LORD NAPIER, who has
so admirably shown his real appreciation of the crofter and his
troubles, has well described this district, as one which “the
caprice of Nature has' stricken with so many disabilities, and
invested with so deep a charm.”
As has already been
shown, there was a time when man was glad, even in South Uist; and
in truth, even here, were the tyranny of Nature all that he had to
contend with, man's life might yet be tolerable. As it is, he lives
in memory and tradition, and the Uist man is at his best when
talking of the past.
Many of the
common-place affairs of every-day life used to be conducted in the
most picturesque manner. In every township, even if of only half a
dozen houses, there was formerly a constabal baile (constable of the
hamlet), whose business it was to direct and distribute the work of
gathering peats, to select new peat grounds when the old were
exhausted, to see to the repair of the mountain paths by which the
peat was brought down in creels, to direct the reclaiming of land,
to represent the crofters in their dealings with the factor, and in
much else. He was elected yearly, or for longer periods or even for
life, according to the custom of his district. When he accepted
office he would take off his shoes and stockings—to show that he was
in contact with the earth of which he was made and to which he would
return, and then, raising his bonnet, and lifting up his eyes to
heaven he would declare that upon his honour, in presence of earth
and heaven, in presence of God and men, he would be faithful to his
trust. Many are the tributes we have heard to the faithfulness of
one and another of these men, to their zeal, justice, industry and
resource.
Such an intermediary
was especially necessary,-when, as on the Gordon estates, the factor
was unable to speak Gaelic. He, on his side, has a sub-official,
known as the Maor Gruind, the ground-officer, who can meet and
converse with the Maor-Baile, so that, as the local saying has it,
“The tongue of the people is in another man's mouth.”
There are some lofty
hills in South Uist—one point, Ben Mhor, visible even from Tyree and
from the mainland, is over 2,000 feet high; another, Hecla, named
probably by the Norsemen over a thousand years ago, 1,988 feet high.
The hills lie along the east coast of the island, while westward of
them, the ground, intersected with lake and bog, lies level to the
sea-shore or machair, a great sandy, bent-grown plain, excellent for
cattle and horses, and in former times all common land, as were also
the hills.
Now the hill-ground
is taken away as well as the best of the machair, and they have even
had to share their rocks and bogs with new-comers. In the old days,
however, when the grass on the shallow strand was exhausted, the
people, with their cattle, used to betake themselves to the hills
and so, by change of scene for themselves and of pasture for their
flocks and herds, they escaped many complaints and ailments common
now that the soil is over-worked, and food, lodging, and clothing so
much deteriorated. They themselves, equally with the cattle, were
much better fed when the ground had a chance to lie fallow. The
possession of common land made even a small croft much more
productive than now, when so much is exacted from it, and Father
Campbell, a native of South Uist, where he is still held in loving
memory, assured the Commissioners that there was sufficient land in
Uist for the present population if only they had the use of it.
A fine day in the
month of June would be chosen for the start, and at an early hour in
the morning the procession formed, the men, lads and young girls,
driving the sheep, mares, and calves, their simple provision packed
in creels strapped on the backs of a few mountain ponies, the older
women, knitting as they walked, following with the young children,
while half-grown boys and girls, full of wild anticipations of fun,
ran backward and forward like the excited dogs, probably of all the
party most conscious of responsibility.
On arriving, there
would be small repairs to make to the shealings of last year, all of
the simplest and most elementary description, often of the bee-hive
shape, but on occasion adapted to the material available—stones
roughly piled against a large rock, or against a bank, supports of
disused oars or parts of masts, a roof of the roughest thatch of
heather or bent grass, a shelf in the thickness of the wall for
keeping the milk cool on hot summer days, the floor as Nature may
have provided, turf or sand or beaten earth.
Then, when all was
arranged, they would sit down in scattered groups to the Moving
Feast, of which the eating and drinking would be, as on all
occasions in the Highlands, the least conspicuous part, consisting
probably of cheese and scones, perhaps tea.
Then would come, as
the climax, the shoaling evening hymn sung to one of the slow
melodies with the melancholy cadence so characteristic of the oldest
Gaelic songs. They would confide themselves and their flocks to the
protection of S. Michael, subduer of the wild beast, to Mary, mother
of the white lamb, to SL Columba, always concerned with the care of
the dumb beasts to whom in his life-time he showed so much kindness,
and finally to the Blessed Trinity.
Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit,
Three in One, be with us in light and darkness:
Down in the low-lying machair or up on the hill-side,
The Thnn» in One be with us,
His ann around our head.
Often in the Islands,
one notes a brighter colour on the heather, or a greener shade upon
the grass in some wild spot just above the rocky shore, denoting the
former occupation of the spot by a group of shealings, perhaps for
the pasturage of cattle, I am told, though I have not seen them,
that on the machair of the west coast of South Uist there are earth
dwellings, which are used as shealings by kelp-workers.
As is described
elsewhere, it is not only at the shealing that such prayers are and
have long been in constant use in the Catholic islands. There are
prayers for travelling, for following the cattle, for going to sea,
for raking the peats at night, for rousing them in the morning, the
theory of saying grace carried to a logical conclusion.
The summer exodus was
indeed the great festival of the year, and among the folk-songs of
the people those in praise of the shealings are among the most
poetical Both in mind and body, perhaps even in soul, the people
have lost much in losing the rest and refreshment of the shealing
life.
The women and
children happily established in their now surroundings, all needful
repairs done to shealing and bothie and pen, the men would return
home to attend to the crops and get in the peat, thatch the houses
and generally make preparation for the coming winter.
During the three
months or more of their stay, the principal work of the women would
be to make butter and cheese for the winter store. The flocks could
ramble all day at will, feeding in the freshest and greenest spots;
the calves and lambs would be growing fat and strong on the sweet
hill pasture, and the cows would be yielding of their best. Spare
hours would be occupied with the distaff, getting the wool ready for
the winter s task of weaving the warm durable cloth which was then
their only wear. The young folks enjoyed the fun and freedom of an
existence without even the responsibility of herding, and none of
the folk-songs are so blithe and gay as those in praise of the
shealings and the shealing life.
In the old days many
of the people paid their rent in kelp, but when kelp-making for the
Estate practically ceased, a reduction in rent, long promised by
Colonel Gordon, ought to have been allowed, for money payment is-
always dearer for the people than payment by labour or produce; for
the amount of money in circulation is very small, and has an
exaggerated value among the people, whose ordinary transactions with
each other are carried on by barter, being a very usual unit of
exchange. What the people buy from the local “merchant” or shop
keeper (a tradesman in the islands is a craftsman; a tailor,
shoemaker, carpenter, etc.) is generally bought on credit and paid
for in wool or home-made cloth, which, though a convenient method,
indeed at times the only one possible, is considerably to the
advantage of the merchant, who, however, of course incurs a certain
amount of risk from which he is bound in some degree to protect
himself.
Even when kelp was
worth considerably more than at the present day, little more than
two or three pounds per ton ever reached the people, and the
tendency for the profit to accrue to the Estate, which contributed
nothing whatever, has naturally increased rather than diminished, so
that compulsory service in kelp-making, on pain of eviction,
lingered on, often greatly to the detriment of agricultural work in
June, July and August, until, in the year 1886, the crofters secured
fixity of tenure and the old threat became of no avail. When, to a
question put by Mr. Fraser Macintosh in the House of Commons, the
Lord Advocate replied that there was now no contract compelling the
crofters to make kelp for the Estate, and that all the money got for
kelp was handed to them in return for their labour, the people
naturally supposed themselves free to seek a better market. With a
power of initiation one would hardly have expected to find in so
remote a place, one of the crofters undertook to act as agent, and
at once offered a penny more per square yard of tangle than was paid
by the Gordon Cathcart Estate. The Estate authorities at once
interdicted the prospective purchasers, and the poor islanders had
no choice but to offer the result of their season's work to them at
the old price. The Estate not only refused the offer, but served an
action of suspension and interdict upon seventeen of the crofters,
prohibiting them from removing or disposing of the tangles
collected. To quote from a contemporary newspaper account:
“They were thus
boycotted; their severe and protracted labours go for nothing, and
the fruit of their hardy industry is ruthlessly sacrificed. Can
anything more disheartening to industrious and honest people be
imagined ? The islanders are greatly agitated over the question, and
claim that it is unreasonable and contrary to justice, that Lady
Cathcart’s claim to tangles, grown perhaps hundreds of miles from
the shores of her estate, should be allowed as her property, merely
because they happen to be cast upon the sea-shores of her island by
the accident of the winds and the waves, and which, but for the
industry of the poor people living on her estate, would not be worth
a farthing to any person in the British Empire.”
It is only in the
Highlands, among a race accustomed to look to those over them as
holding parental, not tyrannical authority, that such things are
possible. In Ireland the people boycot the landlords; in the
Islands, the landlord boy cots the people. And then we talk about
“the lazy Highlander” and wonder that he does not make more effort
to better his condition!
It is obvious
therefore, that with no agriculture worth mentioning, insufficient
ground on which to graze stock, rare and uncertain markets for their
beasts, and every obstacle put in the way of making profit out of
even the jetsam and flotsam of the ocean, it is extremely difficult
for the people to acquire the actual cash which alone would enable
them to face the world with the characteristic Highland independence
and self-respect. This their present life is going far to
obliterate, at least among the inhabitants of South Uist. The hope
of gaining a prosperous home in South Uist seems so remote that the
islander in despair turns his gaze across the Atlantic. In Manitoba
he knows that the hardy industrious Highlandor will be welcome. It
is true that compulsory emigration is not now permitted. Yet are
there many indirect methods of making life quite intolerable, in
districts where endurance is being already stretched to its utmost
possibility of tension.
The people have an
absolute craving for work, and it is chiefly from these islands that
the young women go every year to the east-coast fishing, mainly now
to Aberdeen, though formerly largely to Fraserburgh and Peterhead.
They are expert fish-curers. They receive £2 on engagement, in
mid-winter, when money is scarcest, and this probably tempts away
many a woman who possibly repents of her bargain later. However
there is no work for them to do at home, the change and better food,
now that there is no shealing-life, is good for their health, and
they bring home not only money but enlargement of notions. Many of
the domestic details of life have improved greatly since the women
have been away from the Islands. They bring home crockery and
articles of clothing, and their lives have gained in order and in
complexity. Their life at the fishing is necessarily of the
roughest. Sometimes they work for two or three nights without sleep.
Their conduct is said to be excellent.
I have travelled with
them two or three times between Oban and their own islands. They
were always neat and modest in their dress and orderly in their
conduct, but, poor girls, strange to say, they were horribly
sea-sick!
Some of the crofters
too go south to work on mainland farms, but almost always as
emergency-work to tide over necessities, bringing back the money
earned to spend on their own crofts, and very rarely tempted to
remain in permanent employment away from family and home. They are
capable of immense endurance and very hard work for any definite
object such as fishing or tangle-drying, persevering day and night
without sleep and with scanty food. Indeed, without such
perseverance and the capacity for seizing occasion, nothing would be
accomplished. When the miserable little crops are gathered, often
literally a mere handful here and there, as any little accumulation
of soil in the hollow of a rock or under the shelter of a hillock
has made planting possible, they often have to stand in the “stooks”
(small shocks) for weeks before they can be stacked, waiting for a
drying wind, in a climate where continuance of sunshine cannot be
depended upon. Only about 150 or so of these poor little bundles go
to a stack as, again probably on account of the damp, the stacks are
made very small and of bee-hive shape. We were told that the flowers
of the water ragwort, caoibhrechan, are put freely among the straw
to keep out the rats; but whether this is a useful agricultural hint
or a part of the same superstition which leads the people to put
this weed into the dairy to keep off the Evil-Eye, I am unable to
say.
The peat-cutting is
still done, if possible, by the men, who leave the peats to dry; but
the burden of bringing them home too often falls upon the women, as
the men are away most of the autumn. The peats are cut flat and big,
not brick-shaped as on the mainland, and require a great deal of
drying before they are fit for use.
There are separate
names for the peats: Barrad is the top peat, Gollacl the outside
peat, Tveasad, the third peat, Siomad the one most protected.
Much labour is spent
over the thatch of the houses, which, if attended to from time to
time, may last for forty years. The material mainly used in Uist is
the bent-grass from the machair, but the people have to pay in
labour for permission to cut it. The bent, when dried, is extremely
tough, and is sometimes woven into mats, bags, and horse collars;
one industrious man in Benbecula makes excellent chairs of it, of
design and outline just such as one sometimes sees in old-fashioned
houses as having come from India. Sometimes rushes are used, if
permission can be obtained to cut them, more rarely heather,
bracken, or the Osmxmda regalia. The walls are built three or four
feet thick, but are pointed with lime, sometimes packed with sand,
as in Tyree.
Now that the people
have security of tenure and are beginning to improve their houses,
the old building is often turned into a byre (shelter for cattle),
and the new one built beside it. There are, however, a few of the
old sod or turf byres still standing, built where surface stones are
not easily available, and these, many of them, were at one time
houses, put up when the unhappy inhabitants had to provide
themselves with a roof-tree, yet with no certainty of being able to
keep even such wretched shelter as this for long.
The average houses of
old times of which large numbers, are still standing, measured,
inside, about thirty feet by fourteen. One end was occupied by the
box-beds, the fire was in the middle of the floor, and at the end
furthest away from the beds, the cattle were formerly housed.
The crofters
generally build north and south, which is said to be for economy in
thatching, but I don’t know upon what principle, and the miserable
position chosen for their homes, is often accounted for by the fact
that in old days, when the land was held in common, it was
profitable to build on the worst part; even such a morsel as thirty
feet by fourteen being too precious to use lightly, if it were
capable of growing corn or potatoes. The house is regarded mainly as
a shelter at night, and the people care nothing for a view; indeed,
as windows are of comparatively recent introduction, they had, till
lately, little opportunity to enjoy it.
It is said that there
was formerly a good deal of illicit trade in South Uist, and that
Dutch smugglers landed goods on the island, but whether for the
benefit of families of the Clan Ranald or whether the goods were
brought with the view of conveyance to the mainland does not appear.
The shebeen or
unlicensed drinking-shops have also, technically, disappeared,
though one in South Uist lingered on until but a few years ago, and
naturally there is some evasion of the excise by the many foreign
traders who visit Barra and Lewis during the short fish-curing
season. Only this year we heard of a melancholy scene when some of
the fishermen of a certain island were deluded into buying a
considerable quantity of Eau de Cologne. Under the impression it was
some new variety of uisge (strong water), they adjourned to the hill
one afternoon, when resting from a night of fishing, and proceeded
to drink it. Then followed a fearful thirst which the men on a
Scotch or English boat induced them to appease with beer, and the
results, as may be imagined, were highly disastrous.
The township of
Steligarry, the endowment of the Macvurrichs, the bards of
Clanranald, was a sacred place and afforded sanctuary for any person
escaping thither, no matter what the nature of his crime. There is a
tradition that the endowment was in perpetuity, as was that of
Bornish, another part of the Clanranald estate, “To be held as long
as the sea comes about a stone, or a black cow gives milk, and until
the big stone of Beinne Corairidh (a hill in Bornish) runs out on
the point of Ard by itself.”
It is said, however,
that when troubles befel the Clanranalds, both Macvurrich and the
laird of Bornish had to go to Edinburgh to defend their claims,
which they maintained successfully in six courts. But one day a man
“like a gentleman” met them, and said that if they wished to be free
from further trouble they had only to go to the Cross at Edinburgh,
and declare themselves publicly in the phrase :
“I am Macvurrich from
Steligarry.
And I am Bornish from Bornish.”
Unfortunately the
expression they used—as was intended—was Mach a Steligarry, Mack a
Bornish, which means out of as well as from,, and when they had said
it “the lawyers who had been in hiding rushed out, and told them
they had publicly renounced all claim to their lands.”
The same informant
says that the Macvurrichs were in Steligarry, the Clanranalds in
Uist, the MacNeills in Barra, and the Macleans in Duart for fifteen
generations.
Like Claverhouse and
many other heroes, the Clanranalds could not be killed with lead.
The chief, who was at Sheriff Muir, was so certain of his immunity
that he dressed in scarlet to exhibit the favours of fate. However,
a man from Moidart, the district next to Clanranald’s mainland
property of Arisaig, who had enlisted to escape punishment for
theft, knew of the charm, and loading his gun with silver, killed
him.
At the north end of
the island is a tract of country which, even in South Uist, is of
exceptional desolation. Bounded on three sides by the sea,
intersected with countless lakes on endless bog, fit only for a
nursery of moss and sundew, a hopeless dreary expanse overhung with
a grey mist of exhalation, which never seems to clear away from the
reeking soil, lies the parish of Iochar, a collection of nine
townships, where, if anywhere on earth, one may look for the very
apotheosis of the struggle for existence.
Mr. Carmichael, who
for some years lived but a mile or two beyond the dreary region,
thus describes it:
“Where the land is
not rock it is heath, where not heath it is bog, where not bog it is
black peaty shallow lake, and where not lake it is a sinuous arm of
the sea, winding, coiling, and trailing its snakelike forms into
every conceivable shape, and meeting you with all its black slimy
mud in the most unexpected places.”
But even here the
gentle inhabitants cherish kindly thoughts and a love for home. The
little Church has lately been restored by means of gifts from sons
and daughters exiled abroad, and who, it may be, preserve in
grateful memory the thought of one kind man who, in this desolate
spot, preached to his people, as so many of these priests have done,
by his life and active work, still eloquent, and still bearing
fruit. With his own hands, Father Macgrigor laboured among the
people, encouraging them to clear their little plots of the rocks
that encumbered them, and using the stone thus gained in erecting
miles of excellent dykes which help to diminish the task of herding
the cattle by keeping the cows and sheep away from the crofts. A
witness for the Commission testified (Report, p. 462): “During his
incumbency of over forty years he showed a more admirable example to
the people how to improve their crofts than all the proprietors,
factors, and tacksmen put together.”
This being the case,
as reported by a Presbyterian witness, one is not surprised to learn
further that the factor deprived him of his croft and confiscated
his improvements; it is perhaps more surprising to hear that they
were restored to him, probably owing to the kindly interference of
one, Roderick Maclean, no less a person than the parish minister.
Buchanan (Land of
Lome, vol. ii. p. 84) says:
“In the whole list of
jobbers, excepting only the mean whites of the Southern States of
America, there are no paltrier fellows than the men who stand by
Highland doors and interpret between ignorance and the great
proprietors. They libel the race they do not understand, they deride
the affections they are too base to cultivate, they rob, plunder,
and would exterminate wholly the rightful masters of the soil. They
are the agents of civilization in such places as the Outer Hebrides,
so that if God does not help the civilized it is tolerably clear
that the devil will. In the islands beware of the civilized.
Wherever the great or little Sassenach comes he leaves a dirty trail
like the slime of a snake.”
I have known factors
and other agents of the proprietors of whom, so far as one may
judge, every word of this indictment appeared to be true. But I
think it only right to record that I know others, men whose life and
conduct I have watched for years, of whom even the tenants freely
testified that they were honest, upright, kindly, as factors go, and
of whom the unprejudiced outsider might well say far more than this:
men from whom I have received not only personal kindness, but just
and humane testimony as to the responsibilities with which they are
charged. No one who has not been on the spot knows all the trials
and difficulties of a factor, especially such as are not autocratic,
who have to render account to a chamberlain who gets the credit of
what goes right and knows where to lay the blame of what goes wrong.
It is high time that the proprietors took a fair share of
responsibility for what is done in their islands. Merely to receive
rents, spend them elsewhere, and leave the people to blame the
unlucky agents for indifference, if not oppression, is often to do
injustice to men, hard - working, well - meaning, but often sorely
perplexed.
I venture to think,
however, that the factors have in one respect themselves to thank
for this. The people are ever ready to point out that they come to
the Islands poor men, and go away rich ones, a reproach which they
sometimes bring upon themselves by occupying the best farms on the
island. Such a position ought not to be possible; the proprietor
ought, in common honesty to his tenants, to place the factor in such
a financial position that he should have no temptation to expose
himself to the charge of “having his own axe to grind.”
Amongst other
pleasant memories to which the people of South Uist still cling, is
that they were once blessed with a good factor whose name deserves
to be recorded, one Doctor Macleod, remembered for his medical skill
when medical attendance was even more difficult to obtain than now,
but still more for the very rare fact that he sought and gained the
love of the people for whom he was responsible, although the
representative of the new order and the alien proprietor. He helped
to redeem the machairs, and by judicious cutting and economy to
promote the growth of kelp. Moreover he contrived, and with great
labour and skill carried out, the drainage of some of the vast
tracts of water with which the land in South Uist is for ever
carrying on a hopeless contest. As Mr. Carmichael has expressed it,
“He drained the estates of their water, instead of the holders of
their produce.”
Father Allan has
recorded a curious fragment of Gaelic verse which gives one an
insight into the conditions of life at this period:
McLeod is the clever
man,
I fear I shall lose his help
Since it is he who stands true to the right.
The factor spoke then :
McIntyre has tortured me,
If he remain in Glac-nan-Ruari
I shall leave of my own accord.
The Colonel spoke majestically [Colonel Gordon]:
Knock you down your house at Martinmas
And put out the wife and the children,
Though they should die in consequence.
The point being that
anything like complaint brought summary punishment upon the person
injured.
The mutual good
feeling of the Protestants and Roman Catholics in islands where one
might very naturally expect the reverse to be the case, is a fact
which constantly came under our notice and deserves to be recorded.
The only case of tension of which we heard was over a matter not
under the control of the people, and which the late Archbishop
Macdonald, of St. Andrews and Edinburgh, at one time himself a
priest in the Highlands, brought before the notice of the
authorities. This was the fact that although in South Uist, out of
280 children in the schools, 255 were of the older faith as against
25 Protestants, the Roman Catholics were allowed no voice in the
selection of a teacher. As the Archbishop truly said, the majority
had the law on their side, but as the proprietor and factors were on
the other, they were afraid to enforce it.
The Chairman of the
Commission pointedly replied that such a matter might well be
referred to the sense of the ratepayers at the next School Board
Election, and something has been done, though we still found some
Protestant teachers in the island. What, to our thinking, was more
serious, some of the Roman Catholic teachers, since elected, were
Irishmen and could not speak Gaelic, and though native
pupil-teachers supply the want to a certain extent, it is a
cumbersome and unsatisfactory method to instruct a number of young
children, intelligent it may be, but stupefied by want of
nourishment and often wet and cold, by means of a foreign language.
The attention of the Roman Catholic authorities in some of their
many admirable training schools, might well be turned to this
question of supplying Gaelic-speaking teachers for the schools of
the Islands. Also, in these days of lack of work for women, it
should be remembered that there is a very imperfect supply of
Gaelic-speaking nurses. “District” nurses to look after people in
their own homes, are perhaps the sorest need of the islanders.
Happily one nurse speaking the language of the people and able to
give them advice and instruction, is established in the admirably
arranged Bute Hospital and Dispensary at Dalibrog which, though
built and maintained at the sole cost of a Roman Catholic, is at the
service of Catholics and Protestants alike and is freely used by
all, even those from distant islands, (Barra, Eriskay, and Benbecula),
who have to cross a dangerous minch or tedious ford as the case may
be, as well as to take a journey of, perhaps, twelve or fifteen
miles in a country destitute of any public conveyance, possessing
indeed very few conveyances of any kind.
The work of the
hospital roaches even further than the care of the sick only. While
everything is done to show consideration for the feelings of the
people, as for example in having all the rooms on one floor, for a
staircase has all the terror of the unknown, and by, as far as
possible, adapting the food to familiar methods and materials, at
the same time advantage is taken of every opportunity of- giving
object-lessons in cleanliness, sanitation, and thrift. There is a
good garden in which, as far as climate and soil permit, a variety
of vegetables and even of flowers receive the care and attention
which the people are too hopeless to bestow on their unenclosed
patches of ground at home. Women, who are convalescent, are
encouraged in sewing and household work, and little children, whose
disease is often cold and hunger, receive that teaching of gentle
example and quiet self-restraint, which far outweighs the temporary
loss of Board school instruction.
The people of South
Uist, perhaps even more than those of other islands, live in
memories of the past. Reverence for the old and the sacred is a part
of the Highland temperament, and here, where the present has so
little to give, the past is especially precious.
A cross, known as
Crois nan Cnoca Breaca, stood —(part of it still remains)—on a
hillock, a little north of the present boundary of Ormiclet. It is
said that when the old Howmore parish Church, now a mere ruin, was
in use, the people coming from the south had to pass close to it,
and always knelt in prayer as they passed, kneeling towards the
Church, which was visible from this point. The lochs were then much
fuller than now, and there was no road possible between the outer
end of Loch Hollay and the Mol of Stoneybridge.
At Loch Eynort near
Na Haun, there is an altar built of loose stones. It is now covered
with bracken. Mass was said here years ago, and the spot is still
called Glaic na h-Altarach. Our informant’s mother had heard Mass
there.
An old woman in
Garrahilli, who is nearly eighty years of age, relates of her
grandfather, Donald M’lan, that in stormy weather, when there could
be no Mass at Bornish, he used himself to place a clean linen cloth
upon this old altar saying prayers for the people who gathered about
him. There is a tradition, which is remembered by a Ben More woman,
of the remains of an altar ’at Coire an t-Sagairt in Hecla, and
another in Sgalavat.
There are various
prophecies current in South Uist which appear to be still
unfulfilled, and should therefore be carefully recorded: that Uist
will yet be under grey geese and rats; that the sea in the west will
be so full of boats that one may step from one to the other; that
the old mansion at Bornish is to be burnt. The present occupier has
had a conflagration in the farm-steading but none in the house.
Other old prophecies
may have already received fulfilment. There is one that the
inhabitants of Uist would become so selfish that a daughter would
refuse necessaries to her own mother, possibly an allusion to the
severe struggle for life, which our own day has witnessed. Again,
that four signs should herald the misfortunes of the island. The
first was the white raven which one Angus of Arivullin saw and
killed with his own hand. He was drowned in Loch Eynort not long
after, and the family of Arivullin (the alleged birthplace of Flora
Macdonald),8 has faded out of sight; the second was the white crow
which old Angus, who remembers these sayings, saw at Kilbride just
before it was lost to the old family; the third that the living
would envy the dead, “and indeed that happened when they were
putting men out into the sea (i.e. at the time of tho Gordon
evictions), and much rather would they have been at home in their
own grave-yards”; and the fourth that charity would go away from the
land, “and true is it that but the other day a crofter said that
what was wrong with the island was that charity had gone out of the
country.”
It is said that the
last Bornish was urging some of his tenants to go to the
kelp-gathering when their own crops needed their attention, and one
of the men got angry and said that “it would not be long that they
would be reaping crops where he was now eating his food. And true is
it that Neil Campbell who was on the same land with him after he
became poor, actually planted cabbage on the site of the old
dining-room.”
“Big Margaret,” a
very old woman from whom many stories have been collected, says that
it has long been known that there would be a great army that would
stretch over South Uist, from the Benbecula Ford on the-north to the
Sound of Eriskay on the south. It has been suggested that the search
parties which were scattered all over South Uist may be said to have
fulfilled this.
She says that her
father saw 300 men leave the Islands for the wars, eighty years ago
(probably the Peninsula War, one does not expect chronological
accuracy), and that it was only one leg that returned, that of Mac
Dhunchaidh 'ic ’ic Iain.
The islanders hold in
reverence certain little cells, about seven feet by six, which are
still to be found in places, and which are called in the Gaelic
“beds of devotion.” We saw and measured the ground plan of some such
cells in Mingulay and on the Stack Islands, and Father Allan records
one at Dalibrog. Another, now destroyed, is remembered at a spot
called Gairrahilli (holy section) near Heilibost (holy town). These
may have been places of religious retirement in the active days of
the religious houses, such as the nunnery at Nunton in Benbecula,
and possibly one at North Boisdale where, on the machair, some ruins
and tho traces of an underground passage may still be found.
An old woman, who had
many old-time stories, says that no one had ever prospered in Nun
ton in consequence of the desecration of Church lands, and she
produced many instances of the misfortunes of its inhabitants either
by bereavement or loss of worldly goods.
Of the middle
district of South Uist, the inhabitants of which are characterized
by a rough frankness, is said—
Stoneybridge of the
tangles
Township of worst manners
Till you reach Hogh.
Hoghmore (= Great
Hogh, there is also Hogh Beg = little Hogh) seems to have been the
ecclesiastical centre in old days. There is a burial-ground of great
age containing the ruins of a Church of which the internal length is
nearly sixty feet, perhaps one of the largest in the Hebrides. There
are also some three or four chapels or oratories. Hogh is, moreover,
the birthplace of Neill MacEachain, the father of Marshal Macdonald,
Duke of Tarentum, who, in 1826, visited South Uist, the home of his
ancestors. It is said that he took away some stones from the cave of
Corodal, and some earth from his birthplace, and that they were
buried with him.
Another spot which
cannot fail to be of interest is Airidh Mhuillin (pronounced
Arivullin) = “the shealing of the mill,” the birthplace of Flora
Macdonald.
In Loch Eynort there
is a rock still pointed out as the place where one of Cromwell’s
frigates, sent to subdue the natives, went to pieces. Once, k propos
of the Estate having exacted payment from the noble philanthropist
who built the only hospital in the Outer Hebrides, not only for the
ground it stands upon, but for the stone of which it is built, I
remarked to a native who was thankfully profiting by its benefits,
“The Estate ought to be grateful to anybody who uses up any amount
of the superfluous rock of this island.” “Ah, but there’s one rock,”
he said, “that South Uist would be sorry to want!” (that is, to
miss), and this, we found, was the historical rock in Loch Eynort.
It is obvious that
South Uist is not without its interests. It is less easy to convey
to the stranger that, in spite of all its wrongs, its sorrows, its
deprivations, it is, as Lord Napier has said, “ a land invested with
so deep a charm.” It is the charm which Wordsworth has expressed for
us in such poems as “The Daisy,” “The Lesser Celandine,” “The
Solitary Reaper.” It is the land where one learns
To look on Nature, not
as in the hour
Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes
The still sad music of humanity
Nor harsh, nor grating, though of ample power
To chasten and sulxlue.
The lines, however,
most often in one’s thoughts under the grey skies of South Uist are
those more practical, because the fruit of personal knowledge, of
Sheriff Nicolson (LL.D.), a member of [the Crofters’ Commission who,
poet that he was, was deeply sensitive to the soul-sorrows, even
more than to the physical needs of these unhappy people :
See that thou kindly
use them, O man!
To whom God giveth
Stewardship over them, in thy short span,
Not for thy pleasure!
Woe be to them who choose for a clan
Four-footed people! [i.e. who evict people from their homes to make
room for sheep.]
Blessings be with you, both now and aye
Dear human creatures. |