<h2>CHAPTER XI<br/> <span class="small">THE STORY OF THE FIELDS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">What was Ancient Britain?—Marshes and bittern—Oak forest—Pines—Savage
country—Cornfield—Fire—Ice—Forest—Worms—Paleolithic
family—The first farmers—Alfred the Great's first Government
agricultural leaflet—Dr. Johnson—Prince Charlie's time—Misery of
our forefathers—Oatmeal, milk, and cabbages—Patrick Miller—Tennyson's
<cite>Northern Farmer</cite>—Flourishing days of 1830 to 1870—Derelict
farmhouses and abandoned crofts—Where have the people
gone?—Will they come back?</p>
<p><span class="dropcap2">W</span>HEN the eyes of man first beheld Britain, what
sort of country was this of ours? It is very
interesting to try to imagine what it was like, but
of course it is a very difficult task. Still it is worth the
attempt, for we ought to know something of what has been
done by our forefathers.</p>
<p>Where the great rivers Thames, Humber, Tyne, Forth,
Clyde, Mersey, and Severn, approached the seashore they
lost themselves in wildernesses of desolate, dreary fenlands.
Here a small scrubby wood of willow, birch, and alder;
there a miles-wide stretch of reeds and undrained marsh
intersected by sluggish, lazy rivers, or varied by stagnant
pools. The bittern boomed in those marshes. Herons,
geese, swans, ducks, and aquatic birds of all sorts found what
is now Chelsea a paradise, only disturbed by the eagle,
harrier-hawk, vulture, and the like.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</SPAN></span>
Neither at the mouth nor even much higher up in its valley-course,
was a river a steady stream in a defined bed. Such
beds as it had were probably four or five times their present
width; they would be quite irregular, meandering about,
changing at every flood, full of islands, loops, backwaters, and
continually interrupted by snags of trees.</p>
<p>The rolling hills of the lowlands would be an almost
unbroken forest of oak, except where perhaps level land and
the absence of drainage produced a marsh or horrible peat-moss.
But when we say forest, we do not mean a glorified
Richmond Park.</p>
<p>In good soil there might indeed be tall and magnificent
trees. But it would be quite impossible to see them! The
giants of the forest would be concealed in an inextricable
tangle of young trees, brushwood, fallen logs, creepers, and
undergrowth. Where the soil was sandy or stony, it might
be a scrub rather than a forest, of gnarled, twisted, and
stunted oaks, or possibly thickets of sloe, birch, rowan,
hawthorn, brambles, and briers.</p>
<p>Every stream would be "wild water" leaping down waterfalls
and cutting out irregular, little woody ravines. Here
and there boulders and escarpments of rock would break
through the forest soil, which would be mossy, thick with
undergrowth, and entangled with rotting fallen trunks and
branches, crossing at every conceivable angle. The higher
hills were covered by a dreary, sombre pine forest. It was
of a monotonous, desolate character. Greenish-grey tufts of
Old Man's Beard lichen hung from the branches. The
ground, treacherous, and broken by boulders, peaty hollows,
and dead logs, would be shrouded in a soft, thick cushion of
feathery Mosses, with Blaeberry, Ferns, Trientalis, Linnea,
Dwarf Cornel, and other rare plants. Through it descended
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</SPAN></span>
raging and destructive torrents which here might be checked
and foamed over dead logs, whilst in another place they
cut out bare earth-escarpments or started new waterfalls
which ate back into the hills behind.</p>
<p>At the summit of the higher hills, bare rock crags projected
out of occasional alpine grassy slopes, or irregular
terraces, ravines, and gullies. Below, these alpine ravines
ended in a peat-moss, which scattered, dwarfed, distorted,
and miserable-looking Scotch Firs and Birches painfully
endeavoured to colonize. Here and there on very steep
hillsides, wiry, tussocky grass might be growing instead of
forest or peat.</p>
<p>A horrible, forbidding, and desolate land, where Deer,
Irish elk, bison, bear, wolf, boar, wolverine, badger, and
fox, alone enjoyed themselves.</p>
<p>Now consider our country to-day. Mark the "trim little
fields"; "that hedge there must have been clipt about
eighty years"; "The lifting day showed the stucco villas on
the green and the awful orderliness of England—line upon
line, wall upon wall, solid stone dock and monolithic pier."<SPAN name="FNanchor_67" id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</SPAN>
The road, carefully macadamized, sweeps on correct and
straight or gracefully curving from neat village to countrytown.
In the heart of the country the roadsides are scraped
bare to produce that hideous tidiness which is dear to the
soul of the County Council roadman. That is if an individual
whose life is spent in stubbing up roses, briers, and
every visible wild flower, can possibly possess a soul! Those
fields without a rock, or even a projecting stone, have been
drained, dug over, and levelled with the greatest possible
care. The very rivers have been straightened and embanked;
the rows of pollarded willows have been planted;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</SPAN></span>
they may, when in flood, overflow, but the results are very
soon no longer visible. Even on the moors and in the
depths of the Highlands, black-faced sheep, draining, and
the regular burning of the heather, have quite transformed
our country.</p>
<p>The original woods have long since vanished: those which
now exist are mostly quite artificial plantations, and the
very trees are often strangers to Britain.</p>
<p>The story of the Herculean labour by which our country,
once as wild and as savage as its early inhabitants the
Icenians and Catieuchlanians (and probably with lineaments
as barbarous as those of the Coritanian and Trinobant),
has been changed to peaceful, fertile meadowlands or
tidy arable, is one long romance. To tell it properly would
require a book to itself. In this chapter we shall only try
to sketch what may have happened on one particular cornfield
which exists on the trap-rocks of Kilbarchan, near
Glasgow.<SPAN name="FNanchor_68" id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</SPAN> The reader must bear in mind that even this is
a very ambitious attempt! It is an exceedingly difficult
undertaking.</p>
<p>The subsoil in this particular cornfield (on Pennell Brae)
lies upon the trap-rock formed by one of those gigantic
lava-flows which cover that part of Renfrewshire. The
whole district at that time must have been exactly like
Vesuvius during the late eruption. Its scenery in this early
miocene period consisted of glowing molten rock, accompanied
by flames of fire, electrical storms, clouds of gas, dust,
ashes, and superheated steam.</p>
<div><SPAN name="then" id="then"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_146.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="smcap">Then—</p> <p>A landscape in Ancient Britain.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div><SPAN name="and_now" id="and_now"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_147.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="smcap">and Now</p> <p>The same landscape at the present time. Notice how the outline of the hills has been softened and its shape rounded. The
forest has almost vanished and the river is bridged and confined within definite banks; in fact, only the ravine remains much the
same.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Every plant and every animal must have been exterminated.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</SPAN></span>
That was unfortunate, for, at that time, Pines, Oaks,
Guelder Rose, Willows, as well as Sequoias allied to the
Mammoth tree and Sassafras, may have lived in Scotland
along with tapirs, opossums, marsupials, and other extraordinary
beasts.</p>
<p>When the lava cooled and became trap-rock, it was at once
attacked by frost, by wind, and by rain. Then by a very
slow process of colonization, vegetation slowly and gradually
crept over the trap-rock and rich mould and plant remains
accumulated. At a much later date, there was another
wholesale destruction. This time, it was the great Ice Sheet
coming down from the Highland hills. Probably it drove
heavily over the top of Pennell Brae and worked up into fine
mud and powder every vestige of the miocene vegetation.</p>
<p>The very rocks themselves would be scratched, polished,
and rounded off. When the glaciers melted away and left
the surface free, it would consist of these rounded rocks alternating
with clay-filled hollows. The trap-rock below would
be covered by a subsoil due to particles of trap, of Highland
and other mud, with remains of the miocene vegetation.
Upon this surface, frost, wind, sunshine, and rain would
again begin to perform their work.</p>
<p>But the subsoil, thus wonderfully formed by fire in the
miocene, by frost in the glacial, and by weather in our own
geological period, very soon felt the protecting and sheltering
effect of a plant-covering.</p>
<p>First a green herb rooted itself every here and there amidst
the desolate boulder-clay or perhaps in a crevice where good
earth had accumulated. Then the scattered colonists began
to form groups; soon patches of green moss united them.
Then a continuous green carpet could be traced over a few
yards here and perhaps on a few feet somewhere else. But
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</SPAN></span>
when things had got as far as this, progress became much
more rapid, and soon the whole site of the future cornfield
was covered over by a continuous green carpet. Only, every
here and there, hard stones and uncompromising trap-rocks
remained still protruding from the green covering.</p>
<p>In another chapter this first covering of the soil will be
described at length.</p>
<p>So far it has been <em>subsoil</em> and <em>underlying rock</em>, but now the
roots begin to disintegrate and work up the subsoil; the earthworm
has his chance, and forms true <em>soil</em>. On this particular
hillside, the water would drain away and there would be no
danger of mosses strangling and choking the Blaeberry and
the Heather. The worm flourished and multiplied, and the
soil became rich and black. Here and there a Sloe or a
Rowan, or Poplar, or perhaps Alder and Birch, began to
appear. In certain places Whins and Brooms, Brambles
and Briers, diversified the hillside. Then a few Scotch firs
began to push their way up, through the thickets. At first
they were very small and stunted, but as each one formed a
dense, deep-going mass of hardy roots, they were able to
investigate the riches of the subsoil. Every year the
amount of leaf-mould above increased, until the original
moss-covering was utterly destroyed and a pine forest (see
Chap. <span class="smcap">XXVIII.</span>) occupied Pennell Brae.</p>
<p>About this time, a paleolithic family may have encamped
on the side of the cliff near a little stream which can still be
traced. The camp was only a few sticks and branches, with
a skin or two for shelter from the north wind. The women
lopped down fir branches for firewood, and cut up the young
trees. The children set fire to the shrubs on dry days and
paths ran here and there through the forest. This would be
about 198,000 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</SPAN></span>
Every year meant a further very gradual, slow destruction
of the pine forest.</p>
<p>About 60,000 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>, our paleolithic hunters with chipped-stone
weapons would be obliged to travel further to the
north. New savages with round heads and polished-stone
weapons would make life in Renfrewshire too uncertain and
too diversified by massacres. These last possessed seed corn,
a few fruit trees as well as goats, cattle, and perhaps a few
hardy, shaggy ponies. At first these settlers would be
obliged to live in a lake dwelling, say in Linwood Moss,
which is close at hand. They would then drive their cattle
over the surrounding district, and camp in slightly-built
villages. Near at hand, probably on the hill, they would
build a (round) camp or fort, where they could fly for safety
in the continual fights and invasions of the period.</p>
<p>Sooner or later a village would be built near Pennell Brae.
One summer day the villagers attacked the wood that
covered it; they cut down all the small brushwood and
hacked through the bark of every big tree. After a few
weeks, when the trees were dead, the wood was set on fire.
Then a rough fold made of rude wattle and daub was
formed, and every night the cattle and sheep were driven in.</p>
<p>After three or four years, this fold would be ploughed up
by exceedingly rude instruments. Barley or certain kinds of
wheat would be grown year after year until the crop was not
worth gathering. When that happened, another fold would
be ploughed up. Probably the whole of Pennell Brae went
through this rude sort of agricultural treatment at one time
or another. At the same time goats, cattle, and the demand
for firewood, obtained in the most reckless and wasteful
manner, would have very seriously interfered with the
forest.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</SPAN></span>
Although no doubt great changes for the better were introduced,
the spearmen of Wallace of Elderslie close by had their
"infield" land, which was practically the sheepfold as above
described, and their "outfield" or grazing commons. Even
down to 1745 the above system was practised (see below).</p>
<p>But when men's minds were stirred up and invigorated by
the great Revolution of 1788-1820, all sorts of new agricultural
discoveries were made. Yet the cornfield on Pennell
Brae was probably not drained or enclosed by stone walls
and hedges until 1830 to 1840! About 1870, it was more
profitable to its owner than it has ever been since, though
even now it forms part of our British farmlands which
yield, on the whole, a larger amount of oats per acre than
those of any other country in the world (except possibly
Denmark).</p>
<p>Let us however look a little closer into the long, long
period during which the "fire and stone-axe methods" of
farming prevailed. Before the Romans landed there seem
to have been no towns.<SPAN name="FNanchor_69" id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</SPAN> There was but little cultivation, for
the Britons wore skins and lived chiefly on milk and
flesh.</p>
<p>In the time of King Alfred, the increase of population
made it necessary to take more trouble about farming, so we
find a description of what the good farmer ought to do. We
might call this the very first Government leaflet, and it has
led to the Agricultural Leaflets published by the Board of
Agriculture for Great Britain and Ireland.</p>
<p>"Sethe wille wyrcan wastbaere lond ateo hin of tham
acre aefest sona fearn and thornas and figrsas swasame
weods."</p>
<p>He was to clear off fern, bracken, thorns, sloe, hawthorn,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</SPAN></span>
bramble, whin, and weeds. The names of the months give
some idea of Anglo-Saxon methods of farming. May was
<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Thrimylce</i>, because the cows might then be milked thrice a
day. August was <em>Weodmonath</em> (weed-month), November
<em>Blotmonath</em>, or blood-month, because the cattle were then
killed to supply salt beef for winter time.<SPAN name="FNanchor_70" id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</SPAN></p>
<p>Very much later in history, after our English friends had
laid waste and depopulated Scotland, so that woods sprang
up again everywhere, and again long after that time when
the gradual increase of population had again utterly destroyed
those woods, a certain Dr. Johnson travelled from
Carlisle to Edinburgh. This gentleman declared that he
saw no tree between those places. This statement must not
be taken too literally, for he had written a dictionary and
considered himself not merely the <em>Times</em> but an <em>Encyclopædia
Britannica</em> as well.<SPAN name="FNanchor_71" id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</SPAN></p>
<p>The Earl of Dundonald (in 1795) thus describes the
agriculture of 1745 (Prince Charlie's days): "The outfield
land never receives any manure. After taking from it two
or three crops of grain it is left in the state it was in at
reaping the last crop, without sowing thereon grass-seeds for
the protection of any sort of herbage. During the first two
or three years a sufficiency of grass to maintain a couple of
rabbits per acre is scarcely produced. In the course of some
years it acquires a sward, and after having been depastured
for some years more, it is again submitted to the same
barbarous system of husbandry" (that is used as a fold and
then ploughed up). In the same year (1745) in Meigle
parish, the land was never allowed to lie fallow: neither
pease, grass, turnips, nor potatoes were raised. No cattle
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</SPAN></span>
were fattened. A little grain (oats or barley) was exported.
In 1754 or thereabouts, there was only one cart in the
parish of Keithhall. Everything was carried about on
ponies' backs, as is the case nowadays in the most unsettled
parts of Canada. The country in places was almost impassable.
Bridges did not exist, and the roads were mere
tracks. In Rannoch the tenants had no beds, but lay on
the ground on couches of heather or fern. These houses
were built of wattle and daub, and so low that people had
to crawl in on hands and feet and could not stand upright.</p>
<p>"In the best times that class of people seldom could
indulge in animal food, and they were in use to support
themselves in part with the blood taken from their cattle at
different periods, made into puddings or bread with a
mixture of oatmeal. Their common diet was either oatmeal,
barley, or bear, cleared of the husks in a stone trough by a
wooden mallet, and boiled with milk; coleworts or greens
also contributed much to their subsistence, and cabbages
when boiled and mashed with a little oatmeal."<SPAN name="FNanchor_72" id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</SPAN> Potatoes
were introduced in Dumfriesshire some time after 1750, and
the use of lime as manure at about the same time. Even
in 1775 the roads were such that no kind of loaded carriages
could pass without the greatest difficulty.</p>
<p>There is a most fascinating account in Dr. Singer's work
of a strong man's difficulties in starting reasonable agriculture
in Dumfriesshire about the year 1785. This was Patrick
Miller, of Dalswinton. (It was on Dalswinton Loch
that he tried the very first steamboat.) "When I went to
view my purchase, I was so much disgusted for eight or ten
days that I then meant never to return to this county. A
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</SPAN></span>
trivial accident set me to work, and I have in a great manner
resided here ever since.... I have now gone over all of this
estate, and this I have done without the aid of a tenant....
I need not inform you that the first steps in improvement
are draining when necessary, inclosing sufficiently, removing
stones, roots, rubbish of every kind, and liming.... These
operations cost me, I reckon, about £11 per acre upon an
average; and I lay my account with being repaid all my
expenses by the first three crops, but at any rate by the
fourth. When the land which I make arable will give at
least (if brought from a state of nature) twenty times the
rent when I began to improve it."</p>
<p>Major-General Dirom, of Mount Annan, writing from that
place in 1811, says that all over Scotland for about thirty
years (from 1780-1810) he has seen "cultivation extending
from the valleys to the hills, commons inclosed, wastes
planted, and heaths everywhere giving way to corn: ...
extension of towns and villages, by new lines of excellent
roads, magnificent bridges and inland navigation ... our
rapidly increasing population, by our now exporting great
quantities of grain from parts of Scotland into which it was
formerly imported, and by the superior comfort and abundance
which appear in the domestic economy of the inhabitants."
If you read any newspaper of to-day published in
Canada or in the Argentine Republic, you find exactly
the same process at work, and the same enthusiasm about it.
Even in 1840-1850 all these improvements were still vigorously
going on.</p>
<p>Look at Tennyson's <cite>Northern Farmer</cite> (old style):—</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="line i6h"> "'An I a stubb'd Thurnaby waäste.</div>
<div class="line">Dobbut looök at the waäste, theer warnt no feeäd for a cow,</div>
<div class="line">Nowt at all but bracken an fuzz, an looök at it now.</div>
<div class="line">Warnt worth nowt a haäcre and now there's lots o feeäd,</div>
<div class="line">Four scoor yows upon it an some on it down i seeäd."</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</SPAN></span>
Even in his days, the good farmer was following King
Alfred's directions. About 1830-1850 most of the land
was in good bearing, and the roads were sufficiently good to
admit of the stage-coach with four horses. But they after
all lasted but a very short time before the railways again
entirely altered the conditions of country life.</p>
<p>As we have seen, rents were in places, five times as large
in 1820-1830 as they had ever been previously.<SPAN name="FNanchor_73" id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</SPAN> Therefore
it was that about this time the gentlemen's houses were in
many places rebuilt on a more magnificent scale. Then also
were begun those circles and strips, or belts of plantation,
which are now conspicuous features of the Scotch lowlands.
An enormous majority of these plantations are not more
than eighty years old. I think avenues were planted in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The fashion about
1820 was to destroy them as unnatural, at least in England.
Unfortunately no respect was paid to the economic practice
of forestry, with very unfortunate results for the proprietor.</p>
<p>The rest of this chapter is necessarily unpleasant and distressing
reading, but it is necessary if we are to understand
the romance of the fields. As one wanders over the grassy
pastures of Southern Scotland, where the black-faced sheep
foolishly start away, and where one's ears are irritated by the
scolding complaints of the curlew or whaup, it is no rare accident
to find a few broken-down walls, a clump of nettles,
and badly grown ash trees. That was once a farm steading,
where a healthy troop of children used to play together
after walking three or more miles barefoot to school. The
ash trees were planted at every farm "toon," for the Scottish
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</SPAN></span>
spear was a very necessary weapon until recent times. Often
also, upon some monotonous grouse moor, one sees the ridges
that betoken a little croft where a cottager lived.</p>
<p>In one parish (Troqueer) over seventy country cottages
have been abandoned during the lifetime of a middle-aged
person.</p>
<p>Many families, of which the laird was often the best
farmer in the district and his own factor, have disappeared.
The fine houses, with their parks and shootings, are let to
strangers, who come for a few weeks or months, and then
leave it in charge of a caretaker. Before this recent development,
the "family" lived all the year round upon the land;
they spent their income chiefly in wages to the country
people. Where once forty or fifty people were employed all
the year, there are now but three or four. The big house
with shuttered windows and weed-grown walks, is a distressing
and saddening spectacle.</p>
<p>Of course such changes must occur. The farmer's and the
cottar's children are now carrying out in Canada, Australia,
or the United States, what was done in Scotland from 1780-1830.
India, South Africa, and China have been developed
by the brains and hold the graves of many of the laird's
sons.</p>
<p>Yet this poor old country, abandoned of her children,
shows signs of revival. Both the poor and the rich are
beginning to find out that a country life is healthier,
quite as interesting, and sometimes quite as profitable as the
overcrowded city with its manufactories, mills, and offices.
All new countries are beginning to fill up, and there is some
hope that a new and vigorous development of farming may
make the countryside once more vigorous, prosperous, and
full of healthy children.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />