to a descendant of the Duke of Albany
who had built it; and for several centuries it has been handed down in the
family of the present owners, the Earls of Moray. It has no ghost, this
old fortress; no famous battle was fought around it; it withstood no
impetuous siege. The centuries have dozed away peacefully while it has
stood there on the "Doune of Menteith," a fortified place long before
history began, with the Teith and the Ardoch prattling amiably below its
walls. And yet the absence of wild legend matters nothing. Doune has its
own peculiar fascination : the sad glamour that steals over a man in a
solitary moment when he thinks of the slow passage of time-birth and
manhood and death-and the wheel of life inevitably turning. This, I think,
is the mood of Doune Castle; at least, it was the mood that settled upon
me that mellow autumn morning. But it passed away like mist before the
wind when I mounted the battlements and looked down across the Ardoch to
the red-stone house of Old Newton, where Prince Charles Edward paused on
his southward march. The Edmonstones lived there, loyal Jacobites whose
ancestor had fought and died on Flodden field. They asked the Prince to
come in to take refreshment, but time was short, and he would accept only
a stirrup-cup. Greatly daring, a cousin of the pretty Edmonstone girls
burst from the group, ran to the Prince, and asked if she might be allowed
to "pree the mou" of His Royal Highness. The Prince was puzzled as he
looked down into the dancing eyes, for he understood little of the broad
Scots tongue, and then the request was explained to him. With a laugh, he
leant from his horse and gave her the kiss she had begged for. Some say he
gave her more than one; probably he did. I wonder if Robina Edmonstone
ever saw him again.
Half an hour later, I was
crossing the Teith by the big stone bridge that was built by Robert
Spittel. According to the inscription carved upon the parapet, he was
tailor to "the most noble Princess Margaret, spouse of James IV."
Evidently Robert Spittel was proud of his appointment, for he ornamented
the bridge with a pair of scissors, but I refuse to believe the story that
he built it to pay off an old score with a slack and surly ferryman. The
charge for being rowed across the river was a doit, or one-twelfth of an
English penny, and one day Spittel found he had no coin smaller than a
bodle, which was two doits. The ferryman, who may have come to life again
as a taxi-driver, swore he had no change. Spittel whipped out his
scissors, cut the bodle into two, handed a half to the ferryman, and
stepped out of the boat. Evidently the Scots nation cracked this kind of
joke about itself long before the days of Harry Lauder. I looked again at
the inscription. "In God is all my trust," wrote Spittel. "The tenth day
of September, in the year of God, 1553 years, founded was this bridge, by
Robert Spittel." After saluting this careful old Scot (who could be as
generous as he was careful, for he built two other, bridges, as well as a
hospital in Stirling, out of the profits of his shears), I set out
southward across the Vale of Menteith. But I have no idea whether I should
blame the map or myself for the fact that I had not gone many miles before
I realised that I was lost.
I had clearly marked out
the Prince's route, and it ran near the Loch of Watson; but while my map
showed a road going past the loch, I could find only a footpath. I knew I
was in the estate of Blair Drummond (which by marriage became the property
of that famous Scots judge Lord Kames), and since the ground immediately
ahead of me was thick with woods, I decided that my best plan would be to
push ahead blindly in the hope of picking up the road further on. Soon,
towards the right I caught a glimpse of the blue water of the loch, bright
in the morning sunlight, with a wide field to cross before I reached it.
I have reason to remember
the crossing of that field. There was a herd of cattle in the middle of
it, and I veered a little to the right, passing between them and the
margin of the loch. The short thick grass was pleasant to walk upon, and I
was telling myself I could tramp all day without fatigue over such
magnificent turf, when I glanced towards the herd and saw that one of the
animals was coming slowly towards me. I stopped and stared, but I did not
stare long: it was a bull. That was an unpleasant moment. I wondered
whether I should retreat, but I decided I had better push quickly forward.
I was close to the edge of the loch now, and the nearest fence was a good
hundred yards away. I began to run, and the bull came after me. Panic is
an ugly thing; I felt its hot agony in my vitals. I had read of how a
matador in the ring faces a charging bull and deflects the animal by a
swing of his red cape; but I had no red cape to swing, even if I had
possessed the courage to halt and face the brute, which I certainly had
not. I could hear his hoofs on the turf behind me. With twenty yards still
to go before I reached the fence, I slipped the heavy pack from my back
and scuttled like a rabbit, wriggling through the strands of the wire in a
sweat of terror. I shall never forget my relief when I turned round and
looked at the animal with the fence between us, and then in sudden
self-contempt I wanted to shout aloud with laughter. The black fellow was
not a bull. He was a "stot," or what I believe the English call a steer -
as friendly a steer as I could have hoped to see, with big brown eyes that
had an expectant and even benign expression. Either he had followed me out
of curiosity, or had imagined I was an old friend, or perhaps it was my
terrific rush to safety that had made him amble in my wake. He stuck his
big black head over the top strand of the fence and gazed at me, as though
he expected me to put out a companionable hand and pat him. Climbing back
into the field, I retrieved my rucksack. To show that there was no
ill-feeling, I wanted to give him a parting gift, and I remembered that
cattle and deer are fond of salt. With obvious satisfaction, he licked
from my palm the contents of the tiny packet of salt I carried with my
food, and we parted the best of friends. Though I swore I would never run
from a bull again until I was quite certain he was a bull, I am not at all
confident that I shall keep this vow.
That morning had one other
surprise for me. Beyond the loch, I got into some woods on the south, and
when I came to a clearing I looked upon a scene that made me think hard.
Myself, I do not shoot wild things, and I do not help to hunt the fox,
although I have taken part in the dismal sport of hunting the hare and the
less dismal one of coursing with greyhounds in the open. A man is entitled
to hold his own opinions about those matters. I think they are more a
question of feeling than of logic, and surely the logical attitude is
that, while hunting is cruel, it is good fun. Now, to go ratting with a
terrier strikes me as excellent fun, but a fox-hunter can reasonably argue
that this is cruelty to rats, although less cruel than getting rid of the
rats by poison. The fox is a wily devil, much more wily than the hounds;
and the main reason why I dislike beagling is that the hare is a fool, and
he screams like a child when killed. To shoot grouse and the swifter black
game upon a moor cannot be called an unmanly sport even by those who
dislike shooting any wild thing, but I fail to see the fun in hunting a
caged deer, capturing it, and hunting it again. Nor do I see the fun in
shooting at pheasants which have been reared by hand and have become
almost as tame as barn-fowls. It was such pheasants that I saw before me
in that pretty clearing of the woods.
On the ground were dozens
of wooden coops, and the lovely birds were wandering about like peacocks
on a terrace. They scuttled away when they saw me, but I stood still, and
they soon came back, their brownish feathers and green tails glistening in
the sunlight. I broke up some biscuits for them; and so, having nobly done
my share in helping to fatten them for the guns, I made my way through the
trees and came out upon the road beyond. I was now upon the edge of the
old Kincardine Moss, and twenty minutes later I had picked up the Prince's
route and was heading for the Forth.
Kincardine Moss is at the
eastern end of the Vale of Menteith, and it is set out like a "dambrod"
with neat fertile fields, the river on its southern edge, and the hills of
Gargunnock and Touch beyond. But it was not fertile one hundred and fifty
years ago; it was a barren place, and it was Lord Kames who transformed
it. He was an amazing man, that judge of Session. Tall, thin, and awkward,
he took pleasure in his broad Scots tongue, which claret loosened and made
more racy, although I am sorry to say he afterwards gave up claret for
port because he thought it patriotic to drink what the English
recommended. At the age of eighty-three, his sight and hearing were
perfect, and he was as nimble on his feet as at twentyfive. He had a
cruelly witty way with him at times, and they used to tell a story of a
murder trial over which he presided at Ayr. He personally knew the man he
was trying, and had often played chess with him; after he had pronounced
the death sentence, he leant forward with a chuckle and exclaimed: "That's
checkmate for ye, Mathie!" He seemed to regard the word "bitch" as a term
of endearment, to be applied to one of either sex, and his usual
salutation was, "Weel, ye bitch, how are ye the day?" When he realised in
the end that his strength was going, he decided to retire from the bench,
and he took an affectionate farewell of his colleagues in Parliament House
at Edinburgh; then he paused at the door as he was going out, and in a low
voice that was full of emotion he said, "Fareweel, ye bitches!" He was a
terrific worker all his life and turned out books on philosophy, religion,
criticism, history, law, farming, and I know not what else. He believed
that if you want to understand a subject you should write a book about it,
and he followed his own advice, with quaint results. I wish Boswell had
had a retort ready when, trying to stand up for Scotland, he said to Dr.
Johnson, "But sir, we have Lord Kames," and Johnson, who at times could be
a most kickable man, replied: "Keep him; ha, ha, ha!"
That Scotland did keep him
was a good thing for Scotland, because Kames was one of the greatest
farmers of his day. At the beginning of the eighteenth century, farming in
Scotland was in the doldrums; the methods used were far behind those in
England; and it was people like Lord Kames who gave the impetus which in a
few generations sent Scotland so far ahead that men came up north to
learn, and Scotsmen went south to take over farms on which Englishmen had
failed. So keen was Lord Kames that, if he arrived home in the dark, he
would go out with a lantern ard walk round his fields to see how his crops
and young plantations were doing, and he would be up at six o'clock next
morning urging his men: "On, ye bitches, on!" Perhaps his greatest
achievement was the clearing of the Kincardine Moss. For centuries this
had been waste land, and Kames discovered that deep below the moss there
was good clay soil. He hit upon a plan which his friends told him was a
ridiculous dream. Under his orders, several burns were diverted into new
channels, and the moss was hacked up and floated to the river Forth.
Hundreds of acres were cleared, and small-holders (called the Moss-lairds)
were settled with their families at a rent of threepence per acre on a
long lease. The son of Lord Kames continued the work; and Andrew Meikle of
Alloa (the threshing-machine man) devised for him a huge wheel which
lifted the water from the Teith at Doune and sent it down across the plain
to help in the job of floating away the peat. Ramsay of Ochtertyre, the
laird of a neighbouring estate, had scoffed at the project of clearing
Kincardine Moss, but he lived to watch the peat bobbing down on its
journey to the North Sea, and to look upon a fertile land.
Kincardine-in-Menteith is a thinly populated parish now, but a century ago
(thanks largely to Lord Kames) it supported over a couple of thousand
souls. As I walked over the countryside that had once been a waste, I
thought of the old Court of Session judge stumping about late at night
with his lantern, and noting the work that had been done since his last
visit, and muttering to himself, "Guid, ye bitches, guid!"
Half an hour after noon, I
climbed into a meadow, dropped my pack, and settled down beside a beech
hedge to eat my lunch. As I looked westward over the flat countryside of
Menteith to Ben Lomond, and eastward to the Firth of Forth, I felt that I
had at last come into the Lowlands of Scotland. I had, indeed, left the
Highlands behind me at Dunkeld; but travelling down the three straths,
Strathmore, Strathearn, and Strathallan, I had felt all the time the
nearness of the mountains. These mountains had now receded; Ben Vorlich,
which I imagined I could see on the skyline, looked very far away; and
when I took to the road again, it was with a new feeling in my bones, the
feeling that I had passed the climacteric of my journey; and there was a
quiet thrill in the thought that the end of it was near.
A note on the margin of my
map reminded me of an injunction I had received from Harold Forrester in
Edinburgh: I must on no account pass a house called The Coldoch, for there
I would be warmly welcomed, and there I would find the most fervent
Jacobite in Scotland. Harold Forrester had smiled mysteriously: all I knew
was that her name was Veronica.
Without much difficulty I
found the house called The Coldoch, for there was no other on the left
side of the road. To make quite certain, I asked a girl I met on the
drive. She was about ten or twelve years old - I am a poor hand at
guessing the age of young ladies-and her blue eyes opened wide when she
caught sight of my pack. " You aren't the Prince Charlie man ? " she
exclaimed.
I replied that I had walked
from Moidart on the Prince's road, and she gave a little cry, then drew
herself up and held out her hand.
"I am Veronica," she said,
and so I was welcomed to The Coldoch by the most fervent Jacobite in
Scotland. Word had been sent from Edinburgh that a stranger who had
travelled from Moidart would pass that way about the end of the week, and
Veronica took me at once to the orchard, where her father and mother were
casting critical glances at the ripening fruit; and there, for the
Prince's sake, I received a second welcome.
The Coldoch I declare to be
a delightful house, part of it probably dating from early in the sixteenth
century. The lands of "Coldochis" were given by James IV to Robert Spittel,
the royal tailor who built the Breeches Bridge at Doune, and the house was
occupied by an uncle of Lady Margaret Drummond, the king's mistress, who
with her two sisters died a sudden and mysterious death after drinking the
sacramental wine one morning at Mass : a murder which, it was said at the
time, was contrived to prevent the king from marrying his lover. The new
portion of the house was added by a man with a sensitive taste for the
comely. Outside, it is white-washed, and indoors there is some panelling
which was built since the War by local carpenters. This woodwork is as
fine as anything of the kind I have seen, old or new, and it gives the lie
to those who declare that craftsmanship is dead in Scotland. The
industrial era smashed a lot of it, but did not kill it, and we have come
to a time when men are beginning to think hard about machinery and the
good and the ill it has done for the world. The good is staring us in the
face every day we live, and the bad is the fault of man, who has lacked
the wit to use decently the tremendous toys he has invented. Only a
half-blind reactionary, brooding behind medieval walls, can be such a fool
as to scoff at the machine, and in painting pictures of the economic
paradise of the Middle Ages he forgets that the happy craftsmen and the
merchants who bought and sold their handiwork fought like cat and dog. Are
things so essentially different to-day? To be sure, Jack is not his own
master, but I do not think Jack ever was. I wish some clever fellow would
devise more and more machines of the kind that lighten the labour of poor
devils whose job is filthy and sweaty and dangerous. The sentimentalists
would be cured of their illusions if they were put into the hold of a
schooner and ordered to fill baskets of coal, one after another endlessly,
while a chain comes down from the winch on the deck above to jerk the
creels up through the hatch and swing them across to the quay. I have
watched men at this job; from nine o'clock in the morning until five, they
have sweltered in an atmosphere that was black with coal dust, and their
pay was eightpence a ton. My point is not that their pay was too little,
but that the work should have been performed by a machine. In the dear old
medieval days when most things were done by hand, there were many vile
jobs which we can do to-day by pressing a button,; and I think one of the
most thrilling sights in the world is a huge factory going at full blast,
with men and women tending the machines, nursing them into efficiency,
living day after day with the hum of them in their ears. A smooth-running
machine is almost a human thing, and to imagine that the man who tends it
has no love for it-has none of the craftsman's pride in its products-is to
misinterpret the attitude of the machine-worker. He understands the
sweetness of the monotony; his blood flows quietly to the rhythm of the
machine; and when he comes to his machine he enters into a waking dream
with its own peculiar quality. His state of mind is that of the weaver at
his loom swinging his body in monotonous and rhythmic movements; and I
look forward to the day when machinery will be so perfect that factory
workers will be on duty for no more than four hours in the day, and will
have leisure to cultivate their souls. To try to put back the clock is to
stop the clock, and one of the things mankind has yet to learn is how to
use the leisure that will one day be the greatest product of the machine.
But this is a far cry from the wooden panelling made by the hands of local
carpenters at The Coldoch, where we sat and drank tea and talked on that
gracious September afternoon.
I was taken to look at the
remains of a Pictish broch or keir in the corner of the garden. Can there
be a more remarkable garden "ornament" in all Scotland? This broch is
small, and most of its stones, I suppose, have long ago been used for
dykes : but the sight of that thick circular wall took my thoughts into
the past, and it was easy to picture men sitting around the low doorway
talking in the Pictish tongue about the Roman soldiers, and the roads they
had made, and that great rampart they had built and failed to hold, a
rampart that ran from somewhere in the west to Peanfahel near Abercorn by
the shore of the inland sea.
I had a fine long talk with
Veronica, who promised me that one day she would write a book about Prince
Charles Edward, and I was driven in a motor-car to the bridge over the
Forth. We descended to look at the Ford of Frew beside the farmhouse past
which the old road led. [The old name, the Fords of Frew, possibly
referred to the two fords at this place, one through the Forth, the other
through the Boquhan Burn.] There the Highland army crossed the river. The
ford had been a place of importance for centuries; it is referred to in
the old Welsh laws, and in the Pictish Chronicle we are told it was
fortified by Kenneth the son of Malcolm who died in the year 995. There is
no ford across the Forth between here and the causewayed Roman ford at
Drip near Stirling, and in the -days before men had learned to build
bridges it was a key-position. Even so late as the thirteenth century,
when the English overran Scotland, Edward I defended it from a peel-tower.
Gardiner's dragoons had
come valiantly out from Stirling to the ford; but instead of waiting to
meet the Highlanders they had flung into, the river some calthrops - iron
crows' feet, brutal instruments for wounding men and horses-and had
scuttled back again. The Prince had sent a few hundred men towards
Stirling to create a diversion, and the officer commanding the castle
imagined that the Jacobite army intended to force the bridge. He sent out
his dragoons; and the group of Highlanders blazed away with their muskets,
then hurried eight miles westward to cross the river at the ford with the
main body. A man who was there said that the Prince was the first to
plunge into the water. If Veronica's mother had not protested against my
spending the rest of the day in wet clothes, I might have been tempted to
follow. It would have been picturesque to splash waist-deep through the
water in the Prince's footsteps, like a lesser Byron emulating Leander in
the Hellespont : instead, I flipped a "chuckie" across the river, and with
an undeserved reputation for common-sense, I went back to the car. We
sedately crossed the Forth by the bridge.
It was a happy thought of
my host and hostess to run me up the steep hill into Kippen to see a
remarkable little parish church. From a casual glance at the outside, you
would never dream there were such glories to be found within. The church
was obviously built some time last century, and the fabric was good and
plain; but within recent years, enough thought and time and money had been
lavished on it to have built three such churches; and the Kippen
congregation, inspired by one of the greatest of living Scotsmen, Sir
David Y. Cameron, has indeed made this place of worship a place of beauty:
the centre of life in the parish, the focus of its inspiration. The walls
of the vestibule are of the same unpointed red sandstone you see outside;
the exquisite iron door handles were made by the local blacksmith, and so
was much of the other ironwork in the building. Beyond the wide arch, the
place for the altar has been dug out of solid rock; the oak pulpit is
austerely and charmingly decorated in gilt, and the reading-desk in gilt
and crimson. The floor is of stone slabs, and the walls have a plain
cream-coloured wash. The chair behind the altar-table has been made of
good Scots oak, and the red altar cloth was designed by the late Lady
Cameron, who is remembered in the parish with deep affection. The choir is
placed down among the congregation, giving unity to the worship; and the
pine-wood pews were stripped of their old disfiguring varnish by the hands
of the minister himself. The two lamps of remembrance are of gilded metal
with deep crimson glass, and in this church is the first cross to have
been displayed in a Presbyterian church since the Reformation. The
church-room on the west has walls of oak, a roof of Scots cedar, and the
great refectory table has been built of Scots elm; the stained-glass
windows are by that fine artist Hendrie. The effect of it all upon the
mind of the beholder is one of breath-taking simplicity and beauty. This
desire for beauty in the sanctuary is one of the clearest signs of
spiritual regeneration; and among the floods of talk about decay in the
Church of Scotland, the kirk at Kippen stands upon its hill like a
beacon-light.
After my host and hostess
from The Coldoch had departed, I talked in his studio with the artist who
has lovingly given so much to make the kirk of Kippen what it is. Over a
garden rich with autumn flowers, the big windows of his work-room look
down northward upon the green Vale of Menteith. He spoke of art and
religion and of his confidence that the one will in the near future be a
spring of inspiration to feed the other. The old strong sense of
nationality is beginning again to assert itself in Scotland both in art
and religion. He sees sorrow and struggle in the years to come, but these
are the birth-throes of a new and nobler age. D. Y. Cameron (a direct
descendant of Dr. Archibald Cameron, younger brother of Locheil of the
'Forty-five) will be long remembered in Scotland, not only as an artist
who has richly depicted the outward aspect of the country he loves, but as
a spiritual inspirer during a critical time in Scotland's history. His
words were echoing in my ears as I descended to the highway near the Frews
and continued my journey on the Prince's road. |