Having thus endeavoured to place in one view that
portion of the military array of the Highlands whose career of duty
called them abroad, as well as those whose service was limited to a
certain distance from their native country, I have now much pleasure in
noticing those who, by their avocations, were confined to a particular
district, but who, with patriotic spirit, formed themselves into an
excellent species of internal defence in the corps of Volunteers and
Local Militia. In the Highlands this force is the less necessary, on
account of the well regulated and peaceable habits of the people, and
their contentment with their lot: at the same time that it is more
difficult to be organized, in a rugged country, thinly sprinkled with
inhabitants, who live at a distance from the places of rendezvous, while
the expense and loss of time is greater than that experienced in the
populous, level districts of the Lowlands. Yet, in the mountains, the
volunteer corps were numerous, and their ranks well filled. Previous to
the peace of 1801, the volunteers in the Highlands and Islands exceeded
11,500 men. When the war recommenced, 13,323 volunteers were embodied,
and placed in corps, as stated below.
In this enumeration, only the native
Highlanders are included, as, for example, in the case of the Dunkeld
and Stormont regiment only 190 men are stated, although the corps was
upwards of 700 strong. The same calculation has been made with regard to
the Aberdeen, Banff, Elgin, and other corps on the Borders, where the
population on each side was united in one regiment.
In the year 1811 the Local Militia were instituted.
Although military duty was seldom required of the Highland volunteers
and local militia, * we may include them in the military array of the
Highlands. The number being 34,784 men, it formed an important addition
to the force already enumerated. It was important in another respect;
namely, in accustoming the youth of the country to the use of arms, and
so preserving a warlike feeling, which had been greatly cooled and
broken by the acts for depriving the people of their arms and garb, and
by other irritating causes; the effects of which were increased in no
small degree by those false and absurd reports of the death and
destruction. that awaited them should they enter the army, and which, as
has been stated, were too generally credited. But so numerous a body as
thirty-four thousand men from among so limited a population, could not
fail to infuse a proper spirit, not only among the youthful and the
active, but among all the inhabitants of the country.
* The Volunteers of Sutherland,—a county conspicuous
for willing and excellent soldiers,—showed in 1804 that the name of
Volunteer was well applied to them; for the regiment, 1000 strong,
volunteered a march of 300 miles to the south of Scotland, and back to
their native county, in all 600 miles. They marched to Linlithgow, and,
after being disciplined there for some time, returned to Sutherland.
The Fencible regiments, also, contributed in a very
eminent degree to promote and invigorate this spirit. The corps of this
description mentioned in the foregoing pages are those considered as
exclusively Highland. There were, however, other regiments raised in the
North, not nominally Highland, but in whose ranks were a number of men
from the mountains; as, for instance, Lord Elgin's regiment, which, as I
have already mentioned, had about 300 Highlanders, wearing
a part of the
Highland garb,—the bonnet and truis; the
Aberdeenshire, Colonel (afterwards Lieutenant-General) Sir James Leith;
the North Lowland, Colonel Balfour; and the Banffshire, Colonel
(afterwards Major-General) Andrew Hay. There were also the Tay, Angus,
and other Fencible corps, bordering on the Highlands. We thus find,
that, independently of Colonel Macneil's Argyle, Colonel Robertson's
Perthshire, both having very few Highlanders, and the Ross-shire
Fencibles, which are not included, as the number was small, the whole
corps embodied in the Highlands amounted to twenty-six battalions of
Fencible infantry, which, in addition to the fifty battalions of the
Line, three of Reserve, and seven of Militia, formed altogether a force
of eighty-six Highland regiments embodied in the course of the four wars
in which Britain had been engaged since the Black Watch was regimented
in the year 1740. From a first glance, the allowing of 1000 men to each
of the eighty-six regiments would appear to come near the truth; but, on
a closer view, it will be found to be far short of the actual number.
Leaving out of our estimate the men who have, at different times in the
course of seventy-five years, from 1740 to the conclusion of the late
war in 1815, joined the 42d, [See Appendix.]
several of the regiments had, in the course of their service, treble or
quadruple their original number in their ranks. Thus, the 71st, the 72d,
and the 73d, which, during the thirty-one years they were Highland,—that
is, from their formation in 1778 till 1809,—had at least 3000
Highlanders each; and other regiments had numbers in pro-portion to the
length and nature of their service, both in tropical and temperate
climates. But, without coming to a close calculation, we have sufficient
evidence to show that the eighty-six battalions, including their
numerous reinforcements, contained a very large and efficient body of
men, who have contributed, in a very eminent degree, to preserve
Scotland in the recollection of Europe as once an independent, and still
a brave nation.
It is only necessary to mention farther, that thirty
regiments of the Line [The second battalions
of the 71st, 72d, 73d, and 74th, are not included, although they were
raised within this period, and had a great many Highlanders in each; but
the garb having been changed, they ceased to come within the line I had
found it necessary to draw. The number of Highlanders in these corps,
and also in the Royal Scots, and many other regiments of the Line, as
well as a considerable number in the Elgin and other Fencibles, will in
some measure counterbalance the number of Lowlanders in the Highland
regiments. Were this a correct supposition, (and there are good grounds
for it,) the number of Highlanders who have served in the late war in
all regiments would greatly exceed the number of men not Highlanders in
the ranks of the forty-seven battalions. Of the twenty-nine
battalions raised in the two former wars, nine-tenths of the men were
Highlanders, In twenty-one battalions the whole were Highlanders.]
and Fencibles, and three regiments of Militia, were raised during the
first six years of the last war, from 1793 to 1799; and, from 1800 to
1804, both years inclusive, seven battalions of the Line, four of
Militia, and three of the Army of Reserve, were raised in the Highlands
; in all, forty battalions of the Line, Fencibles, and Army of Reserve,
seven regiments of Militia, and 34,785 Local Militia and Volunteers,
during the late war.
It is fortunate for the poor Highlanders that so
large a portion of their number served their country, during the
eventful period referred to, as the publicity and notoriety of their
military services furnish the best answer to the statements published by
different authors, whose opinions might lead the public to believe that
their military character is annihilated; that they are indolent and
useless as cultivators and shepherds, incapable of becoming
manufacturers, too impatient for mechanics, and averse to the duties of
a military life. It appears, therefore, highly necessary that the real
facts should be known; that the Government of this country should have a
full knowledge of the true character of those they govern; and that the
inhabitants of one part of the kingdom should be made acquainted with
the dispositions, and civil and military habits of the other part. This
is but justice to a people who may suffer, without pity or sympathy, if
their character and principles were taken from the views given by Mr
Pinkerton and several other authors, whose statements have made a most
unfavourable impression on the public mind ; not generally, but to such
an extent as to afford a justification of the acts of oppression and
cruelty of which the Highlanders complain, and which are so rapidly
generating a spirit of hatred and revenge against the higher orders
of society. But, if there be any truth in the character drawn of
this race, revenge, and all the worst passions of our nature, might be
expected from "mere radical savages," as Mr Pinkerton describes the
Celts. "Look at them," says he, "for they are just as they were,
incapable of industry or cultivation, even after half their blood is
Gothic, and remain as marked by the ancients, fond of lies, and enemies
to truth." If a Highlander offers to state what he believes to be true,
as I have presumed to do, then "to say that a writer is a Celt, is to
say that he is a stranger to truth, morality, and modesty." Another
delineator of Highland manners and capability says, "They are so
deficient in intelligence, so slow, heavy-footed, and inert in
their movements, that one Lowland shepherd will do more work than five
indolent Highlanders." Then, being so unqualified for the duties of a
pastoral life,—a life of all others for which they have been supposed
peculiarly well calculated— if they are placed on fishing stations on
the coast, we are assured that "a decided preference will be given to
strangers." Thus, while they are noted for being enemies to truth,
worthless as cultivators, as fishers, and as shepherds, and incapable of
industry, "they are everywhere," says an author who advances strong
opinions on the subject, "notedly averse to the army, and I do not say,
without abundant information, that it probably would be
impossible to raise a single recruit by beat of drum, or a single
volunteer for the navy, throughout the Islands. It is doubtful if the
whole Islands possess at this moment one hundred men in both services.
Skye, with a population of 16,000, has not a man in the army." [Dr
Macculloch's Western Isles.] And again, with regard to the state
of religion in the Highlands, we are told by one authority, that they
are "Christians only in name;" while, as the natural consequence of this
deplorable state, it was to be expected that another authority should
meet with the "basest vices" in a country where the people are "enemies
to truth," and "savage heathens," as they have also been called; and
where, we are told by some reverend preachers, —not surely of the Gospel
of truth—that there are many who "know not the name of Jesus!" [See
Reports of different Societies for the Encouragement* of Religion,
Education, and Morals in the Highlands. If these societies
teach the morality some of their members practise in publishing
slanderous and lying reports, better would it be for the Highlanders to
remain in their original ignorance, than to be so taught and instructed.]
My personal information and experience of the state
and extent of religious knowledge among these people, with the
beneficial influence thereof on their principles and character, leads me
to a perfectly opposite conclusion ; but from my not having practical
experience of farming, of the management of sheep, or of fisheries, it
is necessary for me to speak with caution, when giving an opinion on the
capabilities of the Highlanders for these occupations; as a soldier,
however, I can speak with some confidence, and beg leave to refer to the
statement in page 408, as an answer to the allegation, that "Skye, with
a population of 16,000, has not a man in the army."
As I have served with many a good and brave soldier
from that island, and as 1 have observed a strong sense of religion, a
clear knowledge of their faith, and more general intelligence, than is
usually found among the common people of many countries, combined with
much moral feeling, industry, and capability in the Highlands, I. may be
allowed to doubt the accuracy of statements which militate against the
evidence of my own senses—of what I have seen with my own eyes; and I
may also be allowed to express pity and sympathy for an unfortunate race
who suffer so severely, and who are in the progress of suffering still
more, from prejudiced and distorted views of their character. But
they will not suffer alone. If the modern system is pursued; if all
the kindness and encouragement of landlords are to be bestowed on monied
men alone; if they are to be nourished and protected, and the people
rejected and despised; if two castes, capitalists and cottars, are
formed without common interests, feelings or sympathy; if the system of
traducing and calumniating this poor unfortunate race be continued; if
Government and the proprietors of the soil continue to give credit to
the statements laid before the public, and to withdraw their countenance
from them as a people altogether worthless;—the rich farmers will learn
to look with contempt on the poor ejected Highlanders, who, in their
turn, will attribute their depression and poverty to the avarice of the
landlords, and to the encroachments of the great monopolists of the
soil: And thus, as I have more than once had occasion to notice, mutual
jealousies and hatred will be generated; the moral ties which connected
intimately the landlord, tacksman, and small tenant, will be dissolved;
and the Highlands of Scotland may have to witness the painful contrast
of a virtuous and contented, with a demoralized and disaffected
population; and this, too, in an enlightened age, when the influence
which a kind regard to the welfare of the lower orders exerts upon their
character ought to be understood and practised. In that country, the
cordial intimacy which subsisted between the higher and lower orders had
the best influence on the feelings and habits of the latter. It roust,
therefore, appear remarkable, that, in times when so much is said and
written on the liberty, independence and education of the people, we
should find them too often treated with a cold, haughty, distant
reserve, totally unknown during the slavish dependence of the clans, as
their former state is generally and improperly called.
I have already quoted the opinion of an author on the
warlike spirit of the Highland Islanders, who, according to him, are so
deficient in this respect, that, during the last war, they were defended
by the manufacturers of the Lowlands, as they would not take up arms
themselves. In prosecution of the subject, it is farther stated, that,
"If recruits should be raised in the islands, they would be found in
Islay, not in Skye or in the Long Island." Now, in twenty-five
years of regimental duty, besides six years on half-pay, during which I
have had full knowledge of the circumstances in question, I found the
case to be entirely the reverse, and that there no dependence can be
placed on what this author states with regard to the facility and manner
in which soldiers are obtained in the southern islands; for, during the
twenty-one years I belonged to the 42d and 78th, we had not twenty men
from Islay in both regiments, while the best and most exemplary soldiers
were those from the northern isles: and these were so numerous, that, as
I have already noticed, 732 men enlisted for the 78th regiment even from
the estate of one landlord (Lord Seaforth's) in the Long Island, and
upwards of 1500 men for other regiments from Lord Macdonald's estate in
Skye. And yet we are told not to expect soldiers in Skye or in the Long
Island !
In a Report of the county of Ross, we find the same
want of spirit alleged to exist in that part of the country. "The
Highlanders are trumpeted forth as our best resource for soldiers,
although it is well known that they are notoriously averse to the
army. The second battalion of the 78th, commanded by my lamented
brother-in-law Lieutenant-Colonel Macleod, was raised in a very short
time, yet this was not owing by any means to the spirit of the
people. Indeed, some bands of young Highlanders, who went to join
the regiment, declared, rather indiscreetly, perhaps, that they had
enlisted merely to save their parents from being turned out of their
farms." [Report to the Board of Agriculture,
by Sir G. Stewart Mackenzie, Bart.] The best and purest motives
may thus be overlooked or perverted. If these youths were not inclined
to a military life, the greater was the sacrifice to filial piety, in
order to save their parents from being ejected from their farms. But as,
no doubt, the terms of their agreement were
fulfilled, (there are great doubts on this head,) and their parents
permitted to remain undisturbed, there could be no indiscretion in
mentioning them. The same Report farther observes, that "there were many
fine fellows, however, who enlisted out of pure regard for some of their
officers, and their connections, but their number was small when
compared with the total amount."
If they were thus actuated by a rooted aversion to a
military life, I confess myself unable to ascertain the motives which
induced these young men to enlist, though no man had a better
opportunity, as I was a Major in the regiment, and had added 419 men to
its strength by recruits and Militia volunteers. It is probable, that,
when the Reporter estimated the warlike spirit of his countrymen so low,
it did not occur to him that the chiefs and chieftains of his own clan
and name had, in the course of a few years, raised six battalions, of
which about 11,500 men, including the different reinforcements, were
Highlanders; and, although Lord Macleod, the Colonel of two of these
battalions, had no lands or farms with which young men might be
encouraged to enlist from the hope of a future settlement for
themselves, or compelled by threats of removing their parents, each
battalion (the number of Highlanders in both being 1750) was completed
in a few weeks. [See article Macleod's
Highlanders.] In my battalion, also, 240 men, as good soldiers as
ever left the Highlands, enlisted in a few days from the Island of
Lewes, one portion of Lord Seaforth's estate on the Long Island.
If these men, and the many thousands of Highlanders who enlisted in the
Mackenzie regiments, were notoriously averse to a military life, their
conduct displayed an inconsistency not easily accounted for on any
common principles of action. If the young men who engaged with me had
the same feelings, they so completely concealed their aversion that I
could discover nothing but the best spirit and a desire to learn and
discharge their duty. The recruits from the country enlisted sometimes
five and six together, when I gave them only twelve guineas,
whereas they would, the same day, have received twenty or twenty-four
guineas as substitutes for the Perthshire and other militia
regiments. Did this preference of a distant, dangerous, but honourable
service, for which the regiment was destined when completed, evince any
want of spirit ? On the contrary, was it not more like the pure spirit
of brave soldiers, regardless of danger, and exhibiting a generous
desire to serve their King in the most effectual manner, and to connect
themselves with the fortunes of an individual from whom they expected
friendship and protection, in return for the fidelity, obedience, and
respect they showed him? If this was not a proper spirit, I know not by
what name it ought to be designated. I am sure their conduct on all
occasions merited as honourable a name, and as much distinction as a
soldier can well obtain, and fully proved the nature of the feelings and
principles with which they entered the service. When the information
received by Sir George Mackenzie, a Highlander by birth, and proprietor
of an extensive inheritance, once occupied by a numerous tenantry, has
led him to form the opinion he has given of his countrymen; and when Dr
Macculloch, who had made the Highlands one of his principal studies, and
had lived on the Mainland and Islands for months, nay, for whole
seasons, produces, statements so easily refuted; certainly those whom he
consulted must have concealed the truth, or been themselves ignorant,
and thus led to the opinions adopted with regard to the men of Skye, and
the warlike disposition of the men of Islay, which are at total variance
with the personal knowledge of all military men whom I have ever heard
speak on the subject.
When gentlemen who have published so much on these
subjects are ignorant of circumstances of public notoriety, can correct
reports be expected from land agents and others, who are generally
ignorant of the country, the people, and their language, and who often
run over a district in one day, speaking to none except those appointed
to meet them, and who, of course, will be careful not to communicate any
thing but what is agreeable to their employers, more especially of the
capabilities of the people, with whose ejection from their farms the
first step of these agents commences? Neither can the best information
on the state of morals and religion be expected from itinerant preachers
and missionaries, such as are often employed (or rather who sometimes
take up the task of their own accord) to instruct the Highlanders. They
are frequently very ignorant persons, especially of human nature,
avoiding all communication with gentlemen and well informed individuals,
associating chiefly with the weak and ignorant, whose imaginations they
so bewilder and inflame by their incoherent harangues on faith, and the
eternal punishments of unbelievers, that the poor creatures, thrown into
a perplexity of doubt, terror, and shame for their former state of sin
and wickedness, are ready to confess themselves guilty of all the crimes
forbidden in the Decalogue, and, till they knew their present teachers,
ignorant of religion, of the gospel of salvation, and of the name of
Jesus. Then comes the statement of these new teachers of the ungodly
mountaineers, on whose alleged want of religion and morality their
own future employment depends. Reports from such sources would,
therefore, deservedly pass unnoticed, were they not too often
countenanced by respectable persons, who know not, perhaps, from their
own experience, the correctness of what appears under their sanction,
and from whom it might Slave been expected that a whole people would not
have been vilified, and exhibited to the world as an unchristian race,
degraded by the basest vices, without sufficient cause, and on the best
foundation. That in any part of Scotland there are people who know
not the name of Jesus, is a strong assertion, and ought not to be
hazarded, far less sanctioned, in the absence of all proof. Without
presuming to offer my own personal experience in opposition to these
statements, extensively circulated, to the great prejudice of a people
who have not the means of defending themselves, I now appeal to all
liberal and intelligent Highlanders, if they ever met with even one
instance in their native country, where the name of Jesus was
unknown; or with the basest vices, and with savage heathens. Such
reports, unless founded on indisputable facts, injure the cause they are
intended to support, especially where the general conduct of a people
offers so ready and full a contradiction. So far as regards the
Highlands, they ought to be received with extreme caution. It is
difficult to conceive,—indeed many think it impossible to believe,—that
a people who have enabled me to bring forward so many honourable traits
of their native character, and to produce instances equally honourable
to them as soldiers, can be, indeed, without religion,, without
military spirit, enemies to truth, degraded by the basest vices, and
ignorant even of the name of their Saviour.
It will be equally difficult to believe, that in this
country, with such uninterrupted and general means of communication, men
should be found intelligent in many respects, yet so deficient in
correct knowledge of the state and character of the inhabitants of a
large portion of their native country, as to doubt whether they are
Christians, and if they ever heard the name of Jesus in their families;
for it must be solely to an ignorance of facts that the false and
unfounded reports published by societies and individuals on the religion
and morals of a whole people can be ascribed. Many very good men, with
the best intentions, are not aware of the injury they do by thus lending
their name to defame, as unprincipled and base, the unfortunate objects
of these cruel animadversions, and the misery they contribute to entail
upon them by the countenance they give to those who are too ready to
consider the lower orders of their country as a burthen which must be
borne with, or as an evil to be removed with the most convenient speed.
Men, who were before irresolute, and, perhaps, afraid to encounter
public odium by harsh measures, will have their resolutions strengthened
when they hear it proclaimed by societies, and in meetings, that their
dependents are affected with the basest vices; and thus their plans of
reducing their station in society,—breaking their spirit of
independence, by making them cottagers, and subservient to the men of
capital, will be enforced, and will occasion more crimes and
demoralization than the united exertions of all the societies in the
country to educate and enlighten will be able to counteract. Instead of
slanderous aspersions, equally unjust as they are injurious, it might
have been expected that men, who profess much Christian charity, would
abstain from injuring and slandering the character of an unoffending
people, who have always shown themselves ready to receive instruction,
and who ought rather to be commended for the religious knowledge, moral
rectitude, and general intelligence which they exhibit under the
greatest disadvantages. When the people are represented as base and
worthless, why are those who have the power, and yet neglect, or refuse,
to provide the means of instruction, exempted from blame? When parishes
in the Highlands are twenty, forty, and, in some cases, even more than
sixty miles in extent, the cause of ignorance, wherever it is found to
exist, ought to be traced to a source different from the supposed innate
depravity and incapacity of their poor inhabitants; and when a few
thousand pounds annually in the erection of new parishes, and in support
of clergymen, would remedy this evil, are those who draw the whole
produce of the country in the rents they exact, and withhold these
benefits to pass without animadversion, and those only who are in
poverty and unable to pay clergymen, and who
suffer from this disregard to their spiritual welfare, to be reprobated,
and to be made to suffer still more, by cruel and unjust
misrepresentations of their character? That itinerant preachers, and
others who oppose the established church, should represent the
state of religion in the Highlands, where the people are, with the
exception of the few Catholics, strongly attached to the
National Faith, as grossly ignorant of what they call Evangelical
truth, is no more than was to be expected, since thereby they promote
their own objects; and therefore, if they can make the world believe
that they found the people sunk low in heathenish practices and
ignorance, and that their rivals, the parish ministers, are ignorant of
the true faith, and regardless of their sacred duties, they expect to
have the better chance of being themselves employed, and the greater
triumph, should they make converts to their own tenets; so that,
although the barbarism, the ignorance, and the immorality of the
Highlanders form the basis of such Reports, their correctness may with
perfect propriety be doubted.
[One of the most
remarkable of all the new discoveries with regard to the Highlands was
one said, to have been made some time ago, of a population, consisting
nearly of 2000 persons, living sequestered in the mountains of
Sutherland, paying no rents, acknowledging no superior, and existing in
a kind of independant freedom, like the Indians in the wilds of America.
Such, on the authority of the advocates for the new improvements in the
North, was the state of this numerous body, some of whom must no doubt
be of those unfortunate Scotchmen who know not even the name of their
Saviour. If the circumstances were true, what opinion must be formed
of the landholders and clergymen, who allowed the people to remain in
such a deplorable state, unprecedented in any other Christian country?
Expressing my astonishment, some time ago, to a
gentleman of considerable influence, and a frequent speaker at public
meetings, how he could be a party to such Reports as he had
countenanced, when, by his frequent excursions to the Highlands, he must
have seen how false and perfectly contrary they were to the real state
of the case 5 his excuse was, that he did not know the whole of the
country,—that, although he never met with an instance of the kind
him-self, others might,—and that a strong case was necessary to make
people advance money! Is it for the sake of a strong case, and to make
the world approve of the changes in the Highlands, that near 500
families are described as living like savages in the mountains, under no
control or obligation? And is it to forward the cause of religion, that
lying statements are published, and people falsely calumniated as being
unchristian? The Christian religion is founded on truth, and ought to be
supported by truth; and it is a bad example
to that morality which is expected from the diffusion of religious
instruction, and the prosperity from agricultural improvements, to
publish statements which every intelligent person in the country can
contradict as not founded on fact; and the nature of those improvements,
which must be so defended, and which cost so much money in vindicatory
publications, must be very doubtful, and must be very different in their
nature and effects from the improvements of some honourable friends of
mine, which require no apology. These improvements speak for themselves
in the prosperity of the landlords, and the contented and happy
condition of the people ; and the state of religious knowledge, with its
practical effects, is best proved by the character, conduct, and well
regulated established principles of those who profess it.]
But that the established clergy should give in to
those unfounded calumnies and thus prejudice their own church and
brethren, the ministers of Highland parishes, was not to be expected;
for, if the people are in the state represented, the character of the
clergymen of the church of Scotland must be greatly changed, since much
of the fault must be theirs, from a neglect of duty—a neglect of which
they were never accused till itinerant preachers began to traverse the
Highlands, and the publication of the Reports on which these
observations are founded. The people of this country are naturally
charitable, and only require to be told a plain and faithful statement
of facts to call forth and rouse the most benevolent feelings. Let the
poverty of the Highlanders, the shameful neglect of their superiors, the
want of clergymen and of schools, and the consequent privations to which
they are subject, be fairly and honestly stated, and it will be
sufficient for the purpose intended, without making unjust and unfounded
reflections on morals and character, and making assertions which it is
impossible to prove. In the Highlands, attempts to calumniate and
underrate the capability and morals of the people may do, and have
already done, incalculable injury.
Oppression is unjustifiable on any grounds, but if
exercised on a worthless and unprincipled race, the indignation
naturally excited is softened. If the Highland character were to be
taken from recent statements, any oppression, even to extirpation, would
meet with little reprehension, and excite no pity for the victims.
[The black Carribbs of
the Island of St Vincent were a Negro-African race, and
had committed great excesses during the insurrections in the years 1795
and 1796. Indeed, the persons and properties of the white inhabitants
were in constant risk of murder and conflagration from their black
neighbours; and when they were rooted out, and banished to the Island of
Ratan, it was considered a measure of indispensable necessity, and met
with general approbation. The yellow Carribbs, the aborigines of the
West Indies, are, on the contrary, of a mild disposition, remarkable for
their regular and proper conduct. Had they been extirpated, something of
the same indignation would have been expressed as has ever been in all
Christian countries against the horrible cruelties of the Spaniards
after the discovery of those islands. But in St Vincent the yellow
Carribbs were cherished and protected as their character and exemplary
habits deserved, and the few of them who remain are now in possession
(as I hope they will always be) of the woods and forests of their
forefathers. It is unnecessary to follow up the illustration, as it is
evident that if the character of the Highlanders were such as is too
often represented, their extirpation would be a happy riddance to this
country.]
I have endeavoured to place the character of my
countrymen in what appears to me its true light, and I regret, for their
sake, that the task to unveil the truth, to vindicate the injured, and,
by an honest and plain narrative of undoubted facts, to point out the
wrongs of the oppressed, has not fallen into abler hands, and that,
among all the philanthropists whom this age has produced, none has
stepped forward to advocate the cause of the calumniated Highlanders.
This task devolved upon me, as I have noticed in the preface, from my
compliance with the accidental request of a professional friend; and I
hope this attempt will at least show, that the subject is worthy of some
notice; and, if followed up by a man of talent and research, it will be
found that I have given a sketch merely of a great mass of matter of no
common interest. The military part of the subject presents a wide and
interesting field, and much both of the past and the present state of
the Highlands, fitted to awaken the strongest and tender-est sympathies
of the heart, still remains untold. The present state of that country is
indeed well worthy of the attention of the moralist, the philanthropist,
the patriot, and the rural economist. In any age but the present, when
every evil is to be cured by finding its own level, and when so
much is said and written to subdue all feelings of humanity, or
regard for the happiness of the people, when supposed to come in
opposition to any plan for individual advantages, or general
improvements in the Highlands; a full exposition of the plans pursued,
the slanders and falsehoods on which they are founded, the callous
manner in which they are carried into execution, with their lamentable
effects as they have already shown themselves, and still more to be
dreaded in their further progress, would perhaps create a stronger
impression in favour of the poor Highlanders. But still, as it is to be
hoped that many will not allow themselves to be deluded by those
specious views of expected prosperity to the proprietors of the land,
and the monied men who are to occupy it, (as, by the views of modern
economists, none but men of capital ought to be agriculturists and
cultivators,) we may look forward in the hope that some person, capable
of doing justice to so interesting a subject, will undertake it, and
introduce many facts and much important information, which, in this
first attempt to call the public attention to the state of the Highlands
and the inhabitants, I have been induced, for various reasons, to
suppress.
And now I cannot conclude these Sketches better than
by noticing the obligations which the public in general, and Scotland in
particular, owe to the author of those exquisite pictures of life called
the Scotch Novels; from the great moral effect produced on the mind, by
exhibiting the pleasing, the homely customs of our country, and the
feelings of our common nature, as they appear in his specimens of the
Lowland peasantry, and of all the lower orders of his countrymen. Many
of the highest qualities of the human mind, as he has shown, are called
forth by the very privations and difficulties to which their humble lot
subjects them : fortitude, kept in continual exercise by having always
much to endure,—gratitude, more lively as obligation is more deeply
felt,—fidelity, very frequent, and more meritorious as resisting strong
temptations,—acuteness and sagacity, sharpened by frequent
exigencies,—and, above all, that humble and earnest piety which forms
the basis of their virtues and the solace of their hardships. It is
melancholy to observe, that, when so many have taste enough to be, or
fashion enough to seem, delighted with these fine pictures of rustic
worth, so few should seek out and cherish the originals from which they
were drawn. Let us hope that this feeling, once awakened, and seconded
by sound reason, will produce in the Highlands a revival of that
kindness and protection which preserved the attachment and confidence of
the peasantry, and prevent that demoralization, and that dissolution of
those mutual feelings between the different orders of society which
appear in so threatening an aspect as to afford some plea for the
extirpation of a brave, loyal, and estimable race, of whom, if once
banished, we may truly say, that "we shall not look upon their like
again." What the Highlanders have been, and what they may still be,
I have endeavoured to show; and while I have presumed to differ in
opinion with many, in exhibiting the character and capability of my
countrymen, I trust I have not done so without producing some well
authenticated facts in support of opinions, which militate against those
of men conspicuous for talents and acquirements, and to whose judgment I
would readily yield, were I not sensible that I speak with more
know-ledge of facts illustrative of the subject, originating principally
from the circumstances of my being a native of the country, and having
from early infancy associated much with the people. Speaking their
language, and keeping an attentive ear and observant eye to what was
said or done in my presence, I have been enabled to acquire a
considerable knowledge of their habits, dispositions, and traditional
histories. Descended by both parents from families in which all I have
said of patriarchal kindness and devoted attachment had for ages been
exemplified with the happiest reciprocal results; and still farther,
having had occasion, in the course of my professional duties, to come
into daily contact with the same people, and thus had an opportunity of
witnessing their moral worth, and steady courage, and of experiencing
their fidelity and friendship,—1 should consider myself ungrateful and
unworthy of that fidelity and friendship, of which I have so frequently
been the object, if I had not availed myself of those opportunities of
calling the public attention to an interesting subject, in the hope of
arresting, if possible, the extirpation, or, what is equally to be
deprecated and lamented, the destruction of the moral feelings and
unshaken loyalty of a valuable race.
Having made use of these combined means of
information, when my profession offered no employment, I shall consider
my spare time and humble talents as having been well occupied, if I have
succeeded in affording some idea of the character, capability, and
importance to the state, of an interesting part of the population,
when treated with Justice and kindness. I also feel gratified in
having been able to exhibit in one view the military force embodied in
the barren and unproductive mountains of Scotland; and how far these
eighty-six battalions, with their numerous reinforcements, have, by
their numbers and physical force,—by their courage, and by their moral
character,—contributed to uphold the honour, and to maintain, what has
been often threatened, the very existence of this country as an
independent state.