登陆注册
18776600000015

第15章 CHAPTER I DOMESTIC ANNALS(12)

The smooth sycophant of the cabin had wholly disappeared, and the boy listened with wonder to a vulgar and truculent ruffian. Of Soutar, I may say TANTUM VIDI, having met him in the Leith docks now more than thirty years ago, when he abounded in the praises of my grandfather, encouraged me (in the most admirable manner) to pursue his footprints, and left impressed for ever on my memory the image of his own Bardolphian nose. He died not long after.

The engineer was not only exposed to the hazards of the sea; he must often ford his way by land to remote and scarce accessible places, beyond reach of the mail or the post-chaise, beyond even the tracery of the bridle-path, and guided by natives across bog and heather. Up to 1807 my grand-father seems to have travelled much on horseback; but he then gave up the idea - 'such,' he writes with characteristic emphasis and capital letters, 'is the Plague of Baiting.' He was a good pedestrian; at the age of fifty-eight I find him covering seventeen miles over the moors of the Mackay country in less than seven hours, and that is not bad travelling for a scramble. The piece of country traversed was already a familiar track, being that between Loch Eriboll and Cape Wrath; and I think I can scarce do better than reproduce from the diary some traits of his first visit. The tender lay in Loch Eriboll; by five in the morning they sat down to breakfast on board; by six they were ashore - my grandfather, Mr. Slight an assistant, and Soutar of the jolly nose, and had been taken in charge by two young gentlemen of the neighbourhood and a pair of gillies. About noon they reached the Kyle of Durness and passed the ferry. By half-past three they were at Cape Wrath - not yet known by the emphatic abbreviation of 'The Cape' - and beheld upon all sides of them unfrequented shores, an expanse of desert moor, and the high-piled Western Ocean. The site of the tower was chosen.

Perhaps it is by inheritance of blood, but I know few things more inspiriting than this location of a lighthouse in a designated space of heather and air, through which the sea-birds are still flying. By 9 p.m. the return journey had brought them again to the shores of the Kyle. The night was dirty, and as the sea was high and the ferry-boat small, Soutar and Mr. Stevenson were left on the far side, while the rest of the party embarked and were received into the darkness. They made, in fact, a safe though an alarming passage; but the ferryman refused to repeat the adventure; and my grand-father and the captain long paced the beach, impatient for their turn to pass, and tormented with rising anxiety as to the fate of their companions. At length they sought the shelter of a shepherd's house. 'We had miserable up-putting,' the diary continues, 'and on both sides of the ferry much anxiety of mind. Our beds were clean straw, and but for the circumstance of the boat, I should have slept as soundly as ever I did after a walk through moss and mire of sixteen hours.'

To go round the lights, even to-day, is to visit past centuries. The tide of tourists that flows yearly in Scotland, vulgarising all where it approaches, is still defined by certain barriers. It will be long ere there is a hotel at Sumburgh or a hydropathic at Cape Wrath; it will be long ere any CHAR-A-BANC, laden with tourists, shall drive up to Barra Head or Monach, the Island of the Monks. They are farther from London than St. Petersburg, and except for the towers, sounding and shining all night with fog-bells and the radiance of the light-room, glittering by day with the trivial brightness of white paint, these island and moorland stations seem inaccessible to the civilisation of to-day, and even to the end of my grandfather's career the isolation was far greater. There ran no post at all in the Long Island; from the light-house on Barra Head a boat must be sent for letters as far as Tobermory, between sixty and seventy miles of open sea; and the posts of Shetland, which had surprised Sir Walter Scott in 1814, were still unimproved in 1833, when my grandfather reported on the subject. The group contained at the time a population of 30,000 souls, and enjoyed a trade which had increased in twenty years seven-fold, to between three and four thousand tons. Yet the mails were despatched and received by chance coasting vessels at the rate of a penny a letter; six and eight weeks often elapsed between opportunities, and when a mail was to be made up, sometimes at a moment's notice, the bellman was sent hastily through the streets of Lerwick. Between Shetland and Orkney, only seventy miles apart, there was 'no trade communication whatever.'

Such was the state of affairs, only sixty years ago, with the three largest clusters of the Scottish Archipelago; and forty-seven years earlier, when Thomas Smith began his rounds, or forty-two, when Robert Stevenson became conjoined with him in these excursions, the barbarism was deep, the people sunk in superstition, the circumstances of their life perhaps unique in history. Lerwick and Kirkwall, like Guam or the Bay of Islands, were but barbarous ports where whalers called to take up and to return experienced seamen. On the outlying islands the clergy lived isolated, thinking other thoughts, dwelling in a different country from their parishioners, like missionaries in the South Seas. My grandfather's unrivalled treasury of anecdote was never written down; it embellished his talk while he yet was, and died with him when he died; and such as have been preserved relate principally to the islands of Ronaldsay and Sanday, two of the Orkney group. These bordered on one of the water-highways of civilisation; a great fleet passed annually in their view, and of the shipwrecks of the world they were the scene and cause of a proportion wholly incommensurable to their size. In one year, 1798, my grandfather found the remains of no fewer than five vessels on the isle of Sanday, which is scarcely twelve miles long.

同类推荐
  • 佛说身观经

    佛说身观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 涅槃宗要

    涅槃宗要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 渴门

    渴门

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 战略

    战略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 白沙语录

    白沙语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 爱的哲学:这本书帮助你明白什么是爱

    爱的哲学:这本书帮助你明白什么是爱

    纵横古今,横跨中西,齐集史上最权威的关于爱的学问,将爱的真谛通过浅显易懂、深入浅出的语言娓娓道来。高亮之,福建长乐人。江苏省农科院院长,美国俄勒岗州立大学客座教授。哲学爱好者,在长期阅读大量古今中外哲学原著的基础上,形成了自己的哲学思想。先后出版《综合哲学随笔》、《漫游西方哲学》、《浅谈中国哲学》三本大众类通俗哲学著作,获得各地读者好评。
  • 万道全书

    万道全书

    广博五教,历览百家,深研术数,对禅智·道法·儒术都有涉及!
  • 穹隆玄幽录

    穹隆玄幽录

    穹隆本是形容天的形状,但人类世界无不处在天空的笼罩之下,这里的人们便把世界称作穹隆。穹隆分五洲,零星散落着先民遗留下来的神秘遗迹。远东学府学生秋顼(xu)生性散漫,学业荒废,被人称作卷毛怪人。直到某一天,京都研究院的探险家来到学府,秋顼的生活……还是没有改变……朽愚君新书,独特的世界观,奇妙的修神经历,真实的爱情,深远的意境,请大家收藏起来!
  • 爱在时空

    爱在时空

    姚谣是一个平凡的岁高中生,和大多数女孩一样梦想着能和白马王子“从此幸福快乐的生活”然而她心目中永远高高在上的白马王子竟然和她穿梭时空到了古代一个不可考证的时期!!!天啊!这也太扯了吧!
  • 2013中国思想随笔排行榜

    2013中国思想随笔排行榜

    思想随笔一记,是散文的一个分支,是议论文的一个变体,兼有议论和抒情两种特性,通常篇幅短小,形式多样,写作者惯常用各种修辞手法曲折传达自己的见解和情感,语言灵动。
  • 妖精来了

    妖精来了

    王颜同学捡到一张芯片,打开发现居然是一部电影哎!女主是王颜同学最喜欢的清纯可爱玉女派掌门人桃小爱姐姐,男主是……卧槽,他怎么长得这么像我罗罗星南域最高行政长官熊世田熊特首!然后,小爱变成了一条狐狸,熊世田变成了一头狗熊,好赞的特技!再然后呢,哇,那只狐狸放大招宰了那只熊唉!“等等”,王颜同学突然感觉不太对,“桃小爱不是只唱歌的么,什么时候开始搞影视了啊……而且这电影,摄像师太渣了点吧,镜头都是歪的……还有,今天早上的新闻头条,我没记错的话,罗罗星南域特首熊世田离奇死于某某旅馆……”
  • 超妖孽完美公主

    超妖孽完美公主

    她是现代的人鱼公主,却因闯了禁地,开启了碾时灯穿越到了古代,而他是古代的龙族王子,“你别想隐瞒,我已看出你不是凡人。”他吐出的每字每句都是那么咄咄逼人。“我也看出了你不是凡人,咱们彼此彼此。没必要把话挑得这么明白吧?我不会说出来的,就像你也不会说出来一样。”“你怎么知道我不毛告诉你我的身份?”“看样你是个不简单的妖精。”白衣男子表情不再像开始时那般刚毅。“你才是妖精!不对,你的原型是个怪物!讨厌的大怪物。”
  • 从责任走向优秀

    从责任走向优秀

    本书对“责任”这个概念进行了具体阐述,提出了“责任的价值”、“责任的行动”和“责任的经营”。
  • 逆战之生化病毒

    逆战之生化病毒

    在特种部队服役的燕哲,接到上级的通知,几个疑似吸食了新型毒品“浴盐”的人,正在商场中攻击人群,已造成多人重伤。到达了事发地点,燕哲才发现,他们攻击他人的原因并不是因为吸食了毒品,而是因为感染了生化病毒。面对这足以使人类灭绝的病毒,各国不得不使用正在测试中的秘密武器,基因药水,战斗机甲,强化合金……
  • 守护甜心之彼岸花的忧殇

    守护甜心之彼岸花的忧殇

    当她以为自己的友情牢不可破时,上帝却给了她致命的一击,她该怎么办?复仇?和好?,最后的复仇,会和什么一起落幕?