WHEN a great man dies, even after doing imperishable
work, it may sometimes be that his work suffers skaith, and that the full
value of it may not be seen until after many days. It was so with King
Robert the Bruce. His work was one of the greatest which it is given to men
to do. He did not merely win a Crown—that may be a very small matter. He
made a Nation—and that must always be a very great one. He gave to a weak,
and a scattered, and a divided people one common object of ambition, and
that a noble object. He welded and disciplined diverse and antagonistic
races into one people seeking to establish that national independence on
which alone can be raised the structure of liberty and of law. He left a
profound impression on the mind of his people. It is one of the great merits
of the curious history, of the life of Bruce, which has been left to us by a
Monk of the same century, that its laborious rhymes are more true to fact
than to the poetic spirit. There are, however, some passages of true poetry,
and there is one passage in particular of singular beauty, force, and
pathos. It is the passage in which the Chronicler relates the last scene of
all—when in his castle of Cardross, looking down on the junction of the
Leven and the Clyde, the old Lion had lain down to die. When the sense of
death had smitten him, when he had called his Knights around him and told
them of his long- cherished purpose—the purpose of all knightly piety in
that age—to fight against the Infidel,—when he had begged that some one
might be chosen who could at least carry his heart to the war where it had
long wished to be,—when the good Lord James Douglas had accepted this
mission, when the dying King had given his last instructions—when the Church
had shrived him—with "very repentance" Robert the Bruce gave up the ghost.
Then the Historian, after the manner of Livy and other ancient authors, puts
into the mouth of those who surrounded the deathbed of this great man, a
Song of Lament which well expresses the sense of loss which must ever
accompany the departure of a powerful Personality from the world:-
"All
our Defence," they said, "alas!
And he that all our comfort was,
Our wit and
all our governing,
Alas! is here brought till ending!
His worship, and his
mickle might,
Made all that were with him so wycht,
That they might never
abased be,
While forouth them they might him see.
Alas! what shall we
do or say?
For on life while he lasted, ay
With all our neighbours dred
were we:
And in till many ser contrie
Of our Worship sprang the renown
And
that was all for his persoune."
These touching words were not more
touching than profoundly true. The personal qualities of great men are in
all ages powerful. In rude ages, when the foundations of society are being
laid, they are the root and spring of everything. But hero-worship, the
disposition to follow and be led by any one with strength of hand, like
everything else that is good, may have its dangers too. If the men whom
others follow be men like Bruce, with some fruitful principle of conduct and
some really great objects of pursuit, fidelity to their standard may well be
the very highest form of public virtue. But if, on the contrary, the men
whom others follow are the reverse of all this—if they embody nothing but
the lower instincts of mankind, and have no objects of pursuit higher than
intertribal feuds or the lust of power or gain, then fidelity to Chiefs and
Leaders may be, and often is, the very greatest danger to which Society can
be exposed. It has broken up great Empires, and has thrown back into utter
barbarism national governments which had been full of promise.
No man knew
this better than Robert Bruce, nor did any man know so well from what part
of his Kingdom this great danger would be likely to arise. If the thoughts
of his deathbed were fixed upon the fields of Palestine, the anxieties and
the cares of his last days of health had been wisely directed to duties
which lay nearer home. We have seen that many of his Celtic subjects had
followed him with unswerving fidelity, even when his fortunes had been at
the lowest. He had not only trusted them, and disciplined them along with
men of other races, but he had placed upon them special reliance as his own
Battalions of reserve in the pitched battles of Bannockburn and Byland. But
he knew also that whilst under good Leadership they were brave and faithful,
they might as easily be equally brave and equally faithful to other Chiefs,
whose first care was not for the Scottish Kingdom. Accordingly, in the
Treaty which he negotiated with Edward iii. in the last year of his life,
1328, and which was ratified by the English Parliament of Northampton in
that year, he took care to extract from that Sovereign an Article pledging
him not to intrigue with or support the Celtic subjects of the Scottish
Crown in the Western Isles. For himself, he gave a corresponding pledge that
he would abstain from similar methods of attack through the rebellious Celts
of Ireland. It is impossible to mistake the significance of this provision.
Robert Bruce knew that when handled and led by true patriots, the Celtic
element in the population of his Kingdom would be an element of strength;
but he knew also and perhaps foresaw that when led by anarchical or
traitorous Chiefs, they would be a source of weakness and of danger. How
near and how great that danger was it was not possible for even Bruce to
see. Let us look for a moment at how it arose and what it teaches.
In the
long and happy processes of amalgamation between the Celtic and Teutonic
races, which went on in Scotland during the 200 years between the reign of
Malcolm Canmore and the reign of Robert the Bruce, there never was any
recognition of such a thing as the Irish "Pale." There never was a circle of
favoured Provinces within which the people enjoyed the advantages of
civilised and written laws, and outside of which a whole Nation was left to
Archaic usages in the last stages of decay, corruption, and abuse. Wherever
the authority of the Crown extended, there was one system of law regulating
the rights and obligations of men. At one early period, some special
provisions were made for respecting and protecting certain local usages much
valued by the Celts of Galloway—just as under the Norman Sovereigns of
England respect was paid to such local customs as Gavelkind in Kent. But
never in any part of Scotland, once it had been brought under the National
Monarchy, were Knights and Barons encouraged or allowed to hold property and
to exercise powers under the old desolating practices of Celtic Feudalism.
The remotest Earldoms and Baronies of the Highlands had been brought under
the law of definite and Chartered rights, and the most powerful of the
Chiefs had found it for their own interest to impose the same limitations
and obligations upon their subordinate Vassals and Tenants. Somerled
himself, the great Celtic Lord of the Isles, who was killed when invading
the Lowlands of Strathclyde in the middle of the Twelfth Century (1164), had
adopted and enforced the system of written Charters. So far therefore, as
acknowledged Law and the duties of loyalty were concerned, these had been
universally established long before the reign of Bruce. Indeed, this had
been well settled eleven years before he was born (July 12, 1274). The
Celtic Chiefs and people of the Hebrides had been allowed their choice—to
emigrate with their property, or, remain- ing, to be governed in future by
Scottish laws. They do not seem to have had any reluctance in transferring
their allegiance from the Sons of Haco to the descendants of Malcolm
Caninore. By a treaty with Norway in 1266, Alexander iii., Bruce's
predecessor in the Throne had secured to the Crown of Scotland the
Sovereignty of the Isles, and from that date forward there never was any
doubt or question of the rightful or legal supremacy of the common Law and
Statutes of the Realm over the whole of the western Highlands and the
Western Isles."
But although there was no "Pale" in Scotland beyond which
the common laws and statutes of the Realm were out of place, there was a
very large part of that Realm within which those laws could with difficulty
be enforced. Not only remoteness and inaccessibility of geographical
position, but the embodiment and predominance of Celtic Feudalism in the
organisation of the Clans, placed in the hands of innumerable Chiefs a
social and political power which was practically absolute. Removed from the
centres of national life and interest, caring nothing for them, and
engrossed with their own local ambitions and petty feuds, the Chiefs and
population of all the Islands, and of a great part of the adjacent mainland,
were a perpetual thorn, and at times a source of real danger, in the side of
the Scottish monarchy and nation. They exhibited in curious perfection the
operation of a tendency in human society, analogous to the tendency which
Darwin detects in animal structures,—to revert to an older type. I do not
believe in the Savage origin of Man. But it is historically certain, that
all races of which we know anything have passed through stages of
comparative barbarism. There is an innate tendency under certain conditions
to go back to these. We feel it even as individuals. In the midst of our own
highly developed civilisation we are conscious, in sentiment at least, of
the charm of stories depicting a "wild life." In a few cases, and among the
poorer classes, this tendency breaks through the bounds of sentiment, and
passes into the realities of action. Darwin has told us how he was struck by
the condition of the poorest savages in the world, the natives of Tierra del
Fuego, when he saw a canoe full of them alongside his ship, and among them a
woman who, naked herself, was suckling an equally naked child, whilst the
snow and sleet of that pitiless climate were beating against her breast. Yet
scenes hardly less piteous may often be seen among ourselves. There are men,
women, and children—whole families, who in Scotland and England betake
themselves to a life in the open air. Often with scanty clothing, and
nothing to shelter them but a ragged tent, they brave the wettest seasons
and the severest winters. I have seen a poor woman nursing a child under
conditions of exposure hardly less apparently miserable than the mother whom
Darwin saw in the Straits of Magellan. Yet the love of a wild, and almost
savage life, is so strong on these wayside dwellers that it is almost
impossible to reclaim them. I have known of houses being given to them, and
opportunities of work; but the old instinct returns, and the old life is
resumed. The same tendency, and a like result, takes place on a large scale
when whole tribes of men enter upon a backward course. More gradually, and
with no violent contrasts to make the changes visible or striking in any
high degree, communities and nations may deviate from the path of
civilisation, and wander back, without a single regret or sense of loss, to
the ways of barbarism.
But the wild life of nations, and a relapse into
its habits and pursuits, is a very different and a much more serious affair
than in the case of individuals. The love of war is one of the most
universal of these pursuits, and it has often been the most destructive.
There is good reason to believe that to this cause alone was due the ruin of
a civilisation in the New World which had made great progress, and the
re-subjection of a great part of that Continent under the foot of the hunter
and the savage. It is well worthy of observation, also, that there are some
races more prone than others to such relapse, and this, too, from elements
in the character which are in themselves eminently attractive. A quick and
imaginative temperament, with strong passions and deep emotions, is
precisely that which is most open to the love of adventure, most easily
swayed by ambition, most readily incited by hatred or by revenge. Delight in
songs and legends of the past, in which strength and courage, or both
combined with cunning, are the great objects of worship, tend to keep alive,
and to transfuse with intense reality, the feuds and animosities of the dead
into the memory and hearts of the 4iving. A people with such gifts, and with
these gifts so unregulated and so perverted, may not only be in danger
themselves of a relapse into barbarism, but may even have power to drag down
men of other races who come within the circle of their influence. Just as in
many individual men and women there are indefinable sources of attraction,
which consist in Charm —sources of attraction which give them a power over
others far beyond any reasonable measure, so it is with some races. Perhaps
more than any other race of whom we have any knowledge, the Celts have had
this power of Charm. Their customs and usages, their poetry and their
legends, their courteous manners, and their wild life, have always attracted
the men of other races who have been brought into contact with them. Under
the power of this temptation, Saxons and Normans have revelled in Celtic
customs, have put into them a coarser spirit, have ridden them to the death,
until they have come to represent nothing of liberty except licence, and
nothing of law except licentious usages. The dwindled and degenerated
representative of the great virtue of patriotism has shrunk into nothing
better than passionate fidelity to some little group of men, not necessarily
even of the same blood, but followers merely of the same adopted name and
standard.
We have seen in a former chapter how Norman and Anglo-Saxon
settlers in Ireland became the worst oppressors of the Irish, by descending
below the level of their own native Chiefs, and conforming their habits and
their conduct to the most corrupt of native usages. A process somewhat
similar passed over the Chiefs and Barons of the Hebridean Isles and Coasts,
many of whom were of Norman or of Norse descent, and almost all of whom were
of more or less mixed blood. The marriage between Norse and Celtic usages
could not fail to increase both the charm, the temptations, and the inherent
vice of the wild life of both races. There are some outward forms and
exhibitions of war, which, by their strength and poetry, tend naturally to
inflame men's passion for it. The pomp and circumstance of great armies did
not constitute the incitement of the Islanders. But the beauty and the
winged swiftness of great fleets of galleys, each of them walking the waters
like a thing of life," each of them carrying its contingent of armed men
from land to land, and pouring them forth on quiet shores to fight and
ravage and destroy —these, celebrated with sounds of Harp and Song, must
have lived in the memory and in the imagination of "roving tribes and rude
barbarians "1 from one generation to another. It is difficult to conceive
anything more exciting or inspiring to wild men inheriting the traditions of
the lawless races, than the habitual prosecution of war in picturesque
galleys rounding stormy capes, running up sheltered inlets, pouncing upon
enemies unawares, and carrying off the harvests and the cattle of all who
were not strong enough to defend them. But in this, as in many other cases,
poetry and charm were the servants of corruption. Civilisation withered
before the Clans, so long as their Chiefs were uncontrolled by higher laws
than the usages of the Celt.
Having now glanced at the causes in
operation, let us look at their actual results. In round numbers, 300 years
elapsed between the coronation of Robert the Bruce and the Union of his
Crown with that of England. Bruce was crowned in 1306. James vi. succeeded
to the English throne in 1603. Calculating, however, not from the
Coronation, but from the death of King Robert, the period embraced between
these two events is only 265 years. It is well worth while to note the
working of Celtic Feudalism during this time of little more than two
centuries and a half.
The remainder of the Fourteenth Century, in which
Bruce did his work and died, was occupied by the reign of his son David II.
(1329-1371), of his nephew Robert ii., the first Sovereign of the House of
Stuart (1371-1390), and by part of the reign of Robert iii., who continued
to occupy the throne during the first six years of the following or
Fifteenth Century (1390-1406). This first period of only 65 years, short as
it is in the life of a nation, was marked by several events and several
circumstances highly significant of the changes which had begun. The Chief
who was Lord of Islay and the Southern Islands had been faithful to the
cause of Bruce, and had been rewarded for it. But he and King Robert died
about the same time, and his son, though distinguished in many ways, and a
great favourite of the Church, exhibited, through a long and successful
life, that striking peculiarity of the Celtic race— that their fidelity is
to Persons and not to Principles. The House of Islay ceased to be faithful
to the Crown of Scotland the moment Robert the Bruce had ceased to wear it.'
The cause of Scotland and of National independence was nothing to him. His
father's King and companion in arms was dead, and John of Islay felt free
from fealty. Within 15 years of the death of the Great King, David ii. had
serious difficulty in coming to a peaceful arrangement with this powerful
Chief. Once in 1344, and again, after the lapse of 25 years, in 1369,' the
same danger arose of a rebellion of the whole Insular and West Highland
population. On the last of these occasions David II. had to support his
negotiations by large military preparations.
But this was not all; nor was
it by any means the worst indication of a great political danger. In spite
of a marriage with a daughter of the Steward of Scotland, who, in 1371,
succeeded to the Throne as Robert ii., Johi of the Isles was in constant
communication with the English Kings, who were at perpetual war with his own
Sovereign, and were the hereditary enemies of the independence of Scotland.
To such an extent was this system carried, that when in 1388 a temporary
truce was made between the two countries, the agreement was openly signed on
one side by the Lord of the Isles as an ally of the King of England.
Considering that by an earlier marriage this Lord of the Isles had re-united
all the Northern Isles with the great possessions of the Earldom of Ross on
the mainland of the Western Highlands, we can estimate the formidable danger
to which the Scottish Monarchy was exposed from the absolute powers wielded
under Celtic Feudalism by such a strong-handed Chief over his subject Clans.
This danger increased under the succeeding generation. John of Islay's son,
Donald, though nearly related through his mother with the royal family of
Scotland,' was a far more rebellious subject than his father. In strict
accordance with the tendency to increasing corruption which seems to have
been inseparable from the unwritten Feudalism of the Celts, his disaffection
and his conduct took a lower and an almost purely predatory type. In 1392
another great Highland Chief gathered his following of the Clans, burst down
the slopes of the Grampians upon the oldest and most settled civilisation of
the East of Scotland, defeated the Lowland forces in the battle of Gaschine,
and ravaged the whole districts of Angus and the Mearns.
But significant
as these events are of the nature and tendency of Celtic Feudalism, I am not
sure that they are so significant as two other incidents or passages of the
same period, which in themselves may seem more grotesque than serious. They
exhibit in two very different forms the dangerous attraction which savage
customs, and the usages of a wild or lawless life, are capable of exciting
over men who by race, birth, and education have risen to higher things.
There was then no blood in Scotland of more purely Norman origin than the
House of Stuart. That name, as is well known, was of merely official origin,
the family having long held by an hereditary tenure the great feudal office
of Seneschal, or High Steward of the kingdom. This office had been granted
to their ancestor in the reign of David i., and therefore some time before
1153. It had been confirmed by a Charter of Malcolm iv. in 1157. They had,
therefore, a Scottish history and pedigree running through more than 200
years at the time of which we are now speaking. But, like the family of the
Bruce, they had come over to England with the Conqueror, and had been first
settled by him on great manors and baronial possessions in Shropshire, in
the heart of England. Alan, the son of Flathald, was the name of the
Conqueror'sfriend, and the title of Fitz Alan, now united with the Howards
of Norfolk, comes by direct descent from them. Like the Bruces they moved
northward with many other Norman Barons when the connection became more
intimate between the Knighthood of the two countries. In Scotland they
became the founders in 1160 of the Great Monastic House of Paisley, and had
there planted a branch of the Cluniac Monks from an older Foundation they
had made at Wenlock. It does not appear that they had any, Celtic blood at
all except that which at a much later date they inherited through their
marriage with a daughter of King Robert the Bruce—an alliance through which
they at last, in 1371, succeeded to the Throne. Robert ii. was the eighth in
descent from the first High Steward, and of his seven predecessors only one
seems to have been allied by marriage with any Celtic House. This one
exception was the fifth High Steward, who married a daughter of James
Macrory, the Lord of Bute—a truly Highland name, and no doubt of as purely
Celtic origin as any in the whole muster of the Clans.' The small Celtic
element, therefore, which existed in the blood of the Stuarts was of the
noblest type—the far-off strain of Malcolm Canmore, reinforced in later
times by alliance with those descendants of Somerled in the Southern Isles
who were most faithful to the cause of Bruce. It would be difficult to
conceive an original descent, or a subsequent line of succession, or a
course of life through many generations, which could have been better
adapted to implant in any breed of men the best and highest tendencies and
accomplishments of their age. Born and bred in the best times of chivalry,
seeing and taking part in the rising civilisation, which, from Malcolm
Canmore to Robert the Bruce, was amalgamating the Celt, the Saxon, the
Norman, and the Norseman into one people, and consecrating everything that
was good in old customs under the strong authority of equal laws, the
Stuarts ought not to have been easily tempted to fall back into barbaric
habits of which they could have had no living memory or tradition. Yet one
of the most prominent occurrences of this last part of the Fourteenth
Century was the part played in the Highlands by a member of this great Scoto-Norman
family. No less high a member of it than a younger brother of the first
Stuart King, Robert II., was granted gTeat landed possessions in the Central
Highlands, whilst by marriage with an heiress he acquired also the extensive
lands, or many of them, belonging to the old Celtic Earldom of Ross. In this
position he at once found himself invested with absolute power over
innumerable Clans who were ready to "go anywhere and do anything" which he
chose to direct. Under this temptation he developed such ferocity of
character, and perpetrated such deeds of cruelty, that he acquired in his
own day, and has since been known in history as the Wolf of Badenoch. A
recent authority has described him as "a species of Celtic Attila." His son,
though he served in more civilised warfare with the chivalry of France,
seems in his early life to have been a worthy representative of his father.
He became Earl of Mar, and was a considerable figure in his day. It was
under his command that the Clans were launched against the Lowlands in 1392,
and routed their defence in the battle of Gasclune.
The second incident of
this period, which still more curiously illustrates the same principles, is
one winch stands alone, not only in the history of Scotland, but in the
history of any modern nation. The gladiatorial shows of Rome are associated
in our minds with the worst days of imperial corruption, and the worst
degrading exhibitions of Pagan customs. They have had no counterpart in
modern times. In the days of chivalry the contests of the tournament were
not intended to be deadly, and, although sometimes loss of life occurred,
this was purely by mischance, and all the rules of the game were inspired by
a spirit even of gentleness as well as honour. Yet in days when chivalry had
not declined, and not long after the heart of the Bruce had been cast into
the squadrons of the Infidel by the Good Lord James Douglas, suddenly we
hear of a scene recalling the most bloody exhibitions which aroused the
savage tastes of Nero or Caligula. In that beautiful Valley which so struck
the Roman Legions, that when it burst upon them from the top of its
enclosing hills, they threw up their spears and shouted "Ecce Tiber,"—on the
fair green meadow which borders the River Tay, and is called the "North Inch
of Perth,"—all the chivalry of Scotland were assembled on the 23d of October
1396, to see a deadly fight between two bodies of wild Highlanders, sixty in
all—thirty on either side. The King himself was there, with all his Court
and Nobles, and a vast crowd of men of all ranks and stations. The
combatants, like the gladiators, were devoid of defensive armour, and were
to fight only with their native weapons, knives, axes, swords, and bows. So
exciting was the scene, and such was the contagion of barbarism which it
induced even in peaceful men, that on the flight of one of the Highlanders
who dashed into the Tay and escaped, one of the spectators—an artificer of
Perth, possibly of Celtic blood - came forward and offered the sacrifice of
his life to fill up the blank. This being accepted, the bloody work
proceeded. At the end of the butchery, on one side only one man remained
alive, on the other, only ten, and these all wounded. Nobody, to this day,
can make out with any certainty whence these men came, whom they
represented, or why they fought. The most favourable view of it is that it
was a Trial by Wager agreed upon as a means of settling a Clan feud, and of
preventing still more extensive bloodshed. But there is no satisfactory
evidence that it settled anything, or that it was ever intended to do so.
What- ever it arose from, it was made a great spectacle. An enclosure was
made and the lists were kept. As the historian tells us, "It was the nature
of the beings brought together to fly at each other like wild cats, and kill
in any way they could."' Such names as the "Clan Kay" and "Clan Qwhele"
appear in the chronicles of the time as the Lowland guesses as to the
particular Celtic Clans which furnished the victims. These names, evidently
corrupt, have been plausibly translated into the Clan Chattan and the Clan
Cameron. There is only too much reason to believe that the ferocious habits
of the Clans, having then become notorious, and having very probably
furnished the theme of exciting stories, and the subject of sentimental
admiration to men who saw in them at least a contempt of death, these poor
Highlanders had been bribed by the promise of reward to the survivors, to
furnish forth this horrid spectacle to the chivalry of Scotland, with its
guests from France. If this be the explanation—and it is the only
explanation at least of the publicity of the scene—it is a signal
illustration of the dangerous attraction which some races have exerted by
their barbarous usages upon men of a far higher civilisation than their own.
With the exception of some obscure references in the old Book of Deir, in
which such family names as Morgan are spoken of as representing "Clans" in
the Lowlands of Buchan, the first mention of this word in the history of
Scotland stands connected with the Gladiatorial Exhibition in the North Inch
of Perth, and with a Brief of Robert III., in 1390, against the murderous
followers of the Wolf of Badenoch. I speak of the name, or the word - not of
the thing or the system which it represents. That system is as old as the
existence of wild and lawless conditions of society in which the weak
cluster round the strong, both for protection and in order to share in the
spoils which strength only could secure. But it was not till towards the
close of the century in which King Robert the Bruce died that the Scotch
people recognised the new conditions under which they were henceforth to
live within reach of the race which had so often stood shoulder to shoulder
with them in the battles of Independence. Somewhat suddenly their eyes were
opened by a bitter and a new experience. But nine years before the spectacle
of massacre between the "Clan Kay" and the Clan "MacQuhele," the Parliament
of the Kingdom had been compelled to take notice of the habits which were
becoming developed under the licence of Celtic Feudalism. In 1385 we have
the first of a long series of statutes passed for the defence of the country
against the robberies and the raids of those who now came to be known under
the name of "Katherans." All the subjects of the Crown were encouraged and
exhorted to resist and to arrest them, and it was provided that if the
Katherans resisted, the killing of them would be no murder, and no crime.
With these events, we have fully entered on the epoch of the Clans. The
bloody spectacle on the North Inch of Perth was a mere outward symptom of
more serious things. In the first law directed against the Highlanders as
Katherans—in the systematic treachery of the Lords of the Isles towards the
national cause—in the savage rebellions and ravages of the Wolf of Badenoch
and his son, brother and nephew of the King (Robert ii.)—in their power to
wield the force of whole hordes of men who followed them without any real
tie of Tribal or blood relationship—we see the dangerous alliance between
the absolute despotism of Celtic Chiefs and the mere forms of Feudal Law.
Most of these Chiefs held Charters; but they used these Instruments of legal
possession, and of lawful powers, only as blinds and covers for an unwritten
code of usages utterly without law, limit, or restraint. The primeval Tribal
system,—its poetical family origin, and its peaceful pastoral
associations,—must no longer be confounded with this terrible system of
military aggregations round red-handed Knights who were mere deserters and
apostates from a higher civilisation. The sentimental admiration for them
and for their followers is little less corrupting now than it was in the
Fourteenth Century. It is a terrible mixture when violence and anarchy put
on the robes of order and of law, and plead the authority of its noblest
instruments for deeds and principles which they were invented to rebuke and
to supplant.
One of the most careful and accurate of our national
historians has pointed out more clearly than others the fundamental
distinctions between all that we admire in the theory of Tribal
Institutions, and the true nature of the Highland Clans when they first come
into the light of history. "Powerful Chiefs," he says, "of Norman name and
Norman blood had penetrated into the remotest districts, and ruled over
multitudes of serfs and vassals, whose strange and uncouth appellatives
proclaim their difference of race in the most convincing manner." These
Chiefs used any legal power which they could find in Charters to strengthen
or sustain the most absolute authority, but without themselves conforming to
any feudal law whatever, either in their relations to those below, or to
those above them. At a later period it became a common system through "Bonds
of Manrent" to recruit from every quarter men who in return for protection,
and for employment in common robberies, deliberately bound themselves over
to be obedient followers and retainers. Thus, although the position and
authority of Chiefs was generally founded on territorial property, it was to
a great extent independent of it—did not flow from the same sources of legal
possession, and was continually used to coerce and overawe men of smaller
property who could not command the same armed following.
This distinction
cannot be too clearly kept in view, because it is fundamental in the history
of the Highlands for more than 300 years. It was not the chartered rights of
landed Ownership, but the unchartered absolutism of Celtic Chieftainship,
that made the Highlands for several centuries a scourge to themselves, and a
danger to the nation. It can be clearly shown—so deeply marked is the
distinction —that in direct and exact proportion as Highland Chiefs and
Chieftains could be induced, or were enabled by the condition of the
country, to live and spend their time simply as great Landowners, with the
fullest rights of property, and all the chartered powers of Baronial
Jurisdiction, in the same proportion did the districts under them advance in
wealth and civilisation, and their people cease to be a terror to those
around them. On the other hand, it can be shown with equal clearness, that
in direct proportion as the principal families in the Highlands were purely
or predominantly Celtic, leading only the life, and exercising only the
tremendous powers of Celtic Feudalism, in the same proportion did the
country go back to desolation, and the people to the most utter barbarism.
It is precisely due to this great distinction that we have a corresponding
difference between two great areas of the country which are separated from
each other by a well-marked line of physical geography. Roughly speaking,
this line runs along the "watershed" of the mountains from which the streams
divide to the West and to the East —that irregular mass of hill country
which was anciently called Drurnalban, and at a later period the "Mounth."
But practically we may take the dividing-line to be that which catches every
eye that looks intelligently to the map of Scotland,—the line which the
Celts called Glen More—or the Great Glen —running across the whole Island
from south-west to north-east, and occupied by the chain of Lakes, of which
advantage was taken in the construction of the Caledonian Canal. The whole
Highlands to the east and south of that Great Glen, with its prolongation
southwards among the Islands, was comparatively accessible to the advancing
civilisation of the Eastern and South-Eastern Lowlands—a civilisation which
crept up slowly but surely along the Valleys and the Firths and Lochs
leading into the areas which were the centres of the early Monarchy. On the
other hand, all the Highlands and Islands which lie to the west and north of
that Great Glen were less accessible to the same influences, were more
exclusively Celtic in their population, and were more absolutely under the
dominion of Celtic usages. There the great families did not live merely as
great Proprietors, but altogether in the much more absolute and formidable
character of small Monarchs commanding the hereditary services of an armed
and lawless population. Clustering round the memory and traditions of two
Old Celtic Dignities—the Lordship of the Isles, and the Earldom of Ross—and
fighting fiercely with each other, first for the succession to these, and
next for the possession of the bits and fragments of them—the West Highland
Clans lived perpetually such a life of war and rapine as that which was only
too closely imitated by the great Norman Baron who disgraced the blood of
Robert the Bruce under the name of the Wolf of Badenoch.
Gregory, in his
History of the Highland Clans, was the first to point out clearly this great
geographical distinction, which marks a corresponding distinction in the
social and political development of the two districts. He goes so far as to
say that the history of the Eastern and Western Highlands cannot be written
in the same book. This is a great exaggeration. Neither in geography nor in
social condition was there any hard and fast line. Glen More was not
impassable to the Clans on either side, neither was it impassable to habits
and institutions. Charters and Leases existed in the West, and Clan feuds
and fights were not wanting in the East. Still, it is true that on the
western side of the line the written laws of property were long submerged
under the unwritten codes of Celtic usage, whilst on the eastern side these
became gradually checked and subordinated to the precepts of a settled
jurisprudence. This was the root and cause of the difference between the two
areas, and it is one which arises out of the very nature of things. The
corruption of human nature is a law which we cannot afford to abandon to the
theologians. Historians and politicians must take note of it as the whole
secret of the most characteristic facts. Hence comes the danger of mere
usages as distinct from laws. All usages tend to abuse, from which nothing
can keep them except the arresting barriers of written law and recorded
judgments. It is the grossest of all errors that traditional customs tend to
the preservation of popular liberties. They tend on the contrary to the
exaggeration of power, and to the continual aggrandisement of the strong.
There may, indeed, be usages which rise to the dignity of laws, and every
civilised system of jurisprudence recognises as such all customs which are
capable of definition, and can be classed as the real but unexpressed
conditions under which all Covenants were made. But Society cannot be built
up on the quicksands of shifting memories, and of loose allegations
incapable of proof. These are always wrested, as we have seen that Celtic
Feudalism did wrest them, to strengthen and to aggravate the abuses of
personal strength and of personal ambition.
We can see then how it was
that for 300 years, after the close of the century in which King Robert the
Bruce had done his great work of amalgamation, that work was being steadily
undone, as far as they could undo it, by the Celtic Clans. In the eleventh
year of the new century, in 1411, Donald, Lord of the Isles, with an army,
it is said of 10,000 Clansmen, attempted the overthrow of the Scottish
Kingdom by a regular invasion. They were with difficulty repulsed in the
bloody battle of Harlaw; and the final but hard-won victory of the Lowland
forces was universally felt in Scotland to be a deliverance not less happy
than the deliverance which had been achieved at Bannockburn. One signal note
of its value is to be found in the circumstance that the contagion of Celtic
Feudalism had done its worst. Alexander, Earl of Mar, son of the Wolf of
Badenoch, had now returned to the allegiance of his blood and race. He
commanded the Lowland gathering of that higher Feudalism which rested on
written Charters, and on loyalty to acknowledged obligation. Under this
banner of civilisation he distinguished himself by the most desperate valour.
The Eastern Highlands, therefore, in the person of one of its most powerful
Chiefs, were now committed to, and associated with the same cause:
Twelve
years later, in the Fifteenth Century, we enter on the period of "The
Jameses." The first Sovereign of that name, and perhaps the most
distinguished, assumed the crown in 1424. He and five successors of the same
name, with the tragic interlude of Mary, occupy the 179 years which elapsed
before the sixth James succeeded to the English throne. No more troubled and
turbulent time has perhaps ever passed over any people which still retained
the elements of progress and of civilisation. But in spite of all the years
of war, rebellion, anarchy, and bloodshed, those elements were retained, and
some of the most fruitful of them were strengthened and developed. The
Clergy of the Latin Church had not yet learned to be afraid of Learning, and
under their influence the Fifteenth Century saw the foundation of the three
oldest Universities in Scotland, St. Andrews, Glasgow, and King's College,
Aberdeen. Some sound and excellent legislation, as we have already seen, was
passed for the restraint of violence, and for the encouragement and security
of Covenants between man and man. A Supreme Court was established for the
administration and interpretation of the law, and some steady progress was
made, both by new enactments and by systematic decisions, in the general
understanding of civil obligations. In the southwestern mainland of the
Highlands, as well as in the eastern Highlands, the growing power and
influence of the Chiefs who had taken part with Bruce, and who continued
faithful to the Monarchy he had restored, were turning to good account,—as
loyal men can always turn them,—the force and fidelity of their Clans. But
with this exception, the working of Celtic Feudalism during the whole of the
Fifteenth, and the whole of the Sixteenth Centuries, presents little more
than one continued spectacle of all the worst vices which can afflict or
destroy a nation. So long as the Lordship of the Isles existed, or the
Earldom of Ross, the Islanders under those Chiefs were systematically
disloyal to the Scottish Monarchy. In 1462 they entered into a formal treaty
with Edward iv. of England, for the subjection and partition of the-
Kingdom. This led to the final suppression of the Earldom of Ross and its
annexation to the Crown.
But treachery to the Monarchy was only replaced
by treachery to each other among all the Clans and Chiefs, between whom the
spoils were divided. There is no more miserable history than the history of
the Highland and Island Clans during this period. If we silence our moral
judgment altogether, it is of course possible to pick out picturesque
incidents, and to bestow our admiration here and there on displays of mere
animal courage. But when one compares this wretched epoch with the older and
nobler time when one great man had taught the Celtic population of the
Highlands how to fight in a great cause and for a great purpose, it is
impossible not to turn with disgust from a perpetual recurrence of plunder
and devastation, of cruel massacres, and of the most treacherous murders.
Even where the Celtic Chiefs were induced sometimes to send some contingent
to strengthen the national army, they could hardly be withheld from fighting
out their own feuds and quarrels in the presence of the common enemy.
Sometimes, even in moments of common misfortune, and of national overthrow,
the passions of Celtic Feudalism could not be restrained from atrocious
acts. On the fatal field of Flodden, when the King and half the nobles of
his Kingdom, with a corresponding proportion of their men, fell under the
spears and arrows and battle-axes of the English army, it is related of a
Highlander of the Clan Mackenzie, that he heard those near him exclaiming,
"Alas! Laird, thou hast fallen." "What Laird?" shouted the Celtic Clansman.
In the answer, "the Laird of Buchanan," he heard a name with which his own
had a blood-feud. Then and there the "faithful Highlander," as he is called
by the sympathetic historian, sought out the fallen Laird, found that he was
only wounded, and butchered the helpless man without ruth or pity. Even
this, however, is by no means the most revolting kind of deed which was only
too common among the Clans. There was one Chief of the name of Macian,
possessing Ardnainurchan, who was in perpetual feud with the Macleans of
Mull. But the softer passion on one occasion brought about an apparent
reconciliation, when the Chief Macian was a suitor for the hand of a
daughter of Maclean. In 1588 the Macians were cordially invited under
assurance of peace, to come to the wedding of their Chief. The wedding over,
with feast and wassail, and one of the houses of the country assigned to the
wedded pair,—in the middle of the night the Macians were surrounded by the
Macleans and massacred to a man—the Chief only being spared to the shrieks
and entreaties of his wife.1 In a raid of the Clanranald against the
Mackenzies of Kintail, a whole congregation was burned to death in the
Church of Gilchrist, whilst the piper of the Macdonalds played round the
building to drown the frantic cries of the victims. This was so late as
1603, the year of James vi.'s accession to the English crown.
In visiting
the lofty and striking precipice which surmounts the Island of Eigg, called
the "Scoor," every stranger is shown a spot where a similar atrocity was
committed. In the standing feud between the Macdonalds and Macleods the
whole population of Eigg, invaded by a superior force, had taken refuge in a
cave, the entrance to which is narrow and concealed. Here they were
discovered, and the Macleods enjoyed the savage pleasure of smoking the
whole of them to death, some 200 in number, by fires lighted at the mouth.
When Sir Walter Scott visited the cave in 1814, the bones of the victims
still covered the floor, and he carried off a skull which seemed to be that
of a young woman.
It is needless to say that where human life was so
little regarded, property was still more universally held as a prey to the
spoiler. Occasionally we have details of the ravages committed. Thus, in
1455, the Islanders attacked the Southern districts of Cumbrae and Arran,
from which they took 500 horses, 10,000 cattle, and more than 1000 sheep and
goats. In this case it is specially mentioned that the Clans did not murder
more than a score of men, women, and children. Such robberies as these, and
they were common, must have reduced whole districts to poverty for many
years. In a longstanding feud between the Macleods of Skye and the
Mackenzies of Lewis, we are told that at one time, about the close of the
Sixteenth Century, both Clans were reduced to the verge of ruin, and that
the people had to live on horses, dogs, and cats.
These are but a few
examples of the whole course of history in the Islands and Western Highlands
during the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. It will be obvious that such a
condition of things tended inevitably to render more and more absolute the
power of the Chiefs over all whom they recruited to become members of their
Clan. To be under the protection of some powerful Chief was the only chance
of enjoying any peace or any safety for the dependent classes. Those of them
who were themselves little better than soldiers of fortune had indeed a
different inducement with the same result. Accordingly, the Crown and
Government of the Kingdom, in their perpetual contests with the Western
Chiefs, determined, in 1496, to assume, as they had a good right to do, that
those Chiefs were really responsible for everything done or left undone
among those over whom they ruled so absolutely. An Act passed by the Lords
of the Council in that year provided that the Chief of every Clan should be
held responsible for the due execution of all legal writs against the men of
his own Clan, under penalty of being himself made liable to the party
bringing the action.
Not long after, in 1502, the Government tried to deal
with the great evil of a purely military population, the obedient followers
of the Chiefs, settling in the country, to the exclusion, or supplanting,
perhaps, of the older settled population who may have been the truer
representatives of the ancient Clans. In dealing with lands resumed by the
Crown in Lochaber, the Royal Commissioners were desired to let the lands for
five years to "true men "—that is, men loyally affected to the Crown— and to
expel all "broken men" from the district. This was the regular Parliamentary
phrase now established by which the military following of Chiefs was
designated; and so numerous had this class become that the historian
observes of this part of the country, that in the state of affairs then
prevalent, the order of the Lords of Council "was equivalent to an order to
expel the whole population." But here it is important to observe that the
Commissioners were ordered to exert upon the Crown lands, in Lochaber,
exactly-the same full rights and powers of Ownership, which the Highland
Chiefs had long been exerting upon their own lands. In both cases the
Proprietors of those lands were disposing of them in favour of men who could
be counted upon as "true" to them. It was, in fact, a process of a
"plantation"—that is to say, the colonising of certain lands with Tenants
who would he loyal to the Owner of them. If the truth could now be fully
traced, and if we could exactly see how large tracts of Highland country,
which had been devastated by murderous raids, came to be Fe- peopled and
re-settled by so-called "Clansmen," we should probably discover that in
numberless cases the process was the same, and that Clans were largely
recruited, if not sometimes almost wholly replaced by "broken men" enlisted
from other districts. Such men owed everything they had in the new
plantation to the Lords and Owners of the soil on which they came to seek
employment and protection. Here and there a case is recorded which may well
lead us to suspect how common it must have been. One of these occurs in the
history of those Eastern Highlands which were, on the whole, so much less
troubled than the Western. It is a hideous story which is told in the Chiefs
of Grant.' In revenge for the murder of a kinsman somewhere in the valley of
the Dee, the Chief of Grant had incited and joined the Earl of iFluntly in
slaying all the men in the country of the Dee where the murder had taken
place. Some time after, on visiting Huntly at his castle of Strathbogie, he
was shown between sixty and eighty orphan children who had been carried off
when their fathers were slain, and were now fed at one long trough, as pigs
are fed, one row of children eating at each side. This sight is said to have
caused such remorse to the Chief of Grant that he carried off the whole of
these children from one side of the trough and took them to his own estate
on Strathspey, where they were settled, taking the name of Grant, whilst
those on the other side of the trough were in like manner kept by Huntly,
and took the name of Gordon.
If these things were sometimes done in the
green tree of the Eastern Highlands, how often must they have been done in
the dry tree of the Western Clans! It is beyond doubt that a large part of
the population of the Highlands are the descendants of men who were moved
about and planted from time to time by the Chiefs who disposed of their
lands, whether acquired by inheritance or by conquest, precisely as the
Crown disposed of the Braes of Lochaber, and as the Grants disposed of the
upper valley of the Spey. In the Western Highlands, however, the Chiefs had
a somewhat different end in view. In Lochaber the King planted men who were
to be real farming Tenants, holding under Leases with their settled
Covenants, and definite rents. In the Northern and Eastern Highlands, such
families as the Chiefs of Grant aimed always principally at the settlement
and improvement of their country. The Island and Highland Chiefs, on the
other hand, planted men who were to be devoted mainly to fighting, whilst
the possessions of the real old native population in corn or cattle were to
be held subject to the arbitrary exactions of the most lawless Celtic
Feudalism.
The state of things which had again arisen among the Western
Isles towards, and after the close of the Sixteenth Century, is indeed
hardly conceivable as co-existing with a national Government in Scotland. It
was almost if not quite as bad—as dangerous and as discreditable—as it had
been four hundred years before, in the days of Somerled and of his immediate
descendants. The Chief who styled himself Lord of the Isles, Macdonald, Lord
of Islay and Kintyre, affected all the airs, and assumed all the powers of
an independent Prince. He did exactly what King Robert the Bruce had
promised, some two hundred and sixty years earlier, he would not allow his
subjects to do, namely, to attack England through her rebellious Irish. In
1595, Queen Elizabeth was in serious trouble from Tyrone's rebellion.
Whether from hostility to the Reformed faith, of which Elizabeth was the
great supporter in Europe, or from other motives, the Macdonalds, both of
Islay and of Skye, allied themselves with Tyrone, and were ready with a
great fleet of galleys and a formidable force to land in Ireland, and
reinforce the rebels. But the astute Queen had friends as well as enemies
among the Western Celts. The old loyalty of the Campbells to the Monarchy of
Bruce, and their new loyalty to the Protestant religion, combined to hold
them true against an alliance so hostile to both as the alliance between the
Clan Donnell and the Romish Celts of Ireland. Accordingly the Earl of
Argyll, in counter-alliance with the Macleans of Douart, and with some other
septs, collected so large a force, and placed it in so strong a flank
position, that the Macdonalds did not dare to pursue their expedition, and
to leave their own territories to devastation. Other means, moreover, were
employed. The great Ministers who served Elizabeth so well kept her well
informed. Divisions were sown among the Clans; preparations were made in
time to meet them, so that when a small portion of their fleet reached the
coast of Ireland, they were easily dispersed, and this new insular armada
dissolved and disappeared.
In this incident we see how little centuries
had done to change the nature of the Clans. Moreover, we have a sketch of
one man in particular, to show how little time had changed the nature of the
Chiefs. The description presented to us in history of the person and
character of James Macdonald of Dunluce, cousin of the Lord of Islay and
Kintyre, reproduces towards the close of the Sixteenth Century all the
essential characteristics which we have seen marking the career of the Wolf
of Badenoch towards the close of the Fourteenth. There is the same mixture
of Lowland culture, of wide acquaintance with men and things, and of fierce
and unscrupulous conduct in the exercise of an absolute local power. C He
seems," says Tytler, "to have been a perfect specimen of those
Scoto-Hebridean Barons, who so often concealed the ferocity of the Highland
freebooter under the polished exterior which they had acquired by an
occasional residence in the Low Country." It was his pleasure sometimes to
join the Court at the Palaces of Falkland, Linlithgow, or Holyrood. There he
was the gayest among the gay, giving rich presents to the Queen and her
ladies, and fascinating all observers by the splendour of his tastes, and
the graces of his person and manners. But suddenly some news from the West
would trouble him, and then "Macsorlie"—this accomplished gentleman— would
fly back to his native Island, and revel in the worst atrocities of the
Clans. This man, however, had perhaps acquired from his connection with the
Celts of Ireland an exceptional ferocity. For in Ireland Celtic Feudalism
had long reached the lowest stages of violence and corruption. But the
Hebridean Chiefs were too closely connected with those of Antrim to escape
the desperate contagion. And so we have another member of the Clan Donald —a
cousin of" Macsorlie," who seems to have been by no means behind his kinsman
of Dunluce. This was the son of the Lord of Islay and Kintyre, also highly
favoured at the Court of James i., knighted by that Sovereign, and
conspicuous in the history of the time as Sir James Macdonald. Of this man
the incredible atrocity is recorded that in order to accomplish the death of
some feudal enemy, he set fire to the house where his own father and mother
were living at the time. Escaping with difficulty, and severely burnt, the
father was confined in irons for several months—until, probably, he had
consented to the transfer of his authority by a premature succession.'
Assuming the command of the Clan, Sir James was soon involved in a furious
contest with the Macleans of Douart, the circumstances of which are
variously narrated, but which in the pages of Tytler2 appear as an
additional example not only of ferocity, but of the basest treachery.
Maclean was an uncle of Sir James, but he was a firm friend of Queen
Elizabeth, and of that Protestant cause of which she was the rallying
centre, and the standard- bearer. The Macdonalds seem to have all been more
or less in league with the Irish enemies of the Queen, and the determined
enemies of the Clans who were most loyal to the Scottish Monarchy. On this
occasion Douart and most of his men were slaughtered, and the Cause in which
they had fought together, fell chiefly into the hands of the Campbells.
The interest of these stories, however, does not lie either in the
illustrations of individual character, or even in the picture they present
of the habits and manners of the time. It lies, rather, in the evidence they
afford as to the condition of the people. It is quite certain that they were
absolutely at the disposal of their Chiefs. Even when these Chiefs did not
use them as soldiers, but left them to cultivate the ground, and employed
mercenaries, all the resources by which these mercenaries were sustained
came out of the ceaseless and unlimited exactions from the native
husbandmen, which were the inseparable concomitant of Celtic Feudalism. All
the minor Chieftains and all the retainers of the Chiefs were quartered on
the people of the country, who were, besides, liable to be cleared off and
removed as a matter of regular bargain among the Chiefs when they treated
with each other for exchanges or extensions of territorial possession. The
delusion that prehistoric "Tribal rights" had outlived the transforming
processes of Clanship, and the absolute dependence of the people for many
centuries on military Chiefs, is a delusion which is effectually dispelled
if we look for a moment at the historical facts which emerge in all the
transactions of this time. Thus it was one of the conditions offered to the
Crown by Sir James Macdonald, in return for certain advantages, that he
would give up Kintyre and remove "his whole Clan and dependers" from it, so
that the lands should be completely cleared, and placed at the disposal of
the Crown for the reletting of it to new Tenants. The Island of Coll had
been similarly cleared in 1596 by the Macdonalds. Everywhere and in
everything the Chiefs were absolute, and the more Celtic Institutions were
allowed their full development, the more abject became the condition of the
people.
And now let us see the consequences. The evidence comes to us in
the most formal and authentic shape. Soon after James VI. united the two
Crowns, he resolved, as so many of his ancestors had resolved before him, to
restore peace and law to the Islands and Highlands of his native country.
After several abortive expeditions and negotiations, for this purpose he
appointed a special Commissioner who was to visit the Hebrides and call the
Chiefs to a friendly conference. The Commissioner selected was the minister
who had accepted the Bishoprick of the Isles and the Deanery of Iona, under
the new Episcopacy which James had then restored. Whatever doubts the
Presbyterian people of Scotland may have had as to the constitutional
character of the proceedings under which the Restoration had been effected,
no such doubts could affect the Island Chiefs. Constitutional illegality was
the very last thing that could offend, or even be observed by Highlanders
amongst whom the Reformed faith and the Presbyterian Church had as yet made
but little way. They were probably rather conciliated by this renewal of an
ancient Dignity, and they came in numbers to meet the Commissioner of the
Crown. The place of meeting was wisely selected as one that was attractive
to them. It was that Holy Island, in whose ancient Churchyard all the Kings
and Chieftains of the Isles had been buried for 900 years. Their descendants
seem to have come willingly to the place where probably many of them had
come before to bury their own Dead, in the same sacred soil. And there they
finally came under certain solemn engagements, founded on a narrative and
confession as to existing evils, which have become known in Scottish history
as the "Statutes of Iona."
These authentically reveal to us both the
condition to which the country had been reduced and the causes which were
now acknowledged to be at the root of its decline. The Bond which the Chiefs
subscribed proceeded on the narrative or confession of "the great misery,
barbarity, and poverty unto which, for the present, their barren country was
subject." Nor were these sweeping words used without adequate explanation in
detail. Religion had fallen into universal decay. The old order had passed
away, and no new order had been established in its place. The clergy had
been starved and banished. The Churches had been allowed to fall into ruins.
Christianity had become little more than a memory and a name. Marriage
itself had ceased to be an institution of general obligation, and had
largely been replaced among the people by an old Celtic barbarous custom
called "Handfasting," which was a contract of union for some short term of
years only. It is difficult to conceive a more terrible indictment against
any system of life and government than that which was admitted and
acknowledged to be true of the country which had been so long under the sway
of Celtic Feudalism. Nor are the promised remedies and reforms less eloquent
than the general confession. The Statutes of Iona numbered nine in
all—referring to so many separate measures to be taken, and to the taking of
which all the Chiefs solemnly bound themselves by an oath under the most
solemn sanctions of • most solemn place. Of these nine Statutes it is
memorable fact that no less than four were directly aimed at abuses which
were the invariable product of the unwritten laws and usages of Celtic
Feudalism. These abuses indicate precisely the same conditions of absolutism
on the part of the Chiefs, and precisely the same kind of sufferings on the
part of their people, which we have seen Sir John Davies denouncing in
Ireland about the same time, and both of which were the natural and
necessary results of loose and traditional customs smothering written laws
and definite agreements.
The first Statute which bears upon these was one for the establishment of
Inns, on the express ground that the burden of supporting all strangers had
hitherto been thrown upon the Tenants and labourers of the ground. The
second Regulation touching the same subject, struck at another form of the
same abuse, namely, the multitudinous retainers and personal attendants of
the Chiefs, the cost of whose support was also habitually thrown on the same
helpless classes in addition to their usual rents. These retainers were in
future to be limited in number, and it was specially provided that each
Chief should support his Household out of his own regular rents, and not by
indefinite exactions levied from his Tenantry. When we look into the rules
laid down under this Statute, which indicate the number of personal
retainers which was thought reasonable for the station of the leading
Chiefs, our eyes become opened to the prevalent delusion that the dues paid
by the occupying class to the Owners were light and easy under Celtic
Feudalism. The habitual entertainment of gentleman-followers to numbers
varying from ten to eight, or from six to three, by each of the Chiefs and
Chieftains of the impoverished Hebrides, indicates an immense drain on the
sources of such a country. When we remember that these gentlemen-retainers
were men who lived at the same board with the Chief —that hardly any
articles of foreign produce, except wine, were then imported—that they did
no work of a productive kind—that they were supported in addition to the
servants necessary for work,—we must come to the conclusion that the rents
paid in produce by the people must have been relatively very much greater
than are paid in modern times. There are very few Landowners now except some
of the very richest, and certainly there is no mere Highland Landowner, who
would not find the habitual entertainment of six or eight gentlemen at his
table all the year round, an intolerable, or perhaps even an exhausting
burden, when added to the unavoidable cost of service. We may well conceive
then what the habitual oppression of the people must have been under the
native usages which rendered it habitual to throw burdens indefinitely
heavier than this upon the Tenants in addition to any fixed or stipulated
rents. The third Statute of the same class applied the same principle to all
who were "Somers" in the country, that is to say, persons living at free
quarters upon the poor inhabitants.
The Fourth Statute aiming at reform is
perhaps the most remarkable of all, because it touched one of the most
purely native and the most characteristically Celtic habits of life which
prevailed in the country, and which in itself might appear to be the most
harmless, as it certainly was one of the most poetic and the most
attractive. This was the habitual entertainment of travelling Bards who by
Harp and Song handed down the stories and traditions of the Clans. But it
was precisely in this attractiveness that the danger lay. The bloody
experience of many centuries had shown, and the exhausted condition of the
country then showed, that the very root of the evil lay in the deathless
animosities between Clan and Clan, and the cruel passions which were
developed in the prosecution of them. It was the very business of the Bards
to carry these on from generation to generation, and by all the incitements
of voice and of stringed instruments to keep every offence from being
forgotten, and every deed of barbarous revenge from being repented of
Sitting in the hall of some strong Keep, built upon a stormy headland or a
sheltered Islet,—or in the one long undivided apartment which occupied the
whole of a house built of turf and wattles,—the Bards kept up round roaring
fires, and in the midst of still more uproarious companies, the unquenchable
flames of hatred and revenge. Thus a barbarous Past was kept from ever
becoming a Past at all. Time was not allowed to have any effect in softening
manners, or in bringing about the oblivion of injuries. So real and so
practical was this tremendous evil that we read of one feud between two
Clans—the same, it is believed, that fought on the Inch of Perth—whose feud
is known to have lasted fully 300 years. Of all the causes which led to this
condition of things, and kept it up, the Bards were the incarnation. It was,
therefore, from no idle Lowland prejudice, but from the true and instinctive
perception of the authorities who were brought face to face with the problem
how to redeem the Islands and Western Highlands from utter barbarism, that
they called upon the Celtic Chiefs to suppress the Bards, and that the Bards
themselves were threatened first with the stocks and then with banishment.
The best remedy, however, which was provided by the Statutes of Iona, was
that which provided for a re-establishment of a free communication with the
more civilised portions of the Kingdom such as might bring about once more
some amalgamation of the two races, and some community of thought and
sentiment. With this view it was provided that every Highlander who
possessed as much as sixty head of cattle should send his eldest son or his
eldest daughter to school in the Lowlands, till he or she had learned to
speak, read, and write the English language. It is said that this provision,
as much as any other, had speedy and permanent effects—that it led in the
next generation to that personal loyalty to the House of Stuart which many
,of the Islanders displayed in the following century. Representing, as I do,
a Clan and family who were true to the Stuarts so long as the Stuarts were
true to the Laws and Constitution of their country, but who preferred that
Law and Constitution to any more personal affection, I can only in
imagination admire the opposite preference shown by the Jacobite Clans. But
at least their conduct, in that great division of opinion, exhibited an
unspeakable elevation of character above that which had so long been spent
on their own broils. Those who are faithful to a great Cause with all its
attachments of intellect and heart, must ever rank higher in the history of
civilisation than those who are faithful merely to a great Family. But it is
impossible to praise too highly the unselfish and incorruptible devotion
with which so many of the Celtic Clans, and the poorest members of these,
resisted the bribes and threats of a powerful government equally strong to
punish or reward, in their protection of the Royal fugitive who lived so
long in the cliffs and caves of Skye. There was not only genuine poetry in
it, but genuine virtue too. It is an immortal page in an otherwise rude and
melancholy history, and has conferred upon the Celtic character a just and
imperishable renown.
We have, however, a signal illustration of the
elements of charm and of attraction which that character has included, and
of the somewhat distorting effect which has been exerted by its poetry and
romance, when we look at the popular estimate which has been formed of the
Clan system as it existed in the Celtic Highlands and as it existed in those
Border Highlands in which the population was predominantly Scoto-Saxon. It
seems to be now almost forgotten that neither in nature nor even in name,
was the Clan organisation confined to the Celtic Highlands. We have the best
possible evidence on this subject—the evidence of the language and of the
action of contemporary Parliaments, embracing representative men from all
corners of the Kingdom who could not possibly be mistaken on the identity of
the social phenomena with which they were called to deal in its different
Provinces. Moreover this evidence of instinctive recognition is corroborated
and confirmed by the still higher evidence of clear intellectual
definitions. Those Parliaments had before them tremendous practical evils,
exposing Society very often to great suffering, and to the continual dread
and anticipation of it. They were compelled to think about, and to define to
themselves and others for the purposes of legislation, the root and source
of such great evils. Accordingly they arrived at consistent and clearly
intelligible results. They had before them two great sources of power and of
authority. One of these was the power of the Proprietor of land in the
exercise of the rights of Ownership. The other of these was the power of a
few great Families in the exercise of the power of Chiefship. The powers of
Ownership rested upon chartered and legal authority, in close connection
with systems of law and of tradi- tion as wide-spreading as the civilisation
of Europe both in the ancient and in the modern world. The power of Chiefs
rested on unwritten and indefinite usages, on influences essentially local,
personal, and individual. These were not formal differences. They were
differences in the nature of things. The interest of a Proprietor of land,
as such, lay in the improvement of the soil, the increase of its produce, in
the peace of the country, in the growing wealth of its population. The
interests of a Chief, merely as such, were generally the interests of a
political and Military Leader, whose ambitions, passions, and desires, did
not by any means tend to be in harmony with the national government or the
general interests of the country.
As between these two great sources of
influence and of power there could be no doubt in the Sixteenth Century
which of them was the instrument to be relied upon in the cause of Law,
Order, and Civilisation. This was the question which, under the pressure of
great and intolerable disorders in many parts of the Kingdom, came at last
to be specially dealt with, first, by the Parliament of 1581, and, next, by
the Parliament of 1587.
The first of these does not give a flattering
description of the confraternities of men who then were known under the name
of Clans. It calls them "Clans of thieves," and says they were "for the most
part copartners of wicked men, coupled in fellowship by occasion of their
surnames, or near dwelling together, or through keeping society in theft, or
reset of theft, not subject to the ordinary Courts of Justice, nor to any
Landlord that will make them amenable to the laws, but commonly dwelling
upon sundry men's lands against the goodwill of their Landlords, whereby
true men injured by them can have no remedy at the hands of their masters."
The Parliament of 1587 dealt with this condition of things much more
carefully, and with an amount of detail which is of the highest historical
interest. It was held in Edinburgh, and was attended by a full proportion of
the classes which generally attended the Great Council of the nation in
those days. In particular, there were both among the clerical and the lay
members men from parts of the Kingdom who lived in, or in the neighbourhood
both of the Celtic and of the Anglo-Saxon Highlands. The Earls of Lennox, of
Mar and of Huntly, the Abbots of Melros, Scone, Inchaifray, Paisley, and
many others, the representatives for the Burghs of Aberdeen, Stirling,
Inverness, Dingwall, Wigton, Selkirk, and Dumfries, must have known what
they were talking about when they absolutely identified the Clan system of
the Highlands proper, with the Clan system of the Border Hills and Vales.
This they did, not only in the general title of the statutes they passed, or
in any loose cursory application of the same words to things which were only
analogous, but not in principle the same. They conjoined together the
Highlands and the Borders in these titles indeed, but also in the far more
effective way of defining that feature of Clanship in which its essence lay.
This was in the power of Chiefship as distinguished from the power of
Ownership. It was the Chiefs as such who recruited, entertained, and
harboured "broken men." It was the Chiefs who waged war against each other,
and overruled and overrode the legitimate influence of Proprietors over
their own Tenants. It was to Proprietors that the Legislature looked for a
remedy to this state of things. It was to their legal and authorised powers
that it appealed as involving corresponding duties in keeping the peace of
the country. They had a right to turn out "broken men" who lived upon their
Estates. They had a right to let their lands on any condition they liked.
They were not to allow themselves, if they could help it, to be reduced to
the condition of mere rent- chargers on their own Estates—divorced from the
powers and rights which they held as Owners of the soil. If, indeed, from
living in the "far Hielands," or on the Borders, they were helpless in the
matter; if they lived on their Estates, and yet could only get their "mailes
and rents, and no other service or obedience," then such landlords were to
be exempt from penalty for consequences which they could not prevent. But as
soon as possible they were to deliver themselves from such a condition. It
was their duty not to let their farms, or other holdings, to men who were
not loyal subjects of the Crown.
This language was addressed equally to
all Owners of land over all the Highlands, Celtic and non-Celtic. The tongue
spoken in particular districts could make no difference in these rights and
powers of Ownership as known to the law, nor could it make any difference in
the duties they imposed. Therefore, all over the Kingdom, both in the
Borders and in the Highlands, the Proprietors of land were exhorted and
enjoined to resist to the utmost the unlawful powers of Chiefs over the
Tenants and others who lived upon their land, and they were especially
enjoined not to let their land on hire to such men as would lend themselves
to such leaders.
But in order to make these enactments more definite and
practical, two lists or "Rolls" were drawn up, and scheduled in the Act; one
of them being a "Roll of the Clans that has Captains, Chiefs, and
Chieftains, on whom they depend ofttime against the wills of their
Landlords, as well on the Borders as the Highlands, and of some special
persons of Branches of the said Clans." The other list was a "Roll of the
Landlords and Baillies of lands dwelling in the Borders and the Highlands
where broken men have dwelt, and presently dwell." At the head of the first
of these rolls we find some of the most famed names of families of the
Border Counties or the non-Celtic Highlands - such as the Elliotts, the
Scots, the Armstrongs, the Johnstones, the Jardines, Maxwells and Carruthers.
These are bracketed in the same list with the Macdonalds, the Macleods, the
Mackintoshes, the Camerons, and all the best known Chiefs of the Clans in
the Western Isles and Highlands, as well as in the central and eastern
districts of the Celtic area. It is quite evident that at that time the
system of men aggregated into Septs and Clans under a common name, and with
at least a flavour and a memory of common blood, was so identical in the two
great divisions of the Kingdom that no distinction could be drawn either in
its principle, or in its effects. It is evident also that the evil and
danger of this system essentially consisted in the military and predatory
character which these Septs and Clans tended to assume—in the perpetuation
of feuds,, and generally in the encouragement of a lawless spirit, and the
practices of a lawless life.
Sir Walter Scott, in the short but powerful
sketch of the history of the Southern Counties during 300 years, which he
has given in the preface to his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, has
entirely accepted this view of the identity of the Clan sys tern in the two
divisions of the Kingdom. Throughout the pages of that sketch, he speaks of
the great families of the Border as the Chiefs and heads of Clans. He even
speaks of the "Tribe;" and his narrative affords-signal examples of all the
characteristic features of Celtic Clanship. The broken remains of some
decimated Sept were in the habit of joining and merging in some other more
fortunate and more powerful Clan. Exactly the same results to the nation and
to society had arisen in both areas. In the Fifteenth Century the great
House of Douglas played, in the southern part of the Kingdom, towards the
Scottish Crown and Monarchy a part strictly analogous to that which, during
the previous Century, had been played in the Highlands by the Lords of the
Isles and the Earls of Ross. And when that great House was broken up, its
place was taken by a crowd of Clans, which kept up against each other, and
often against the Crown, the same perpetual feuds, and the same frequent
rebellions. The only difference between the Celtic and the non-Celtic Clans
and Septs lay in the geographical situation of their respective countries,
and in the distinctions of language. Both of these differences tended to
keep up the Clan system in the Highlands long after it had practically
disappeared in the Lowland counties. The Union of the Crowns under James
vi., in 1603, put an end to the isolated position of the southern Clans as
Borderers. As Sir Walter Scott pithily puts it, this event "converted the
extremity into the centre of his Kingdom." Community of language had
been already established for centuries between the southern Clans and their
neighbours in the Low Country.
The Reformation took a powerful hold over
the population of the Borders; and it is well known that a few years later
they furnished the most uncompromising adherents and martyrs of the
Presbyterian Covenant. On the other hand, the Celtic Clans continued as
isolated and inaccessible as before, and their language and habits were an
insuperable barrier to any real community of thought. The Reformation did
not, until a much later date, make much progress among the Celtic
population. They had no religious sympathy whatever with the powerful
motives and incitements which kept up among the Presbyterian people a
passionate devotion to constitutional liberty, and to a system of government
strictly subordinate to law. All this is intelligible enough. But what is
less intelligible is the extent to which it is forgotten that the ultimate
decline of the Clan system in the Highlands and in the Borders was due to
the same general causes which operated in both cases the same kind and
measure of improvement. The only difference was that the change came in the
Highlands more suddenly, and later by more than a hundred years. But the
essence of that change was the same in both cases. It was the decline, on
the one hand, of usages unwritten and unknown to the law. It was the
emergence, on the other hand,—the survival and working—of powers and
influences which were imbedded in the Legislation of many centuries, and had
been from time immemorial the basis of all civilisation. The Chief, as such,
lost a power which was checked by no responsibility, and was only by
accident connected with any public duty. The Proprietor, as such, became
free to exercise powers which were recognised by law, and were in the nature
of things, inseparably bound up with the progress of the country and the
advance of agriculture.
Yet, strange to say, the imaginations of men in
the Highlands continued, down to our own time, to think of the Clan as
having a legal and substantive existence there, although it had for two
centuries ceased to be even thought of in the Border Counties, where it had
once been quite as powerful, and quite as universally established. With such
vividness was this imagination entertained, that so late as the year 1852 an
attempt was made by a man of the name of Macgillivray to claim certain lands
from the natural heir, on the ground that this heir did not belong to the
"Clan Cliattan," whilst he, the claimant, did belong to it. Such a claim
showed a wonderful forgetfulness of the methods by which Clans had been
maintained. They had been kept up by mere enlistment—by "Bonds of Manrent"
entered into with strangers—by the adoption of the children of slaughtered
foes,—by the absorption of the broken remnants of other Septs. It would have
been a return to barbarism, indeed, if mythical "Tribal rights" had been
suffered to disinherit the nearest blood-relations of the last Proprietor,
and to establish in possession the descendant, perhaps, of some "broken man"
of a hostile Sept, who had changed his allegiance and his name. That such a
claim should have been made is another example, in a separate line of
action, of the corrupting effect of sentimental admiration for Celtic
Feudalism, of which we have already seen other illustrations. The claim
brought up before the Supreme Court in Scotland the whole question whether
the Clan organisation had any existence which could be recognised by law.
The decision of that Court is one of high legal and historical interest, and
bears upon the face of it its justice and its truth. I give it therefore in
full, as quoted by Mr. Skene.
"The lapse of time and the progress of
civilisation, with the attendant influences of settled Government, regular
authority, and the supremacy of law, have entirely obliterated the peculiar
features, and destroyed the essential qualities and character of Scottish
Clanship, but whether they are viewed as they once were, or as they now are,
a Court of Law is equally precluded from recognising clans as existing
institutions or societies with legal status, the membership of which can be
inquired into or acknowledged for ascertaining the character of heirs called
to succession.
"The inquiry which the pursuer's averments would here
demand must be attended with extreme practical difficulties; but the
recognition of a Clan as an institution or society known to law, so that
membership thereof shall be a quality of heirship and a condition of
succession, is open to serious objection in point of principle.
"In an
earlier age, when feudal authority and irresponsible power were stronger
than the law, and formidable to the Crown, Clans and Chiefs, with military
character, feudal subordination and internal arbitrary dominion, were
allowed to sustain a tolerated, but not a legally recognised or sanctioned
existence.
"In more recent times Clans are indeed mentioned, or recognised
as existing, in several Acts of Parliament. But it is thought that they are
not mentioned or recognised as institutions or societies having legal
status, legal rights, or legal vocation or functions, but rather as
associations of a lawless, arbitrary, turbulent, and dangerous character.
"But nothing now remains either of the feudal power and independent dominion
which procured sufferance in one age, or of the lawless and dangerous
turbulence which required suppression in another. When all military
character, all feudal subordination, all heritable jurisdiction, all
independent authority of Chiefs, are extracted from what used to be called a
Clan, nothing remains of its essential and peculiar features. Clans are no
longer what they were. The purposes for which they once existed, as
tolerated but not as sanctioned societies, are not now lawful. To all
practical purposes they cannot legally act, and they do not legally exist.
The law knows them not. For peaceful pageantry, social enjoyment, and family
traditions, mention may still be made of Clans and Chiefs of Clans; but the
Highlands of Scotland, no longer oppressed by arbitrary sway, or distracted
by feudal contentions, are now inhabited by loyal, Orderly, and peaceful
subjects of the Crown of Great Britain; and Claus are not now corporations
which law sustains, nor societies which law recognises or acknowledges."
There is only one point of view which is not fully presented in this clear
and admirable Judgment. There is probably no human institution, however
liable to abuse, or however greatly it may have been actually abused, which
has not also some original elements of good. These may survive and revive
even in the processes of decay. When the purely feudal relations of
Chieftain and of Clan were not separated from, but, on the contrary, were
united with, the peaceful and industrial relations of Proprietor and Tenant,
and when the life and pursuits of Chiefs were no longer directed by
political ambitions or by intertribal hatreds, the combined influences of
Chief and of Landlord were obviously capable of being converted into the
most powerful agency of civilisation and of progress. Such, accordingly,
they proved to be, first among the Lowland, and, at last, also among the
Celtic Clans. Of this we shall see some examples in the next Chapter. The
passage between these two conditions of Clan- ship is sure to be accompanied
by incidents of difficulty and discontent. These are illustrated by a
melancholy example. In virtue of the arrangement made by the Statutes of
Iona many of the young Highland Chiefs came to be educated in the leading
centres of learning, both in Scotland, in England, and on the Continent.
Thus two young men of the Clanranald—Macdonalds of Keppoch, one of the
oldest families in the Highlands—returned from the Low Country in 1666, full
of zeal for the improvement of their estates. Such improvements never fail
to offend many whose lives have been spent in pursuits, and in ideas, which
belong to the dying past. Such men have neither the intelligence nor the
education which enable them to understand reforms. They misjudge the motives
and the reasons which induce men of superior knowledge to depart from
ignorant but ancestral usages. The two young Macdonalds seem in this way to
have fallen victims to their superior culture, and were barbarously murdered
by some of their own Clan.' But these young men were martyrs in a cause
which was soon to triumph. About twenty-two years after their untimely
death, their own followers fought with their old enemies, the Mackintoshes,
the last Battle of the Clans. This was in 1688, shortly before the
Revolution which finally established the Reign of Constitutional Law in the
government of the United Kingdom. After this there was a slow but steady
change; and although a great number of the Clans chose and fought for the
Cause which was opposed to Progress, yet they fought in that cause
nobly—with a personal loyalty and a chivalrous devotion. The better elements
of Clanship were thus emerging even in those who did not choose the better
side. The same elements emerged, at least equally, among those other Chiefs
and Clans who fought as well, as devotedly, and sometimes with as much
self-sacrifice in that other Cause which was identified with the triumph of
Settled Law over Arbitrary Power.