Breakfast is a delight
after such an appetiser; and fresh eggs and thin oatcakes, creamy
porridge, golden marmalade, and all the wealth of Highland fare, disappear
with startling despatch. There is no time to be wasted, either, for Archie
was to have the boat ready at half-past nine, and there is a Highland
half-mile of road between the house and the loch. Archie would by no means
scruple about expressing his candid, and perhaps not very complimentary,
opinion if the party chanced to be late; and there is a kind of unwritten
law in the house that the old servant is to be humoured as much as
possible. So already the ladies are concerning themselves with the making
and packing of sandwiches, the due stowage of cold provender, jellies,
fruit, milk, &c., and the apportioning to each his load. For the luncheon
is to be, bonâ fide, a true Robinson Crusoe affair, no servants
interfering; and each man must make himself useful.
"‘Deed, and ye’re no that
late, efter a’ !" is Archie’s magnanimous reply to a deprecating remark of
his mistress on reaching the lochside. The sunshine has evidently thawed
his usual crustiness. "Aye mem," he replies further, "it’ll be a fine
mornin’, a very fine mornin’; the hills is quite clear." After which
deliverance he holds the boat steady alongside the little wooden
landing-place, while provisions, kettles, &c., are stowed away in the bow;
and his grey eyes twinkle with pleased humour under their shaggy brows
when the heir of the house whispers some bit of sly badinage in his ear.
"Aye he iss a fine lad that, a fine lad!" the old fellow will be saying to
himself when the boat has been pushed off, and he watches from the pier
the stalwart object of his remark bestirring himself to haul up the sail.
There is just enough breeze
to curl the water gently; and when the snowy sheet is hoisted the boat
bends away gracefully before it, leaving a swirling track of foam and
eddies in her wake. When the morning is so fine as this there is little
fear of danger; but on these Highland lochs one never can foretell the
moment when a sudden gust may come down from some hillside corrie; and
cool nerves and a steady hand are needed to control sheet and tiller. The
man who loses his wits on an emergency, who cannot slacken out sail or
bring the boat’s head up to the wind when a squall strikes her, is no fit
pilot for these waters, and many a fair freight has gone to the bottom
from such an one holding the helm. A strong and ready hand is in charge
to-day, however, and "black care" is a thing impossible on board, as the
little craft goes bounding out upon the bosom of the loch.
And fair as a romance is
the scene—the clear lake winding away among the mountains, its surface
broken only by bosky islets that float in their own reflections, while the
sunny air is full of the awe and silence of the Bens.
The only spot in all the
scene where silence reigns not is on board the little boat herself; and a
continuous ripple of merry chat and joyous laughter floats away astern
with her foam. From wild little islets passed by the way come breaths of
pinewood and of heather in bloom, faint and delicious as the gales which
drifted leeward of old from home-bound spice-argosies of the East. But the
bright eyes on board are an inspiration themselves, independent of the
sunshine and the pure and scented air; and the gladness of youth has
broken forth—the contagion of happy and hopeful hearts. A sweet strain of
melody floats once and again from the bow, where the singing throats are:
Speed, bonnie boat, like a
bird on the wing!
—the Skye Boat Song, a
farewell to Prince Charlie, that old-time idol of the Highland hearts. A
sad melody it is amid its sweetness, as are all the old Jacobite songs,
with their breathing of hopes that were never to be fulfilled; and
somehow, strains like that come to the ear with more real tenderness when
sung as to-day by clear young voices among their native mountains.
Too soon, almost, the
boat’s keel grates upon the island beach—the strip of silver shingle under
the green-fringing trees. One would fain have prolonged especially the
last part of the voyage, through the straits between the islands—straits
like the miniature narrows of fairy land, between whose near and bosky
shores the fragile shallop of Oberon and Titania might almost be expected
to appear, flying a web of the woodland gossamers for its sail. But other
attractions enough lie within the island greenwood. There are delicate
groups of birches to be sketched by those who have brought block and
colours. In the rivulet dells some of the young ladies have been promised
the discovery of the much-sought hart’s-tongue fern. And for those who
wish to recall to fancy the place’s romance of the past, there are the
remains of a ruined monastery to explore. But the merriest party of all,
perhaps, is that retained for the preparation of luncheon; and it is
wonderful in how short a time those dainty-fingered damsels have the
tasteful display of linen and crystal and silver spread on a grassy plot,
the clumsy-handed males being retained, after the fashion of the
knights-errant of old, for the opening of baskets and boxes, and the
seeking of leaves wherewith to decorate fruit salvers, napkins, and the
tablecloth’s centre.
A merry meal it is, too,
which follows, al fresco—"all in the greenwood free"—with the
contortions of carvers on their knees, the popping of corks, and continual
little explosions of mysterious laughter from the various groups perched
on cloaks and rugs wherever a seat-hold offers round the roots of some
gnarled oak or ash. Never more gallant do young men appear than when
attending the wants of their fair comrades amid such a scene; and thrice
happy is he who has such an opportunity of laying siege to the heart that
he desires.
Then away again over the
island they go, in parties of two and three; and the flutter of a light
dress is to be seen and the joyous ripple of merry laughter to be heard in
many a nook and dell hitherto invaded only by the antlered and timid deer.
Many a pleasant word is spoken and many a heart mayhap lightened of its
care on such an afternoon; for the anxieties of civilised life come not to
a sylvan retreat like this, and it is impossible to be aught but
joyous-spirited when the surroundings are all of gladness.
But hark! they have caught
a piper on the mainland, and have brought him over, and there is to be a
dance on the grass. Yonder he goes, under the edge of the trees, pouring
forth "hurricanes of Highland reels." A brave sound that, setting the
blood on fire and making it impossible to sit still. And merrily go the
twinkling feet on the greensward—"figures of eight," and Reel o’ Tulloch,
Highland Schottische and Highland Fling. Wilder and faster grows the
music, as the piper catches the spirit of the scene, and faster and faster
the dancers foot it, with swirling tartans and flying skirts, till, at a
final blast of the screaming chanter, the last partners throw themselves
panting on the grass. Then a cup of tea makes a kindly refreshment and
prevents heated throats from catching cold, and the boat has to be got
ready, and the furniture of the feast stowed away. Afterwards, as the
clear young moon begins to sparkle in the sky, the sail is once more set
and the prow pointed for home. And if the wind fails, and some rowing has
to be done, the exercise is good for keeping off the chill; and with song
after song floating out across the water under the stars, a fitting end is
made of a day without regrets.