LEAVING
the wilder country north and north-west of Lewis, and crossing
endless miles of grey moorland, diversified only by black patches of
peat, or grey lochs of sullen water, we come to Stornoway. Here we
have paved streets and rows of shops, several varieties of Churches,
even villas with “bedded out” gardens, which would pass muster in a
London suburb —a place where people pay calls, read the ladies’
papers, and have afternoon tea.
Just as one thinks of kelp and Tyree, of poverty and South Uist, of
officialism and Loch Maddy, so one inevitably associates Stornoway
with fish and education. The shops and the villas and the
church-going finery are an accident, the real Stornoway smells of
fish and reeks of education; and in regard to both interests one
finds much that is characteristic, much that well repays one for
inquiry.
In spite of considerable difference of detail and surroundings, the
fishery problem is much the same in all the Islands. In Stornoway,
however, the capital of the fishing world of the west coast, it
naturally reaches its climax; and had the relations between
proprietor and people been such as they are in South Uist, or even
Tyree, the brave little town would never have arrived at its present
degree of prosperity.
But the people, in spite of occasional errors on both sides, have
been generously and considerately treated; and in Stornoway, with
its shops and hotels and Churches, its villas and gardens, its
harbour, its orderly officials, its police, its poorhouse, its
courts, its Banks, its general activity, we see what can be done,
under fair conditions, by the same people who, otherwise dealt with,
are condemned, wholesale, as idle and ungrateful.
Even in Lewis, where the industry has reached its height, where the
facilities for transport are so much better than elsewhere, and
where there is some cooperation and local organization, we are told
by those most cognizant of the subject that the population can never
be supported by the fisheries alone, that the fishing-trade can
never be much more than a help to the people, that every acre
annexed for sport is subtracted from the living of the poor.
The minister of Uig, giving evidence before the Commission and
speaking from a life-long familiarity with the conditions of the
people, stated: “ There is a notion prevalent with some that the
people, or at least many of them, should become exclusively
fishermen, and that this would leave them better off than they are
at present. I wish very strongly to impress upon the Commissioners
the folly of this view and the danger of entertaining it. The
herring-fishing is carried on for two months of the year on the
east-side of the island. During the remainder of the year the native
population prosecute the ling-fishing exclusively. I should also
mention that for two or three months in the year they go as hired
men to the east-coast herring-fishing.”
The east-coast fishing, though very variable, may in certain years
be remunerative. The men go mainly to Peterhead and Fraserburgh, and
take their chance, following the herring round the coast, and
selling it at so much a cran, i.e. a deep barrel. Often they bring
homo from £20 to £30 each, which supports their families through the
worst of the winter. Then, returning early in September, they fish
for lythe and saithe, while the women get in the harvest.
The lobster fishing, once profitable, is now declining, and no pains
are taken to cultivate oysters, which might do well in the calm
lochs and bays of the east coast, if only some one with capital
could take the matter in hand. It is out of the question for the
people themselves to undertake the experiment, the first step of
which is to lodge £60 in advance, with the certainty of other costs
to follow.
“The Crown,” says Mr. Anderson Smith, “is the most mercenary and
least satisfactory landlord to deal with. Others may be negligent,
the Crown is oppressive,” from which we gather that there were some
islands with which Mr. Anderson Smith had not made personal
acquaintance! He points out (op.
cit.
p. 415) that what is required is some cheap and simple means of
getting grants for oyster or lobster beds and other small
undertakings, and, above all, compensation for improvements on
Crown-fishing with no Government rackrenting allowed. On the part of
the proprietors there should be the granting of facilities for
building small piers, and right of settlement at reasonable cost on
lands near to the foreshores.
The salmon rivers are, of course, a feature of the “ sport,” so
productive—to the landlord. We read that in old times salmon was
sold at a penny a pound, and the “ Indweller,” already quoted,
speaking of a river in Barvas, half-a-mile long, which connects a
freshwater loch with the sea, says that “in 1585 it was observed
that there were 3,000 great salmon taken in that small portion of
river.”
It is also alleged by older writers, as well as by Mr. Anderson
Smith, that many species of fish of little value elsewhere are firm
and well-tasted here.
The fishing operations, even from the practical point of view—all
questions of the science of breeding and preservation apart—are far
more complicated than the mere outsider is at all likely to realize.
A recent writer in the
Quarterly Review,
July, 1901, touches on some interesting points, which he has
obviously observed for himself, a privilege which has not been ours.
We talk about “poor” fishermen and “ignorant” fishermen; it is a
becoming lesson in humility to learn that the mere question of nets
is one involving much knowledge and experience.
“Four different kinds of net may be enumerated. The trawl scrapes
the sandy bed of the sea, scooping up everything that moves in its
path. The trammel is a fixed wall of meshes, generally laid among
the rocks, with deep purses, in which the wandering fish entangle
themselves. The drift net, which may be likened to a moving trammel,
drives through the water ahead of the smacks, and enmeshes every
herring or mackerel that strikes it. Omitting some less important
patterns of net, we have as our fourth typo the seine or sean, a
corked and leaded net, which is ‘ shot ’ with the aid of a rowing
boat close in shore in a circle. Its method of working is thus a
compromise between trawl and trammel.
“Each method of netting has its followers, and the trawlers,
drifters and seaners of any large fishing community may be regarded
professionally, and in some parts indeed socially as well, as
distinct castes, the adept at one method being often totally
unfitted to earn his living at any other. Dire necessity, it is
true, may compel fishermen of one class to turn their hands to
another, but such transferred activity is rare. This distinction
between the various sections of the fishing population is scarcely
common knowledge with those who have not resided for a time in their
midst; and we have even recounted instances of profound ignorance on
the subject, in gentlemen who sit for these fishing constituencies
in the House of Commons, and are proudly alluded to with a conscious
dignity of ownership by those hard-worked electors, with the nature
of whose occupations they are so slightly acquainted. To the
uninitiated, fishing appears to be unskilled rather than skilled
labour. A fisherman is just a fisherman, and not a drifter, or
seaner, or hooker; and few persons are aware of the deep-rooted
prejudices and jealousies that demarcate the men of different
methods.”
It seems almost incredible that there should not be “as good fish in
the sea as ever came out of it,” but such is in fact the melancholy
truth; and just as England is looking forward to the extinction of
her coal mines, so the west-coast fisherman is not only looking
forward, but in certain cases is already experiencing the exhaustion
of his fishing grounds ; and in both cases to some extent for the
same reasons—that the alien is allowed to profit, and that it does
not seem to be any one’s business to prevent the individual from
enriching himself at the expense of the ultimate public good. Even
as I write, the newspapers are reporting the co-operation of Welsh
coal owners with a view to the direction and organization of output;
but again and again our enlightened Government entirely refuses to
consider the enforcing of any such policy, in regard to fish, as the
coal owners are voluntarily proposing for themselves.
And yet the fishing question is of more pressing consequence because
more remediable. If those who cut down the forests of the outer
Hebrides had planted as well as destroyed, it would have been to the
permanent advantage of the health, climate and cultivation of the
Islands; like these selfish destroyers of old, with no thought for
posterity, our lawgivers are absolutely refusing to give attention
alike to the possible replenishing and the imminent exhaustion of
our waters.
The most evident of the grievances calling for redress is that of
the abuse of the alien steam-trawler, which sweeps the bottom of the
sea, and destroys far more than it takes away; disturbing the
spawning-beds, and shoals of school-fish, crushing young fish in the
beams, and breaking tackle and fishing gear spread by other
fishermen. Such attempts at legislation as have already been made
have been mainly in the direction of restriction of area, but this,
as has already been pointed out, is constantly evaded, and a
trawling-boat will often come in by night, do infinite damage even
before it is perceived, and be off before any steps can be taken to
arrest its movements.
Experts tell us, moreover, that even the methods of the fishermen
themselves, both those belonging to the district and the visitors
from the east-coast, are not entirely blameless, and require
supervision and control. Be that as it may, few seek to deny that
while the division of profits is spread over an ever extended area,
the “bad years” are increasingly frequent.
To come, as we did only last June, from the repose and silence of
other islands into the Babel of a Stornoway evening, is a curious
and surprising experience. The pearl-coloured tints of sky and sea
which follow a calm sunset in the Hebrides, the distant purple
hills, the grey plain of the open country, all are there ; but the
rare meeting of a home-returning shepherd, of a girl carrying a
basket of peat for the evening fire, of the old woman weary with a
long day’s herding, all friends, known to us by name and kindly
acknowledging our evening greeting, this, the familiar human
element, is wanting. Instead we have a motley crowd, largely of
strangers, speaking in tongues that sound harsh and strange; for
only here and there one catches the usually predominant Gaelic;
instead, there is the plaintive sing-song of the low country Scot,
the guttural of the east-coast, the provincial utterance of the East
Riding of Yorkshire, or the coast of Norfolk and Suffolk, or,
stranger still, the Babel-sounds of Dutch or German, or even
Russian. Even the Jew is not wanting on this Rialto of the north.
The day’s work is done, the night work not yet begun. The men have
perhaps had their afternoon rest, and are smoking their evening pipe
; the women, in holiday attire, are walking up and down or standing
about in bright-coloured groups, knitting the inevitable stocking,
and, often enough, betraying their own local origin by its make and
quality. No sportsman, catered for with dainty fingers at
country-house firesides, can show “tops” to compare for skill and
elaboration with these produced by the fish-curing girls of some of
the Islands and east-coast stations; patterns never yet written
down, designs handed from generation to generation, marvellous to
the uninitiated. It is to be for ever regretted that the
introduction by wandering pedlars and visitants from Glasgow, of
hideous aniline dyes, has been encouraged by English purchasers, and
that the people are learning to buy inferior wool of the crudest
reds and greens instead of using the fleeces of their own sheep and
the beautiful colourings of the lily-roots and heather-tops which
have been their pride and distinction for generations. All is
decorous and orderly; their dresses varied and picturesque, ranging
from the “mutch” of the east-coast fishwife to the conventional form
and livid colouring of the English girls from Grimsby or Yarmouth.
The local costume, however carefully reminiscent of last year’s
visitor, generally betrays itself from lack of variety in form or
material, and we traced a trimming of wavy braid, probably imported
by some merchant in Stornoway, through half the villages in the
island. One always reflected with satisfaction that the flimsy
stuffs of mainland manufacture, with which the native girls were
rivalling their summer visitants, would soon perish in such a
climate and with such service, and that before long they would be
back in their own tweeds of softer colouring and more dignified
outline. Meanwhile the gay colourings were not unacceptable among
the sober tints of earth and sky.
At sunrise the whole scene is changed. The harbour is a forest of
masts, the sails are folded away; here and there a lantern, fastened
to the mast, has been forgotten, and the light is dimly twinkling in
the early sunshine. In every boat men are hauling up from the bottom
the great red-brown nets full of silver fish, while scores of girls
with bare heads and shortened skirts stand in orderly rows beside
great wooden troughs, into which the gleaming spoils are cast, in
deep basketfuls. Then, with incredible rapidity and a skill learnt
from danger avoided, they slit and gut the fish, casting them, one
by one, into the barrels which stand in rows beside them. How the
palms of their hands escape a horrible accident a hundred times a
day is a problem to the uninitiated, but we are assured that
accidents are very rare. The island-women are said to be especially
skilful, and their services in much demand. The Dutch fishermen cure
for themselves, and the east-coast men bring women with them, but
extra hands are often wanted. Stornoway alone possesses some eighty
or ninety lassies, and some two thousand inhabitants are engaged
just now in fishing; so with the temporary immigration the
fishing-population is very large at the present time, although we
are assured that some two-thirds of the foreign fleet has already
gone elsewhere, a fact which, in face of the close-packed forest of
masts, it is difficult to apprehend. The scene is curiously
characteristic. There is none of the chatter which accompanies any
gregarious work in the fishing-quarters of Dieppe and Boulogne. Now
and then the men on the boats shout to each other, or to the women
ashore, but there is no mere talk. The scene however is not silent.
The air is rent with the shrieks of thousands of gulls, and the
flapping of their wings as they hover in myriads, darting and
swooping at the refuse thrown to them, is distinctly audible. They
are the scavengers of the occasion, taking a useful and definite
share of the work in progress.
As we turn away in the direction of our hotel, which, facing the
bay-head, affords us a lingering view of the scene, we meet certain
lounging gentlemen whose appearance might perplex a stranger. No
tourists are they, affecting the air of sportsmen; no real sportsmen
affecting nothing at all; but trim and well-dressed, unmistakably
commercial, canny Scots some of them, silent English, voluble
Frenchmen, heavy German, even the Dutchman whom we saw last night in
his wooden shoes, now alert, and with an eye to business. Merchants
they are, every one of them, waiting till the fish shall be cleaned,
salted, and measured into crans to be sold in open market and
carried off in the little steamboats that are standing outside in
the bay. Some, it may be, however, have a contract with certain
boats and do not buy as the fish comes in, as do others.
An important and interesting feature of Stornoway life is that it is
one of the depots of the Naval Reserve for the west of Scotland,
and, naturally, a centre of attraction towards naval life for the
whole of the Long Island. The particular aspect in which the Naval
Reserve is presented to most of us is that of the coastguard, which
is entirely recruited from able-bodied navy men who have seen nine
years’ service, and who are moreover kept up to a high standard of
efficiency by regular drill and inspection, and are ready and liable
to be called upon at any hour for active sea-service.
The primary and obvious duty of the coastguard is of course the
protection of our shores; but when one passes the little
white-washed stations with their flagstaff and parallelogram of
garden, on some lonely promontory overlooking the Atlantic, one
realizes that there must be work for them other than the prevention
of smuggling. And indeed their work as protectors of life and
property in such spots as these is both difficult and dangerous, for
they serve the Board of Trade and the Admiralty, as well as the
Customs, and on the storm-beaten shores of the west-coast of
Scotland they have a wide field for noble and quiet heroism. When
sitting comfortably at breakfast we read in the paper of a wreck
(off the Hebrides, it may be), and we say carelessly, “It is all
right, no life lost,” we little realize all that has probably been
dared and endured in cheating the hungry waves of their prey. When a
ship is in distress, the coastguard, on the look-out night and day,
signals or fires back an assurance of help at hand, and the
wonderful rocket apparatus is at once brought into use. The sending
of a line by means of a rocket so that it shall arrive on board a
ship tossing wildly on a boiling sea, while a heavy gale is madly
raging at every human effort, is often a difficult, sometimes a
hopeless task. Again and again the attempt is made against fearful
odds, and at last the coastguardsmen see their efforts rewarded, and
the line is drawn in ; the hawser follows, and the frail-looking
basket or “trousers-buoy” carries out the brave expert, and the
grand work of rescue begins. The coastguardsmen are not only the
last to leave the wreck, but, from the time she is left by the
captain and the crew, they become responsible for every spar and
every morsel of cargo which it may be possible to redeem from the
fury of the waves. The brief announcement which we read so
carelessly may be the record of deeds of endurance and heroism
hardly to be paralleled in the annals of the Victoria Cross.
Often the coastguardsmen have to spend hours in the water conveying
help, it may be, to fellow-creatures struggling in the waves, or
perilously floating on rafts and spars. The victims of the shipwreck
are taken to the coastguard station and fed and warmed, often
restored to life, and kindly cared for till help reaches them.
The Naval Reserve, moreover, supplies our lighthouses. A visit to
the Skerryvore or the Dubh Eartach, or Barra Head, or the Flannan
Island lighthouse, is a revelation not only of human skill, but of
human endurance and heroism, which can hardly fail to produce a
permanent effect upon one’s view of life. Now and then some ghastly
tragedy, such as the Flannan Island catastrophe of last year,
reveals the hideous possibilities of lighthouse existence. We had a
talk with William Ross, the sole survivor, the one man who,
according to the regular rotation, happened to be on shore at the
time. He had photographs of his three companions, one of them a fine
young man, over six feet high, only twenty-nine years of age. “We
were all good friends,” he said, showing us a group of the four,
himself included; “and we never even had a chance to bury them.”
“And it might just as well have been himself,” his wife interjected,
looking round upon her bonnie children and her orderly home. And
then he told us how the weather being rough, those in the look-out
house were hardly surprised that the light should be obscured, as
was sometimes the case in a heavy sea-fog; but when the storm
somewhat subsided, and eleven days passed, and still no light shone
out, they became alarmed, and went across the dangerous minch, to
find not a trace of the three brave men upon whose life, as upon
their work, had fallen the silence of eternal darkness. The
lighthouse stands upon a perpendicular cliff, and some 200 feet down
the zig-zag path which leads to the landing-place, is a ledge or
small terrace, where various ropes and landing-gear are stored,
ready for use. It is supposed that the men may have gone down to
rescue implements, the loss of which would have been very serious,
and that they were swept away in the attempt. Looking at the
photograph of the scene, it seemed to us incredible that even the
fierce waves of the open Atlantic could reach such a height as this,
but our friend assured us that it not infrequently happened. He had
also been at the Skerryvore, but we could not wonder that he should
now feel unequal to further lighthouse work, and that the
authorities had considerately placed him in a coastguard station,
upon another and more accessible island, a post lonely and perilous
enough, but with none of the hideous possibilities of a home on a
solitary storm-beaten rock in the open Atlantic.
Such, varied by signalling to passing ships and by gun practice, is
the life of the men of the Naval Reserve, as none know better than
the islanders who see it in its most heroic and dangerous aspects.
It seemed to us therefore the more creditable, that no less than
2,558 men were drilled at Stornoway last year, including 567 newly
enrolled. By the courtesy of Mr. Beedle, the divisional officer, we
were allowed to see the buildings and apparatus in use, and to be
present at various kinds of drill, including that of the life-saving
apparatus and signalling to shore, which are perfectly understood by
all the men, and constantly practised. A rifle-range is rented from
the local Company of Artillery, and there is also a sea-range for
heavy guns. We learnt that 5,000 rounds are fired annually, and that
the practice is at a range of 600 yards. A certain number of men are
constantly under instruction, while those who have arrived at full
efficiency have to come up for inspection and drill for a fortnight
during the year, often walking immense distances for the purpose.
These visits are, however, a sort of festive occasion, and they
value the opportunity of intercourse with old friends. They are, for
the most part, of excellent physique, in spite of a life of poverty
and hardship, the larger number of them being crofters, cottars, and
crofter fishermen. Their average height is five feet eight, and many
are even up to six feet three. They showed the characteristic
Highland earnestness in all their work, and the intentness of their
expression when under instruction was almost painful to witness. All
considerations of public utility apart, such revelation of orderly
life, such discipline, such enforced neatness of appearance, dignity
of carriage and propriety of conduct and habits, as even the
temporary privilege of their life at the depdt permits, cannot fail
to modify their entire existence.
Their public utility can scarcely be over-rated. To quote the words
of Captain J. T. Newall, late Indian Staff Corps, and familiar with
the island and its people: “From an Imperial point of view, any
unnecessary expatriation of the islanders of the western coast would
be, as it has been, a national loss. These islands, Skye especially,
once formed a depot from which was drawn some of the finest fighting
material in the British Army. At present, in the Lews, there is a
considerable number of Navy Reserve men.”
He wrote in 1889, and I believe that under the present able
management, and the pleasant personal relations of the officers with
their Highland recruits, the number is considerably on the increase.
The lover of the Islands who is truly anxious for the development of
the best characteristics of the people cannot but rejoice at this.
The personal element, the influence of the chiefs has always been so
strong an incentive to the service of the country, that when this
was withdrawn, there seemed real danger of actual indifference to
public duty. Sir Walter Scott quotes an
Argyllshire chieftain who said, “I have lived to woeful days. When I
was young, the only question asked concerning a man’s rank was, how
many men lived on his estate; then it came to be how many black
cattle he could keep; but now they only ask how many sheep the lands
will carry.”
Six Highland regiments formed part of the conquering force at
Seringapatam, and we who have lived to see the horrors of the field
of Magersfontein may glory still in the brave deeds of our valiant
countrymen, perhaps all the braver and more glorious that their
incentive is the less.
Sheriff Nicolson’s poem,
A Highland Marching
Song, to the tune of
Angus O'Mhbrag,
should be learnt in every Highland school. He begins with a worthy
battle cry:
He
that wears the kilt should be
Erect and free as deer on heather.
When he hears the bag-pipe sound
His heart should pound like steed for battle.
Think of them who went before us,
Winning glory for the tartan.
Vainly did the mighty Roman
Check the Caledonian valour.
Still from each unconquered glen
Rose the men no yoke could fetter.
And then he proceeds to enumerate, with suitable epithet and
picturesque characterization, the deeds of the days of Bruce,
Montrose, Dundee and Prince Charlie. He reminds us of Fontenoy,
Culloden, Ticonderoga, Quebec, Aboukir, of the Peninsular War, of
Waterloo, of Alma, of the Mutiny and of the Ashantee War. The poem
was first written in 1865, and brought up to date to 1882, and
looking back over twenty years, we the more appreciate his,
From Cabul to Candahar
Glorious was the march with Roberts.
Nor shall he that war who ruled,
Donald Stewart, be forgotten.
And so with much annotation of accurate chronology, the poet presses
on to the key-note of the whole:
Where the doughtiest deeds are dared
Shall the Gael be forward pressing.
Where the Highland broad-sword wave
There shall graves be found the thickest.
But when they have sheathed the swords
Then their glory is to succour.
Hearts that scorn the thought of fear
Melt to tears at touch of pity.
Hands that fiercest smite in war
Have the warmest grasp for brothers.
And beneath the tartan plaid
Wife and maid find gentlest lover.
Think then of the name ye bear
Ye that wear the Highland tartan!
Jealous of its old renown
Hand it down without a blemish!
Angus O’Mhbrag!
Ho-ro! march together,
Angus O’Mh6rag.
Nothing less than the call upon Mliorag, the esoteric name of Prince
Charlie, can serve as fit peroration for such a battle-call as this.
It would be a vain and thankless task to represent to the Highlander
that their idol had feet of clay. More, it would be irrelevant. To
them the thought of Prince Charlie is the last utterance of the day
of romance, of enthusiasm, of love for the chiefs, of hatred of the
alien oppressor, — for them represented by the Duke of Argyll rather
than by the Elector of Hanover. The thought is cosmic, not
individual, the voice of a dying past, that lies “too deep for
tears.”
And so we come back, and truly it is not far to come, to the depot
of the Naval Reserve at Stornoway.
Here, as in the schools, we were interested in asking questions as
to family and clan, and we noted that 496 Macleods and 138
Mackenzies were drilled during the past year. We heard, moreover, of
an amusing episode when, on some occasion, an Angus Macleod being
required without further specification, the claims of no less than
forty Angus Macleods had to be considered!
The transition to the remaining prominent fact in the existence of
Stornoway is not remote from that of the elevating influences of the
Naval Reserve.
Heron, writing in 1794, whether humorous or ignorant it would be
hard to say, attributes the improvement in the Hebrides to the
family of Argyll, the soldiers of Cromwell, and the Society for
Promoting Christian Knowledge. The good old S.P.C.K., like all
reforming bodies, is used to being libelled and misunderstood, and
is doubtless strong enough to endure any propinquity which may be
thrust upon it! There is no question as to the good work it
accomplished in old times in the Hebrides, especially in the
direction of education, and I believe that the Society still
contributes £60 a year to the support of higher education in Lews.
In Martin we learn that even two hundred years ago Stornoway was in
the van of the education movement, and that in 1696 schools were
generally established. In 1774 there is a report upon education
which tends to show that at that time it was largely religious, as
it included religious teaching on two afternoons a week; “the
inspection of morals in and out of school”; and a day of real hard
work on Sundays. There was school, with religious teaching, from 7
to 9, from 10 to 12, and from 2 to 5. If the children did not go to
church at 11, being afterwards catechised on the sermon, they had a
sermon in school from 12 to 2. In 1803 we learn that the salaries of
teachers were raised—one cannot wonder if there may have been some
agitation on the question ! The scholars’ fees were very low,
2s.
6d.
per quarter and a guinea for extras, such as navigation, a subject
now constantly taught in the West Highland schools. There was a sort
of private academy known as Mackay’s School, where navigation, “the
big book of the sea,” was studied by men still living, who speak
gratefully of their old master, whose devotion to this particular
subject is recorded on his gravestone. He died in 1879.
When the School Board came to Stornoway in 1873, it found no schools
in its charge except the Parish School, which was closed, and the
teacher retired. As we hear that in 1865 there were some 2,500
children in the island not attending school at all, one feels that
the Parochial Inspectors must have had plenty of occupation!
However, the whole question took on a new aspect when Nicolson, a
native of the island, left a considerable sum of money for the
building and endowment of schools to benefit “the children of my old
schoolfellows.”
For six years these schools have been reported on by the Government
Inspectors in the most favourable terms, and they are constantly
enlarging their sphere and advancing in efficiency. Their leaving
certificates are now accepted in lieu of the preliminary
examinations for legal and civil service training, for the War
Office, the army, the English and Scotch Universities, and for the
Royal College of Surgeons. The course of study ranges from
kindergarten
work up to preparation for the Universities. Commercial life is
equally kept in view, and includes modem languages, mathematics,
shorthand, and typewriting. There is a physical laboratory, the
girls, especially, have teaching in botany, and half an hour every
morning is devoted to religious instruction.
The stranger probably looks around at the modern villas and
enterprising shops of Stornoway, and concludes that it is from such
homes as these that the Nicolson School gathers its material, which
is true enough so far as it goes; but, mingling with the
well-dressed girls and boys (taught together after the Scotch
fashion, be it observed), are large numbers of bare-footed children,
of children whose vernacular is Gaelic, to whom English and Latin
are equally foreign languages, who—as we were quietly directed to
observe—go up and down the handsome school staircase clinging to the
railing with both hands, so absolute a novelty is a second floor to
children brought up in “black houses” with a roof of sods, walls
without mortar, probably a fire in the middle of the room, and a
plank, a box or two, and a few shelves for sole furniture. An almost
incredible—except in the Highlands an impossible—fact, is that the
presence of a considerable number of these children is due to the
arrangement in 1894 of a bursary scheme, for bringing into the
school the best pupils from rural schools, who come to live in
Stornoway on
an income of ten pounds a year. Imagine
the English villages with all their advantages, all their
experience, all the difference of their conditions, under auy
conceivable County Council arrangement, sending, wanting to send,
being persuaded to send, finding the notion conceivable of sending,
their little Charlies and Florences alone, on an income of ten
pounds, to study the classics or modern languages, not across miles
of peat-bog among strangers speaking a foreign tongue, but even by
train to the capital of their county!
The quiet dignity of the girls, the matter-of-course courtesy of the
boys, is a tribute to the success of the system of bringing them
together as part of the ordinary course of things from the very
first. Moreover, the girls receive the highest of all tributes to
their potentialities, in the fact that a successful student is not
regarded as a
lusus naturce,
that a woman may exhibit intellectual ability, and capacity for
making her way, without exciting either misplaced admiration or
irrelevant surprise.
Martin tells us that women “were anciently denied the use of writing
in the islands to prevent love-intrigues; their parents believed
that Nature was too skilful in that matter, and needed not the help
of education, and, therefore, that writing would be of dangerous
consequence to the weaker sex.”
The Highlands, if not the rest of Britain, have, however, happily
outgrown a point of view so elementary as that of supposing that a
woman is necessarily deprived of common sense and self-respect by
the mere accident of sex. Moreover, the fact that the girls of the
Nicolson School have distinguished themselves in such subjects as
point to future plans of womanly work, rather than to any vulgar
“equality of the sexes,” suggests that absence of strain and
abnormal intellectual effort which has done so much to make our
professional “clever woman,” educated beyond her brain power, the
uninteresting animal she is. During the past six years the
dux
of the Nicolson School has twice been a girl. Whereas the lads have
been foremost in science and in classics, the girls have done best
in modern languages—English, French, and German. It is the girls who
have taken prizes in botany and who have shown special aptitude for
shorthand and drawing from nature. Girls and boys are equally
successful in the theory of music. In all languages, Greek and
Latin, or French, German and English, composition is taught, and the
boys who work in the practical laboratory are encouraged to make
their own instruments.
Perhaps in America, possibly in Germany, we might find some such
combination of teaching and receptivity, but nowhere but in the
Highlands could we find quite such social conditions as here. It
takes Caledonia to “ cultivate literature on a little oatmeal!”
It was with very real pleasure that we found to how great an extent
the iuferior teachers of the school had been trained within its
walls, and how sympathetic they were with their pupils in
consequence, meeting them on their own ground, and, above all,
addressing them in their own tongue. Among all the words of wisdom
to be found in the
Report of the
Crofter Commission none, as it seems to
us, shows more real love for the people, more true knowledge of
their lives than the following
“We think that the discouragement and neglect of the native language
in the education of Gaelic speaking children, which have hitherto so
largely influenced the system practised in the Highlands, ought to
cease, and that a knowledge of that language ought to be considered
one of the primary qualifications of every person engaged in the
carrying out of the national system of education in Gaelic-speaking
districts, whether as school inspectors, teachers, or compulsory
officers.”
Dr. Johnson spoke severely of the absurdities of “the native
language being proscribed in the schools, and the children taught to
read a language which they may never use nor understand.”
Things have changed since Johnson’s time, and the opportunity for
the islanders to make use of English, and the advantage of their
familiarity with it, have greatly increased; but the futility of
trying to instruct children entirely in a foreign language is too
obvious to dwell upon. It was a matter looked into even by the
S.P.C.K. in 1824, and we read in the report that after careful
enquiry they came to the conclusion “that great injury had been done
by the neglect of the vernacular language.”
There are some 300,000 Gaelic-speaking persons in Scotland, and
surely such a population should be specially considered, as indeed
it has been, by the central if not by the local authorities; for the
code of 1878 gave permission for examinations to be conducted in
Gaelic. In the more enlightened districts, the schoolmasters
themselves are becoming conscious of the folly of the wholly English
system, and I know of one most praiseworthy instance, in the island
of Tyree, where a schoolmaster, with the kind and capable assistance
of the parish minister, has absolutely learnt Gaelic, and is now,
unlike many head-masters, in a position to have direct intercourse
with the children under his care.
Professor Blackie, than whom the western Highlands had no truer
friend, reflects upon “the stupid system of neglecting the mother
tongue, and forcing English down the throat of innocent children who
can no more be changed into Saxons by a mere stroke of pedagogy than
the heather on the hills can blush itself into roses, from hearing a
lecture by the professor of botany.”
Professor Blackie, moreover, is not only an advocate for the
education of the Gael in his own language, but both by example and
precept he has done much to stimulate its acquisition by the
stranger, and he relates how, after working his way through the
Gaelic Bible with the help of Monro’s Grammar and MacAlpines
Dictionary, he was able to read various prose works, and so to
acquire a considerable vocabulary in a language which he describes
as a “very fine and polished dialect, rather too polished, somewhat
like French, and especially adapted for music.” And indeed for
students very inferior to Professor Blackie the acquisition of a
reading acquaintance with Gaelic, which has so many roots in common
with more familiar tongues, is comparatively easy. “ It is not,” he
says in another place
(Language and
Literature of the Highlands of Scotland,
p. 21 )> “it is not, therefore, the difficulty to the learner, but
the ignorance, indifference, laziness and prejudice of the teacher,
that makes the reading of Gaelic so
shamefully neglected in many Gaelic schools. It is an act of
intellectual suicide of which an intelligent people should be
ashamed."
To the stranger it is not the establishment of a reading, but of a
speaking acquaintance with Gaelic which presents the supreme
difficulty. The relation between the appearance and pronunciation of
the commonest words, makes one feel inclined to assert that there
are two languages, the spoken and the written. One says,
Kem mar hd shiv t
— How do you do? and one 'torites,
Cia mar tha
sibh. One says,
Hatch meshu colla
riv—I’ll come with you; but one
ivrites,
Theicl mise
comhla ribh.
It seems as if the only way to spell a Gaelic word is to begin by
eliminating every letter, which by the light of nature seems likely
to be required. That it is an extraordinarily expressive language,
peculiarly rich in epithets, no one would venture to dispute. It is
popularly described as the finest tongue “to swear in, to make love
in, and to shuffle out of a bargain in,” the last probably because
it contains no direct equivalent for “yes” and “no” When one remarks
that it is a fine day, your interlocutor replies, “A fine day it
is.” “You say so” (reminding one of the biblical “Thou sayest it ”),
or, “I’m sure,” are courteous forms of agreement with your
statement. For story-telling the language is unequalled, as any one
may discover from a study of the
High-land
Tales collected and almost literally
translated by Campbell of Islay.
He, by the way, goes even further than Blackie in denouncement of
the policy of stamping out the tongue of the people.
“I find,” he writes
(Highland Tales,
vol. iv., page 358), “that lectures are delivered to Sunday-school
children to prove that Gaelic is part of the Divine curse, and
Highland proprietors tell me that ‘it is a bar to the advancement of
the people.’ But if there is any truth in this assertion, it is
equally true, on the other hand, that English is a bar to the
advancement of proprietors if they cannot speak to those who pay
their rents; and it is the want of English, not the possession of
Gaelic, which retards the advancement of those who seek employment
where English is spoken. So Highland proprietors should learn Gaelic
and teach English.” |