EXTRACT from "A Tour in Scotland and Voyage to the
Hebrides, 1772, by Thomas Pennant." Dedication dated at Downing, March 1,
1774.
Mr Pennant accomplished most of his tour in the
Western Highlands and Islands by means of a sailing vessel. Landing at
Dundonnel at the head of Little Loch Broom, on 30th July 1772, in
tempestuous weather, he was hospitably entertained by Kenneth Mackenzie,
Esq. of Dundonnel. He made this note here:— "Dundonnel,—Determine to go by
land to visit Loch Maree, a great lake to the south ; and direct Mr
Thompson to sail and wait for us at Gairloch."
After a rough ride, occupying most of the day, and
which seems to have been by way of Achneigie, thence by Glen na Muic and
the heights of Kenlochewe to the lower end of Glen Dochartie (a route
still indicated by a mountain track), he writes as follows (vol. ii., page
328) under date of 1st August 1772 :—
"Black morassy heaths succeed, named
Gliann-dochartai. Dine on the side of a rill at the bottom, on plentiful
fare provided by our kind host, whose son Mr Mackenzie, and another
gentleman of the name, kindly undertook the charge of us to the next
stage. Ride through a narrow strath called Kin-loch-ewe, where we first
saw the signs of houses and a little cultivation since morning. This
terminates in a meadowy plain, closed at the end with Loch-Maree : the
night proved wet and tempestuous; we therefore determined to defer the
voyage till next day; and to shelter ourselves in a whisky house, the inn
of the place. Mr Mackenzie complimented Mr Lightfoot and me with the
bedstead, well covered with a warm litter of heath : we lay in our cloaths,
wrapped ourselves in plaids and enjoyed a good repose. Our friends did not
lose their sleep ; but great was our surprize to see them form their bed
of wet hay, or rather grass collected from the fields; they flung a plaid
over it, undressed, and lay most comfortably, without injury, in what, in
a little time, must have become an errant hot bed: so blest with hardy
constitutions are even the gentlemen of this country!
"At seven in the morning (Aug. 2) take a six-oared
boat, at the east end of Loch Maree, keep on the north shore beneath steep
rocks, mostly filled with pines-waving over our heads. Observe on the
shore a young man of good appearance,. hailing the boat in the erse
language. I demanded what he wanted; was informed, a place in the boat. As
it was entirely filled, was obliged to refuse his request. He follows us
for two miles through every difficulty, and by his voice and gestures
threatened revenge. At length a rower thought fit to acquaint us, that he
-was owner of the boat, and only wanted admission in lieu of one of them.
The boat was ordered to shore, and the master taken in with proper
apologies and attempts to sooth him for his hard treatment. Instead of
insulting us with abuse as a Char-on of South Britain would have done, he
instantly composed himself, and told us through an interpreter, that he
felt great pride in finding that his conduct gained any degree of
approbation.
"Continue our course. The lake, which at the
beginning was only half a mile broad, now, nearly half its length, widens
into a great bay, bending towards the south, about four miles in breadth,
filled with little isles, too much clustered and t indistinct. Land on
that called Inch-maree, the favoured isle of the saint, the patron of all
the coast from Applecross to Loch-broom. The shores are neat and gravelly;
the whole surface covered thickly with a beautiful grove of oak, ash,
willow, wicken, birch, fir, hazel, and enormous hollies. In the midst is a
circular dike of stones, with a regular narrow entrance; the inner part
has been used for ages as a burial-place, and is still in use. I suspect
the dike to have been originally Druidical, and that the ancient
superstition of Paganism had been taken up by the saint as the readiest
method of making a conquest over the minds of the inhabitants. A stump of
a tree is shewn as an altar, probably the memorial of one of stone; but
the curiosity of the place is the well of the saint; of power unspeakable
in cases of lunacy. The patient is brought into the sacred island, is made
to kneel before the altar, where his attendants leave an offering in
money; he is then brought to the well, and sips some of the holy water: a
second offering is made ; that done, he is thrice dipped in the lake; and
the same operation is repeated every day for some weeks: and it often
happens, by natural causes, the patient receives relief, of which the
saint receives the credit. I must add that the visitants draw from the
state of the well an omen of the disposition of St Maree; if his well is
full, they suppose he will be propitious; if not, they proceed in their
operations with fears and doubts; but let the event be what it will, he is
held in high esteem ; the common oath of the country is by his name; if a
traveller passes by any of his resting-places, they never neglect to leave
an offering; but the saint is so moderate as not to put him to any
expense, a stone, a stick, a bit of rag contents him.
"This is the most beautiful of the isles; the others
have only a few trees sprinkled over their surface.
"About a mile farther the lake again contracts. Pass
beneath a high rock, formed of short precipices, with shelves between,
filled with multitudes of self-sown pines, making a most beautiful
appearance.
"The south of the water is bounded with mountains
adorned with birch woods, mixed with a few pines: a military road runs
along its length. The mountains are not very high, but open in many parts
to give a view of others, whose naked and broken tops shooting into sharp
crags, strangely diversify the scene, and form a noble termination.
"Towards the bottom of the lake is a headland,
finely wooded to the very summit. Here the water suddenly narrows to the
breadth of a hundred yards, and continues so for nearly a mile, the banks
cloathed with trees, and often bending into little semilunar bays to the
very extremity; from whence its waters, after the course of a mile, a
continual Rapide discharge into a deep and darksome hole, called Pool-ewe,
which opens into the large bay of Loch-Ewe.
"The lake we had left is eighteen miles long ; the
waters are said to be specifically lighter than most others, and very
rarely frozen ; the depth is various, in some places sixty fathoms ; but
the bottom is very uneven; if ten feet of water were drained away, the
whole would appear a chain of little lakes.
"The fish are salmon, char, and trout; of the last
is a species weighing thirty pounds.
"Land; are received by the
Rev. Mr Dounie, minister of Gairloch, whom we attend to church, and hear a
very edifying plain comment on a portion of Scripture. He takes us home
with him, and by his hospitality makes us experience the difference
between the lodgings of the two nights.
"Aug. 3. Take a view of the
environs : visit the mouth of the river, where the salmon fishery supplies
the tenant with three or four lasts of fish annually. On the bank are the
remains of a very antient iron furnace. Mr Dounie has seen the back of a
grate, marked 'S. G. Hay,' or Sir George Hay, who was head of a company
here in the time of the Queen Regent; and is supposed to have chose this
remote place for the sake of quiet in those turbulent times.
"Potatoes are raised here on the
very peat-moors, without any other drains than the trenches between the
beds. The potatoes are kiln-dried for preservation.
"It is to be hoped that a town
will form itself here, as it is the station of a Government-packet, that
sails regularly from hence to Stornaway, in Lewis, a place now growing
considerable, by the encouragement of Lord Seaforth, the proprietor. This
is a spot of much concourse ; for here terminates the military road, which
crosses from the East to the West sea, commencing at Inverness, and
passing by Fair-burn and Strath-braan to this place. Yet I believe the
best inn on the last thirty miles is that of Mr Roderick Mac-donald, our
landlord the last night but one.
"Ride about six miles South, and reach Gair-loch ;
consisting of a few scattered houses, on a fine bay of the same name.
Breakfast at Flowerdale ; a good house, beautifully seated between hills
finely wooded. This is the seat of Sir Hector Mackenzie, whose ancestor
received a writ of fire and sword against the antient rebellious owners;
he succeeded in his commission, and received their lands for his pains.
"The parish of Gairloch is very
extensive, and the number of inhabitants evidently encrease, owing to the
simple method of life, and the conveniency they have of drawing a support
from the fishery. If a young man is possessed of a herring-net, a
hand-line, and three or four cows, he immediately thinks himself able to
support a family, and marries. The present number of souls are about two
thousand eight hundred.
"Herrings offer themselves in shoals from June to
January; cod-fish abound on the great sandbank, one corner of which
reaches to this bay, and is supposed to extend as far as Cape Wrath ; and
South, as low as Rona, off Skie; with various branches, all swarming with
cod and ling. The fishery is carried on with long-lines, begins in
February', and ends in April. The annual capture is uncertain, from five
to twenty-seven thousand. The natives at present labor under some
oppressions, which might be easily removed, to the great advancement of
this commerce. At present the fish are sold to some merchants from
Campbel-Urum, who contract for them at two-pence farthing a-piece, after
being cured and dried in the sun. The merchants take only those that
measure eighteen inches from the gills to the setting on of the tail; and
oblige the people to let them have two for one of all that are beneath
that length. The fish are sent to Bilboa ; ling has also been carried
there, but was rejected by the Spaniards. This trade is far from being
pushed to its full extent; is monopolised, and the poor fishers obliged to
sell their fish at half the price to those who sell it to the merchants. •
"The want of a town is very sensibly felt in all those parts; there is no
one commodity, no one article of life, or implement of fishery, but what
is gotten with difficulty, and at a great price, brought from a distance
by those who are to make advantage from the necessities of the people. It
is much to be lamented that after the example of the Earl of Seaforth,
they do not collect a number of inhabitants by feuing their lands, or
granting leases for a length of years for building ; but still so much of
the spirit of the chieftain remains, that they dread giving an
independency to their people; a false policy ! as it would enrich both
parties; and make the landlord more respectable, as master of a set of
decent tenants, than of thousands of bare-footed half-starved vassals. At
present adventurers from distant parts take the employ from the natives ;
a town would create a market; a market would soon occasion a concourse of
snipping, who would then arrive with a certainty of a cargo ready taken
for them ; and the mutual wants of stranger and natives would be supplied
at an easy rate.
"By example of a gentleman or two, some few improvements in farming
appear. Lime is burnt; sea tang used as manure ; and shell sand' imported
by such who can afford the freight. But the best trade at present is
cattle: about five hundred are annually sold out of this parish, from the
price of one pound seven to two pounds five a-piece. About eighty horses,
at three pounds each, and a hundred and fifty sheep, at three pounds per
score. The cattle are blooded at spring and fall: the blood is preserved
to be eaten cold.
"We found our vessel safely arrived at anchor with
many others, under the shelter of a little isle, on the south side of the
bay. Weigh, and get under sail with a good breeze." |