THE beautiful peninsula of
Rosneath has long been a favourite place of resort for those who are in
search of romantic and salubrious summer quarters. There is a wondrous charm
about the sinuous shores and winding bays of the Firth of Clyde, overlooked
as they are by many a heathery mountain slope, across whose breezy heights
flit the ever-changing shadows of a summer day. Last century the scenery of
the valley and estuary of the Clyde presented an aspect very different from
their now luxuriant clothing of well-tilled lands and spreading plantations.
Any one then sailing along the Clyde saw the heather and bracken-clad slopes
of the hills, interspersed with glens, in which the indigenous birch and
alder trees grew in profusion, but none of the great plantations of larch,
spruce and silver firs, which are now such a feature in the landscape.
The name of the peninsula has
been fruitful of controversy, being claimed by English and Gaelic writers as
derived from divergent sources. Undoubtedly the true orthography of the name
is Rossnkath, a Gaelic term, not the modernised and more euphonious
Roseneath. No doubt the latter mode of spelling is the accepted version by
compilers of guide-books and railway time-tables, but it is repudiated by
natives of the "island," as the name is written in old title-deeds, as an
unworthy concession to ignorant outsiders. One Gaelic derivation of the word
is Rhosnoeth, the "bare or unwooded promontory," another Ros-na-choich, the
"virgin's promontory,"—these being the two generally accepted terms which
have gradually been corrupted into Rosneath. The latter is more generaIIy
adopted, but still another reading gives it as Rossnereth, the " promontory
of the sanctuary." Now, from time immemorial there has been both a place of
worship and of burial in the peninsula, in the immediate vicinity of the
present church at the Clachan village. Thus the "promontory of the sanctuary
" would be an appropriate name for the now populous and frequented parish of
Rosneath.
It is believed that Rosneath
church was dedicated to St. Modan, who Iived in the sixth century, and who
set out from Iona on a mission of Christianity, dwelling for a time on Loch
Etive, then at the Kyles of Bute, and ending his days at Rosneath. The
following quotation from the beautiful poem entitled the "Bell of S. Modan's
ChapeI," by Lady EIisabeth CIough Taylor, of the Argyll family, may be given
here :—
In good St. Modan's ruined
shrine
Once hung a golden bell,
And still Loch Etive's fishers gray
Its strange, sweet story tell—
How in the days of other years
Its healing powers were blest,
And many thronged from distant isles
In simple, trustful quest;
And none unanswered turn'd away,
But all found health and rest.
Fair is the spot St. Modan
chose
Wherein to work and pray
The slumbrous gloom of purple hills
O'ershadow creek and bay,
And far and wide, from yon green glen
Upon the wanderer's right,
Rises the mountain range of Mull
In ever-changing light;
While fierce and free, by Brander's Pass,
In eddying rapids wild,
The foaming Awe leaps headlong forth
From waters many isl'd.
"And at his feet the ancient
weII-
Awaking tender thought
Of all the weary, suffering souls
Its healing charm that sought—
Still feeds from never-failing depths
The murmuring mountain burn,
That low-voic'd woos to fleeting kiss
The drooping sprays of fern.
But greener woods, more smiling shores,
Wash'd by a gentler tide,
Where Cruachash and his brethren guard
The fertile vale of Clyde,
Welcom'd the aged Saint's worn feet
To haven of repose.
"And there, in memory of his
name
And long life's peaceful close,
His followers rais'd the cloister'd aisles
That Fancy's feet alone
May tread again, with rapt delight,
In day dreams all her own.
Her eyes alone see 'neath sad years,
With measur'd footsteps walk,
Rossneveth's cowled monks of yore
In grave and earnest talk."
Little more than fifty years
ago, along the strand of the peninsula, there was an almost unbroken verge
of grass, or undergrowth of brushwood, the natural woods spreading close
upon the shore about Rahane, Mambeg and Gareloch-head. At Clynder there were
one or two villas and some thatched houses, the shore green and grassy,
where now there is a continuous row of modern mansions, trim gardens, shops,
a bowling green, a pier, and other indications of a teeming summer
population. At that time there were no piers on the Gareloch for
disembarking passengers, and when the steamers sailed up the loch,- those on
board had to be landed at their destinations by means of the various
ferry-boats at Row, Rosneath, Shandon and Gareloch-head.
At this period, on landing
from the old Duchess of Argyle, at Rosneath Ferry, the visitor would find
himself on a point of land opposite Row, where the tide forms a rapid race
at certain periods of its rise and fall. Often, when there is a south-west
wind meeting the full force of the ebb-tide, the channel is very rough, and
full of breakers. This narrow strip of water constantly changes its aspect,
and according to the atmospheric phases and irridescence of the sky, the
colouring of the waves is strangely varied. At the calm hour of midnight,
sometimes, the rushing and gurgling of the great body of water as it races
and swirls on its passage through the "Narrows," can be heard a long way
off, like the sound of a cataract, even though the loch is in perfect
repose. On disembarking from the steamer, fifty years ago, the only house
visible was the little Rosneath Inn, which has stood in its present
situation for about one hundred years. Most of the stones of which the inn
is built were brought from the remains of the old mansion belonging to the
Campbells of Carrick, which stood close to the celebrated "Big Trees,"
within the Campsail woods. The former hostelry, a humble, thatched, single
storeyed cottage, stood a little further up, facing the bay, and the ancient
road to the ferry followed the bend of the shore from Strouel bay, bordered
by a row of venerable ash trees.
A short distance up the road
is the Clachan of Rosneath, which, even now, is a picturesque-looking row of
houses, and has interesting features fast passing away. Before the erection
of the new schoolhouse and grocer's shop adjoining, the row of cottages were
- whitewashed, old structures, with thatched or red-tiled roofs, mellow with
age, and overgrown with moss and lichens. The end cottage was long known as
M'Wattie's public-house, one of the six which were in the parish in the days
of the Rev. Robert Story. The old house, with its gable to the road, and
facing the churchyard, was long used as the village school, and the
schoolmaster occupied the upper storey. It was for many years tenanted by
the worthy schoolmaster, the late Mr. John Dodds, who, for fifty years,
taught the youth of the parish, and died in 1870. In addition to the
ordinary branches of knowledge imparted in Scottish parish schools, Mr.
Dodds taught the higher departments of mathematics, land surveying and
navigation, and many of his pupils (one of whom was the late distinguished
Archibald Smith, of Jordanhill) achieved eminence in various walks in life.
His successor, the present schoolmaster, Mr. William Stewart, has fully
maintained the high character of the school. He has fulfilled his onerous
and responsible duties to the entire satisfaction of the heritors, the
School Board, and community of Rosneath. Mr. Stewart is of a modest and
retiring disposition, but his conscientious character has gained him the
respect of all, and the great success which his scholars have achieved in
the Bursary competitions of the county is a sure proof that the high
eulogiums officially pronounced over the Clachan school are thoroughly
deserved.
One of the admired features
of Rosneath is the fine avenue of yew trees, which extends, from the little
wooden bridge over the CIachan burn, up to the old mansion at the other end,
long used as a dower-house of the Argyll family. It is not easy to ascertain
the exact age of these stately yews, but it certainly must be well on to two
hundred years. In the very hottest day in summer there is ever a grateful
shade under their mantling boughs, which are, at many points, interlaced
together, and form an appropriate avenue to the ancient resting-place of the
dead. Sometimes the light breezes play amidst their sombre sprays, with a
subdued murmuring sound, like the hollow voice of the ocean. Many
generations of CIachan children have gambolled under the branches of these
venerable trees, their merry voices resounding through the bosky glade. This
is a favourite subject for artists, and in summer they may often be observed
depicting this rich sylvan scene. When the moon is full, and shining right
down on the hoary yews, the soft shadows lie sleeping on the sward below,
the vista is one full of impressive beauty. Beyond the yews are two rows of
spreading Iime trees, which give shelter to the avenue, and whose boughs in
summer resound with the hum of many bees, as they gather their fragrant
harvest, and "flee hams wi' lades o' treasure." [The yew avenue was a
favourite walk with the late Dean Stanley when he visited at the Manse. The
fine sycamore tree at the end, near the burn, is 120 feet in height, and
girths 14 feet 4 inches at three feet from the ground. One of the old yews
has twenty-eight flutings in the stem, is 11 feet 3 inches in girth, and has
a spread of branches 57 feet in width. There is an outer row of fine limes
and Spanish chestnuts.]
Conjecture has been busy as
to the meaning of this yew avenue and the moss-grown mansion house. It would
seem that two massive stone pillars once formed the entrance, at the spot
where the wooden bridge over the Clachan now stands. Their foundations were
seen, not long ago, by the village joiner when making some repairs. There
was a tradition that a monastery had once existed where the Clachan House is
placed, and when the tenant of the farm was making a drain, he came upon a
quantity of massive stones, all solidly located, and forming a firm
foundation for a large building. The existing house has been erected at
different dates, the oldest portion being next the avenue, and it was once
of much greater extent—a large wing having been pulled down about forty
years ago. A little distance from the old house, along the road, you come to
the Strouel Well, a running stream of water that has only been known to fail
on very rare occasions of extreme drought. The old road to the ferry used to
run along the shore, between the beach and the row of venerable ash trees
which now overhang the strand, and are, one by one, succumbing to the fury
of the wintry blasts. Early in this century the road had diminished to a
mere track, and has long been wholly obliterated. No doubt this was the
ancient road from Glasgow to the West Highlands, by which pilgrims journeyed
to Iona. It went along the loch side until Hattonburn, near Barremman, was
reached when it ran up the hillside and along the ridge of the moor for some
distance, then striking down the shores of Loch Long to Coulport, from
whence there has long been a royal ferry to Ardentinny.
We are now at the
commencement of the various feus which have been taken off the Barremman
estate, which marches with the Argyll property at the small burn beyond the
Strouel well. Feuing commenced in the year 1825, previously to which date
the shore from this point to Gareloch-head presented an unbroken slope of
green fields and bracken-clad braes, with the exception of some thatched
cottages at rare intervals. The first feu taken, in the year 1825, from
Barremman estate, and subsequently entirely bought up, was the villa, now
know as Achnashie, "Field of Peace," where the Rev. Dr. Macleod Campbell
lived and died. It is an unpretending solid stone structure, with heavy
overhanging eaves, and beautifully arranged pleasure grounds, adorned with a
great variety of fine shrubs and trees. Nearly opposite is the small rocky
island, entirely submerged at high water, known as Carrick-na-raon, or "Rock
of the Seal," showing that, before the advent of the steamers, seals used to
frequent the Gareloch. Passing along the shore we arrive at Clynder, where
are a_few shops and a small hotel, where there used to be some rough stone
houses with thatched roofs, their gables to the loch. Also at Crossowen,
near where Barremman pier is placed, there was a small, old thatched farm
house and buildings, and another similar cottage at Hattonburn. Barremman
House, a plain mansion of moderate size, facing the loch, is now passed; the
estate for more than a century and a half was in possession of the Cumming
family, and is now owned by Mr. R. Thom of Canna.
A little to the north of the
present house, the old mansion stands where the Cummings resided in former
days, a very simple, rough cast house of two storeys. Part of the house is
of ancient build, the lower portion constructed with unhewn stones taken
from the shore, interspersed with clay, and it had a thatched roof. An extra
storey of more substantial architecture was added and a slated roof
substituted. Over the door the names, "Patrick Cuming 1730, Mary M'Farlane,"
are cut in the stone, and the whole has a venerable aspect, corresponding
with the old ash and plane trees overhanging the wimpling burn which rushes
down to the loch in small sparkling cascades. From the windows of the new
mansion there is a fine prospect of the entire Gareloch, and, towards the
south-east, the long peculiar stretch of the Row point sometimes bare grey
shingle, at other times merely indicated by a curved crest of broken water,
while the head lands of Cairndhu, and the dark promontory of Ardmore close
in the view. Towards the northern end of the loch, there is the lofty
outline of the Loch Long range of mountains, the "Argyll Bowling Green," and
those on the Row and Shandon shores, with the ridges of Glenfruin just seen
peering over the Iesser heights.
On the left, up on the
hillside, are seen the two farms of Little Rahane, and Meikle Rahane, with
their dwelling houses and steadings some way above the loch. It needs all
the patience and energy which the farmers possess to enable them to overcome
the unremunerative nature of their working in such exposed positions. But it
is interesting to note what has been done to develop the natural
capabilities of the bare hillside, and good stock has been reared on these
Gareloch farms. The old farm-house of Little IZabane, only a small part of
which is now standing, used to be a favourite subject for artists, on
account of its picturesque aspect, the walls of very rough stones plastered
with clay. On the shore will be noticed the small village of Rahane,
consisting of a few humble cottages, and some villas, the first of which,
Aikenshaw, was built in 1851. It is a primitive looking spot, access from
the steamers being gained by the ferry-boat, but its secluded situation
gives it a charm in the eyes of many. The ferry house, built half a century
ago, occupies the site of two older thatched structures, which faced the
wood, and three contiguous cottages were pulled down a few years ago. These
were originally malt houses for the distillery which, many years ago, stood
about a hundred yards back, and of which only the faintest trace can be
observed. The malt mill was a little nearer the shore, on the border of the
burn into which the water wheel projected, and used to delight the village
boys with its gyrations. From this to Gareloch-head the road is well shaded
by the trees which grow to the very water's edge, and shed their leaves in
autumn into the sea, many of them fine specimens of oaks and ashes. In
spring, these woods, and all the fields which slope down to the road, are
thickly covered with a luxuriant, beautiful growth of primroses, while the
pale yellow flower also decks the mossy banks of the burns which bound down
to the loch past many a shady nook. A plantation of young birch, rowan,
hazel, beech, fir, and other varieties of trees, clothes the hill-side near
Mambeg, and at intervals of a few years, it is thinned for the bark. A mile
beyond this, the houses of Garelochhead open to view, and the end of the
parish is reached, at the burn which flows down the hill from the heights
above Whistlefield.
Returning to the Clachan of
Rosneath, and proceeding in the direction of the Castle, the visitor will
notice the fine old trees, chiefly of the plane and ash species, which adorn
the landscape. The Mill, or, as it is also called, Campsail Bay, is now seen
gleaming through the trees, one of the most beautiful inlets of water in all
the Frith of Clyde, and a favourite place of anchorage for yachts of various
sizes, when laid up for the winter. Near the middle of the bay, an
old-looking avenue gate points the way to where Campsail House once stood,
formerly possessed by the Campbells of Carrick. The gate posts are covered
with delicate grey lichens, and one of them has an ornamented top in the
form of an acorn, but its fellow has long since disappeared. The wood beyond
is a sylvan nook of rare beauty, many of the trees being old, and casting a
sombre shade from their mantling branches. Oaks, beeches, walnuts, Spanish
chestnuts, planes, and straight, lofty silver firs, all combine to impress
the spectator with a feeling of peace and solitude, as in some lonely forest
far from the haunts of men. The bracken and ferns which clothe the ground,
mingled with periwinkle, wild sorrel, honeysuckle, and other creepers,
harmonise with the verdant retreat, and the shining leaves of holly,
hawthorn, sloe, and ivy, thickly clustering round the rugged trunks, gleam
amid the slanting sun-rays. A short walk from the old avenue gate brings the
visitor in front of the two peerless silver firs, which are the special
glory of Rosneath, whose fame has endured for many generations. These are
two grand specimens of the fir tribe, their huge trunks, gnarled and
massive, bearing all the solidity and seeming indestructibility of the
granite rock, and their great roots are deeply fixed in the mossy soil.
Probably not in Europe are there to be seen two such magnificent and
venerable silver firs, as these celebrated "big trees" of Rosneath.
Multitudes of visitors have been attracted to the peninsula, many from A-merica
and the Colonies, to behold these two monarchs of the forest, which, for
centuries, have flourished in the secluded woods of Campsail. Nearly
twenty-five feet in circumference, and one hundred and thirty in height,
with immense branches, themselves respectable trees, springing from the
great, grey, seamed stem, hoar with age, and clad with lichen as the
rock,—these twin giants Iift their verdant crests above their companions of
the grove.
[The following notice of
these firs appeared in Gardening Illustrated, in February 1891. "On the Duke
of Argyll's property at Rosneath are many fine old trees of the silver fir
species, from 100 to 130 feet in height, with clean stems, and girth 20
feet, a yard from the ground. Especially there are two fine old silvers,
called Adam and Eve, the first named has few equals in this or any other
country. They were planted over 200 years ago, and are now respectively 130
and 124 feet high, and Eve girths at 3 and 5 feet, 22 feet 8 inches and 21
feet 8 inches respectively. At 1 foot from the ground Adam girths 28 feet 10
inches size of stem, and is 130 feet high." These trees were measured in
1817 by Sir Thomas Dick Lauder and Lord John Campbell. The uppermost one,
"Eve," at five feet from the ground, girthed 15 feet 9 inches, and at one
foot from the ground 19 feet 8 inches. In 1833, when the tree was again
measured, the proportions were 17 feet 7 inches, and 22 feet at the same
distances from ground. The other tree, "Adam," in 1833, was found by Sir T.
D. Lauder and Lord John to be, at the root, 24 feet 9 inches, and five feet
up, 18 feet 2 inches.]
In winter, when the whole
sylvan scene is dazzling white with snow, only patches of bracken or thorns
peering over the fleecy mass, while long streaks of snow lie on the stems of
trees, or cluster in thick wreaths on their pendent boughs, the twin giants
stand out with grand effect in the wintry landscape. The yews, and the other
dark firs beyond, seem to bring out the great trees, whose strange grouping
of mighty, grey, twisted boughs, bulge and twine round one another, as
though in deadly conflict they seek to rise above their fellows, and dark
hollows and caverns are formed by their fantastic formation, when they leave
the parent stem. All is still and quiet, the roar of the storm is hushed,
the boughs are bent with the accumulated masses of snowflakes, and, glancing
below the drooping branches, the eye sees the swelling uplands in their
silvery shroud, crowned with distant woods, arrayed in frosty garb, and
overhead, the misty, faintly crimsoned sky, suffused with the light of a
brief winter's day. And a little way off may be seen the cold, leaden-hued,
calm waters of the bay, on the oozy sand of which are gathered some
sea-gulls, whose screaming, querulous cries break upon the silence of the
grove, and the sudden screech of the heron, in his measured flight far
above, adds harsh music to the scene.
Close beside the great silver
firs may be observed the foundations of the old mansion of Campsail, which
once belonged to the Campbells of Carrick, and where their representative,
the sister of John Duke of Argyll, known as Lady Carrick by the Rosneath
people, long lived, and was beloved for her good deeds. A sweet spot it must
have been, with fine mossy sward around the ancient pile, which, in the
spring, is thickly carpeted with wild hyacinths and primroses, with a lovely
peep through the opening branches of the bay, and Helensburgh in the
distance. Even now, the terraced formation of the sward indicates where the
pleasure grounds had been, the old well still offers a cool draught of
limpid water, and the worn flagstones of the courtyard speak of "auld lang
syne." In the earlier part of the century, the stones of the ruinous
dwelling were partly removed to build the inn at Ardencaple, near Row, and
to add to the Ferry inn at Rosneath.
Emerging from the wood by a
wicket gate, between two very lofty and straight old silver firs, the road
by the shore is regained, and the visitor sees before him the entrance, over
a low bridge, to the grounds round the Castle. Lifting their dark bushy
heads above the surrounding trees, are several picturesque great Scotch
firs, with red, rugged bark, which glows warmly in the rays of the setting
sun, and harmonises well with the prevailing colour around. Beautiful peeps
of the loch and distant hills are gained as the visitor skirts the winding
reaches of the rocky strand, and some specially venerable beech trees are
seen, near the old sea wall of conglomerate rock, at the spot known as
"Wallace's Leap." It was here that the hero leaped down with his gallant
steed from the summit of the rock, and though the horse was killed, Wallace
succeeded in swimming across the loch to Cairndhu point. This was somewhere
about the year 1297, when Wallace was contending against King Edward of
England.
There is every reason to
believe that the renowned warrior of Scotland did once visit Rosneath in the
course of his remarkable adventures. William Hamilton of Gilbertfield, in
1721, wrote a poetic account of the hero's achievements, which was dedicated
to James, Duke of Hamilton, Wallace had been engaged in one of his numerous
struggles with the English, in the neighbourhood of Cathcart, and was on his
way to visit his friend and supporter, Malcolm, Earl of Lennox. He seems to
have sacked the town of Dunbarton, and burnt the castle of Rosneath, which
was occupied by the English, after which exploits he made his way into the
strongholds of Lennox. Apparently he had been guided by one well affected to
his cause who,
Directed Wallace where the
Southron lay
Who set their lodgings all in a fair low,
About their ears and burnt them stub and stow.
Then to Dunbarton cave, with merry speed,
March'd long ere day, a quick exploit indeed.
Toward Rosneath next night they past along,
Where Englishmen possest that castle strong,
Who that same day unto a wedding go,
Fourscore in number, at the least, or moe.
In their return, the Scots upon them set,
Where forty (lid their death wounds fairly get;
The rest scour'd off, and to the castle fled
But Wallace, who in war was nicely bred,
He did the entry to the castle win,
And slew the South'ron all were found therein.
After the fliers did pursue with speed,
None did escape him, all were cut down dead.
On their purveyance seven days lodged there,
At their own ease, and merrily did fare.
Some South'ron came to visit their good kin,
But none went out, be sure, that once came in,
After he had set fire unto the place,
Diarch'd straight to Falkland in a little space."
Such is the account of the
taking of Rosneath Castle given by Hamilton of GilbertfieId. On another of
his raids against Dunbar-ton, Wallace was very nearly being made prisoner by
his relentless foes, the English. Being in a hostelry in the town, an
officer and twenty-four men were sent to apprehend him, but he leapt out of
the window and proceeded to assault the soldiers outside. With one or two
sweeps of his terrible two-handed sword, our hero cut down the commander of
the party and a dozen of his men, while the rest fled precipitately to the
castle for refuge. Wallace's favourite weapon was a ponderous, long,
two-handed sword, which, from his great strength, he wielded with ease, and
until the last few years, a rusty weapon, known as "Wallace's Sword" was
preserved in the armoury at Dunbarton Castle, and considerable indignation
was aroused at its removal to the Wallace Monument at Stirling, where it now
rests.
[Respecting the armour and
sword of Wallace, Dr. Jamieson in his notes on "Blind Harry " has the
following remarks. "In the Castle of Dunbarton they pretend to show the mail
and, if I mistake not, also the sword of Wallace. If he was confined in that
fortress by Menteith before being sent into England, as some have supposed,
it is not improbable that his armour might be left there. The popular belief
on this head, however, is very strong." Carrick, the author of a Life of Sir
William Wallace, has the following note on the subject of the hero's armour.
"Certain it is, if such armour was in Dunbarton Castle at the time, it is
unknown to those connected with the garrison, at present (1830); and we
cannot conceive that a relic, so valuable in the estimation of the public,
would have totally disappeared, without its being known what had become of
it. All that they pretend to show in the Castle of Dunbarton, as having
belonged to Wallace, is a sword of very antique fashion, intended to be used
with both hands, but by no means of a weight that would prevent men of
ordinary strength of the present day from wielding it. There is no proof,
however, that it belonged to the Deliverer of Scotland ; and if we may
credit the account given by old people, of its having been dragged up from
the bottom of the Clyde by the anchor of a vessel, about sixty years ago,
its identity becomes more than doubtful. Such, however, is the prevalence of
the report in its favour, that it was some time since sent to London, for
the inspection of certain official characters connected with the Board of
Ordnance. At the time it was sent off, it wanted several inches of its
length which, it seems, had been broken off by some accident."
The sword measures from point
to point four feet eleven and a half inches, the handle is one foot two
inches long, and the blade three feet nine inches in length. It varies in
breadth from two and a quarter inches at the guard, to three quarters of an
inch at the point, is six pounds in weight, and has been welded at two
different places. The following item occurs in the books of the Lord
Treasurer under date 8th December, 1505, when King James IV. visited
Dunbarton. "For bynding of ane riding sword rappyer, and binding of l6'allas
sword with cordis of silk, and new hilt and plomet, new skabbard, and new
belt to the said sword, xxvjsh."]
Blind Harry gives his account
also of the taking and sacking of Rosneath Castle by Wallace.
A short distance from
Wallace's leap there stands the present castle, or rather palace of Rosneatb,
a noble building of massive construction, the work of an Italian architect,
Bonomi of London, which was begun in 1803. The site is a fine one, at a
greater distance from the shore than the old castle, and is said to have
been selected by the famous landscape painter, Alexander Nasmyth. The former
residence of the Argyll family long rested upon the point of land opposite
Ardencaple. It does not seem to have been a building of any special
importance, or architectural merit, but, about the year 1630, it was
enlarged and embellished by the famous Marquis of Argyll. This mansion
remained until about the beginning of the present century, when it was
nearly all burnt to the ground. Upon this occasion, the old Duke of Argyll,
a pious man, calmly viewed the conflagration from his castle of Ardencaple,
opposite, and expressed his gratitude by saying, "I thank my God, I have
another house to go to." An old stone, with the date 1634, carved with the
cypher of the famous Marquis, and his wife Margaret Douglas, is now at
Inveraray castle, one of the few remains of the ancient structure. The
architecture of the new castle is a mixture of Italian and Greek, massive
and imposing, the splendid Ionic portico, with its lofty stone pillars, is
almost unequalled in Scotland. The castle is 184 feet long, and 121 in
breadth, with two very handsome fronts, each adorned with fine Ionic
columns, the stone of the finest freestone from the famous Garscube quarry,
near Glasgow, and is hewn into ponderous blocks. From the high circular
tower in the centre of the building there is a grand panorama of wood,
water, lawn and moor, affording endless pleasure to the spectator. Each door
and window is of stately dimensions, though a large portion, both of the
interior and exterior, is quite unfinished, many of the pillars with their
noble capitals, and finely moulded balustrade above, never having been
placed in position. Inside, the rooms are lofty and finely proportioned, one
of them, the circular library under the tower, being exceedingly elegant,
with decorated friezes, and classic ceiling ornaments. Several family
portraits, one of the most recently added, the Marquis of Lorne, in full
Highland costume, and an engraving of the beautiful Miss Gunning, afterwards
Duchess of Argyll, adorn the public rooms.
There is an interesting old
plan of the Rosneath estate dated 1731 in the castle, which shows the
houses, roads, and woods as they existed at that date. In this plan the
castle stands back from the shore, in front of it being the "Little Green,"
and to the side the "Meikle Green," and garden at the back, all bounded by
what is called the " new avenue." Various crofts are marked at "Little
Ross," "Middle Ross," and "Meikle Ross," and at Portkill several small
cottages are situated. Near Old Kilcreggan, on the opposite side of the
road, "Ruins of an old cell " is marked, which locally is known as the "
Broken castle," though no trace of the ruins can be seen. Near Campsail Mill
there are entered an "Upper" and "Nether" pond, no doubt for water supply.
The old house of Campsail is noted with the avenue leading straight up from
the bay. Three small cottages are marked on Campsail hill, and they remained
till a few years ago, when the new Clachan farm house was built. At the
Clachan, the cruciform Kirk is put down, and the road from the castle and
Campsail bay is noted as coming to an end at the Clachan village. A brick
yard is situated near the present schoolmaster's house, and there are two
cottages at the ferry which is called "Clachan point." Going along the shore
the "Strall " spring is noted, with a cottage beside it, and at "The
Clynders," there are three cottages. No houses are marked as existing on the
Kilcreggan or Cove shores, but there is a pier not far from the present one.
The farms of Aiden, Ailey, Knockderry, and others, are indicated, and a good
many cottages near them, but hardly any plantations, except on the
Gallowhill, and near the castle and Campsail bay.
One delightful feature is the
pleasant, old-fashioned garden at the back of the castle, with its long
stretches of mossy turf, and quaint arrangement of laurel and heath plants,
groups of flowering shrubs, and graceful, drooping bushes, trimly kept walks
with heavy box borders, all vastly superior to the formal parterres now so
much in vogue. The soft, mossy walks seem to allure you to stroll along, and
to enjoy the scent of wallflowers, sweet peas, and mignonette. There are
quiet, retired nooks, in which you may repose, quite secluded from
observation, and listen to the cooing of the wood pigeons, the lively
strains of the chaffinch, or whitethroat, and the rich warbling of the mavis
and blackbird, from the surrounding groves,—while the songs of infancy steal
over the senses, or the day dreams of youth enrapture the mind with the
languor of thrilling remembrance. The shrill cry of the welcome and friendly
peesweep, as he lightly skims over the adjoining fields, falls upon the ear,
and, as you advance, his graceful evolutions, as he turns on the wing,
bringing his white breast into view, are pleasing to witness. And the long
drawn, peculiar wail of the curlew, which frequents all the shores near the
"Green Isle," is heard amidst the sharper notes of the various descriptions
of sea fowl which abound. Going along past Culwatty bay, on the left, the
dark thick wood is approached, in which is situated the heronry of Rosneath,
chiefly in the midst of a number of lofty Scotch and silver firs, surrounded
by a thick belt of plantation. This is a scene of sylvan repose, forming a
still retreat, which the visitor would scarcely expect to meet. The screen
of spruce, larch, and silver firs, with rowans and beeches at intervals, is
crossed by grassy glades of turf, decked in spring with rich profusion of
wild hyacinths. Only a little distance beyond is the busy, seething world of
toil and commerce, with the manifold wheels of industry, in ceaseless hum,
while here is all the loneliness of the grove. In the spring, however, the
woods resound with the harsh clamour of the herons, who are engaged in the
important work of rearing their young. The nests are great unshapely masses
of dried twigs, with a few tufts of coarse grass inside, and there are
generally four eggs in each, of a pale green colour. Sometimes the bird will
courageously defend itself, if surprised by an intruder, while sitting on
its eggs, and a blow from the long sharp, horny bill is sufficiently severe.
There were last year over eighty nests, and as you walk below the lofty
trees, when the breeding season is in full swing, there is much stir and
commotion overhead. The herons fly to and fro, crashing amidst the boughs
with their long bodies, and spreading wings, many of them carrying fish in
their bills to satisfy the cravings of their nestlings.
Proceeding across the fields
at the back of the castle, the visitor sees the extensive pile of buildings,
known locally as "The Steeple," facing the range of steadings of the Home
Farm. There is here an old threshing mill, worked by a water-wheel supplied
by water brought chiefly through an underground channel all the way from
Lindowan reservoir, on the moor above Kilcreggan. The buildings are about
280 feet in length, of massive construction, and semi-Gothic architecture,
and once were ornamented by a tower, 90 feet in height, designed by Nasmyth
of Edinburgh, but which, after the great fire, nearly fifty years ago, was
curtailed of its lofty proportions. Originally this whole structure was
intended to have been the castle stables, but, for some reason or other,
this was found impracticable. In front of the Home Farm rises the Gallowhill,
414 feet above the sea, once completely covered with a fine plantation of
fir trees, but these, forty years ago, were cut down by the proprietor. The
view from the summit of the hill is extensive, and gives a striking idea of
the diversified scenery of the Frith of Clyde. Looking towards the north the
whole of the upper part of the peninsula is seen, an undulation of purple
heather and bushy bracken, while the dark mass of mountains above Loch Long,
and their distant peaks, are faintly shrouded in blue haze. Many burns seam
the sides of the hills round the Gareloch, whose waters reflect the fringe
of trees along its shore, amid which nestle numerous villas, and the green
fields above join on to the moorland ridge. The russet brown of autumn
spreads its mantle over the uplands, and the plantations on both sides are
glowing with yellow and roseate tints. In the full blaze of mellow sunshine
which, on an autumn day, bathes the whole loch and surrounding mountains,
beautiful effects are gained by the delicate blending of the warm tints of
moor, glen, and sloping braes. While the edge of the nearer rugged mountain
outline is sharply defined against the sides of receding peaks, which
reflect the sun with brilliant lustre—a lovely soft haze envelopes the
horizon, although the immediate foreground is strongly coloured with the
purple water and the dark green of the pine forest. A white line of strand
marks the upper reaches of the loch, and the tawny coloured streaks of
spreading brushwood give variety of tints to the picture. Some of the old
beech trees are seen in the castle woods, their foliage flaming with yellow
and crimson, with their shining, grey trunks intervening between the red
Scotch firs and lordly oaks—all presenting a sylvan picture of rare beauty.
Your solitude is undisturbed, for there is a considerable extent of moor
round the summit of the Gallowhill, and it is difficult to realise, at
certain points of the landscape, that you are so near the great bustling
world of commercial enterprise of which Glasgow is the centre. [In the month
of May, in taking a walk along the shore, the following wild flowers may be
gathered :—Daisy, buttercup, cowslip, whin, broom, hyacinth, lesser
celandine, goat weed, stillaria religinoso, primrose, star of Bethlehem,
pink tampion, dog's mercury, blue borage, violet, speedwell, cuckoo flower,
wood sorrel, forget•me•not, and a few more.]
Descending the hill, and
rejoining the road leading over to Kilereggan, the small hamlet of Mill of
Campsail is reached. The old meal mill is a picturesque building of rubble
work, "harled" over, but has long since lost its pristine whiteness, and is,
in many places, thickly covered over with a soft mossy growth like green
velvet. A rich mantle of lichens covers the roof, and thick layers of downy
moss overspread the stone work and eaves, while ferns have obtained a
lodgment in many parts, and hang their graceful fronds over the old walls.
There is a date, 1752, on the lintel stone of the door, low down, and
another date, 1177, is cut on the stone projection at the gable, probably
indicating when it was enlarged. The old wheel, with its water trough, and
the wooden shoot down which there trickles a tiny rivulet of water, is a
favourite subject for artists. Peter M'Neilage, the present miller, is a
member of a family who have tenanted the mill and croft adjoining for many
generations, and be finds it very different from what it used to be in his
father's lifetime, when the farmers in the district all used to bring in
their grain to be ground. His father made the first cart with wheels which
came to the mill, for, before that time, the grain was brought on horses'
backs in bags. The road past the mill was made about a century ago, and the
miller's cottage was built in 1827; a few years before, the old cottages,
which used to stand in the field opposite the mill across the burn, were all
pulled down. In these primitive days the farmers used to dry their oats with
peat fires before coming to the mill, for coals were unknown in the
district. At that time there were no fanners for separating the chaff from
the grain, and this operation was done on the summit of the mound at the
side of the miller's house, known as the "Shelling hill," where, on a breezy
day, the grain and chaff were thrown into the air from bags and basket till
the required result was got. His father and Donald Turner, the smith at the
Clachan, were both baptised one Sabbath afternoon about 1792, in the open
air, on the "Shelling-hill," by the Burgher minister, Mr. Henderson of
Kilmalcolm.
Just beyond the Mill is the
Free Church, a plain building, erected over the quarry from whence the
stones used were extracted, but some notable men have preached within its
walls, including many of those worthies who guided the fortunes of that
Church after the Disruption. On the hillside, beside the plantation
surrounding the church, sixty years ago, there was a sweetly secluded
hamlet, called the Millbrae, access to which was gained by a path across the
whin clad, rocky brae, where the sheep wandered at will. Several pretty
cottages were there, with gardens, fruit trees, and many wild roses, some of
which still remain, with broken stems and torn branches, to tell of the
happy, ruddy-faced children, whose joyous voices resounded in this now
silent spot. A romantic and suggestive scene, from which the spectator could
survey the opening of the Gareloch, with the villas of Row beyond, looking
almost like a picture on the Italian lakes, richly bowered amid trees, and
the verdant crest of hills overhanging the sorrowful Glenfruin bounding the
view.
Returning to the road, the
traveller opens up the broad estuary of the Clyde, with its rippling waters
ploughed by many a passing vessel, and turning back, the calm land-locked
Mill bay lies embosomed in trees. This bay has a charm of its own, and, on a
summer day, presents effects of colour, light and shade, subtle and full of
beauty. The water near the shore may be dark sapphire, out in the open loch
a shimmering opal, the green turf touching the strand, and the perfume
breathing beeches and oaks reflected in the waves, the sloping hills round
the Gareloch closing in one side of the picture, with gleaming patches of
sunshine bringing into contrast the lowering and frowning mountains beyond
Loch Long. Suddenly, a change comes, the colours on the mobile surface of
the loch are reversed, smooth bright folds seem to agitate the waters near
the shore, while, further out, the depths look unnaturally calm and dark,
ominous of a coming storm. Yet here and there tender streaks of sunshine
lovingly linger between the silvery boughs of the lofty silver firs,
towering above the grove. Looking round upon the broad frith, the various
sea-side resorts, so popular in summer, are seen on the right, dominated by
the fine range of the Cowal mountains, and the rugged peaks of Arran looming
grandly in the far off haze. A little way down the road on the left is the
row of old cottages known as Old Kilcreggan, the primitive hamlet remaining
much as it was fifty years ago. In former years the tiled and thatched
cottages had a picturesque appearance, as they faced the rustling burn,
which falls into the sea near the original pier, a massive structure, whose
great stones still give shelter to the humble sailing craft. Before the
present farm of Portkill, so long occupied by the Duke's chamberlain, Mr.
Lorne Campbell, was built, there was an old farm house at Old Kilcreggan
that, for many generations, had been tenanted by a family, Chalmers by name,
the last of whom died a number of years ago at Gourock. There was a small
farm house at Portkill, a thatched building, which stood near where the
present factor's house is built. Two other cottages were at the top of the
brae, near Port-kill House, but, in the various changes brought about by
time, they have passed away.
At the foot of the steep brae
leading to Kilcreggan pier, there stands the pretty, white cottage,
embowered in flowers, where the M'Farlanes, who for nearly a century worked
the ferry over to Gourock, long resided, and where the venerable widow of
the last ferryman still lives in a serene old age. Her father and
grandfather were in the Duke's service, and from the old pier, her husband's
commodious wherry daily set forth for. Greenock and Gourock, laden with
passengers, and all sorts of farm produce, besides cattle, and sheep, and
brought back a miscellaneous cargo. Often great risk was run, from the
violent gales which would suddenly arise, and the compass had to be used
when thick banks of fog enveloped the channel. It is difficult to realise
that, where there is now a continuous row of handsome villas all along the
shore for four miles, sixty years ago there was nothing but a silent strand,
laved by the clear waters of the Clyde, and the rough cart track at the foot
of the heath clad braes, all over-grown with whips, brambles, and wild briar
roses. One small cottage there was, situated in a beautiful alcove of rocks
and rowan trees, to which the builder, whose name was Coll Turner, member of
a family long resident at the farm of Duchlage, gave the appropriate
designation of Craigrownie. This expressive name has since been localised by
being adopted in the nomenclature of the district and quoad sacra parish. [Craigrownie.—The
author has been favoured with a letter from Mr. Archibald M'Neilage, Clerk
to Rosneath School Board, a native of the parish, from which the following
is given:--"The only house between Mrs. M'Farlane's anti the head of Cove
pier, sixty years ago, was Craigrownie cottage, a slated house, built by the
late Coll Turner, who afterwards went to reside in Greenock. Mr. Turner
built this cottage about 65 years ago; it still stands among the trees
immediately below Baron Cliff villa. To it the name of Craigrownie was
originally given. Air. John M'Lean, postmaster, Rosneath, says he was a
little boy running about when it was building, and interesting himself in
the various parts of the work as they proceeded."]
One old cottage was then
standing below the rocky face of the cliff above Cove pier, a humble,
thatched building, long occupied as a public house by the father of the late
Mr. John M'Lean, Clachan of Rosneath, who also acted as ferryman to the
opposite village of Blairmore. Going past this, and crossing the Dhualt
burn, which falls into the small bay of the same name, there was no dwelling
on the shore road, until Peatoun mansion house, and one or two cottages
beyond, were reached; an unbroken stretch extending from Letter farm, until
you came to Coulport ferry. On the high road there were the various farms of
Meikle and Little Aiden, near Kilcreggan, North and South Ailey, Knockderry,
and Barbour, besides some others now no longer existing. About this time the
Duke of Argyll caused a carriage drive to be made along the shore, taking
the place of the old cart track, rudely constructed, and dangerous from
large portions of the rock protruding above the ground. Here he would drive
in his stately old barouche with its mighty C. springs, and panels
emblazoned with the Argyll coat of arms, which, for many years had done
duty, both in this country and on the Continent.
Proceeding along the shore
road past Cove pier, a fine prospect is opened up of Loch Long, with the
dark swelling forms of the mountains rising from its deep waters, prominent
amongst them being Cruachash, above the retired village of Ardentinny.
Presently more of the purple waters of Loch Long come into view, with the
Holy Loch, and mountains beyond. Fields and plantations stretch down to the
shore, and ascending to the moor above with its slopes of fragrant heather,
the harsh cry of the grouse or black cock may be heard from the moss hag, or
he may be seen skimming away in his rapid flight.
As you approach Barbour farm,
the new cemetery, made for those families resident in the peninsula who have
no right of burial at Rosneath churchyard, is seen occupying a fine site,
and already there are a good many graves. It is a sequestered and peaceful
spot, where nature has put forth her gentle hand to soothe the sorrows of
those who mourn departed friends, whose place on earth now knows them no
more. Looking back, the bold headland of Knockderry stands out above the
sea, an interesting spot, from its being the site of an ancient Danish or
Norwegian fort, hardly any trace of which now remains. As Barbour is neared,
the view grows wilder, while Loch Long assumes the appearance of an inland
lake, seemingly surrounded with hills; those in the foreground bearing signs
of cultivation, while the mountains on the opposite shores of the loch rise
steep and rugged, clothed with bracken and Birchwood near the water's edge.
Ascending the hill, after crossing the Camloch burn, there is a broad
expanse of moor, the distant swelling outlines of the ridges beyond Loch
Goil now coming into view, and the serrated peaks of the Argyll Bowling
Green forming an appropriate background.
The highest point in the
peninsula is easily climbed from either Peatoun or Mambeg on the Gareloch
side. Its Gaelic name is Knoch-na-Airidhe, which, in English, may be
rendered "Hill of Shieling," and is now corrupted into Tomnahara. From this
moderate elevation of 117 feet, it is surprising what a varied expanse of
mountain, moor, craggy fell, and glittering sea can be gained, and, on a
clear day, the noble crest of Ben Cruachan may be seen. Rising above
Garelochhead are the swelling outlines of the grassy mountains at the head
of Glenfruin, from whence the eye ranges on to Helens-burgh, and to the
distant braes above Kilpatrick. Opposite are the uplands of Renfrewshire,
the busy ports of Greenock, Gourock, and Port-Glasgow, the Cloch Lighthouse,
and the craggy reaches of the Ayrshire coast, and following on, you gain
fine views of the Cum-braes, Bute, Arran, and the nearer mountains of
Argyllshire. To any one fond of studying the varied atmospheric effects
visible from such a spot, according to the changes of weather, the scene
from any of the higher points on the moor is full of interest. On a warm
summer afternoon in June, when the sky is of a faint blue colour, and light
fleecy clouds move slowly over its face, delicate changes in the aspect of
the landscape will be seen. Towards the summit of the moor, the ridge of fir
trees in the middle distance stands clear against the filmy sky, the
gathering mist growing more dense over Loch Long and its mountains. While
the outline of the peninsula behind Garelochhead is clear against the
background, a thick blue haze nearly conceals the intervening glens and
hollows. The fine rugged mountains about the middle of the Argyll Bowling
Green, loom out in solid grandeur, but those beyond Loch Goil seem very
faint, until they blend with the misty haze. Cruachash, above Arden-tinny,
looms out by itself in rounded proportions, like a well defined blue cloud
emerging from the horizon, and about to overspread the sky. The distant Ben
Im, and the Cobbler above Arrochar, can faintly be traced in the nebulous
haze, while a tinge of yellow suffuses the lesser heights over Glenfruin,
shading away into purple all the subtle gradations of tint so impossible to
depict, even by the most cunning brush. As the fleecy clouds steal over the
hidden ravines, the most delicate phases of colour are observed, the fields
on the loch side being of a lighter green than the pasture lands above, and
the woods darker in hue where the fir trees predominate. The heather is of a
brown hue, with stretches of green moss and bracken intervening, streaked
with the yellow blossom of the whins. The sun's rays strike upon the beech
or oak trees, scattered here and there, casting their shadows upon the turf,
which is decked with wild flowers. Grey walls and rocks gleam in the
sunlight, and the villages and houses on the loch are seen clearly amidst
their verdant surroundings, the white line of strand fringing the water. In
the still depths of the purple loch the peaceful landscape is reflected, a
light zeyphr ever and anon causing a faint streak of ripple to appear, with
a white-winged gull skimming over the tide.
When the russet hues of
Autumn cast their mantle over the scene, fresh beauties appear. The mellow
sunshine bathes the moor with a deep golden tint, which seems to glow amid
the silvery sheen of the fir trees, and sparkles on the glistening faces of
rock beside the mountain streamlets. The heather is in full bloom, and the
green, mossy sward is seen in patches between the masses of abounding
bracken, which has began to assume its rich brown colour. Many are the
richly variegated tints of the woods which clothe the slopes of the hills,
and the corn fields gleam yellow where the grain has yet to he gathered. A
vapoury haze seems partially to envelope the higher mountains, and the
lesser heights assume soft and rounded outlines against the blue depths of
the intervening valleys. As the shades of evening steal over the still
landscape, all is hushed in repose, unless the harsh, whirring cry of the
grouse falls upon the ear, or long drawn, quavering, piping of the curlew is
echoed on the sides of the ravine, and when night darkens the scene,
"The crisping rays, that on
the waters lie,
Depict a paler moon, a fainter sky;
While through the inverted alder boughs below,
The twinkling stars with greener lustre glow."
At all seasons, and at all
times of the day, there is to be seen much that will repay the closest
inspection. So constantly changing is the sky, and so correspondingly varied
is the colour of the Gareloch, that a series of beautiful panoramic effects
reward the patient student of nature. Whether it be in summer, when not a
cloud rests on the blue ether of the sky, or is embosomed in the calm loch,
with all nature quivering in the hot, impalpable haze,—or in winter, with a
soft shroud of snow enveloping mountain, field, and garden alike,—the
picture is radiant with loveliness. Spring has its own peculiar elements of
beauty, the first suffusion of the glow of mingling colour, which afterwards
pervades the spot. Autumn's rich mosaic flames over wood and brake, and the
deep crimson of the setting sun flushes over sky and strand. At times, the
sun's horizontal rays, just before the luminary is sinking behind the Loch
Long hills, catch upon the upper ranges of fir trees, investing them with an
exquisite pearly grey hue. And, in winter, while all the ground is robed in
snow, there is a solemn stillness that awes the feelings of the solitary
wayfarer. The loch is chill and leaden in aspect, the fields and moors have
all landmarks obliterated beneath the snowy mantle, the trees are powdered
with the hoarfrost, their black branches are set off by silvery rime. If it
is morning, as the early sun begins to suffuse the sky, then the graceful
forms of the trees are traced out in fleecy indistinctness. As the sun rays
grow warmer, a yellow tinge spreads on the woods above, but, lower down, all
is coldly grey. Nearer to the beholder the pale frosted boughs are traced
against the horizon in a delicate fret work, and showers of snow, like ocean
spray, fall from the evergreens, as the startled wood pigeon rushes from his
perch. By the moonlight, the scene is only deepened and intensified, the
snow is more ethereal, the trees more ghostly, and the hills more unreal in
their dusky outlines. Each far off peak gleams faintly against the wan
firmament in the cold glitter of the stars.
Atmosphere and cloud effects
of singular and varied beauty are to be observed at various seasons, some of
the finest of them in the early hours of a summer morn, or about midnight
when the days are longest. It would need all the word painting of a Ruskin
to do justice to such a scene. Sometimes great masses of billowy clouds are
heaped above the Loch Long mountains, and, as the early sun rays play upon
the shifting surface, subtle gradations of colour can be marked. A bright
patch of clear sky is opened up from time to time, and it is difficult to
distinguish the rugged outlines of the hills, from the clearly developed
lines of clouds traced against the horizon. There is, in summer, sometimes a
lovely effect of deep purple in the colours of the cloud banks resting on
the mountain ridges, and innumerable islands seem to float in a golden sea.
This cloud bank becomes all the denser and darker as the clear border of sky
is more and more reflected in the still waters of the loch. Great mountain
precipices and vast crags seem toppling over in the moving cloudland
overhanging the waters. The pale green of the young bracken is in strong
contrast with the purple clouds, and light streamers of mist curl themselves
round the fir plantations.
At the height of summer, when
there is hardly any night, and the faint flush of a new day is fast tinging
the sky, a still and impressive scene of beauty is presented to the eye. A
dark mass of clouds rests on the highest ridges, while away at either end of
the horizon Iight is reflected in the placid loch. The foreground is of an
indefinite hue, the trees and moorlands ghostly and ill defined, the murky
atmosphere lending faint colour to the picture. The great and dominant
feature is the (lark shroud overhanging the distant hills, intensely gloomy,
and seemingly charged with presaging woe. An oppressive languor pervades the
atmosphere, even at that hour of early dawn, and all nature is bushed in
preternatural repose.
Moonlight on the Gareloch has
always a beautiful effect, owing to the rugged outlines of the mountains
against the canopy of heaven, and the smooth unbroken surface of the water,
which reflects the stars in their lustrous sheen. To view the scene, in all
its weird and ghostly loveliness, a visit to the summit of the Gallowhill,
the high ground at the end of the Iiosneath peninsula, will well repay the
walk. It is a lonely spot, but it commands the view far down the Clyde, as
well as the Gareloch, and the hills near Helensburgh and Cardross.
Immediately above the Loch Long mountains on such an evening the horizon is
of pale green, against which the purple peaks are sharply outlined, and the
trees on the crest of the nearer slopes are softly pencilled against the
luminous sky, as if they were but shadows. The Arran mountains seem like
dark clouds, but the contour of the hills on the Argyllshire coast is more
clearly defined. The broad Frith glows in the moon's lustre, and the lights
of the various towns twinkle along the dark line of strand. Ardmore Point,
in deep shadow, reaches far into the sea, and faintly visible in the
distance is the great mass of Dunbarton rock. In the near foreground are the
woods round Rosneath Castle, and the lamps of Row are reflected in the calm
waters of the bay. Hushed is the night breeze on the solitary moor, but the
cry of an owl arises from the old fir trees, and sounds strangely in keeping
with the solemn stillness around. Overhead, the blue, glittering stars
scintillate with gem like effulgence in the opaque, purple firmament. An
hour and a spot calling for reverent contemplation, as the musing spectator
views the pale picture, so delicately lambent in the wan rays of the moon.
Standing on the hill on such
a peaceful evening, watching the gleaming silver ripple on the broad
estuary, and the long avenues of lights shining in stillness on the opposite
strand,—a belt of fire beside the dimly purple water,—the mind of the lonely
stranger must respond to the impressive associations of the spot. Yon steep
rising town, with many a -tall chimney pointing to the star spangled sky, is
the place where the great but modest man of genius, who first guaged the
gigantic power of steam, saw the light of day. He solved the problem of how
to blend the two opposing forces of water and fire, and summoned into being
the terrific energy of steam. The genius of Watt so regulated the mighty
throbbings of the imprisoned giant within that iron cylinder, that the
transmitted energy sufficed to drive the ponderous vessel through the
mountainous billows of the Atlantic. At the summons of the magician's wand,
the spirits which lay dormant in those antagonistic elements, brought
together in auspicious union, have evolved a power far transcending the
fabled Cyclops of the Grecian poet. Seated at his workshop, just across the
gently heaving water, the brain of the unknown mechani- cian, solved the
problem which was to add a new born motor to nature, and created novel
possibilities in the scientific world whose might would be felt throughout
the succeeding ages. Contrasting the puny results of the dynamics of the
past century with the marvellous achievements of the modern steam engine, it
seems almost as though one looked upon the feeble rushlight in some lonely
midnight cell, and next morning beheld all the rising effulgence of the
rolling sun in its glory, lighting up the firmament with approaching
meridian splendour.
Turning round in the moon's
rays, the lights of Helensburgh shine out against the opposite side of the
estuary, and here comes up in imagination the humble wheelwright, whose
prophetic insight into the future of steam navigation enabled him to conjure
up a vision of great transatlantic steamers ploughing their way through the
green and billowy ocean. Henry Bell lived for many years in Helensburgh, a
man of fine inventive skill, and destined to adorn a niche in the temple of
science. He patiently matured his schemes for using the infant force of the
steam engine, and impelling his vessel against the solid impact of the ocean
waves. Nor did he seek to enlist the favouring gale in guiding his ship over
the waste of waters, the opposing blast had to yield to the overmastering
strength of steam, and the mariner could face even the raging tempest with
the assured hope of success. The crested Atlantic rollers would no longer
daunt the aspiring traveller searching for the far-off parts of the world,
and the anxious merchant could send away his argosies, freighted with the
rarest products of the loom, to swell the stream of commerce on the banks of
the swift rolling Ganges, or amidst the palm girt islands of the Malay
Archipelago.
Where the heavy timbered,
painted, galleys, with the rude warriors from the 'North Sea, slowly and
cumbrously made their way up the waters of the Clyde, their carved prows and
long bending oars toiling through the waves, now may be seen the mighty
iron-clads, bearing aloft those guns whose discharge shakes the adamantine
rocks, with self-impelled, resistless way, moving majestically to their
appointed place. Their shadows fall athwart the watery channel, and they lie
each one at anchor, destined, perchance, to destroy the fell usurper's
power, or bear the "meteor flag " of Britain to victory in a far-off
conflict, whose echoes shall one day reverberate amidst the "cloud cap'd
towers" and sun-girt palaces of some hostile fortress. All these now
sleeping shores, when dawn begins to steal over the mountain brow, will
awake to the busy hum of toiling masses, and the whirring wheels of
commerce, and how vast is the debt of gratitude which they owe to that
illustrious man, whose discovery was fraught with incalculable blessings to
the human race.
Down these waters had sailed,
from yonder nearly isolated lofty rocky fortress, whose rounded outline is
faintly indicated amidst the misty exhalations from the Vale of Leven, some
of Scotland's monarchs on their voyages in quest of glory and success in
love and war. Amongst them yon hapless queen, around whom gathers an
environment of crime and woe, while warriors and statesmen, famed in the
annals of their country, swelled the ranks of her attendants. Here, too, was
wont to sail in his galleys of pleasure, reclined amidst the companions he
Ioved, and who stood by him on many a field of gore, the warrior king of
Scotland, who sought retirement in his declining years by the verdant banks
of the smoothly flowing Leven. And up the winding Frith, in their humble
sailing craft, there came from the shore of Ireland and the Western Isles,
those pious and holy men bringing as their blessed evangel, "Peace on earth
and goodwill towards men." A rich blending of ancient story, woven into one
long drawn chain of mellowing reminiscences, over which the mind and fancy
might well linger in pensive reverie.
'Tis a picture in memory
distinctly defined
With the strong and imperishing colours of mind."
The never-dying interest
which attaches to all that proceeded from the magic pen of Sir Walter Scott
renders the latter portion of the Heart of Midlothian of special import to
those who seek to connect the romantic incidents of each stirring narrative
with the actual surroundings and history of the scene in which they were
laid. In almost all the tales of the "Wizard of the North," his descriptions
of scenery, and peculiarities of the people and territory of which he is
treating, prove that he himself had gone over the ground with the view of
giving graphic touches worthy of the master. But there is good ground for
believing that in the pathetic tale of the hapless Effie Deans, and her
noble sister Jeanie, Sir Walter trusted to memory, or to information derived
at second hand. To begin with, in the story, Rosneath is throughout spoken
of as an island, and many of his readers rise from the perusal of the
fortunes of the Deans family, fired with the wish to inspect the beautiful
isle, where so much that is of thrilling interest is concentrated. Not that
Sir Walter is singular in the idea he had conceived of the insular form of
iRosneath, for in old title deeds of the local families it is sometimes
mentioned as the "isle," and, in former days, colloquially it was spoken of
as "the island."
Most readers are familiar
with the beautiful story of the Heart of Midlothian., which largely turns
upon the powerful influence with the King and Queen wielded by the great
chief of the Clan Campbell, the Duke of Argyll. Following the fortunes of
the simple and guileless Jeanie Deans who had, after surmounting many
difficulties reached London on foot, she is found in the library of his
Grace, who arranges that she should have a private interview with Queen
Caroline, in order that she may plead for a pardon for her sister Effie. Sir
Walter thus describes the character of John Duke of Argyll and
Greenwich:—"Soaring above the petty distinctions of faction, his voice was
raised, whether in office or opposition, for those measures which were at
once just and lenient. IIis high military talents enabled him, during the
memorable year 1715, to render such services to the House of Hanover as,
perhaps, were too great to be either acknowledged or repaid. He had
employed, too, his utmost influence in softening the consequences of that
insurrection to the unfortunate gentlemen whom a mistaken sense of loyalty
had engaged in the affair, and was rewarded by the esteem and affection of
his country in an uncommon degree." This powerful nobleman's influence with
the Queen secured Effie's pardon, and the thread of the story is soon after
transferred to Scotland, and more particularly to Rosneath. Having elicited
from Jeanie in her open artless way the information as to her own life and
her own simple love passages, in which the good Reuben Butler bore a part,
the Duke sought to do his best to bring to fruition the hopes which the
lovers had ventured to entertain in their own unsophisticated way. He also
wished to discharge the debt of gratitude under which his ancestor lay to
the grandfather of Reuben, who had been the means of saving his life on one
occasion in the Civil 'War, and he resolved to present Jeanie's lover with
the living of the Parish of Knocktarlitie, which was in his Grace's gift.
Jeanie's father, "Douce Davie Deans," bad, unknown to the former, been
placed by the Duke, in charge of a new farm in the Rosneath district of his
ample possessions. It was therefore arranged that she should travel to
Scotland, under the charge of a discreet attendant of the Argyll family,
along with a somewhat timorous and extremely voluble English dairy woman, by
name Mrs. Dolly Dutton. Readers of the novel know well bow the party
proceeded on their journey and finally reached their destination at the
Duke's residence in Dunbartonshire.
The following is the
description which Sir Walter gives of the district in which the lot of the
Deans family was now cast. "The islands in the Firth of Clyde," he writes,
"are of exquisite, yet varied beauty. Rosneath, a smaller isle, lies much
higher up the firth, and towards its western shore, near the opening of the
lake called the Care-Loch, and not far from Loch Long and Loch Scant, or the
Holy Loch, which wind from the mountains of the Western Highlands to join
the estuary of the Clyde. In these isles the severe frost winds which
tyrannise over the vegetable creation during a Scottish spring, are
comparatively little felt. Accordingly the weeping-willow, the
weeping-birch, and other trees of early and pendulous shoots, flourish in
these favoured recesses in a degree unknown in our eastern districts. The
picturesque beauty of the island of Rosneath, in particular, had such
recommendations, that the Earls and Dukes of Argyll, from an early period
made it their occasional residence, and had their temporary accommodation in
a fishing or hunting lodge, which succeeding improvements have since
transformed into a palace."
The surprise of Jeanie was
great when upon reaching the landing place—which is described as "shrouded
by some old low, but widespreading, oak trees, intermixed with hazel
bushes"--she was clasped in the arms of her father. Another personage of far
greater importance, in his own estimation, was the worshipful gentleman, the
Laird of Knocktarlitie, Captain of Knockdunder, Bailie of the Lordship to
the Duke of Argyll. This wrathful and imperious Celt, who reigned supreme in
those regions, had made all the necessary arrangements for the induction of
good Reuben Butler to the vacant charge of Knocktarlitie. "The whole party
being embarked, therefore, in a large boat which the Captain called his
coach and six, and attended by a smaller one termed his gig, the gallant
Duncan steered straight upon the little tower of the old-fashioned church of
Knocktarlitie, and the exertions of six stout rowers sped them rapidly on
their voyage. As they neared the land the hills appeared to recede from
them, and a little valley, formed by the descent of a small river from the
mountains, evolved itself, as it were, upon their approach. The style of the
country on each side was simply pastoral, and resembled in appearance and
character the description of a forgotten Scottish poet. They landed in this
Highland Arcadia, at the mouth of the small stream which watered the
delightful and peaceable valley. Inhabitants of several descriptions came to
pay their respects to the Captain of Knockdunder, a homage which he was very
peremptory in exacting. Besides these there were a wilder set of
parishioners, mountaineers from the upper glen and adjacent hill, who spoke
Gaelic, went about armed, and wore the Highland dress. They first visited
the Manse, as the parsonage is termed in Scotland. It was old, but in good
repair, and stood snugly embosomed in a grove of sycamore, with a well
stocked garden in front, bounded by the small river, which- was partly
visible from the windows, partly concealed by the bushes, trees, and
boundary hedge."
When we try to trace the
resemblance between this ideal glen in which the church and manse of
Knocktarlitie stood, and the same structures as they are at the Clachan of
Rosneath, it is evident that the great novelist had never visited the latter
scene. Rosneath Church and manse cannot be said to be in a pastoral country,
there are only two small fields between them and the sea shore, and the
pretty, wimpling Clachan burn, which issues from the wooded glen running tip
from the cluster of old cottages until it reaches the loch on the moor from
whence it takes its rise, can scarcely be dignified by the appellation of a
"small river from the mountains." Tomnahara, the extreme summit of the
Rosneath peninsula, is but 714 feet above the loch, and the whole ridge of
high lands can scarcely be said to rise above an ordinary hill in height.
The Manse is prettily situated, partially sheltered at the back by the
rising ground and a strip of wood, now sadly bared of its once luxuriant
growth of trees. While there are one or two beautiful glens in the
peninsula, rich in ferns, full of lovely shady nooks, resounding in the long
summer days with the notes of the blackbird, mavis, and cushat dove, there
is no "upper glen " in which "mountaineers" of stern aspect and warlike
dress once resided. The whole peninsula consists mainly of one continuous
ridge, and with the exception of the level grounds in the vicinity of
Rosneath Castle and policies, and the fields of the Clachan Farm, the
cultivated portions are the slopes on either side rising from the Gareloch
and Loch Long.
Going on to describe the farm
of Auchengower, which was henceforth to be occupied by the staunch
Cameronian, Deans, in lieu of his former holding at St. Leonard's Crags, Sir
Walter writes as follows: "The situation was considerably higher than that
of the Manse, and fronted to the west. The windows commanded an enchanting
view of the little vale over which the mansion seemed to preside, the
windings of the stream and the firth, with its associated lakes and romantic
islands. The hills of Dunbartonshire, once possessed by the fierce clan of
Macfarlanes, formed a crescent behind the valley, and far to the right were
seen the dusky and more gigantic mountains of Argyllshire, with a sea-ward
view of the shattered and thundersplitten peaks of Arran." There is no site
on the Gareloch side of Rosneath Peninsula from which such a view could have
been obtained, and if it were supposed to apply to the Kilcreggan side, then
the spectator is facing the west, and has the Argyllshire mountains opposite
him, while the rugged peaks of Dunbartonshire are at his back, concealed
from observation by the uplands of Rosneath.
We then come to the strange
secret interview which Jeanie had with her unfortunate and wayward sister,
Effie—now the lawful wife of the reckless and abandoned Sir George Staunton,
formerly known as Robertson, who had so long set the authorities of the law
at defiance. It was a lovely night, the pale moon shedding soft radiance,
and "flinging a trembling reflection on the broad and glittering waves. The
fine scene of headlands, and capes, and bays, around them, with the broad
blue chain of mountains, were dimly visible in the moonlight; while every
dash of the oars made the waters glance and sparkle with the brilliant
phenomenon called the sea-fire." Jeanie springs lightly ashore at the "usual
landing place, at a quarter of a mile's distance from the Lodge, and
although the tide did not admit of the large boat coming quite close to the
jetty of loose stones which served as a pier." The sisters have an
affectionate but very hurried interview, interrupted by the sudden
apparition of Effie's wild husband, now handsomely dressed, and with the
assured mien of a person of rank. Ere long Effie "tore herself from her
sister's arms, rejoined her husband—they plunged into the copsewood, and she
saw them no more." Presently she heard the distant sound of oars, "and a
skiff was seen on the Firth, pulling swiftly towards the small smuggling
sloop which lay in the offing."
Years roll on after the happy
union of Jeanie and Reuben Butler, which was graced by the puissant presence
of the Captain of Knockdunder, who was full of wrath that David Deans had
rigidly stood out against the "iniquities of pipes, fiddles, and promiscuous
dancing." The captain had many disputations with old David, whose notions of
politics and church government were stigmatised by the Duke's irascible and
bibulous henchman as "nonsense, whilk it is not worth while of a shentleman
to knock out of an auld silly head, either by force of reason or otherwise."
The patron and friend of the Butlers, John, Duke of Argyll and Greenwich,
died in the year 1743, universally lamented, and admitted to be a true
friend of his country, and one who would never stoop to any act of undue
subserviency to court royal favour. In time the stern, worthy, David Deans
also was gathered to his fathers, expiring in the arms of his affectionate
daughter, after earnest prayers for the welfare of the noble house of
Argyll, and Duncan of Knockdunder, when his own immediate family circle had
been remembered at the Throne of Grace.
Then came the last eventful
visit of poor Effie, now Lady Staunton, who came to see her sister, and for
a short time partook of the hospitalities of the manse. During this sojourn
the remarkable interview took place, in a wild glen a few miles from Reuben
Butler's home, between Effie and her unhappy boy, who, after various strange
adventures, had been sold to a lawless ruffian, by name Donacha Dhu, a sort
of ferocious freebooter, well known to the Captain of Knockdunder. The boy
was little removed from a mere savage, and the place where he dwelt was
known as "The Whistler's Glen," a terrible and wild scene of tangled
desolation. The place where this young savage found his lair is thus
described:—"A single shoot carried a considerable stream over the face of a
black rock, which contrasted strongly in colour with the white foam of the
cascade, and at the depth of about twenty feet another rock interrupted the
view of the bottom of the fall. The water, wheeling out far beneath, swept
round the crag, which thus bounded their view, and tumbled down the rocky
glen in a torrent of foam." At length Lady Staunton and Jeanie's two boys
"came full in front of the fall, which here had a most tremendous aspect,
boiling, roaring, and thundering with unceasing din into a black cauldron, a
hundred feet at least below them, which resembled the crater of a volcano."
There is no fall of water or
defile in Rosneath district to which this description would be at all
applicable, but on the Row side of the Gareloch, not far from the old
mansion of Ardenconnel, there is what is known as the "Whistler's Glen." In
this glen there are one or two considerable falls of water, and in some
parts its tangled gorge might be said to resemble the aspect of the defile
where Effie encountered her boy. Then there comes the last eventful scene in
the tale, when Effie's husband and Reuben Butler are being rowed to Rosneath
in an open boat, and are in danger of being caught by a gathering storm.
"They approached the little cove, which, concealed behind crags, and
defended on every point by shallows and sunken rocks, could scarce be
discovered or approached except by those intimate with the navigation." Soon
after the Captain of Knockdunder and his followers, who had been scouring
the close, entangled wood and little glen near Caird's Cove in their search
for Donacha and the smugglers, heard a shot in the vicinity of the spot
where Staunton and Reuben Butler effected their landing. In the skirmish
which ensued, poor Effie's dissolute husband received his death-wound, and
the novel is brought to a close with the account of Effie's return for a
season to the vortex of London society, in which she had shone for a brief
period, and her eventual retirement to the seclusion of a convent on the
Continent, where she died.
Some of the natives of
Rosneath who are proud of the great "Wizard of the North" selecting their
territory for the closing scenes of his fine romance, are inclined to place
"Caird's Cove" below some steep rocks not far from the pier at Cove on Loch
Long. The commanding rock known as Knockderry, further along the loch side,
has been named by others as the site of the dwelling occupied by the
redoubtable Captain of Knockdunder. Another site has been assigned to it on
the grassy plateau opposite the range of buildings near Rosneath Castle,
known as the Parkhead, and an old house which was pulled down over forty
years ago, may have once sheltered the distinguished representative of the
might and privileges of Mac Chaillan Mor. |