"All hail, Macbeth! thou
shalt be king hereafter.”—Shakspere.
It is, perhaps, not quite
unworthy of remark, that not only is Cromarty the sole district of the
kingdom whose annals ascend into the obscure ages of fable, but that the
first passage of even its real history derives its chief interest, not
from its importance as a fact, but from what may be termed its chance
union with a sublime fiction of poetry. Few, I daresay, have so much a3
dreamed of connecting either its name or scenery with the genius of
Shakspere, and yet they are linked to one of the most powerful of his
achievements as a poet, by the bonds of a natural association. The very
first incident of its true history would have constituted, had the
details been minutely preserved, the early biography of the celebrated
Macbeth; who, according to our black-letter historians, makes his first
appearance in public life as Thane of Cromarty, and Maormor, or great
man of Ross. But I am aware I do not derive from the circumstance any
right to become his biographer. For though his character was probably
formed at a time when he may be regarded as the legitimate property of
the provincial annalist, no sooner is it exhibited in action than he is
consigned over to the chroniclers of the kingdom.
For the earlier facts of
our history the evidence is rather circumstantial than direct. We see it
stamped on the face of the country, or inscribed on our older obelisks,
or sometimes disinterred from out of hillocks of sand, or accumulations
of moss ; but very rarely do we find it deposited in our archives. Let
us examine it, however, wherever it presents itself, and strive, should
it seem at all intelligible, to determine regarding its purport and
amount. Not more than sixty years ago a bank of blown sand, directly
under the northern Sutor, which had been heaped over the soil ages
before^ was laid open by the winds of a stormy winter, when it was
discovered that the nucleus on which the hillock had originally formed,
was composed of the bones of various animals of the chase, and the horns
of deer. It is not much more than twelve years since there were dug up
in the same sandy tract two earthen urns, the one filled with ashes and
fragments of half-burned bones, the other with bits of a black
bituminous-looking stone, somewhat resembling jet, which had been
fashioned into beads, and little flat parallelograms, perforated
edgewise, with four holes apiece. Nothing could be ruder than the
workmanship : the urns were clumsily modelled by the hand, unassisted by
a lathe; the ornaments, rough and unpolished, and still bearing the
marks of the tool, resembled nothing of modem production, except,
perhaps, the toys which herd-boys sometimes amuse their leisure in
forming with the knife. "VVe find remains such as these fraught with a
more faithful evidence regarding the early state of our country than the
black-letter pages of our chroniclers. They testify of a period when the
chase formed, perhaps, the sole employment of the few scattered
inhabitants; and of the practice, so prevalent among savages, of burying
with their dead friends whatever they most loved when alive. It may be
further remarked as a curious fact, and one from which we may infer that
trinkets wrought in so uncouth a style could have belonged to only the
first stage of society, that man’s inventive powers receive their
earliest impulses rather from his admiration of the beautiful, than his
sense of the useful. He displays a taste in ornament, and has learned to
dye his skin, and to tatoo it with rude figures of the sun and moon,
before he has become ingenious enough to discover that he stands in need
of a covering.
There is a tradition of
this part of the country which seems not a great deal more modem than
the urns or their ornaments, and which bears the character of the savage
nearly as distinctly impressed on it. On the summit of Knock-Ferril, a
steep hill which rises a few miles to the west of Dingwall, there are
the remains of one of those vitrified forts which so puzzle and interest
the antiquary; and which was originally constructed, says tradition, by
a gigantic tribe of Fions, for the protection of their wives and
children, when they themselves were engaged in hunting. It chanced in
one of their excursions that a mean-spirited little fellow of the party,
not much more than fifteen feet in height, was so distanced by his more
active brethren, that, leaving them to follow out the chase, he returned
home, and throwing himself down, much fatigued, on the side of the
eminence, fell fast asleep. Garry, for so the unlucky hunter was called,
was no favourite with the women of the tribe;—he was spiritless and
diminutive, and ill-tempered; and as they could make little else of him
that they cared for, they converted him into the butt of many a teasing
little joke, and the sport of many a capricious humour. On seeing that
he had fallen asleep, they stole out to where he lay, and after
fastening his long hair with pegs to the grass, awakened him with their
shouts and laughter. He strove to extricate himself, but in vain; until
at length, infuriated by their gibes and the pain of his own exertions,
he wrenched up his head, leaving half his locks behind him, and,
hurrying after them, set fire to the stronghold into which they had
rushed for shelter. The flames rose till they mounted over the roof, and
broke out at every slit and opening; but Garry, unmoved by the shrieks
and groans of the sufferers within, held fast the door until all was
silent; when he fled into the remote Highlands, towards the west. The
males of the tribe, who had, meanwhile, been engaged in hunting on that
part of the northern Sutor which bears the name of the hill of Nigg,
alarmed by the vast column of smoke which they saw ascending from their
dwelling, came pressing on to the Firth of Cromarty, and leaping across
on their hunting-spears, they hurried home. But they arrived to find
only a huge pile of embers, fanned by the breeze, and amid which the
very stones of the building were sputtering and bubbling with the
intense heat, like the contents of a boiling caldron. Wild with rage and
astonishment, and yet collected enough to conclude that none but Garry
could be the author of a deed so barbarous, they tracked him into a
nameless Highland glen, which has ever since been known as Glen-Garry>
and there tore him to pieces. And as all the women of the tribe perished
in the flames, there was an end, when this forlorn and widowed
generation had passed away, to the whole race of the Fions. The next
incident of our history bears no other connexion to this story, than
that it belongs to a very early age, that of the Vikingr and Sea-King,
and that we owe our data regarding it, not to written records, but to an
interesting class of ancient remains, and to a doubtful and imperfect
tradition.
In this age, says the
tradition, the Maormor of Ross was married to a daughter of the king of
Denmark, and proved so barbarous a husband, that her father, to whom she
at length found the means of escape, fitted out a fleet and army to
avenge on him the cruelties inflicted on her. Three of her brothers
accompanied the expedition; but, on nearing the Scottish coast, a
terrible storm arose, in which almost all the vessels of the fleet
either foundered or were driven ashore, and the three princes were
drowned. The ledge of rock at which this latter disaster is said to have
taken place, still bears the name of the King’s Sons; a magnificent cave
which opens among the cliffs of the neighbouring shore is still known as
the King’s Cave; and a path that winds to the summits of the precipices
beside it, as the King’s Path. The bodies of the princes, says the
tradition, were interred, one at Shandwick, one at Hilton, and one at
Nigg; and the sculptured obelisks of these places, three very curious
pieces of antiquity, are said to be monuments erected to their memory by
their father. In no part of Scotland do stones of this class so abound
as on the shores of the Moray Firth. And they have often attracted the
notice and employed the ingenuity of the antiquary ; but it still
appears somewhat doubtful whether we are to regard them as of Celtic or
of Scandinavian origin. It may be remarked, however, that though their
style of sculpture resembles, in its general features, that exhibited in
the ancient crosses of Wales, which are unquestionably British, and
though they are described in a tradition current on the southern shore
of the Moray Firth, as monuments raised by the inhabitants on the
expulsion of the Danes, the amount of evidence seems to preponderate in
the opposite direction; when we consider that they are invariably found
bordering on the sea ; that their design and workmanship display a
degree of ta&te and mechanical ability which the Celtse of North Britain
seem never to have possessed; that the eastern shores of the German
Ocean abound in similar monuments, which, to a complexity of ornament
not more decidedly Runic, add the Runic inscription; and that the
tradition just related—which, wild as it may appear, can hardly be
deemed less authentic than the one opposed to it, seeing that it belongs
to a district still peopled by the old inhabitants of the country,
whereas the other seems restricted to the lowlands of Moray—assigns
their erection not to the natives, but to their rapacious and unwelcome
visitors, the Danes themselves. The reader may perhaps indulge me in a
few descriptive notices of the three stones connected with the
tradition; they all lie within six miles of Cromarty, and their
weathered and mossy planes, roughened with complicated tracery and
doubtful hieroglyphics, may be regarded as pages of provincial
history—as pages, however, which we must copy rather than translate. May
I not urge, besides, that men who have visited Egypt to examine
monuments not much more curious, have written folios on their return?
The obelisk at Hilton,
though perhaps the most elegant of its class in Scotland, is less known
than any of the other two, and it has fared more hardly. For, about two
centuries ago, it was taken down by some barbarous mason of Ross, who
converted it into a tombstone, and, erasing the neat mysterious
hieroglyphics of one of the sides, engraved on the place which they had
occupied a rude shield and label, and the following laughable
inscription; no bad specimen, by the bye, of the taste and judgment
which could destroy so interesting a monument, and of that fortuitous
species of wit which lies within the reach of accident, and of accident
alone.
HE • THAT ' LIVES ' WEIL *
DYES ' WEIL ' SAYS * SOLOMON * THE * WISE.
HEIR ' LYES • ALEXANDER ' DVFF * AND * HIS * THRIE * WIVES.
The side of the obelisk
which the chisel has spared is surrounded by a broad border, embossed in
a style of ornament that would hardly disgrace the frieze of an Athenian
portico ; —the centre is thickly occupied by the figures of men, some on
horseback, some afoot—of wild and tame animals, musical instruments, and
weapons of war and of the chase. The stone of Shandwick is still
standing,1 and bears on the side which corresponds to the obliterated
surface of the other, the figure of a large cross, composed of circular
knobs wrought into an involved and intricate species of fretwork, which
seems formed by the twisting of myriads of snakes. In the spaces on the
sides of the shaft there are two huge, clumsy-looking animals, the one
resembling an elephant, and the other a lion; over each of these a St.
Andrew seems leaning forward from his cross; and on the reverse of the
obelisk the sculpture represents processions, hunting-scenes, and
combats. These, however, are but meagre notices ; the obelisk at Nigg I
shall describe more minutely as an average specimen of the class to
which it belongs.
It stands in the parish
burying-ground, beside the eastern gable of the church; and bears on one
of its sides, like the stone at Shandwick, a large cross, which, it may
be remarked, rather resembles that of the Greek than of the Romish
Church, and on the other a richly embossed frame, enclosing, like the
border of the obelisk at Hilton, the figures of a crowded assemblage of
men and animals. Beneath the arms of the cross the surface is divided
into four oblong compartments, and there are three above—one on each
side, which form complete squares, and one a-top, which, like the
pediment of a portico, is of a triangular shape. In the lower angle of
this upper compartment, two priest-like figures, attired in long
garments, and furnished each with a book, incline forwards in the
attitude of prayer; and in the centre between them there is a circular
cake or wafer, which a dove, descending from above, holds in its bill.
Two dogs seem starting towards the wafer from either side; and directly
under it there is a figure so much weathered, that it may be deemed to
represent, as fancy may determine, either a little circular table, or
the sacramental cup. A pictorial record cannot be other than a doubtful
one ; and it is difficult to decide whether the hieroglyphic of this
department denotes the ghostly influence of the priest in delivering the
soul from the evils of an intermediate state; for, at a slight expense
of conjectural analogy, we may premise that the mysterious dove descends
in answer to the prayer of the two kneeling figures, to deliver the
little emblematical cake from the “ power of the dog—or, whether it may
not represent a treaty of peace between rival chiefs whose previous
hostility may be symbolized by the two fierce animals below, and their
pacific intentions by the bird above, and who ratify the contract by an
oath, solemnized over the book, the cup, and the wafer. A very few such
explanations might tempt one to quote the well-known story of the
Professor of signs and the Aberdeen butcher; the weight of the evidence,
however, rests apparently with those who adopt the last. We see the
locks of the kneeling figures curling upon their shoulders in unclerical
profusion, unbroken by the tonsure; while the presence of the two books,
with the absence of any written inscription, seems characteristic of the
mutual memorial of tribes, who, though not wholly illiterate, possess no
common language save the very doubtful language of symbol. If we hold
further that the stone is of Scandinavian origin—and it seems a rather
difficult matter to arrive at a different conclusion—we can hardly
suppose that the natives should have left unmutilated the monument of a
people so little beloved had they had no part in what it records, or no
interest in its preservation.
We pass to the other
compartments ;—some of these and the plane of the cross are occupied by
a species of fretwork exceedingly involved and complicated, but formed,
notwithstanding, on regular mathematical figures. There are others which
contain squares of elegantly arrayed tracery, designed in a style which
we can almost identify with that of the border illuminations of our
older manuscripts, or of the ornaments, imitative of these, which occur
in works printed during the reigns of Elizabeth and James. But what seem
the more curious compartments of the stone are embossed into rows of
circular knobs, covered over, as if by basket-work, with the intricate
foldings of myriads of snakes; and which may be either deemed to allude
to the serpent and apple of the Fall—thus placed in no inapt
neighbourhood to the cross ; or to symbolize (for even the knobs may be
supposed to consist wholly of serpents) that of which the serpent has
ever been held emblematic, and which we cannot regard as less appositely
introduced—a complex wisdom, or an incomprehensible eternity.
The hieroglyphics of the
opposite side are in lower relief, and though the various fretwork of
the border is executed in a style of much elegance, the whole seems to
owe less to the care of the sculptor. The centre is occupied by what,
from its size, we must deem the chief figure of the group—that of a man
attired in long garments, caressing a fawn; and directly fronting him,
there are the figures of a lamb and a harp. The whole is, perhaps,
emblematical of peace, and may be supposed to tell the same story with
the upper hieroglyphic of the reverse. In the space beneath there is the
figure of a man furnished with cymbals, which he seems clashing with
much glee, and that of a horse and its rider, surrounded by animals of
the chase; while in the upper part of the stone there are dogs, deer, an
armed huntsman, and, surmounting the whole, an eagle or raven. It may
not be deemed unworthy of remark, that the style of the more complex
ornaments of this stone very much resembles that which obtains in the
sculptures and tatooings of the New-Zealander. We see exhibited in both
the same intricate regularity of pattern, and almost similar
combinations of the same waving lines. And we are led to infer, that
though the rude Scandinavian of perhaps nine centuries ago had travelled
a long stage in advance of the New-Zealander of our own times, he had
yet his ideas of the beautiful cast in nearly the same mould. Is it not
a curious fact, that man, in his advances towards the just and graceful
in desgin, proceeds not from the simple to the complex, but from the
complex to the simple.
The slope of the northern
Sutor which fronts the town of Cromarty, terminates about a hundred and
fifty feet above the level of the shore in a precipitous declivity
surmounted by a little green knoll, which for the last six centuries has
borne the name of Dunskaith (i.e. the fort of mischief). And in its
immediate vicinity there is a high-lying farm, known all over the
country as the farm of Castle-Craig. The prospect from the edge of the
eminence is one of the finest in the kingdom. We may survey the entire
Firth of Cromarty spread out before us as in a map; the town, though on
the opposite shore, seems so completely under our view that we think of
looking down into its streets; and yet the distance is sufficient to
conceal all but what is pleasing in it. The eye, in travelling over the
country beyond, ascends delighted through the various regions of com,
and wood, and moor, and then expatiates unfatigued amid a wilderness of
blue-peaked hills. And where the land terminates towards the east, we
may see the dark abmpt cliffs of the southern Sutor flinging their
shadows half-way across the opening, and distinguish among the lofty
crags, which rise to oppose them, the jagged and serrated shelves of the
Diamond-rock, a tall beetling precipice which once bore, if we may trust
to tradition, a wondrous gem in its forehead. Often, says the legend,
has the benighted boatman gazed from ainid the darkness, as he came
rowing along the shore, on its clear beaconlike flame, which, streaming
from the rock, threw a long fiery strip athwart the water; and the
mariners of other countries have inquired whether the light which they
saw shining so high among the cliffs, right over their mast, did not
proceed from the shrine of some saint, or the cell of some hermit. But
like the carbuncle of the Ward-hill of Hoy, of which the author of
Waverley makes so poetical a use, “ though it gleamed ruddy as a furnace
to them who viewed it from beneath, it ever became invisible to him
whose daring foot had scaled the precipices from whence it darted its
splendour.” I have been oftener than once interrogated on the western
coast of Scotland regarding the “ Diamond-rock of Cromarty;” and an old
campaigner who fought under Abercromby has told me that he has listened
to the familiar stoiy of its diamond amid the sand wastes of Egypt. But
the jewel has long since disappeared, and we see only the rock. It used
never to be seen, it is said, by day, nor could the exact point which it
occupied be ascertained; and on a certain luckless occasion an ingenious
ship-captain, determined on marking its place, brought with him from
England a few balls of chalk, and, charging with this novel species of
shot, took aim at it in the night-time with one of his great guns. Ere
he had fired, however, it vanished, as if suddenly withdrawn by some
guardian hand} and its place on the rock has ever since remained as
undistinguishable as the scaurs and cliffs around it. And now the eye,
after completing its circuit, rests on the eminence of Dunskaith;—the
site of a royal fortress erected by William the Lion, to repress, says
Lord Hailes in his Annals of Scotland, the oft-recurring rebellions and
disorders of Ross-shire. We can still trace the moat of the citadel, and
part of an outwork which rises towards the hill; but the walls have sunk
into low grassy mounds, and the line of the outer moat has long since
been effaced by the plough. The disorders of Ross-shire seem to have
outlived, by many ages, the fortress raised to suppress them. I need
hardly advert to a story so well known as that of the robber of this
province who nailed horse-shoes to the feet of the poor widow who had
threatened him with the vengeance of James I., and who, with twelve of
his followers, was brought to Edinburgh by that monarch, to be
horse-shoed in turn. Even so late as the reign of James VI. the clans of
Ross are classed among the peculiarly obnoxious, in an Act for the
punishment of theft, grief, and oppression.
Between the times of
Macbeth and an age comparatively recent, there occurs a wide chasm in
the history of Cromarty. The Thane, magnified by the atmosphere of
poetry which surrounds him, towers like a giant over the remoter brink
of the gap, while, in apparent opposition to every law of perspective,
the people on its nearer edge seem diminished into pigmies. And yet the
Urquharts of Cromarty—though Sir Thomas, in his zeal for their honour,
has dealt by them as the poets of ancient Greece did by the early
history of their country—were a race of ancient standing and of no
little consideration. The editor of the second edition of Sir Thomas’s
Jewel, which was not published until the first had been more than a
hundred years out of print, states in his advertisement that he had
compared the genealogy of his author with another genealogy of the
family in possession of the Lord Lyon of Scotland, and that from the
reign of Alexander II. to that of Charles I. he had found them perfectly
to agree. The lands of the family extended from the furthest point of
the southern Sutor to the hill of Kiribeakie (i.e. end of the living), a
tract which includes the parishes of Cromarty, Kirkmichael, and
Cullicuden; and, prior to the imprisonment and exile of Sir Thomas, he
was vested with the patronage of the churches of these parishes, and the
admiralty of the eastern coast of Scotland, from Caithness to Inverness.
The first of his
ancestors, whose story receives some shadow of confirmation from
tradition, was a contemporary of Wallace and the Bruce. When ejected
from his castle, he is said to have regained it from the English by a
stratagem, and to have held it out with only forty men for about seven
years. “During that time,” says Sir Thomas, “his lands were wasted and
his woods burnt; and having nothing he could properly call his own but
the moat-hill of Cromarty, which he maintained in defiance of all the
efforts of the enemy, he was agnamed Gulielmm de monte alto. At length,”
continues the genealogist, “he was relieved by Sir William Wallace, who
raised the siege after defeating the English in a little den or hollow
about two miles from the town.” Tradition, though silent respecting the
siege, is more explicit than Sir Thomas in her details of the battle.
Somewhat more than four
miles to the south of Cromarty, and about the middle of the mountainous
ridge which, stretching from the Sutors to the village of Rosemarkie,
overhangs at the one edge the shores of the Moray Firth, and sinks on
the other into a broken moor, there is a little wooded eminence. Like
the ridge which it overtops, it sweeps gradually towards the east until
it terminates in an abrupt precipice that overhangs the sea, and slopes
upon the west into a marshy hollow, known to the elderly people of the
last age and a very few of the present as Wallace-slack—i.e., ravine.
The direct line of communication with the southern districts, to
travellers who cross the Firth at the narrow strait of Ardersier, passes
within a few yards of the hollow. And when, some time during the wars of
Edward, a strong body of English troops were marching by this route to
join another strong body encamped in the peninsula of Easter Ross, this
circumstance is said to have pointed it out to Wallace as a fit place
for forming an ambuscade. From the eminence which overtops it, the
spectator can look down on a wide tract of country, while the ravine
itself is concealed by a flat tubercle of the moor, which to the
traveller approaching from the south or west, seems the base of the
eminence. The stratagem succeeded; the English, surprised and
panic-struck, were defeated with much slaughter, six hundred being left
dead in the scene of the attack; and the survivors, closely pursued and
wholly unacquainted with the country, fled towards the north along the
ridge of hill which terminates at the bay of Cromarty. From the top of
the ridge the two Sutors seem piled the one over the other, and so shut
up the opening, that the bay within assumes the appearance of a lake;
and the English deeming it such, pressed onward, in the hope that a
continued tract of land stretched between them and their countrymen on
the opposite shore. They were only undeceived when, on climbing the
southern Sutor, where it rises behind the town, they saw an arm of the
sea more than a mile in width, and skirted by abrupt and dizzy
precipices, opening before them. The spot is still pointed out where
they made their final stand; and a few shapeless hillocks, that may
still be seen among the trees, are said to have been raised above the
bodies of those who fell; while the fugitives, for they were soon beaten
from this position, were either driven over the neighbouring precipices,
or perished amid the waves of the Firth. Wallace, on another occasion,
is said to have fled for refuge to a cave of the Sutors; and his
metrical historian, Blind Harry, after narrating his exploits at St.
Johnstone’s, Dunotter, and Aberdeen, describes him as
“Raiping throw the
Northland into playne,
Till at Crummade feil Inglisuion he’d slayne."
Hamilton, in his
modernized edition of the “Achievements,” renders the Crummade here
Cromarty; and as shown by an ancient custom-house seal or cocket
(supposed to belong to the reign of Robert II.), now in the Inverness
Museum, the place was certainly designated of old by a word of
resembling sound— Chrombhte.
Of all the humbler poets
of Scotland—and where is there a country with more?—there is hardly one
who has not sung in praise of Wallace. His exploit, as recorded in the
Jewel, connected with the tradition of the cave, has been narrated by
the muse of a provincial poet, who published a volume of poems at
Inverness about five years ago; and, in the lack of less questionable
materials for this part of my history, I avail myself of his poem.
Thus ran the tale :—proud
England’s host
Lay ’trench’d on Croma’s winding coast,
And rose the Urquhart’s towers beneath
Fierce shouts of wars, deep groans of death.
The Wallace hoard;—from Moray’s shore
One little bark his warriors bore.
But died the breeze, and rose the day,
Ere gained that bark the destined bay;
When, lo! these rocks a quay supplied,
These yawning caves meet shades to hide.
Secure, where rank the nightshade grew,
And patter’d thick th’ unwholesome dew,
Patient of cold and gloom they lay,
Till eve’s last light had died away.
It died away ;—in Croma’s hall
No flame glanced on the trophied wall,
Nor sound of mirth nor revel free
Was heard where joy had wont to be.
With day had ceased the siege’s din,
But still gaunt famine raged within.
In chamber lone, on weary bed,
That castle’s wounded lord was laid;
His woe-worn lady watch'd beside.
To pain devote, and grief, and gloom,
No taper cheer’d the darksome room;
Yet to the wounded chieftain’s sight
Strange shapes were there, and sheets of light
And oft he spoke, in jargon vain,
Of ruthless deed and tyrant reign,
For maddening fever fired his brain
O hark! the warder’s rousing call—
“Rise, warriors, rise, and man the wall! ’
Starts up tho chief, but rack’d with pain,
And weak, he backward sinks again:
“O Heaven, they come! ” the lady cries,
“The Southrons come, and Urquhart dies!”
Nay, ’tis not fever mocks his sight;
His brolder’d couch is red with light;
In light his lady stands confest,
Her hand clasp’d on her heaving breast.
And hark; wild shouts assail the ear,
Loud and more loud, near and more near
They rise!—hark, frequent rings the blade,
On crested helm relentless laid;
Yells, groans, sharp sounds of smitten mail,
And war-cries load the midnight gale ;
0 hark ! like Heaven's own thunder high,
Swells o’er the rest one ceaseless cry,
Racking the dull cold ear of night,
“The Wallace wight!—the Wallace wight!"
Yes, gleams the sword of Wallace there,
Unused his country’s foes to spare;
Roars the red camp like funeral pyre,
One wild, wide, wasteful sea of fire;
Glow red the low-brow’d clouds of night,
The wooded hill is bathed in light,
Gleams wave, and field, and turret height
Death’s vassals dog the spoiler’s horde,
Burns in their front th’ unsparing sword;
The fired camp casts its volumes o’er;
Behind spreads wide a skiffless shore;
Fire, flood, and sword, conspire to slay.
How sad shall rest morn’s early ray
On blacken’d strand, and crimson’d main,
On floods of gore, and hills of slain;
But bright its cheering beams shall fall
Where mirth whoops in the Urquharts’ Hall.
* * *
There occurs in our
narrative another wide chasm, which extends from the times of Wallace to
the reign of James IV. Like the earlier gap, however, it might be filled
up by a recital of events, which, though they belong properly to the
history of the neighbouring districts, must have affected in no slight
degree the interests and passions of the people of Cromarty. Among these
we may reckon the descents on Ross by the Lords of the’ Isles, which
terminated in the battles of Harlaw and Driemder-fat, and that contest
between the Macintoshes and Munros, which took place in the same century
at the village of Clachnaherry. I might avail myself, too, on a similar
principle, of the pilgrimage of James IV. to the neighbouring chapel of
St. Dothus, near Tain. But as all these events have, like the story of
Macbeth, been appropriated by the historians of the kingdom, they are
already familiar to the general reader. In an after age, Cromarty, like
Tain, was honoured by a visit from royalty. I find it stated by
Calderwood, that in the year 1589, on the discovery of Huntly’s
conspiracy, and the discomfiture of his followers at the Bridge of Dee,
James VI. rode to Aberdeen, ostensibly with the intention of holding
justice-courts on the delinquents; but that, deputing the business of
trial to certain judges whom he instructed to act with a lenity which
the historian condemns, he set out on a hunting expedition to Cromarty,
from which he returned after an absence of about twenty days.
We find not a great deal
less of the savage in the records of these later times than in those of
the darker periods which went before. Life and property seem to have
been hardly more secure, especially in those hapless districts which,
bordering on the Highlands, may be regarded as constituting the
battle-fields on which needy barbarism, and the imperfectly-formed
vanguard of a slowly advancing civilisation, contended for the mastery.
Early in the reign of James IV. the lands of Cromarty were wasted by a
combination of the neighbouring clans, headed by Hucheon Rose of
Kilravock, Macintosh of Macintosh, and Fraser of Lovat; and so complete
was the spoliation, that the entire property of the inhabitants, to
their very household furniture, was carried away. Restitution was
afterwards enforced by the Lords of Council. We find it decreed in the
Acta Domi-norum Concilii for 1492, that Hucheon Rose of Kilravock do
restore, content, and pay to Mr. Alexander Urquhart, sheriff of
Cromarty, and his tenants, the various items carried off by him and his
accomplices ; viz., six hundred cows, one hundred horses, one thousand
sheep, four hundred goats, two hundred swine, and four hundred bolls of
victual. Kilravock is said to have conciliated the justice-general on
this occasion by resigning into his hands his grand-daughter, the
heiress of Calder, then a child; and her lands the wily magistrate
secured to his family by marrying her to one of his sons.
There lived in the
succeeding reign a proprietor of Cromarty, who, from the number of his
children, received, says the genealogist, the title, or agname, of
Paterhemon. He had twenty-five sons who arrived at manhood, and eleven
daughters who ripened into women, and were married. Seven of the sons
lost their lives at the battle of Pinkie; and there were some of the
survivors who, settling in England, became the founders of families
which, in the days of the Commonwealth, were possessed of considerable
property and influence in Devonshire and Cumberland. Tradition tells the
story of Paterhemon somewhat differently. His children, whom it
diminishes to twenty, are described as robust and very handsome men j
and he is said to have lived in the reign of Mary. On the visit of that
princess to Inverness, and when, according to Buchanan, the Frasers and
Munros, two of the most warlike clans of the country, were raised by
their respective chieftains to defend her against the designs of Huntly,
the Urquhart is said also to have marched to her assistance with a
strong body of his vassals, and accompanied by all his sons, mounted on
white horses. At the moment of his arrival Mary was engaged in reviewing
the clans, and surrounded by the chiefs and her officers. The venerable
chieftain rode up to her, and, dismounting with all the ease of a
galliard of five-and-twenty, presented to her, as his best gift, his
little troup of children. There is yet a third edition of the
story:—About the year 1652, one Richard Franck, a native of the sister
kingdom, and as devoted an angler as Isaac Walton himself, made the tour
of Scotland, and then published a book descriptive of what he had seen.
His notice of Cromarty is mostly summed up in a curious little anecdote
of the patriarch, which he probably derived from some tradition current
at the time of his visit. Sir Thomas he describes as his eldest son ;
and the number of his children who arrived at maturity he has increased
to forty. “He had thirty sons and ten daughters,” says the tourist,
“standing at once before him, and not one natural child amongst them.”
Having attained the extreme verge of human life, he began to consider
himself as already dead ; and in the exercise of an imagination, which
the genealogist seems to have inherited with his lands, he derived
comfort from the daily repetition of a kind of ceremony, ingenious
enough to challenge comparison with any rite of the Romish Church. For
every evening about sunset, being brought out in his couch to the base
of a tower of the castle, he was raised by pulleys, slowly and gently,
to the battlements; and the ascent he deemed emblematical of the
resurrection. Or to employ the graphic language of the tourist—“ The
declining age of this venerable laird of Urquhart, for he had now
reached the utmost limit of life, invited him to contemplate mortality,
and to cruciate himself by fancying his cradle his sepulchre; therein,
therefore, was he lodged night after night, and hauled up by pulleys to
the roof of his house, approaching, as near as the summits of its higher
pinnacles would let him, to the beautiful battlements and suburbs of
heaven.”
I find I must devote one
other chapter to the consideration of the interesting remains which form
almost the sole materials of this earlier portion of my history. But the
class of these to which I am now about to turn, are to be found, not on
the face of the country, but locked up in the minds of the inhabitants.
And they are falling much more rapidly into decay—mouldering away in
their hidden recesses, like bodies of the dead; while others, which more
resemble the green mound and the monumental tablet, bid fair to abide
the inquiry of coming generations. Those vestiges of ancient
superstition, which are to be traced in the customs and manners of the
common people, share in a polite age a very different fate from those
impressions of it, if I may so express myself, which we find stamped
upon matter. For when the just and liberal opinions which originate with
philosophers and men of genius- are diffused over a whole people, a
modification of the same good sense which leads the scholar to treasure
up old beliefs and usages, serves to emancipate the peasant from their
influence or observance. |