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THE
LOCH OF THE VANISHED RACES
There
is nothing gloomy about it, for the great hills lie far back from its
shores and let the sun and wind play freely about its open waters. Indeed,
from the bright, wave-washed beach at Kinloch to the far-off Glencoe Bens
the west winds race helter-skelter over the great moor with its desolate
lochans, down the gorge of the Gaur River, and over ten clear miles of
sparkling water, until you begin to think of Loch Rannoch as the loch
of perpetual breezes. It gives you the sense of the open sea as few inland
Highland lochs do. The shapely cone of Schiehallion guards its eastern
shores, and the dim blue Shepherds of Etive stand sentinel in the sunset
far away.
And yet,
this heartsome Highland loch, for all its beauty and brightness,
will always be to me the Loch of the Vanished Races.
For round its shores there is a chain of ancient graves, many a dead village,
and a whole world of lost romance, the very sough of which can only be
heard by those who know how to lean a fond ear to the pipes of time as
they wail soft coronachs down the glens. It may be that the Celt has not
yet reached his last horizon in this grey old land. But, at least, no
one who has haunted the Hebrid Isles, wandered in the waste places of
the hills, or looked long and lovingly for some news of a lost folk in
the Standing Stones can deny that where once the glens were thick with
clansmen and hundreds rallied to the battle-cry, today it would be hard
to elist a company or gather a mere platoon. The wind sings only one lament
as it moans about the bracken braes where the shielings lie in ruins :-
CHA
TILL, CHA TILLE, CHA TILLE MI TUILLE --- No more, no more, no more
returning.
Standing
any summer day in the little square at Kinloch, you will hear nothing
but the clatter of English tongues, with a word or two of the good Gaelic
wafted to you on a stray breeze when a bodach goes by or a ghillie passes
on to the smiddy, with a garron from Tummelside or far Corrievachtie.
Yet, time was when the shores of Rannoch swarmed with Robertsons, Macgregors,
and Camerons, with some venturesome Campbells who had travelled north
from the real Argyll.
There
is a rocky height above Kinloch called Craigievar, once tree-clad, now
bare and bald except for a tuft of pines left on its summit, like the
feathers on an Indian's head. Climb the scarp, and what a volume of history
you can read in that little open valley - once an extension of the Loch
- which runs from the river mouth to Dunalastair !
Yonder,
snuggling among the trees at the glen-foot right opposite is Innerhadden,
where St Chad is said to have had a disert or chapel of retreat. This
is more than likely. For, when Aidan, that princely successor of Columba
in Iona, went south to Lindisfarne, he brought back from Northumbria two
of his Saxon converts, the brothers Cedd and Chad, to receive further
instruction in Iona. When they were on their return journey, some time
about 650, they settled for a time at Fortingal in the Lyon Valley, beyond
Schiehallion, and while there St Cedd built churches at Fortingal and
Logierait, while his brother St Chad founded the churches of Grandtully
and Foss. Both were made bishops on their return to the south. St Cedd
was Bishop of Essex, and St Chad fixed his See of Mercia at Lichfield,
where in the Cathedral today you can look upon his shrine.
How
much meaning there is in an ancient Gaelic word ! As Innerhadden means
the Beginning of the Fight, and Dalchosnie means the Field of Victory,
and Glen Sassunn that runs between them means the Englishman's Glen, I
see here a complete place-name description of the Battle of Innerhadden,
which took place in the year 1306. That was the momentous year when Robert
Bruce killed John Comyn within the chapel of the Minorites at Dumfries
in February, was crowned King at Scone in March, and was defeated at Methven
by the English under the Earl of Pembroke in June. All through the summer
night Bruce and his followers fled across the hills to Atholl, until the
morning found them tired and hungry, in a wood on Tummelside, near Killiecrankie.
A woman was making porridge in a house close by, and Bruce asked for some
of the fine brose. So the wood was called ever after Coille Brochain,
the Wood of the Brose, and a gable of the old house still stands with
a tablet in the wall, on which is carved this legend : "Robert the Bruce
rested here after the Battle of Methven - 1306." An old site on the Tummel
hillside across the river from Dunalastair and a little east from Macgregor's
Cave is still known as Seomar-an-righ, the Room of the King. Doubtless
one of Bruce's haunts, for he hid for a time in Rannoch. But his enemies
found him out, and a battle was fought between Innerhadden and Dalchosnie.
Bruce gained the victory and the English fled south over the hills by
the nearest glen. So, in these three Gaelic place-names - Innerhadden,
Dalchosnie and Glen Sassunn - we have the whole history of this battle
in brief : the Beginning of the Fight, the Field of Victory, and the Glen
of the English. It is said that the women of Lassentullich, that Hill
of Passion near by, were so anxious to help Bruce that they took off their
stockings, filled them with stones, and laid on ferociously whenever an
Englishman came near.
At Lassentullich
you can still see the ancient chapel of St Blane on the rock above the
road, with a graveyard behind. Little Norman windows pierce the ruined
walls, a tiny holy-water font lies in the recess of the churchyard wall,
and a fine old Celtic cross on an upright slab stands near the gate -
all eloquent of the old faith. Here, also, was St Peter's Well, and doubtless
the neighbouring place called Tempar commemorates some Tom-Peadar, or
Hill of Peter. There used to stand a large stone in a field west of Tempar
Lodge, called the Clach Sgoilt or Split Stone, until it was broken
up for road metal - so I am told. For when the Stewarts of Innerhadden
went out to fight for Prince Charlie, a Stewart woman who lived here heard
on Culloden day a black dog howling most pitifully, and then by some strange
occult force this great stone was suddenly split in two. She knew that
her man was dead, and there was a keening in Rannoch that day. What a
weird world of love and lore can be reaped from a few old Gaelic words
!
But
it is graves and dead chieftains all the way. You can stand high up in
the burial ground of the Stewarts of Innerhadden, among the trees, and
look east to Dunalastair. You can stand among dead Macdonalds at St Blanes
of Lassentullich and look through the little window to Loch Garry's House
across the Tummel. You come next to an old derelict burial place of the
Stewarts of Crossmount across the road below the lodge, where the view
westward was once open, before the trees grew up. You cross the bridge
over the river at the gorge of Dunalastair, and, if you know where to
find it, you can climb through the wood to the little enclosure where
the old Struan Robertsons of Rannoch sleep below the lordly new house
of Dunalastair, the ancient Mount Alexander of the clan. A stone's-throw
farther and you come to St Luke's burial ground where Robertsons, Camerons,
and Campbells sleep peacefully enough now. Above them stands the new cross
of a new laird, on a new mound. But the old Struans sleep today beneath
long grass and nettles
.Those
were the days when there were still some wolves in Rannoch. Struan hunted
them down until there was only one great dog-wolf left. This brute was
all the more to be feared because it was a baby-stealer, and had destroyed
several children. Today there is a lonely little farm in a hollow of the
moors below the Struan road which is called Mullinavadie. Here in olden
times there was a meal-mill. One day the miller's wife was mashing potatoes
in the kitchen with her wooden bittle. The grey wolf walked in and made
straight for the cradle, in which lay a six-month's-old baby. The Robertson
woman raised her bittle and hit the wolf behind the ear, killing it on
the spot. The head was afterwards cut off by her goodman and sent as a
gift to Struan, and the place is called to this day Mullinavadie
- the Mill of the Wolf.
Walk
round the loch and you will find the same story of lost lore and a vanished
race of heroes. The standing stone in the garden of the Loch Rannoch Hotel
is called Clach-a-Mharscin, the Stone of the Pedlar, because a
packman once sat down to rest himself against it, threw his pack over
the stone, and was strangled by the strap. On the shore below Annet there
is a grave. Here lies the last Rannoch man who was hanged for sheep-stealing.
He dangled in chains from that great oak-tree close-by which has four
trunks and some fine handy horizontal branches. Climb the hill above Annet
itself and you will find the remains of a large village. I counted twenty-four
distinct houses, and there are many more stone heaps where other houses
probably stood. Yonder by the wood at Leargan is the only cottage left
of this hillside community. Past this ancient village runs a very old
right-of-way to Loch Garry, and the story is that there was a sudden raid
down this old war-path from the north, and the whole village was left
tenantless and deserted. The cloverstones had just been gathered from
the fields in preparation for further husbandry, and there they are today,
mute reminders of the breathless haste of the fugitives.
There
must have been a holy cell or chapel here, for the very name of Annait
means a relic chapel. The Annait was the church where the patron-saint
was educated, or in which he kept his relics, and it ranked first among
the different kinds of chapel. Is there not a Bal-na-banait over
yonder in Glen Lyon, a Tobar-na-banait in Skye, and a Teampull-na-banait
on the island of Killigray off Harris ? Having got word of this Abbotland
or Annait on Loch Rannochside, I searched in the dark pine wood of Annet,
and instead of finding a mere cell I came upon a lost village ! Six or
seven ruined houses and a long walled place of graves oriented east and
west. In the windless gloom of the wood there was silence. No bird called.
No beast or creeping thing appeared. I sat down against the lichened stones,
and the smoke of the fire rose like incense in the solitude. A sound of
chanting seemed to steal through the unearthly stillness, and the tinkle
of God's little bell could almost be heard as the priest in his simple
robe spoke the words of mystery to the rude Celts who dwelt above this
eerie Annait. Songs of love, the laughter of children, the shout of armed
men, the sob of women, and the clash of claymores must often have been
heard here. Now - the very trees, all grey with lichen, grow where stood
their hearths and altar-stone. And when the wind rises it is only to sigh
through the dark wood the same ancient coronach of sorrow - " No more,
no more, no more returning ! "
At Craig-an-Odhar
- the dun-coloured rock, there is a strange hatchet-shaped standing-stone
on a tree-clad mound by the roadside, which some call the Cheiftain's
Grave. If he was a local lord he would not have far to travel for his
weapons, for at Aulich, a little farther on, there was in olden times
a famous smith, said to be in league with the devil, and he made the finest
claymores in Rannoch. Rannoch long ago was as famous for its swords as
Doune was for its pistols. Deposits of bog-iron were found all round the
loch. The Black Wood provided fuel for smelting and charcoal for tempering,
and as I write I have before me a piece of iron from the slag smeltings
which was picked up at Aulich. Still farther on at Killiechonan, which
is one of the last dwindling crofter communities round these shores, there
is an old font lying within the wall of the churchyard. For war and religion
have ever been dear to the soul of the Celt.
When
you come to the glistening sands of Camus and look across the loch, you
will see a little tower on the rocky Eilean nam Feoileag - the
Isle of Storms. Here some local chief confined a prisoner. Who he was
or what his crime I cannot tell. But his friends sent him every year two
sacks of apples, and the laird sent out the apples in a boat with two
of his ghillies. "Here are your apples, shifty lad," said they. "Well,
there are more here than I can eat, just men, so take a sack for yourselves,"
he replied. With that he emptied a whole bagful before the greedy ghillies,
who scrambled for them on their hands and knees. But while they were busy
at the game of grab, the sly fellow made off in the boat and left them
on the island staring after him
Standing
on the Bridge of Gaur at the head of the loch, looking at Rannoch Barracks
- once a thatched depôt for the redcoats who were sent to quell those
fiery Highlanders, and now an ample lodge - it is part of the old sadness
to think that this last lodge on Rannochside, owned by a Robertson, is
now changing hands. Cha till, cha till !
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