<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
<div class="blockquot">
<p><span class="firstword">The</span> Orkney Islands. The Shetland Islands. Faroe Islands
contrasted with Western Isles. ‘Burning the water.’ A
fisher of men. Salmon according to London taste. Trout
and fishing-poles. A wolf’s den.</p>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">THE ORKNEY ISLANDS</div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Orkney and Shetland Islands present
in many respects a strong contrast to the
Hebrides. Differing fundamentally in their
geological structure, and consequently also in
their scenery, they are inhabited by a totally
distinct race of people, and the topographical
names, instead of being Gaelic, are Norse or
English. The natives, descendants of the old
Norwegian stock that once ruled the north
and west of Scotland, still retain many marks
of their Scandinavian origin. Blue eyes and
fair hair are common among them. They are
strongly built and active, with an energy and
enterprise which strike with surprise one who
has long been familiar with the west Highland
indolence and procrastination. My first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
descent upon the Orkneys was a brief but
interesting expedition, when after a ramble
along the north coast of Caithness, I had
reached, with my colleague, Mr. B. N. Peach,
the little inn of Huna, near John o’ Groat’s
House. For geological purposes we were
desirous of visiting the nearest of the Orkney
group, Stroma, ‘the island of the stream,’—a
name which graphically marks its position in
the midst of the broad tidal current of the
Pentland Firth that sweeps past it like a vast
river, and with a flow fully three times faster
than that of an ordinary navigable river. We
engaged the old ferryman, who used to run the
mail-boat from Caithness to Orkney, and were
warned by him that, as the weather looked
threatening and the tide in the evening would
be against us, he could not give us more than
an hour on the island, and he would not allow
the men to have any whisky on the voyage,
since they might need all their wits about them
before we got back. The sail across was easily
made. Obeying our captain’s injunctions to
keep within the prescribed hour, we did
most of our work running, and succeeded in
ascertaining what we wanted to know. On
re-embarking, we soon perceived that his prognostication
as to the weather was likely to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
fulfilled. The sky had become entirely overcast,
and, though no rain fell, ominous moanings
of wind warned us not to linger. The tide
had turned and was beginning to flow westwards
against the breeze. As it increased in
its rate of flow the surface of the firth began
to curl and boil, streaks of foam were whirled
round in yeasty eddies, while here and there
the water, as if in agony, would rear itself in
swirling columns that burst into spray, which
was swept along by the wind in clouds of
spindrift. Not far off we could see the
‘Merry men of Mey,’ a tumultuous group
of breakers above a dangerous reef, surging
up into sheets of foam-crested water that
writhed and tossed themselves far up into
the misty air. Our pilot sat at the helm
watching every advancing billow and cleverly
bringing the boat round in time to meet it.
It was a difficult piece of navigation, skilfully
performed. We could then understand why
the men were to be prohibited from tasting
whisky till they got back to Huna. But
arrived in safety, we cheerfully ordered the
stipulated bottle for them.</p>
<div class="sidenote">ORKNEY BOATMEN</div>
<p>Subsequently on crossing over into the
Orkney group, I had soon occasion to note
the difference between the boatmen there and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
those with whom I was familiar in the west of
Scotland. More adventurous and skilful than
their Celtic fellow-countrymen, they generally
possess larger and stronger boats, which they
keep in better trim. Some of their smaller
boats are built with sharp sterns, and exactly
resemble the common type one sees in Norway.
In the eighteenth century, as Boswell
mentions, the people in the Inner Hebrides
sometimes obtained their boats from Norway.
The Orcadians, among other traces of their
Scandinavian descent, seem to take to the
water as naturally as the seals which they
shoot. On several occasions my Orkney boatmen
piloted me along the base of cliffs and
among rocks against which the heavy Atlantic
swell was breaking, where no Skye boatmen I
ever met with would have ventured. No one
can fully realize the grandeur of the great cliff
of Hoy unless he can look up at it from
below, as well as from the crest above. Its
warm tints of bright yellow and red make it
seem aglow with light even in dull weather,
and from a distance it looks as if it caught
sunbeams which are falling on no other part of
the scene. Viewed from its upper edge, this
cliff presents a wonderful picture of decay. The
horizontal beds of sandstone have been split<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
by the weather into long deep vertical chasms,
and etched out into fantastic cusps and cupolas,
alcoves and recesses. From the edge of the
precipice, which rises a thousand feet above
the sea, one looks down on the long Atlantic
rollers, seemingly diminished to mere ripples,
and their heavy breakers to streaks of foam,
while the surge, though it thunders against the
rocks, ‘cannot be heard so high.’ The Old
Man of Hoy, which has been left standing
as an isolated column in front of this great
cliff, is the grandest natural obelisk in the
British Islands, for it rises to a height of
450 feet above the waves that beat against
its base.</p>
<p>Swept by the salt-laden blasts from the
ocean, Orkney and Shetland cannot boast
of trees. Hedges of elder grow well enough
when under the protection of stone walls, but
are shorn off obliquely when they rise above
them, as if a scythe or bill-hook had cut
them across. A group of low trees, sheltered
by the houses at Stromness, appears
to be the resort of all the birds within a
compass of many miles. There is a story
of an American traveller who landed at Kirkwall
in the dark, and, after a stroll before
breakfast next morning, returned to the hotel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
amazed at the ‘completeness of the clearing’
which he supposed the inhabitants had made
of their forests. To the geologist, the antiquary,
and the lover of cliff scenery, the
Orkney islands offer much of great interest.
Though it was in the first of these capacities
that I was drawn to the islands, the standing
stones, brochs, and mounds, as well as
the magnificent coast-precipices, were soon
found to have irresistible attractions.</p>
<div class="sidenote">THE SHETLAND ISLES</div>
<p>Shetland, lying more remote from the rest
of Britain, has preserved, even more than
Orkney, traces of the Scandinavian occupation.
One comes now and then upon an old
Norse word in the language of the people,
and so foreign are the topographical names
that, in hearing them pronounced, one might
imagine oneself to be among the fjords of
Norway. To this day we may hear a Shetlander,
who is about to sail for the south,
say that he is going to Scotland, as if he
regarded his own islands as part of another
kingdom. On my first visit to Shetland I
spent some time on the mainland, chiefly on
geological errands bent, but not without a
glance at the scenic and antiquarian interests
of the islands. One of my excursions took
me to Papa Stour—a small island lying to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
the west, and exposed to the full fury of the
Atlantic storms, which have tunnelled its
cliffs with caverns and gullies. Some of these
perforations have been continued until they
open upward in cauldron-like holes on the
surface of the moorland. During gales from
the west, the sea is driven into these clefts
with a noise like the firing of cannon, and
bursts out in sheets of spray from the
cauldrons on the moor. On this island, as
in so many other parts of Shetland, the
want of fuel is a serious evil. The inhabitants
have gradually cut away and burnt
much of the thin coating of turf which
covered the naked rock. Hence over considerable
areas there is now no soil,—only
sheets of crumbling stone which supports no
vegetation and cannot be made to yield a
crop of any kind.</p>
<div class="sidenote">IN THE SHETLAND ISLES</div>
<p>On the way back from Papa Stour to Lerwick,
I availed myself of the kindly offered
hospitality of one of the proprietors on the
mainland. The lady of the house was unfortunately
confined to bed, but her daughter
and the governess did the honours of the
house. This young lady was said to be descended
from one of the daughters of the
Shetland worthy whose likeness Scott drew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
as Magnus Troil in the <cite>Pirate</cite>. At all
events she was a typical Shetlander, as
much at home on the water as on the land.
Mounted on a strong pony, she used to scour
the country far and near, picking her way
across bog and stream in a region where
roads were few. In her boat, she had made
acquaintance with every creek and cavern for
miles along the coast on either side. Some
time before my visit, a vessel with a cargo
of teak had been wrecked in the neighbourhood,
and such part of the wood as could
be reached had been removed. But the
young lady, in the true spirit of the wrecker,
knew where every stray log was to be found,
in each little voe and creek into which the
waves had carried it. She had a huge dog
which accompanied her on her rambles, and,
as one of the family, was admitted into the
dining-room at meal-time. During dinner the
animal, instinctively divining that I was fond
of dogs and might be expected to be attentive
to him, placed himself at my side, with
his nose resting on the edge of the table
and his eyes directed towards my plate.
Interested beyond measure in the talk of my
young hostess, I forgot my four-footed friend
for a little, and, on turning to continue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
operations with knife and fork, found to my
astonishment that my plate was empty, and
that he was pleasantly looking at me and
licking his lips.</p>
<p>In the course of a cruise in the ‘Aster’
round the Shetland Islands I enjoyed ample
opportunities of becoming acquainted with the
whole of the wonderful coast-scenery of this
archipelago. With a steam yacht it is possible
to keep close inshore, and to sail back and
forward along the more interesting parts. In
this way I was enabled to see the great cliffs of
Foula well, and to watch the movements of its
‘bonxies’ or Great Skuas. With the view of
protecting these now rare and almost exterminated
birds, the proprietor of the island many
years ago gave strict orders to the natives not
to molest them nor take their eggs, and on no
account to let any birds’-egg collectors come
and help themselves. He was on the steamer
one day bound for Scotland, when one of the
passengers, entering into conversation with
him, began to talk of Foula, and to complain of
the incivility of the people of the island. The
laird inquired in what way they had been discourteous
to him. ‘Well, you see,’ said the
bird-man, ‘I am a dealer in birds’ eggs, and I
went to the island to obtain some eggs of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
Great Skua. The natives refused to get me
any, and when they saw me preparing to go
and hunt for them myself they gathered round
and threatened to pitch me over the cliff into
the sea.’ ‘And, by Jove,’ exclaimed the laird,
‘they would have done it too. They have my
orders; I am the proprietor of Foula.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">IN THE SHETLAND ISLES</div>
<p>As the yacht steamed round St. Magnus
Bay and past the extraordinary group of fantastic
islets that rise out of its waters, we had
the good luck to see a white-tailed eagle
winging its way northward, and pursued by a
flock of large gulls. This bird is now almost
extinct along our coasts. A few pairs are still
left. One of these breeds near the top of a
cliff 500 feet high, in a group of islets which is
a favourite anchorage for the ‘Aster.’ Last
year (1903), besides the two old birds, a third
was seen.</p>
<p>Rounding the far headland of Unst, the most
northerly point of the British Islands, we ran up
a flag to salute the lighthouse on that lonely
spot. So seldom does any yacht pass there,
and, judging from our experience, so few vessels
of any kind come within saluting distance of
the place, that the keeper, taken aback apparently
at our courtesy, and not wishing to delay
his return of it, seized a pair of white trousers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
that were drying on the parapet rail, and waved
them enthusiastically, while his comrade ran to
hoist the flag.</p>
<p>One of the greatest obstacles to yachting in
these northern seas during summer is the prevalence
of fogs. In two cruises to the Faroe
Islands, the ‘Aster’ had to be navigated for
most of the way in a dense white mist, with a
smooth sea below and blue sky above, but
when one end of the vessel was scarcely visible
from the other, and the foghorn had to be kept
constantly going. So excellently, however,
had the course been laid, that after soundings
had shown that land could not be far off, we
heard the barking of a dog and the firing of a
gun. In a few minutes the top of the Lille
Dimon could be seen above the fog, and we
entered the channel for which we had been
steering.</p>
<div class="sidenote">THE FAROE ISLES</div>
<p>At the time of one of our trips to Faroe,
small-pox had been prevalent in Scotland, and
when we ran into the sheltered inlet of Trangisvaag,
the yellow quarantine flag was run up
on the wooden building ashore, and a boat
came off to warn us not to land until we had
been inspected by the medical man of the place.
In a little while he pulled alongside, and after
some preliminary conversation asked that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
whole human contents of the yacht should be
mustered on the deck before him. So we all
placed ourselves in a row, while he marched
along and inspected us. It was interesting to
notice the amused and half-contemptuous faces
of the crew at this performance, each man feeling
himself as strong and well as youth, sea-air,
and good food could make him. My host
thought that the official should not be allowed
to leave without some refreshment, and called
on the steward to bring it. The Doctor
selected a glass of whisky, evidently without
knowing what it was, for before we could
make any explanation, he tossed it off as if it
had been so much water. But not until it
was well down his throat did he realise the
strength of the liquor. He gave a few gasps,
while his eyes filled with water, and he had
to make an effort to compose himself and go
on with the conversation as if nothing had
happened. If he had never tasted Talisker
whisky before, we believed he would not
forget his first experience of it.</p>
<p>So exactly do the Faroe Islands reproduce
the scenery of the Inner Hebrides that it is
difficult at first to believe that we are not
somehow back again under the cliffs of Skye
or Mull. Green declivities descend from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
interior of these islands to the edge of the
cliffs, which then plunge sheer down into the
sea. The precipices are built up of nearly
level sheets of brown basalt, edged with narrow
strips of grassy herbage, cleft into chasms, and
eaten out into tunnels and caves by the restless
surge. From the horizontal bars of the great
cliffs, the eye ranges upward to the brightly
verdant slopes above, and marks dark-brown
ribs of rock running parallel with these bars
in a series of terraces away up to the crests
of the ridges and hills. Only in the little bays,
which here and there indent the ranges of
formidable precipice, does one catch sight of
evidence of human occupation.</p>
<p>But, while the topography is so similar, the
population presents a singular contrast to that
of the Western Isles of Scotland. Everywhere
it gives proofs of energy, industry, comfort,
cleanliness, and civilisation. Each little community
at the head of its cliff-girt inlet has
built a hamlet of neat wooden houses, which,
with their painted doors, trim windows, and
clean white curtains, show that the inhabitants
are well-to-do, and not without some of the
luxuries of life. Fishing is the main industry,
and all the inhabitants are more or less engaged
in it—men, women, and children. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
men go to sea and bring back the fish. The
women look after it as it lies drying in the
sun, cover it with tarpaulin if rain comes,
and stack it up ready for export. There is
usually a chief man or merchant who takes
general charge of the trade, and arranges for
the steamboats to come and carry off the
piles of fish.</p>
<div class="sidenote">FAROES AND WESTERN ISLES</div>
<p>To return from such a scene to the west
of Skye cannot but fill the heart with sadness
as one passes inlet after inlet, either with no
inhabitants or with only a handful of them,
housed in squalid, miserable, dirty huts, too
poor to provide themselves with good seagoing
boats, too timid or too lazy and unenterprising
to gather the harvest of the sea, as
the men do in Faroe, but content to live as
their fathers have done, save that now they
have become possessed by a greed for more
land, which, when they get it, they will doubtless
cultivate in the same unskilful and slovenly
fashion. In the herring fishing, which is the
chief industry among the Western Isles, the
boats come largely from the east side of Scotland,
and are manned by the stalwart and
active seamen of the shores of the Moray
Firth and other parts of the coast.</p>
<p>The subject of fish and fishing recalls some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
recollections of angling experiences on the
mainland. In boyhood I used sometimes to
assist at a ‘burning o’ the water,’ when all
the shepherds, poachers, and idlers of the
district assembled to take part in the fun and
excitement of spearing salmon or grilse.
The Gala Water on these nights presented a
singularly picturesque sight—the lurid glare
and smoke of the torches, the cautious
movements of the men in the river, the shouts
of those on the bank as a successful ‘leister,’
that had transfixed a fish, was handed over
to them, and the chorus of shepherds’ dogs
that were among the most active and excited
of the spectators. The account of the night
exploits at Charlie’s Hope in <cite>Guy Mannering</cite>
is as truthful as it is graphic.</p>
<p>Among the lakes of Sutherland there is
one not far from Beinn Griam which, an
enthusiastic angler assured me, consists of
‘three parts of fish and one water.’ Another
sporting friend, not to be outdone, lauded the
extraordinary abundance of game in his native
island. ‘There is a stream there,’ he would
say, ‘once so stocked with trout that I never
failed to fill a big basket. But now the
feathered game has become so abundant that
though the fish are as plentiful as ever, I can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
hardly get any, for almost every time I cast
my line I hook a grouse in the air.’</p>
<p>A former well-known witty editor of an
Edinburgh newspaper was fond of escaping to
the banks of the Yarrow or the Ettrick for a
few days’ fishing. One Monday morning he
was accosted by the clergyman who had been
preaching the day before, and who, though a
stranger to him, asked a number of questions
about his sport. The editor replied civilly to
the battery of queries, and at last began to
catechise in his turn.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A FISHER OF MEN</div>
<p>‘And are you too a fisher?’ he asked.</p>
<p>‘Oh no, I have no time for angling. You
see I am a fisher of men.’</p>
<p>‘And have you had much success in your
line?’</p>
<p>‘Not nearly as much as I could wish.’</p>
<p>‘Ay, I can believe that. I looked into
your creel [the church] yesterday and there
were very few fish in it.’<SPAN name="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</SPAN></p>
<p>There is a story told of an amateur angler
who with an attendant was fishing, from the
English side, the Carham Burn, which at one
part of the border separates the two kingdoms.
His hook had caught under the opposite bank,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
and he was under the impression that it had
been taken by a large fish which had run up
from the Tweed. His old companion, however,
disabused him by drily remarking, ‘Ay,
ye hae got a big fish, nae doot; ye hae
heukit auld Scotland.’</p>
<p>Those who are accustomed to salmon which
has been carried in ice a long distance, and
kept for some days before being eaten, do not
always appreciate the newly-killed fish as it
is given in Scotland, with its firm, flaky consistence
and fresh curd. A Londoner, who
had taken a house for the summer in Forfarshire,
had made the acquaintance of the lessee
of one of the salmon fisheries on the coast of
that county, and asked him one day to be
so good as allow him to have a fish for a
dinner party which he was about to give. A
fine fresh salmon was accordingly sent to the
house. A few weeks afterwards the Englishman
came down to the coast again, and after
expressing his thanks for the fish, ventured to
remark that somehow it was harder and more
flaky than what he was accustomed to in
London. He was about to give another
dinner, he said, and would like another salmon.
The lessee, promising that he should have
one quite to his taste, went down to one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
his men and gave the following order:
‘Sandy, you’ll take that fish and hang it up
in the sun all day. Then after breakfast to-morrow
you’ll lay it on a stone and thump it
hard all over with a heavy stick, then hang
it up in the sun again till the afternoon, and
after that send it up to Mr. ——.’ The
Londoner in a few days appeared to express
his thanks for the fish which he pronounced
to be exactly what he liked, and what he
was used to in the south.</p>
<div class="sidenote">TROUT AND FISHING-RODS</div>
<p>Trouting streams in this country and in
Western America have distinct peculiarities.
Some years ago I was rambling up Glen
Spean, and along the heathery and rocky
banks of the River Treig with an American
friend, who had spent much of his life in surveying
the Western Territories of the United
States. ‘What a fine stream,’ he remarked,
‘not to have trout in it!’ I assured him
there were plenty of trout in all the streams
of the district. ‘But how can that be?’ he
enquired, ‘there are no poles growing along
the banks.’ He explained that in the Far
West, Providence appeared to have so arranged
that fish need not be sought for in
streams on the margins of which no wood
grew, such as would supply a fishing-rod.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span></p>
<div class="sidenote">A BEAR’S DEN</div>
<p>The mention of sport in the Highlands
brings to recollection another illustration of the
curious vitality of some stories, and the singular
transformations which they may undergo
as they are passed on from mouth to mouth
through successive generations. An old legend
in the north-west Highlands tells how two
men set out to kill a wolf that was destroying
the sheep of the crofters of Kintail. One of
them entered the animal’s den, while the other
stood on guard at the entrance. Soon afterwards
the wolf returned and made for its cave,
when the man at the entrance seized it by the
tail as it got inside, and held it fast. His
companion within then called out</p>
<div class="poetry-container pw15">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0">One-eyed Gilchrist</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Who closed the hole?</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class="in0">The other answered</p>
<div class="poetry-container pw15">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0">If the rump-tail should break</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Thy skull shall know that.<SPAN name="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</SPAN></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>Probably this tale was carried to Canada by
some of the Highland emigrants and became
naturalised and localised there, for it has come
back in the following guise: Two Scotsmen in
a mountainous part of the colony, climbed up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
a rocky slope to the mouth of a narrow cave,
into which one of them crawled to discover
what might be inside. The other contented
himself by lighting his pipe and sitting down
outside, but had not been there above a
minute or two when a huge she-bear came
rushing up the declivity and made straight
for the cave. Seeing the danger to his friend
he had presence of mind enough to seize the
tail of the bear just as the animal had got
within the entrance, and to plant his feet
firmly against the rock on each side. Presently
a voice from the inner recesses shouted
out, ‘Donald, Donald, fat be darkenin’ the
hole?’ To which Donald replied, ‘My faith,
Angus, gin the tail break ye’ll fin’ fat be
darkenin’ the hole.’<SPAN name="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</SPAN></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />