To look at Stratheden, its
normal aspect seems one of undisturbed seclusion, so far as visitors are
concerned. And yet it is visited, and that largely compared with thirty
years ago,—this change, like many others referred to, having been
brought about very much by the growing facilities of communication.
Besides sportsmen and "great guns" in other fields, there come regularly
commercial travellers—an apparently industrious class of persons—and
there likewise visit us tourists, tramps, and tinkers — the visits from
the two latter fraternities being more frequent than the average
resident cares about. Though by no means least, we elect to speak of
sportsmen last, for a reason which, while valid in our own eyes, may
seem slender enough to priority hunters among sportsmen; for doubtless
even. among them men wishing to be first will be found. The Twelfth of
August is the orthodox date of the sportsman's first outing. Tramps and
tinkers arrive long before then; and indeed we ourselves have been
honoured with a visit from representatives of the two latter communities
as early as the first, not of August merely, but even of January.
Tourists, specially so called, and commercial travellers likewise, are
earlier arrivals than the worshippers of Saint Grouse and kindred idols.
So then, in the matter of order of treatment, we avoid the delicate
question of precedence, and for the nonce adopt the rule of "first come,
first described."
Tramps of various sorts
come to Stratheden at all seasons and in all weathers, and—especially in
summer and autumn—in perplexingly large numbers. The mainland districts,
of course, are more largely visited by them, certain of the outer
islands enjoying a privileged immunity from this species of infliction.
The tramp is an almost daily visitor, and often he who calls early in
the day is but the pioneer of more to follow, many tramps arranging to
come to districts in bands. We happened in a very harmless way recently
to observe to a tramp, in a sort of inquiring manner, that we thought
the class of people he belonged to travelled in bands. He denied the
fact in the bold style that the average tramp adopts when displeased ;
and, bolder still, he proceeded to remark that he himself had never been
in Stratheden before,—the fact being that he had visited the parish
twice within the preceding six months. The recent commercial depression
caused a great increase in the tramp department, or at least it supplied
many with an introductory ground of appeal. "Out of work," "trade dull,"
"got my hand crushed," "got my leg broken," "fell ill," are some of the
stock introductory phrases popular among them; but few, if any, that
study their ways believe their statements—an incredulity warranted by
the tramp's very frequent disregard of truth. To judge from the number
coming, and the frequency of their visits, one would suppose tramps do a
flourishing business in Stratheden; and indeed we are glad to be able to
chronicle that Highlanders generally lean in the direction of taking a
practical compassion on the wandering homeless poor. Some tramps
obviously enough need help, whether they deserve it or not, — old
broken-down men, and young but old-looking men, with a shattered
miserable look painfully suggestive of the hard ways of the
transgressor. Some are essentially bad-looking fellows, with a cast of
face indicating some capacity for roughness and cunning; and though, as
a rule, they make no distinctly violent displays, a refusal of help at
times discovers some leanings that way. Such as are believed to be
deserving are usually helped. There are some of them one can easily
pronounce undeserving—the saucy, growling grumblers that refuse to take
meat instead of money. Individuals of this ungrateful type refuse such
food as bread and milk, fish, and meal, apparently thinking no other
help than hard cash worth having. The Stratheden crofters and others in
the parish rarely would send a tramp away unhelped ; but the tramp's
preference for the compact coin cannot always be satisfied by the
average resident. A refusal of help—of money help, that is —occasionally
gives rise to a ludicrous though unpleasant scene. The unsatisfied tramp
gets angry, and gives vent to his feelings in the offensive slang in
which most of the fraternity seem well versed. The refusing party, as
happens now and then, is more at home in Gaelic than English, and
responds with more or less bitterness in the former language, of which
the tramp is ignorant. Of one mind for the moment—that is, in being
angry with each other —they employ different languages, but seem,
however, to succeed in rousing each other's anger as well as relieving
their own feelings.
Tramps have various ways
of finding lodgings for the night. In summer and autumn, ordinarily,
this matter is not reckoned problematic by themselves. Most of them then
select a grassy bed in some sheltered spot, and with nought between them
and the sky, in this wide berth await the morn. Some will select a
cart-shed for a sleeping apartment; and a Stratheden crofter told us of
his having one morning last autumn found a tramp asleep in his cart, and
that with a soundness that some accustomed to better or softer beds
might envy. Many of these tramps are very much afraid of horses and
cattle, and in selecting the sort of wide berth referred to, they are
careful to see that these quadrupeds have a field for themselves,
—careful to give them, in other words, a very "wide berth." A tramp came
to us in great distress one evening Iately, begging for old clothes. He
related a mishap that befell him, and on which he grounded an urgent
appeal for clothes. He was, to give his own story, passing through a
park belonging to a Stratheden farmer, and a certain quadruped (a
perfectly harmless heifer, we were afterwards told) seemed anxious to
interview the tramp, and even make, as the alarmed vagrant believed, a
decidedly definite appeal to his feelings. The tramp did not reciprocate
the heifer's attentions, and proseeded to retire from the field.
Gathering speed, though losing coolness, as he fled from the quadruped,
he reached a wire fence, once over which he would be safe. In leaping
the fence, the poor tramp, unnecessarily frightened—for he never looked
back to see that the heifer gave up the chase, if it ever really began
it—got entangled somehow in the fence, and a piece of broken wire did
serious damage to his clothes. Hence his urgent appeal to us for
clothes. When the weather prevents the tramp occupying the large sort of
bed alluded to, other lodgings must be got. In Stratheden there are a
few houses that afford shelter for a few pence—threepence usually—per
night ; and those that either will not or cannot give even this small
sum try to find a bed in some open outhouse or other available corner.
Adhering to the
precedence of early arrival in our description of visitors, after
tramps, specially so called, come tinkers, well known in all Highland
parishes. Some of these latter come as early as the tramps; but the
important fact is that both come earlier than is ordinarily relished,
and certainly oftener than is liked. In Stratheden there are at times no
fewer than half-a-dozen tinker camps. It is common enough, on a calm
morning, to see smoke rising from three or four tents pitched in
sheltered nooks along the Strath. These tinkers seem to like the
sheltered woods of Stratheden. In the best-kept woods even, there will
always be some firewood available, which is an important consideration
from the tinker point of view; and the running stream in the wood is
another advantage when clothes are to be washed, and when the rarer
exercise of personal ablution is indulged in.
The prevailing tinker
names are Stewart, Macphee, Macneil, and Macalister. The Stewarts
consider themselves the representatives of the older and better type of
the tinker tribe, and this contention now and then develops into
contentions of a more violent sort. These latter contentions, as a rule,
are settled, or rather, for the time, finished, in the pronounced and
rather disgusting fashion deemed orthodox by the fraternity. Not that
big fights are common among the tinkers frequenting Stratheden. Of
course they have their domestic squabbles, as some other people not
ordinarily called tinkers have; but it is doubtful if these are as
bitter, and especially as permanent in their results, as the squabbles
of those that consider themselves better than tinkers.
The Macneils, despite the
pride of name displayed by the Stewarts, look down on the latter. The
former, undoubtedly not only have a more civilised look about them, but
exhibit something like leanings towards settled or "housed" ways of
livings. The Alacneils and Macalisters do no small traffic in
horse-dealing; and some of the Stratheden people, though dubious as to
the safety of trafficking with tinkers, accept the risk and buy, or, as
is often the case, exchange horses with them.
The children of the camp,
always remarkably numerous, seem almost uncared for, though in not a few
cases this is more apparent than real. Although, as among other people,
some scenes of more or less frequent occurrence seem to indicate a
scantiness of affection for relatives among tinkers, they have their
feelings, of course, as the saying is; and instances of this are met
with. Some time ago the son of a tinker, at the time camped in
Stratheden, died, and the sad, heart-broken look of his father's face
for long after amply proved that, however much despised by many, they
are not insensible to the influence of natural affection. Last spring,
while taking a walk one evening along a road in Stratheden, we heard in
the distance the bagpipes sounding, and, liking the stirring strains, we
naturally wished to know whence they issued. Our curiosity was soon set
at rest. A little farther on from where we first heard the music there
is a quarry, in which at the time there was a tinker camp—and there, a
few yards from the camp, to bagpipe-music played by their father, danced
two tinker children, brother and sister, player and dancers looking as
happy as could be. The scene was suggestive in many ways, but we must
not wait to moralise. Often in the coldest weather tinkers' children run
about barefooted, but never seem to feel cold. Poor children! they
thrive wonderfully, and it is almost miraculous that they do so,
considering the hardships they have to endure in their too early
wanderings. By a strange reversing of the ordinary arrangement, the
children of a tinker camp are often the principal providers of the food
of the family. The people of Stratheden are well aware how largely the
commissariat department of the camp is intrusted to the tinker
begging-children. The older members of the family are not above begging;
but while the tinkers' bairns are commissioned to beg meal, butter, tea,
sugar, and milk, the former devote special attention to providing, by
begging from "big fairmer" or small crofter, hay, straw, and oats for
their horses.
Tinkers have been known
to attend church in Stratheden, but they are not strong in church-going;
and we have often wondered whether their sense of the estimate
ordinarily very low, formed of them by outsiders, has anything to do
with their very rare frequenting of church. But this suggests a large
subject, and we proceed to observe, that though not given to church
-going, they affect ecclesiasti-cal designations, and very irreverently,
as do some others" not ordinarily called tinkers, introduce these
designations into their fights and squabbles generally. Some of them say
they are Protestants, while others allege they are Roman Catholics; and
in a rather big fight that took place a few months ago in a parish near
Stratheden, where tinker representatives of each faith were engaged,
they were calling each other by the various ecclesiastical names, with
prefixes, and affixes too, of very violent and disgusting import. The
same feeling perhaps may be easily enough met with in more refined
communities---but then tinkers have their own way of squabbling; and
though refined people, so called, might desire to give like definite and
striking expression to the feeling—the ecclesiastical feeling, we
mean—it is well it is not fashionable.
Their wandering life,
while unfavourable to churchgoing, is particularly injurious in regard
to the education of their children. In fact their children are hardly
ever educated—and the best way of getting them educated constitutes a
somewhat difficult problem. But though perplexing as it stands, the
problem is not unhopefully so, when it is considered that the tinker
system shows signs of yielding to the changes of to-day. Some tinkers'
sons, encouraged by the travelling facilities of these days, and not
quite ignorant of ambition, are taking to more civilised, settled ways
of living ; and this itself, among a people at one time so very
exclusive and isolated, is significant as to the future. Then, again,
the tin dishes and other articles sold by tinkers can now be so easily
had elsewhere, that the tin specialty which long sustained many a camp
will gradually cease to have its effect. And there is a reason of quite
a different kind for thinking the system is destined to break up.
Notwithstanding that occasionally a stalwart frame is seen among them,
on many may be seen an ominous enough look of physical feebleness.
Frequent exposure to wet and cold, scanty clothing and little food, in
addition to intemperate habits, have made deterioration evident enough
in not a few cases—a fact which encourages the belief that the
distinctiveness of the fraternity will gradually be modified, and
probably, in the not very distant future, altogether cease to hold. To
render this more probable, it need only be added that within recent
years some tinkers, previously known in Stratheden in their wandering
ways, have taken to a stationary mode of life, and now occupy settled
homes.
Adhering to our rule as
to priority of treatment, commercial travellers would now be referred
to. They, however, have been spoken of in the chapter on "Shopkeeping,"
and other than what is there indicated, there is no feature of special
interest in the commercial traveller's relation to the average Highland
parish.
Next in order of
treatment come tourists. They are far behind tramps and tinkers—as to
date of arrival, that is to say. Tourists pass and repass in increasing
numbers from the beginning of July until the end of September. Many of
them wait to luxuriate amid the stillness and the grand scenery of
Stratheden. Though there is not much, if any, of what is popularly known
as the "lion" element to be seen in Stratheden, there are shaggy
mountain-brows and bold faces of gigantic rocks; and though no grand
triumphs of architectural skill are visible, who knows but the
chronicler of the future may have something great to say of Stratheden
in this respect — a future, too, not far distant? There is as wide a
gulf between some of they cottages of to-day and the huts of fifty years
ago, as there is between the former and certain structures daily visited
as triumphs of architecture. But there are at this moment in Stratheden
curiosities of architecture, models, in their way, of design and build.
There are one or two specimens of huts, of a kind common fifty years
ago, yet lingering, and perhaps the like of them may never have been
seen by some that travel far in quest of " lions." Not that they are
squalid: the average Highland parish stands tolerably high in the matter
of cleanliness, whatever may be said of the godliness to which it is
said cleanliness is so nearly allied. Nor are these huts devoid of
comfort of a kind ; and indeed, so far as dryness and warmth are
concerned, they are superior to some more elaborate structures. The
fabrics we allude to are peculiar for their sunk-flat appearance, their
scanty light and defective ventilation, and the very rare contrivances
for securing both. This sort of building, already sunken in its look,
will soon utterly sink out of view ; but by those among visitors to
Highland parishes who wish to study the history of an interesting people
and country, such buildings will be thought at least worth looking at.
To certain tourists they ought to possess a fond interest. Many that
first saw the light in such a home are to-day occupying influential and
lucrative situations in various parts of the country. Some of these make
a point of occasionally visiting the scene of early days; and all such,
except those afflicted with a contemptible emptiness of head and heart,
will give a fond lingering look at "the auld hoose," if it yet endures;
and should their dear auld hoose have yielded to the removing influence
of time, there is a sort of satisfying of the commendable feeling
alluded to in even looking at any similar humble habitation yet "to the
fore."
As was to be expected,
the new means of locomotion have increased the number of tourists, and
there has been much commendable enterprise displayed to meet the
increasing strain on the means of communication between southern
districts and the Northern Highlands generally. The Highland Railway
Company, and the owners of the excellent and admirably managed fleet of
steam-ships known in the West Highlands as "the Hutchesons'" steamers —
the Messrs Hutcheson have a very worthy successor in Mr Macbrayne have
so efficiently contributed their respective shares to the establishing
of rapid and easy communication, that to-day the proverbial distance
"from Land's End to John o' Groat's" may be travelled in little over
twenty four hours; and Oban, Skye, Strathpeffer, and other places
deservedly famous for health-giving qualities and richly varied scenery,
are brought within easy access. Oban, so much nearer the south now that
the Oban and Callander Railway is open, forms an excellent centre for
pleasant and interesting excursions by sea and land, and is also valued
by many as a bathing-place; while for such as are neither on excursions
nor on bathing bent, Oban is an attractive place to linger in for a week
or two. Skye, so long and so deservedly enjoying an established
reputation among tourists in quest of scenery and health, continues to
grow in favour because the travelling facilities are bringing it within
more convenient reach and making it better known; and enterprising
endeavours are being made to meet the growing demand for hotel
accommodation in this beautiful "isle of the west."
There is, of course, very
considerable variety in the tourist element. It is not, however,
necessary to detail this variety, as it is not a feature peculiar to
tourists visiting Highland parishes. Suffice it to say, there come big
and little men, literally and figuratively; and it is amusing enough to
notice those tourists whose conscious looks and general air suggest that
they feel very big on the strength of the mere fact of being tourists.
There was a time when more than now this vain conceit was satisfied.
This was when tourists were rare, and the average Highlander's views of
the world generally somewhat narrow and hazy—flash, glitter, and tall
talk having then a tendency to command the wonderment of the poorer
Highlanders in their humble obscurity. And yet the conscious ones
continue to come, and probably will do so, although the vision and
discriminating powers of the average Highlander are becoming daily
enlarged. But, of course, tourists with the conscious leaning are but a
proportion — a small proportion, let it be gratefully noted—of the many
annually flocking to the Highlands. Family groups, solitary bachelors
and groups of bachelors, elderly maiden ladies singly and in groups,
generally speaking, make up the usual tourists; and there are city
merchants, lawyers, clergymen, medical men, landed proprietors, and
persons of no occupation, among the number. The city pastor, exhausted
with sermon-making, and especially with visiting his flock and attending
to the other usual and ordinary duties, comes to get up renewed vigour
of mind and body. Sometimes a conscious parson may be seen strutting
along in a very large way; but it is only just to "the cloth" to say
such parsons are rare--which is fact that he spent no small portion of
his early life in one of those "dreadfully black and little huts " he
talks about so disparagingly and feebly. But there are other "Highland
laddies" of a wiser, manlier sort. These, in early life, go to push
their fortune in one or other of the southern towns, and succeed, —
Highlanders have a way of succeeding,—and it is a settled resolve with
thern that their native parish be revisited periodically; and if those
that made the "old home" dear are gone, there is a saddened satisfaction
in revisiting the very heather, and the rocks, and the bonnie burn
"clear winding still," near which stood the home of early days. Those we
speak of have not forgot their Gaelic, as some ones of the weaker sort
affect to do; and, impressed with memories of days of yore, they like to
speak it with such as may happen to know it—while the latter speak to
them of the old people and ways, alluding, half sorrowfully it may be,
to the changed aspect of to-day.
In addition to the
benefits gained by tourists themselves in their Highland rambles,
certain of the natives and others are benefited by the tourist system in
respect of the circulation of money thus caused. Where no "boots" forms
one of the appliances and; means of the Highland inn, and where, should
such exist, the pressure of the busy season renders "boots" unable to
nun to the occasion, some boys and grown-up lads in Highland parishes
make rather a good thing of it during the season by carrying luggage and
going messages for tourists. Then some tourists go a-fishing, and this
means employment for such as we refer to. And again, some tourist of
antiquarian or geologic leaning goes for a ramble among the rocks in the
hope of a precious "find," and he must needs take one of the village
boys to carry the collection; and hence to such boy a find much more
fondly prized by him than the treasure intrusted to him by his temporary
employer. Some of our readers may have read or heard of an incident
recorded as having taken place in the Highlands, and which shows how a
tourist of this latter description was pretty decidedly done by a man
whom he employed iii the capacity indicated. To the best of our
recollection the main circumstances are these: The tourist, an
enthusiastic student of lithology, left a Highland inn one summer
morning to search for precious stones near a rocky hill some fourteen
miles away. He was accompanied by a native Highlander—a calculating,
cute sort of man; but so far as the metals prized by his employer were
concerned, stone-blind. In the course of the day various stones of the
precious sort were gathered, which were deposited in a strong canvas or
leather bag carried by the hired man. In the evening the two parted, the
tourist giving specific instructions to his attendant to take the stones
to the inn. Feeling the precious metals rather a burden, the Highlander
adopted the very simple expedient of throwing all the stones away,
thinking it foolish indeed to carry a burden of stones fourteen miles,
when there were so many stones quite as good just beside the inn!
Arrived at the inn with the empty bag, he filled it to the original
apparent bulk with very, very common stones, not certainly classified
among precious stones, which treasure he ordered to be given to the
enthusiastic student of lithology on his return!
In pursuance of our order
of treatment as determined by date of arrival, we now proceed to say a
few words of sportsmen. To some sportsmen the very difficulty of
travelling to and in the Highlands long ago used to be an additional
attraction in respect of that difficulty satisfying adventurous leanings
but notwithstanding this, the number of sportsmen coming to the
Highlands is larger since the travelling facilities have been increased.
There are several shooting-boxes in Stratheden—the district being not a
little famous for its attractiveness in this respect. Since the railway
was extended to the district, one or two pretty-looking shooting-lodges
have gone up in the parish; and early in August the ordinarily quiet
railway station of Stratheden for a few days presents a thronged and
bustling aspect. As in other places, there is no small variety of rank
and intellect discernible in this annual accession to the population.
Including the lessees of the shootings and their guests, there are earls
and lords not a few, esquires too numerous to mention, and
parsons—chiefly from south of the Tweed—in well nigh amazing abundance.
Many of the natives view
with special horror the fact of "munnistarrs going to the hull to be
shooting and running aifter the birds." Some such natives, aiming at
being sarcastic, may now and then be heard saying - "Graysheous me! what
would the godly people before say if they would be seeing munnistarrs
running like mat people with fire and powter? I wonder whatna place in
the Bible tells them to be shooting and work like that? They're saying
they will be going on their, knees in the hull for the birds and the
like o' that. Am afraid it's no on their knees where they should be
they'll be." Nor is it the uneducated alone that make comments of this
sort. A Free Church clergyman not sixty miles from Stratheden, and
seemingly not disposed to think kindly of the sportsman institution
generally, a short time ago, in referring to sportsmen, ended some
strong remarks with the following silly, but, as he believed, triumphant
sarcasm: "I wonder how many gamekeepers Moses had?" We trust it is not
beyond our province to express the hope that this game problem, started
by the divine referred to, will not be thought of sufficient importance
to engage the attention of the competent Church judicatories, already
amply agitated anent themes where Moses is concerned.
Besides the class of
persons indicated, tea-planters from India and China, prosperous city
merchants from Glasgow, Edinburgh, and London, bankers of various
stamps, retired grocers from all quarters, and not a few cultured
disciples of the pen and the pencil, may be found among the many
sportsmen annually visiting the Highlands. It is unnecessary to say much
anent the variety of intellect observable. As among other people, there
are among theme4men of4mind, and men very scantily endowed with brains;
persons of mediocrity, and some a degree higher than the ordinary level;
and as is true of tourists, there are "conscious" ones among sportsmen
also, these latter being very big persons. Ordinarily, however, the
repose of culture is to be seen among sportsmen, though stupidity, and
even vulgarity, have each representatives among them.
In inquiring what
influence the annual accession of sportsmen has on the average Highland
parish, there is no doubt that the most prominent, and certainly the
most definite result, is the circulation of money thus caused ; and so
far, at Ieast, they do good to others. The average native resident had
long been in the habit of reckoning sportsmen veritable
"mints,"—visitors with unlimited ability, and a constant readiness, to
give away money. This delusion may now be almost pronounced extinct; and
it is much the same with the feeling of something like awe with which
sportsmen used to be viewed by the average native of long ago, as being
in every case not only extraordinarily rich, but great and powerful, and
everything that was impressive. Of course, the rich, and the great too,
are to-day among sportsmen as of old, and so also are the good and the
true; but the penny paper and cheap literature generally, and the
widening view encouraged by this and the travelling facilities of
to-day, are combining to invest the local estimate of sportsmen with a
more sensible, discerning, and, consequently, a more independent
character. Nor, so far as some sportsmen are concerned, would their
estimate of the natives be the worse of modification. Some of the less
thoughtful and cultured of sportsmen are too prone to be influenced by
the "inferior clay" idea, and to discard certain harmless local
prejudices, in such matters, for instance, as Sunday observance. We know
well enough, and, we think, have shown in another chapter, that the
Highland estimate of what right Sunday observance is has often been—and
is, to this day, in some cases—very unsound and even superstitious; but
those among sportsmen and others who know that all healthy development
requires time, and who understand that toleration is a mutual duty, will
studiously avoid giving needless offence. Many sportsmen wisely do so,
we gladly chronicle,—giving practical evidence of their belief that
Christian charity forbids giving countenance to aught that unnecessarily
hurts the harmless prejudices of even the sensitively weak. And besides
this, of many sportsmen it must be recorded to their credit, that they
give ample evidence, by kindly interest and deeds of active benevolence,
that they are wishful to render their stay in the Highlands not merely a
source of satisfaction to themselves, but likewise a source of profit
and happiness to others.
Speaking of sportsmen, it
is right that reference be made to gamekeepers and gillies. Shepherds
and ploughmen are in the habit of saying that gamekeepers have grand
times of it,—by which is meant that the latter have little to do, and
that, by regular wages and the gratuities of the shooting season, their
pecuniary advantages are great. No doubt, except for some weeks from and
after "the Twelfth," the duties of the gamekeeper are not too arduous.
He is very much his own master; nor is this privilege seriously
interfered with, even where there is a head-gamekeeper understood to
supervise two or three subordinates. He must, of course, take occasional
runs over the "ground" to see what is doing; and he is in duty bound to
beware lest aspiring ones, ambitious after even temporary gamekeepership—on
poaching bent, in other words—are on the scent for game,—which extent of
work, however, does not mean much in the nature of arduous toil. But the
gamekeeper's duties from and after the "the Twelth" until, say, early in
October, are, as a rule, heavy enough. Early astir, a long journey, hard
and constant work, and long hours, and this repeated day after day, is
no joke. Generally speaking, however, the sportsman is very mindful of
the gamekeeper's requirements in the busy season ; and in the matter of
food and drink, liberal provision is made for gamekeepers and gillies.
These officials, gamekeepers especially, acquire a sort of smartness of
manner, and particularly, as they themselves think, of speech, by
associating with sportsmen; and it is very amusing to hear some of them
affect a sort of "tall," grand talk — the amusement being intensified by
the occasional natural spicing of the Highland accent with which it is
interspersed. Some gamekeepers are essentially pawky, and, though
appearing very unassuming and receptive while in the hill with
sportsmen, are known to be carefully studying the individual characters,
as also, with apparent humility and guilelessness, humouring the
peculiarities of the several sportsmen, and especially feeding the
vanity of the vain among them. In the case of such sportsmen as are
quick to hear of local matters, it is doubtful whether, in accepting the
gamekeeper's version, the former always exercise a prudent discretion by
making allowance for local prejudices and envyings. It is pretty well
known that, in local ecclesiastical matters especially, some sportsmen
are often materially deceived by the one-sided narrative of a bigoted
gamekeeper. To know aright, sportsmen must either inquire of ones less
likely to be narrowly prejudiced, or, better still, wait to be able to
judge for themselves.
Besides gamekeepers and
gillies, many natives get work during the shooting season—so that in
this way, to others than themselves, the coming of sportsmen brings at
least one tangible benefit; but as to the measure of affection those
thus employed cherish for their employers, and as to the other and
larger question of the sentiments with which the average native views
sportsmen, we need not here inquire. We cannot help, however, expressing
the hope that, whatever extension of the sportsman system may be
contemplated, a wise, generous regard will be paid to the welfare of
farmers and crofters—both which classes, we maintain, with every
reasonable appreciation of the benefits conferred by sportsmen,
contribute so much to the strength and prosperity of the country. |