OF some places, as of some people, it is hardly safe
to trust the hand to write. Who can be trusted to indite an article
on the wife of his bosom, or write without apparently uncalled-for
emotion about the home of his childhood?
So is it with us in respect to Carloway, with its
pleasant bay, its rambling clachans, its cheerful cliffs, and, last
of all, the many friendly faces we left beside its rocky shore.
The Carloway River, a good-sized stream, runs into
the sea-loch of the same name, a broad tract being left bare at low
water where it enters. As it passes seaward it narrows and deepens,
takes a sudden bend at right angles round a rocky bluff, and resumes
its westward course.
In this bend, sheltered from the direct action, of
the sea, the fishing-boats lie at anchor, exposed, however, to
severe squalls down the gully from the river. The sea-loch is
nowhere very wide, and everywhere irregular and rocky; but we
understand it has been taken note of as an excellent harbour for a
British fleet, in case of war with America.
The vicinity of the boat-anchorage has an extensive
slope carefully cultivated, and in spring and autumn presents a
pleasing and picturesque appearance. Many brilliant shades of green
combine well with the tawny rocks and blue waves.
Sea, cliffs, and clachans—nothing wonderful —and yet,
and yet it is a pleasant place. For nature here, as elsewhere, has
her gala days when she dons her gayest apparel. Every one who has
written of the Hebrides has described the terrific hailstorms swept
along by a demoniac wind, that, more especially in the late autumn
and early spring, sweep over the weather-beaten, tanned, and
everlastingly embrowned face of this sadly abused land. No one fails
to enter minutely into details of the hail, snow, sleet, and rain,
now alternating during a single day, now giving their whole minds to
their work during a whole twenty-four hours—not working steadily any
more than the Celtic inhabitants, but with boisterous and recurrent
pertinacity. All this is it not written in the chronicles
of “Sixty-one" than whom few are remembered more kindly in the Lews?
But who has described the Lews in its real spring?
Not boisterous February or March, but when all nature suddenly
awakes, like the half-torpid inhabitants from the long nights of
winter, and rushes to its labour like a giant refreshed. It presses
out the primroses, and many a lovely wild flower, over the faces of
the cliffs, hurries the laggard ferns into life by many a lonely
watercourse, and decks the late sad-looking country in a lively suit
of varying green.
One who has only looked at the Lews in winter has not
the remotest notion of what this dismal tract is capable. A week or
two of suitable weather, and the growth is almost supernaturally
rapid and luxuriant. As there are no divisions over most of the
country from harvest to seed time, the cattle and sheep roaming
uninterrupted over the land, every blade of grass is cropped up by
the more than half-starved anatomies that wander eager-eyed around.
But, the seed time over, they are carefully tended on the
neighbouring moors, and the struggling vegetation springs with a
bound into activity and beauty. With what affectionate fondness do
the lovely primroses and purple rock-daisies nestle in every creek
and corner of those bold western cliffs, while the scrambling silver
weed looks over from the edge of its bed, spread along the upper
slope. The dweller in the sunny South naturally supposes we are in a
flowerless wilderness, but see what we are walking through now as we
stroll along the borders of this pretty little loch, a few miles
from Carloway, waving with flags and decked all over with lovely
water-lilies. The grass is green and luxuriant, and studded with
orchis of the most brilliant purple and of large size. Beds of the
yellow iris cover the damper spots, and the marsh marigold grows in
the little streams. The crowfoot, the silver-weed, buttercup, and
yellow clover show every shade of yellow, while the sober gowan and
white clover sit demure amid their more gaudy friends.
The many species of delicate grasses give elegance to
the green banks, and beautiful ferns, amid which may be seen the
stately royal, adorn and border the stream beside us. The
forget-me-not refuses to be forgotten, and the presence of the
thistle makes itself felt; while violets and variegated vetches
contend for a subsistence with many a less known and less respected
brightener of the wayside. The lovely eyebright and the flowering
nettle, and even already an occasional sprig of the bell-heather,
are peeping at us from the rocks. For this is the charming little
green vale of Dalebeg, charming both on account of nature and human
nature, and, like the shadow of a great rock in a weary land, the
sojourner in the wilderness is ever sure of a kindly welcome in its
hospitable shade.
Between Dalebeg and Carloway there is a renowned and
very extensive beach of disintegrated gneiss, unprotected in the
slightest from the rolling Atlantic, which hurls its hollow breakers
continuously over the dancing sand. A valley of rich pasture leads
down to the bent-grown “macher” that borders the bay, handsome
soft-contoured cliffs closing it in on either side.
For a few miles on either side of Loch Carloway lies
the snuggest and warmest and one of the most pleasing districts we
have seen in the Lews. Northward of this it opens out into a bleak
rocky moorland, swept over by every wind of heaven. Southward it
becomes tamer and more contracted, with flatter land and a confined
inland sea. Here it is snug; bold to landward, and open to seaward.
Numberless lochs in the neighbourhood abound with
brown trout, and those whence the Carloway River is fed are well
supplied with sea-trout and salmon. These latter, however, never
rise to the angler in the Carloway River.
As a rule, the sea-loch affords few fish, more
particularly when the river is high and the season has been wet, the
fresh water seemingly driving out sea-fish.
In Loch Roag, outside, however, a fair quantity of
fish may be taken at most seasons, and few more picturesque
sea-coasts can be found to set a drift of hooks along.
Let us run out and set our spiller line, and toss our
black buoys on the wave, take careful bearings, and tack about for
an hour or two. Our companions at sea are stupid guillemots, or
quick-witted, sprightly, elegant sea-pigeons. The “bishop,” or great
northern diver, laughs and disappears as we seek to approach him, or
an eider duck on a visit from the Flannan Isles tempts us in vain
from our course. There a long-necked cormorant goes hurrying past
with its strong inelegant flight, or a solan goose stops in its
sailing course, and drops headlong with a splash into the deep. With
what force the goose descends! On one occasion a boat was on its way
from St. Kilda, when, it is said, one of these birds miscalculated
its progress, and, in place of dropping on its prey, went crash
through the bottom of the boat. The boatmen found it so jammed in
that they left it sticking through the planks until they reached the
shore.
But see that strange turmoil on the waters ! A large
flight of gulls are tumbling over one another again and again, in
their frantic endeavours to get at a shoal of young herring. Not
until we row right up to the spot do we observe any assistants, but
on arrival we are amused to see the heads of dookers shoot funnily
up, with a startled expression, from under the water all about us.
These had been diving amid and under the shoal, whose silvery
jackets thus rudely shaken off were dancing all through the
surrounding waters. The gobbling gulls, unable to follow the prey
under the waves, hastened to take advantage of the assistance thus
providentially afforded them. The wild screeching and rude jostling
and tumbling of the gulls was most ridiculous, and the whole flight
might have been covered with a blanket, so close were they atop of
one another during their rivalry.
We have time still to run along by the bold cliffs,
with now a natural bridge, now a huge cave, now an isolated rock
like a fortalice; or, tacking about again, run across Loch Roag to
the island of Little Bernera, with its beautiful beaches and rich
pasturage. The prevailing shells here are of the genus “patella;”
about Stornoway the most common genus is “car-dium.” The varieties
of both are great. Look at the bent turned into compasses! some one
calls out; and sure enough the stiff-pointed grasses growing through
the sand have been caught in this eddy by the strong wind, and the
points have described beautiful circles in the sand all about! Lazy
herons are flapping, active sandpipers running, and curlews are as
fond of hearing themselves screeching as young ladies just
“finished” from a boarding-school. But our buoys have been dancing
long enough on the waves, and we seek our home.
Let us now turn landward. News has come to the
cottage this morning that the people are gathering for the Carloway
fank.
A stroll of half a mile over the moor, or rather
constant leaping over peat banks, brings us to the green margin of a
pretty-little loch, dotted with clumps of reeds. By its side the
stone fank is placed, where the cotters’ sheep, grazing on the moor
in the vicinity, are periodically gathered. We are first on the
ground, so must wait for a time beside the little pool, with the
rocky hilly moorland spreading away on every side, diversified by an
occasional loch, and enlivened by the little Highland cattle of the
cotters dotted here and there over it.
At length the people begin to gather, and when next
we raise our heads from tales of other lands, we find quite a
multitude of men, with occasional women and girls, sitting on the
knolls around. But where are the sheep? Patience! Hist! there comes
the bleating of the pioneers, and, ere long, the flock of the
clachan, several hundred strong, or weak, makes its -diversified
appearance. Every age and sex, almost every species, indigenous or
acclimatized, are there; from the aged Cheviot ewe, with scarce a
tuft of wool left, to the frizzy, black-faced lamb.
On they come ! with plenty of vocal music as they
proceed, and at length are enclosed within the rude walls of the
fank; a crowd of bipeds surrounding it outside.
Now commences the robbery of the innocents —the
shearing of the various fleeces. If any accustomed to Lowland
manners, or shearing on a farm, expect similar regularity and
decorum, they will be sadly disappointed. Here are no wooden stools
of open spars with the shearers seated in—waiting for the victims;
but in two minutes a rush has been made into the fold by
wild-looking, bare-legged men and strapping, handsome, laughing
girls. Each of the cotter horde seizes his or her one or two sheep,
and drags them, bleating and struggling, amid the furious and
constant vociferations of all, to the grassy bank outside the fank.
The legs of the bleaters once tied, a dozen shears are plied by as
many parties, each more or less, particularly less, skilful; and the
bank is ere long covered by prostrate scores of nondescripts being
denuded of their coats, or awaiting their turns, neither silently
nor patiently. One consolation to the humanitarian arises from the
fact that most of the sheep are pets, accustomed to being housed
with the family to which they belong. So that, however anxious for
wool, and unskilful at procuring it, they rather fail on the side of
kindness and extravagance than of economy and cruelty. The reckless
wounds indispensable from shearing on a great scale, as in Buenos
Ayres or California, are nowise possible here.
Ascending the hill alongside, we look down on the
busy scene in the midst of the desolate-looking hills. The snip of
the shears reaches our ears, through the shouting of the men, the
shrill screaming of the women, and the piteous calls of prostrate
mothers to their terrified and equally noisy offspring.
There, a spanking girl, gaily bedight, springs into
the fank, and soon re-appears with a sheep under each arm. They
struggle in vain in arms accustomed to swing on her hips a creel of
peats, under the weight of which many an athlete of my acquaintance
would stagger like a giant in drink. There, a bare-legged girl of
ten speeds like a fawn after a startled runaway, and turns it
lightly on its back, as if turtle-turning had been the business of
her life. The freed and wretched - looking creatures, already
stripped of their winter coats, rush bleating to the hills, the
lambs helplessly seeking their comfortless mothers, amid the
miserable and scattered parties spread over the neighbouring
moorland.
Verily! if those excitable Celts did not manage to
carry a sparkling interest into the very simplest affairs of life,
could they dwell so happily and contentedly on this “floating peat”?
Near us, in the rolling land between Carlo way and
Tolsta Chulish, is the celebrated Dune Carloway. This is the best
preserved of any dune we have seen in the Lews. These circular
dry-stone Pictish forts, or places of security, are very numerous in
this country. At least a dozen are in the parish of Uige, and many
of them have formerly dotted the sea-coast as far as Ness. They are
generally built close by a freshwater loch, not far from the sea,
and are always innocent of lime or mortar. Still they have been so
strongly built as to reach the Lews of to-day from distant times,
and would doubtless have done so in much better preservation but for
the ready quarries they have proved to the cotters.
Dune Carloway is built on a slight elevation,
overlooking a fine freshwater loch abounding in trout; while, at the
same time, it affords a capital view over Loch Roag and out to the
Atlantic.
On the road to Ness, a number of villages border the
sea on the left hand, and a few ruined dunes are to be seen beside
the lochs on the right. These villages merit observation from the
peculiarity that they are built generally beside embouchures of
rivers. The sea, in almost every case> has thrown up a magnificent
bank of gravel at the river-mouth, thus spreading it out into a
freshwater loch, with this great gravel bank between it and the sea.
On the top of the bank the fishing-boats of the community are
ranged, while the river skulks round the corner seaward. This is
quite a distinctive characteristic of this part of the coast. Beside
Dalebeg, there is a cliff apparently of good granite, much used for
millstones, which shows no sign of stratification. As the
neighbouring formation, however, is gneiss, it does not seem exactly
in order, any more than the weird tales told of its boduch-haunted
environs.
The other day, we obtained the complete appurtenances
of a veterinary surgeon. These consisted of a “serpent stone” and a
serpent’s head. The stone was simply a disc with a hole in the
centre, and two plain circles cut out on it. Such are held in great
esteem, are very rare, and their appearance is accounted for in
various ways. The commonest account given is, that the hole in the
stone is caused by the passage of a serpent through it, a Harrisman
having found one on the way through. A more fanciful and complicated
belief assigns their origin to nine times nine snakes passing
continuously round a heather bush? An idol-breaker from the mainland
insists that such stones were common at the end of the spindles
formerly, in place of a swelling in the wood, or an extemporised
potato, as at present.
However this may be, the people have great faith in
these stones as a cure for cattle, when bitten by snakes, as well as
in many other ills that bovine flesh is heir to in the Lews. One of
these stones is placed in water, or water is poured over it, and
then given to the cattle to drink. Only three or four were known to
be in the Carloway district, and these were in constant requisition
for swelling in cattle, and other ailments. In default of the stone,
or as an additional security, the head of an adder tied to a string
was used in the same way, and for the same purpose. Such heads were
more common, and in constant use. Will Mr. Phen6, who is acquainted
with the Lews, claim these customs as a relic of widespread
serpent-worship?
A medley of ancient superstitions and modern bigotry
exists universally among the people. The boldest by day fear to go
about at night, and endless tales of Boduchs, or spirits, distend
the eyes of young and old round the peat fire. Here a water-horse
revels in some roadside loch to the terror of the wayfarer. There, a
“head” trundles along the hilly road all alone, and taboos the whole
vicinity to travellers. Now, mysterious lights about the kirk
disturb the repose of the whole community ; and again, some stalwart
fisherman wrestles with the “Boduch Mohr ” — Satan himself — a whole
night long on the moor, and “ has never been the same man since/*
You are passing along the road at Callamish. Hasty
steps are heard behind, for no one is so bold as to pass within a
mile of the stones alone in the gloaming, and your company for the
present is in urgent request. The pedestrian may have travelled in
far lands. Were you afraid there? you ask. “Not in the least”— only
in the dread land of his birth, darkened by the tales of
the “cailliachs.”
Then there are no musicians whatever among the
people, as the ministers and elders as a rule proscribe such pure
enjoyment. One lame lad at Shawbost had bought a fiddle to solace
himself during the long winter evenings, but the elders forced him
to dispose of it, and now not a man plays anything but a Jew’s harp
among the natives of the west. Indeed, only lately have they relaxed
so far as to have even dancing, and many ludicrous scenes have we
witnessed from the holy horror of the elders. Everything that dark
superstition and a severe creed can do has been done to oppress the
minds of the people; but Celtic blood will show, and, with happy
homes and minds at ease, they are “merry and wise,” in spite of all
ghostly interference. |