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Full text of "Remarks on Dr. Samuel Johnson's Journey to the Hebrides; in which are contained observations on the antiquities, language, genius, and manners of the Highlanders of Scotland"

O N 
DR. SAMUEL JOHNSON'S 

JOURNEY to the HEBRIDES; 

IN WHICH ARE CONTAINED, 

OBSERVATIONS oil the ANTIQUITIES, LAN- 
GUAGE, GENIUS, and MANNERS of the 
HIGHLANDERS of SCOTLAND. 

y 

B Y 

the Rev. DONALD M'NICOL, A.M. 
Minifter of LISMORE in ARGYLESHIRE. 



Old Men and Yravelleri LIE by Authority. . 

RAY'S Proverbs. 



LONDON: 

PRINTED FOR T. CADELL, IN THE STRAND. 
M.DCC.LXXIX. 






o 



TO 

HUGH S E T O N, ESQ, 
OF APPIN, 

THE FOLLOWING SHEETS 

ARE 

WITH GREAT RESPECT 
INSCRIBED 
BY 

THE AUTHOR. 






ADVERTISEMENT, 

THE following Sheets were writ- 
ten foon after Dr. Johnfon's 
*' Journey to the Hebrides" was 
printed. But as the writer had never 
made his appearance at the bar of the 
Public, he was unwilling to enter the 
lifts, with fuch a powerful antagonift, 
without previoufly confulting a few 
learned friends. The diftance of thofe 
friends made it difficult to procure 
their opinion, without fome trouble 
and a great lofs of time : belides, the 
Author was not fo fond of his work 
as to be very anxious about its pub- 
lication. 



He 



He is, however, fenfible, that the 
publication, if it was at all to happen, 
has been too long delayed. Anfwers 
to eminent writers are generally in- 
debted, for their fale and circulation, 
to the works which they endeavour to 
refute. Unfortunately, Dr. Johnfon's 
v Journey" has lain dead in the libra- 
ry, for fome time pail. This confider- 
ation is fo difcouraging, that the 
writer of the Remarks expefts little 
literary reputation, and lefs profit, 
from his labours. But, as he had gone 
fo far, he was induced to go further 
{till, were it for nothing more than 
the ambition of fending his work 
to Jlcep, on the fame flielf, with that; 
of the learned Dr. Johnfon. 




REMARKS 



O N 



t)r. SAMUEL jOHNSON's 



TRAVELLING through the diffe- 
rent kingdoms of Europe has greatly 
prevailed, of late years, among men of 
curiofity and tafte. Some are led abroad 
by the mere love of novelty ; others have 
a more folid purpofe in view, a defire of 
acquiring an extenfive knowledge of man- 
kind. As the obfervations of the former 
are generally of a curfory nature, and fel- 
B dom 



dom extend beyond the circle of their pri- 
vate acquaintance, it is from the latter only 
that we can expert a more public and 
particular information relative to foreign 
parts. Some ingenious and valuable pro- 
ductions of this kind have lately made their 
appearance ; and when a man communi- 
cates, with candour and fidelity, what he 
has feen in other countries, he cannot 
render a more agreeable or lifeful fervice 
to his own. 

By fuch faithful portraits of men and 
manners, we are prefented with a view of 
.the world around us, as it really is. Our 
Author, like a trufty guide, conducts us 
through the fcenes he defcribes, and makes 
us acquainted with the inhabitants; and 
thus we reap all the pleafures and advan- 
tages of travel, without the inconveniencies 
attending it. There is no country fo con- 
temptible as not to furnifh fome things 
that may pleafe, nor is any arrived to that 

degree 



( 3 ) 

degree of perfection as to afford no matter 
of diflike. When, therefore, no falfe co- 
louring is ufed, to diminifh what is com- 
mendable, or magnify defects, we often 
find reafon to give up much of our fup- 
pofed fuperiority over other nations. Hence 
our candour increafes with our knowledge 
of mankind, and we get rid of the folly of 
prejudice and felf-conceit ; which is equally 
ridiculous in a people as individuals, and 
equally an obftacle to improvement. 

It were to be wilhed that the Treatife, 
which is the fubjedt of the following fheets, 
had been formed on fuch a plan as has 
been now mentioned, as it would be a 
much more agreeable tafk to commend 
than cenfure it. But it will appear, from 
the fequel, how far its author has acquitted 
himfelf with that candour which could 
inform the curious, or undeceive the pre- 
judiced. 

B 2 When 



( 4 ) 

When it was known, about two years 
ago, that Dr. Samuel Johnfon, a man of 
fome reputation for letters, had undertaken 
a tour through Scotland, it was naturally 
enough expected, that one of his con- 
templative turn would, fome time or other, 
give a public account of his journey. His 
early prejudices againft the country were 
fufficiently known ; but every one expected 
a fair, if not a flattering, reprefentation, 
from the narrative of grey hairs. But 
there was another circumftance which pro- 
mifed a collateral fecurity for the Doctor's 
fair dealing. Mr. Pennant, and other 
gentlemen of abilities and integrity, had 
made the fame tour before him, and, 
like men of liberal fentiments, fpoke re- 
fpectfully of the Scotch nation. It was 
thought, therefore, that this, if nothing 
elfe, would prove a check on his prepoflef- 
fions, and make him extremely cautious, 
were it only for his own fake, how he 
contradicted fuch refpectable authorities. 

Neither 



( s ) 

Neither of thefe confiderations, how- 
ever, had any weight. The Doctor hated 
Scotland ; that was the mafler-pqffion> and 
it fcorned all reftraints. He feems to have 
fet out with a defign to give a diftorted 
reprefentation of every thing he faw on the 
north fide of the Tweed; and it is but 
doing him juftice to acknowledge, that he 
has not failed in the execution. 

But confiftency has not always been 
attended to in the courfe of his narration. 
He differs no more from other travellers, 
than he often does from himfelf, denying 
at one time what he has afferted at ano- 
ther, as prejudice, or a more generous 
paflion, happened, by turns, to prevail ; 
which, to fay no worfe, is but an aukward 
fituation for a man who makes any pre- 
tenfions to be believed. 

At the fame time I am not fo partial to 

my country, as to fay that Dr. Johnfon is 

always in the wrong when he finds fault. 

B 3 On 



On the contrary, I am ready to allow him, 
as, I believe, will every Scotchman, that the 
road through the mountains, from Fort 
Auguftus to Glenelg, is not quite fo fmooth 
as that between London and Bath ; and 
that he could not find, in the huts or cot- 
tages at Anoch and Glen/heals, the fame 
luxuries and accommodations as in the inns 
on an Englim poft-road. In thefe, and 
fuch like remarks, the Doctor's veracity 
muft certainly remain unimpeached. But 
the bare merit of telling truth will not 
always atone for a want of candour in the 
intention. In the more remote and un- 
frequented parts of a country, little refine- 
ment is to be expe'cled ; it is, therefore, 
no lefs frivolous to examine them with too 
critical an eye, than difingenuous to exhibit 
them as fpecimens of the reft. This, how- 
ever, has been too much the practice with 
)r. Johnfon, in his account of Scotland ; 
every trifling defect is eagerly brought for- 
ward, while the more perfect parts of the 

piece 



( 7 ) 

piece are as carefully kept out of view. If 
other travellers were to ^proceed on the 
fame plan, what nation ia Europe but 
might be made to appear ridiculous ? 

The objects of any moment, which have 
been chiefly diftinguimed by that odium 
which Dr. Johnfon bears to every thing 
that is Scotch, feem to be the Poems of 
Oflian, the whole Gallic language, our 
feminaries of learning, the Reformation, 
and the veracity of all Scotch> and par- 
ticularly Highland narration. The utter 
extinction of the two former feerns to have 
been the principal motive of his journey 
to the North. To pave the way for this 
favourite purpofe, and being aware that 
the influence of tradition, to which all ages 
and nations have ever paid fome regard in 
matters of remote antiquity, muft be re- 
moved, he refolves point blank to deny the 
validity of all Scotch, and particularly 
Highland narration. This he employs all 
B 4 his 



( 8 ) 

his art to perfuade the Public Is always 
vague and fabulous, and deferves no man- 
ner of credit, except when it proves unfa- 
vourable to the country ; then, indeed, it is 
deemed altogether infallible, and is adduced 
by himfelf, upon all occafions, in proof of 
what he aflerts. But this .is a mode of 
reafoning with which the world has been 
totally unacquainted before the Doctor's 
days. 

The Poems of Oflian were no fooner 
made known to the Public, though flript 
of their native ancient garb, than they 
became the delight and admiration of the 
learned over all Europe. Dr. Johnfon, per- 
haps, was the only man, of any pretenfions 
to be ranked in that clafs, who chofe to dif- 
fent from the general voice. The moment he 
heard of the publication and fame of thofe 
Poems, he declared them fpurious, without 
waiting for the common formality of a 
perufal. His cynical difpofition inftantly 

took 



( 9 ) 

took the alarm ; and that, aided by his 
prejudices, would not fuffer him to admit 
that a competition of fuch acknowledged 
merit could originate from a country which, 
becaufe he hated, he always affected to 
defpife. 

But what is the confequence of this hafty 
and abfurd declaration ? After all that has 
been faid upon the fubject, the Poems muft 
flill be confidered as the production either 
of Oflian or Mr. Macpherfon. Dr. Johnfon 
does not vouchfafe to tell us who elfe was 
the author ; and confequently the national 
claim remains perfectly entire. In labour- 
ing to deny their antiquity, therefore, the 
Doctor only plucks the wreath of ages 
from the tomb of the ancient bard, to adorn 
the brow of the modern Caledonian. For 
the moment Mr. Macpherfon ceafes to be 
admitted as a tranflator, he inflantly ac- 
quires a title to the original. This confe- 
quence is unavoidable, though it is not to 

be 



be fuppofed Dr. Johnfon intended it. Na- 
turally pompous and vain, and ridiculoufly 
ambitious of an exclufive reputation in 
letters, it can hardly be believed that he 
would voluntarily beftow fo envied a com- 
pliment on a young candidate for fame, 
who had already, in other refpecls, made a 
difcovery of talents fufficient to alarm his 
own pride : but we often derive from' the 
folly of fome men, more than we claim from 
their juftice. 

From the firft appearance of Offian's 
Poems in public, we may date the origin 
of Dr. Johnfon's intended tour to Scot- 
land ; whatever he may pretend to tell us a 
in the beginning of his narration. There 
are many circumftances to juftify this opi- 
nion ; among which a material one is, that 
a gentleman of uridobted honour and vera- 
city, who happened to be at London foon 
after that period, informed me upon his 
return to the country, that Caledonia might, 

fome 



fome day, look for an unfriendly vifit from 
the Doctor. So little able was he, it feems, 
to conceal his ill-humour on that occafion, 
that it became the fubject of common dif- 
courfe; and the event has fully verified 
what was predicated as the confequence. 

In the year 1 773 he accomplifhed his 
purpofe ; and fometime in the year follow- 
ing he publifhed an account of his journey, 
which plainly fhews the fpirit with which 
it was undertaken. All men have their 
prejudices more or lefs, nor are the beft 
always without them ; but fo fturdy an in- 
ftance as this is hardly to be met with. It 
is without example, in any attempt of the 
like kind that has gone before it ; and it is 
to be hoped, for the fake of truth and the 
credit of human nature, it will furnifh none 
to fuch as may come after. 

As, in refuting the mifreprefentations 
and detecting the inconfiftencies of Dr. 

Johnfon, 



Johnfon, it may fometimes be found necef- 
fary to draw a comparifon between the 
north and the fouth fide of the Tweed, if 
is proper to premife here, that this fhall 
always be done, without the leaft intention 
to reflect on the Englifh nation. My mind 
was perfectly free from the narrownefs of 
national prejudice before this occafion; 
and I am not yet fufficiently provoked, by 
the Doctor's injuftice to my country, to 
retaliate againft his. To illuftrate the fub- 
jet by fimilar inftances, is my only aim ; 
as then, like objecls brought nearer to the 
eye, obfervations, when applied more im- 
mediately to ourfelves, will ftrike more 
forcibly. This much, I hope, will fuffice 
as an apology with every candid Eng- 
lifhman. And as to fome people among 
ourfelves, who eafily give up many points 
of national honour, they are chiefly up- 
ftarts in the world ; a fet of men, who, 
in all countries, are apt to make light of 

diftinctions 



( 13 ) 

diftin&ions from which their own obfcurity 
excludes them. 

My firft intention was to write what I 
had to fay on this fubject in the form of 
an Effay. Upon farther confideration, 
however, " the method I have now adopted 
appeared the moft eligible; as, by citing 
the Doctor's own words, the Public will 
be the better enabled to judge what juftice 
is done to his meaning. This plan, on 
account of the frequent interruptions, may 
not, perhaps, render the performance fo 
entertaining to fome readers ; but it gives 
an opportunity for a more clofe inveftiga- 
tion, and to fuch as are not poffeflfed of the 
Doctor's book, it will, in a great meafure, 
fupply its place. 

That the reader may not be difappointed, 

I muft tell him before-hand, that he is not 

to expect, in the following (heets, what Dr. 

Johnfon calls '* ornamental fpkndors" Im- 

3 partiality 



( '4 ) 

partiality of obfervation fhall be more at- 
tended to than elegance of didion ; and if 
I appear fometimes fevere, the Doctor fhall 
have no reafon to fay I am unjuft. He is 
to be tried all along by his own evidence ; 
and, therefore, he cannot complain, if, 
" out of his own mouth, he is condemned/' 

Dr. Johnfon informs us, that he fet out 
from Edinburgh, upon his intended pere- 
grination, the 1 8th of Auguft 1773. This 
muft undoubtedly appear an uncommon 
feafon of the year for an old frail inhabitant 
of London to undertake a journey to the He- 
brides, if he propofed the tour mould prove 
agreeable to himfelf, or amufing to the Pub- 
lic. Moft other travellers make choice of 
the fummer months, when the countries 
through which they pafs are feen to mod 
advantage; and as the Dodor acknow- 
ledges he had been hitherto but little out 
of the metropolis, one fhould think he 
would have wilhed to have made the moft 

of 



( 15 ) 

of his journey. But it was not beauties 
the Doctor went to find out in Scotland, 
but defects ; and for the northern fituation 
of the Hebrides, the advanced time of the 
year fuited his purpofe beft. 

He pafles over the city of Edinburgh 
almoft without notice; though furely its 
magnificent caftle, its palace, and many 
ftately buildings, both public and private, 
were not unworthy of a flight touch, at 
leaft, from the Doctor's pencil. Little, 
therefore, is to be expected from a man 
who would turn his back on the capital 
with a fupercilious filence. But, indeed, 
he is commonly very fparing of his re- 
marks where there is any thing that merits 
attention ; though we find he has always 
enough to fay where none but himfelf could 
find matter of obfervation. 

In page 3d, his account of the ifland of 
Inch Keith is trifling and contradictory. 

Ke 
7 



He reprefents it as a barren rock where there* 
formerly was a fort ; and yet he tells us 
again, that it was never intended for a place 
of flrength, and that a " herd of cows grazes 
annually upon it in the fummer." But a 
fort without Jlrength is furely fomething 
new, and grazing for cattle a moft uncommon 
mark of barrennefs* 

Before the Doctor difmifies this wonder- 
ful fpot, which he has made fomething and 
nothing all in a breath, he amufes him- 
felf with thinking " on the different ap- 
pearance that it would have made, if it had 
been placed at the fame diftance from 
London ;" and then he adds, with an air 
of exultation, " with what emulation of 
price a few rocky acres would have been 
purchafed, and with what expenfive in- 
duftry they would have been cultivated and 
adorned." 

The cenfure implied in the above paflage 
is obvious ; but, to give it effect, the Doctor 

ought 



( '7 ) ' ' 

ought firft to determine whether Inch 
Keith is not dill a royal property. Should 
that be found to be the cafe, no emulation 
of price could purchafe it ; and confequently 
the citizens of Edinburgh are not to be 
blamed for not cultivating and adorning 
what they cannot make their own. 

But this confideration fet apart, let me 
afk the Dodor, Whether the Londoners 
have fhewn themfelves fo very deferving of 
the ranting compliment he pays them ? If 
I am not mifmformed, there are, at this 
prefent moment, even in the very heart of 
the cities of London and Weftminfter, 
many extenfive fpots of ground, which 
exhibit at once the mod miferable marks of 
defolation, and proofs of neglect. Inftead 
of being cultivated and adorned^ thefe are 
reprefented as dangerous to the paffenger, 
and loathfome to the view. What then 
are we to think of this boafted emulation to 
purchafe, this induftry to improve ? Is it 
C very 



very credible, that a people fhould go fuch 
expenfive lengths for an agreeable fituation 
without their walls, who permit the vileft 
{inks of filth and corruption to incommode 
and difgrace their ftreets ? 

The Doctor fays, he difcovered no woods 
in his way towards Cowpar. This may be 
true, as the Doctor's optics, I am told, are 
none of the beft. But furely the fine ex- 
tenfive plantations of the Earl of Leven's 
eftate, and not very diftant from the public 
road, could not well have efcaped the no- 
tice of any other paflenger. He then tells 
us, that " a tree is as great a curiofity in 
Scotland, as a horfe at Venice." I cannot 
decide upon the merits of this aflertion, as 
I am not acquainted with the numbers of 
the Venetian cavalry. But, whatever the 
Doctor may infmuate about the prefent 
fcarcity of trees in Scotland, we are much 
deceived by fame, if a very near anceftor 
of his, who was a native of that country, 

did 



( I? ) 

did not find to his coft, that a tree was not 
quite fuch a rarity in his days. 

It is allowed, indeed, he might pafs 
through fome parts of Scotland where 
there are not many trees ; as, I believe, is 
the cafe in England, and moft other coun- 
tries. But as he is fo very careful in de- 
fcribing the nakednefs of the country where 
trees were not, he ought to have had the 
candour likewife to inform us where they 
were. 

Such, however, as are defirous of fatif- 
fadion on this head, may confult Mr. Pen- 
nanfs Tour, and they will find a very 
different account of the matter from that 
given by the Doctor. That gentleman 
found abundance of woods, and even frees, 
in different parts of the country, if thofe of 
twelve and fifteen feet in circumference 
may deferve that name. But he travelled 
with his judgment unbiaffedy and his eyes 
G 2 open; 



open ; two circumftances in which he dif- 
fered very materially from Dr. Johnfon, 
and which, rather fomewhat unluckily for 
the latter, has occafioned fucli a frequent 
difference in their accounts. 

As the Do&or arrived at St. Andrews at 
two in the morning, it is pleafant enough 
to hear him fay, " Though we were yet in 
the moft populous part of Scotland, and at 
fo fmall a diftance from the capital, we met 
few paflengers." Few people, I believe, 
would complain of this circumftance, at the 
fame hours, and at fa fmall a diftance from 
the Englim capital. But it is pretty evi- 
dent, that the Doctor meant nothing lefs 
than a compliment to the Scots, for the 
fecurity with which he performed this noc- 
turnal expedition. 

But the night is the natural feafon for 
reft; and that being confidered, it effec- 
tually takes the fling from the above filly 

remark. 



remark. What man in his fenfes would 
expect to find crowded roads at midnight ? 
Or what man of common honefty would 
be bold enough to aflert, that there were 
few or no trees in Fife, becaufe forfooth 
they were not to be feen in the dark ? 

He fays (page 7), that there is hardly 
fo much of the cathedral of St. Andrews 
remaining " as to exhibit, even to an artift, 
a fufficient fpecimen of the architecture." 
I am at a lofs to know what he means by 
a fufficient fpecimen , if a great part of one 
of the fide-walls, with a fpire at each end, 
and the main entry entire, are not fufficient 
for the purpofe he mentions : for all thefe 
ftill remain in fpite of Knox's reformation, 
as he farcaftically exprefles it. 

In 1543* a bill was pafled in the parlia- 
ment of Scotland, granting leave to the 
people to read the fcriptures in the vulgar 
tongues ; and this bill was notified to the 
C 3 Public, 



.Public, by a proclamation from the regent. 
He even went fo far as to defire Sir Ralph 
Sadler, the Englifh ambaflador, to fend 
for Englifh bibles from London. As this 
deed, therefore, had the fanclion of the 
regent and parliament, let the world judge 
of the candour of the man who calls it 
Knox's reformation. 

Page 8th.' He mentions the miferable 
but juft fate of cardinal Beatoune, in fuch 
a manner as might make it be thought to 
have proceeded from the religious animo- 
fities of thofe times ; for he fays, c< that he 
was murdered by the ruffians of reforma- 
tion." But it is well known to fuch as 
are converfant in the hiftory of that period, 
that it was not for his religion that this 
peft of fociety was brought to an untimely 
end. His numberlefs cruelties and op- 
preffions had raifed him many enemies 
among all ranks of people; and in parti- 
cular there was aa old quarrel between 

him 



him and Norman Lejly^ fon to the Earl of 
Rothes, who was the principal agent in 
ridding the world of a monfter, who ought 
rather to have fallen by the hand of public 
juftice. 

But while our Author condemns this 
act with fo much malignant acrimony, he 
takes care, with his ufual candour, to con- 
ceal from his reader the more to be 
lamented fate of the amiable Wi/Joart ; who 
but a few days before, and that for con- 
fcience fake alone, was condemned to the 
flames, and fuffered accordingly, by one 
of the many barbarous decrees of the 
Doctor's favourite cardinal, though there 
was an exprefs order from the regent to 
the contrary. If this was not murder with 
a vengeance, I fhould be glad to know its 
proper name. But as it was perpetrated 
under the fanction of a popifh judicatory, 
the Doctor may, perhaps, foften perfecu- 
tion into juftice, and roundly affirm that 
C 4 the 



the devoted Wifhart deferred no mercy, 
for the unpardonable crime, according to 
him, of being one of the ruffians of reform- 
atlon. He feems, indeed, to have a good 
deal of the old leaven in his compofition ; 
and whatever may be his notions of civil 
liberty, he fhews himfelf, upon moft occa- 
fions, to be no great friend to that of con- 
fcience. 

Towards the bottom of the fame page, 
he aflerts, that all the civilization intro- 
duced into Scotland, is entirely owing to 
our trade and intercourfe with England. 
It is but too common with Englifh writers 
to fpeak contemptuoufly, of other coun- 
tries, and arrogate very largely to their 
own ; and what with national vanity on 
the one hand, and national prejudice on 
the other, the Doctor has, in this inftance, 
either fuffered himfelf to be betrayed into 
a moft grofs and wilful mifreprefentation, 
or he difcovers an amazing ignorance of 

the 



the hiftory of Europe. This miracle of 
knowledge did not know, or is willing to 
forget, that, long before the period he 
alludes to, we had an intercourfe of many 
centuries with France; a nation as polity 
at leaft, as England, and, perhaps, full as 
ready to do juftice to the characters of their 
neighbours. 

Our firft league with France was in the 
reign of Charlemagne, in 792, figned by 
that monarch, and afterwards by our king 
Achaius, at Inverkchoy. Charles the Great 
was fo fond of ennobling France, not only 
by arms but by arts, that he fent for 
learned men from Scotland, fays Buchanan, 
to read philofophy, in Greek and Latin, at 
Paris. He himfelf had for his preceptor, 
Johannes Scotus, or Albinus, a man emi- 
nent for learning. 

Many other Scots went over about that 
to inftruct the inhabitants about the 

Rhine 



Rhine in the doctrines of Chriftianity ; 
which they did with fuch fuccefs, that the 
people built monafteries in many places. 
The Germans paid fuch a refpedl to their 
memories, that, even in Buchanan's time, 
Scotchmen were made governors of thofe 
monafteries. 

From the time of Achaius to the Union, 
our alliance with France .continued. A 
complete catalogue of all thofe treaties, 
with an Englifh tranflation, was published 
in 1751 ; to which I refer the Doctor, to 
convince him, that we had fome importance 
as a nation, before we had any connection 
with his country. There he will fee the 
uncommon privileges we enjoyed in 
France : That we were entrufted with 
the higheft offices, civil, military, and 
ccclefiaftical : That we were compliment- 
ed with all the rights and franchifes of 
native fubje&s, which we poflefs to this 
day: And that we were diftinguifhed 
2 by 



( 27 ) 

by the fingular honour of acting as. life- 
guards to the French kings ; a truft, one 
would think, not to be conferred on fuch 
favages and barbarians as the Doctor would 
make us. 

Our merchants likewife enjoyed the 
moft uncommon privileges and immuni- 
ties in France : and many of our nobility 
and gentlemen obtained extenfive eftates in 
that kingdom, as rewards for their fignal 
fervices to the ftate, which the pofterity of 
moft of them inherit to this day. 

There cannot, I think, be a more con- 
vincing proof of the entire confidence 
which the French repofed in the honour 
and fidelity of the Scots, than their 
making choice of them for guarding 
the perfons of their fovereigns. After 
Lewis XII. had fet forth, in terms the 
moft honourable to our nation, the fervices 

which 



which the Scots had performed for Charles 
the Seventh, in expelling the Englifh out 
of France, and reducing the kingdom to 
his obedience, he adds, " Since which 
" reduction, and for the fervice the Scots 
" rendered to Charles the Seventh, upon 
" that occafion, and for the great loyalty 
<f and virtue which he found in them, he 
" feleded 200 of them for the guard of his 
" perfon, of whom he made an hundred 
<c men at arms, and an hundred life-guards : 
<c And the hundred men at arms are the 
" hundred lances of our ancient ordinances; 
'* and the life-guard men are thofe of our 
" guard, who flill are near and about our 
" perfon." 

With refped to the fidelity of the Scots 
in this honourable ftation, let us hear the 
teftimony of Claud Seyfil, Matter of 
Requefts to the fame Lewis XII. and 
afterwards Archbifhop of Turin, in the 
hiftory of that prince ; where, fpeaking of 
i Scotland, 



Scotland, he fays, '* The French have fo 

<{ ancient a friendfhip and alliance with 

" the Scots, that, of 400 men appointed 

" for the king's life-guard, there are an 

" hundred of the faid nation who are the 

" neareft to his perfon, and, in the night, 

M keep the keys of the apartment where 

" he fleeps. There are, moreover, an 

" hundred complete lances, and two hun- 

" dred yeomen of the faid nation, befides 

" feveral that are difperfed through the 

" companies : and for fo long a time as 

" they have ferved in France, never hath 

" there been one of them found, that hath 

" committed, or done any fault, againft 

" the kings or their ftate ; and they make 

" ufe of them as of their own fubjects." 

The ancient rights and privileges of the 
Scottifh life-guards were very honourable. 
Here follows a defcription of the functions 
and precedence belonging to their com- 
pany, and efpecially to the twenty-four 

firft 



( 3 ) 

firft guards ; to whom the firft gendarme^ 
of France being added, they make up the 
number of twenty-five, commonly called 
gardes de manche (fleeve guards) who were 
all Scotch by nation. The Author of the 
ancient alliance fays, " Two of them 
" aflift at mafs, fermon, vefpers, and or- 
" dinary meals. On high holidays, ac the 
tc ceremony of the royal touch^ the erec- 
tion of Knights of the King's order, the 
reception of extraordinary ambafladors, 
and the public entries of cities, there 
" muft be fix of their number next to the 
" King's perfon, three on each fide of his 
<c Majefty : and the body of the king muft 
" be carried by thefe only, wherefoever 
" ceremony requires ; and his effigy muft 
" t?e attended by them. They have the 
*' keeping of the keys of the king's lodg- 
" ing at night, the keeping of the choir 
" of the chapel, the keeping of the boats 
*' when the king pafies the rivers ; and 

{ they 



( 3 ) 

" they have the honour of bearing the 
' white filk fringe in their arms, which, 
" in France, is the coronal colour. The 
" keys of all the cities where the king 
*' makes his entry are given to their cap- 
" tain, in waiting, or out of waiting. He 
" has the privilege, in waiting, or out of 
" waiting, at ceremonies, fuch as corona- 
* { tions, marriages, and funerals of the 
" kings, and at the baptifms and marriages 
" of their children, to take duty upon 
" him. The coronation robe belongs to 
" him : and this company, by the death 
" or change of a captain, never changes its 
" rank, as do the three others." 

It would be eafy to produce the moft 
honourable teftimonies of our national 
character, from the writers of all the ftates 
of any note in Europe, our neareft neigh- 
bours excepted. But this much may fuffice 
to convince the moft partial and credulous 

of 



( 3* ) 

of Doctor Johnfon's readers, that, when 
we began to have "trade and intercourfe 
with England,'* our manners could not 
ftand in much need of any cultivation from 
that quarter. It will be allowed, I believe, 
that the Englifh, like moft other nations, 
are indebted for their own chief improve- 
ments to the French. It would, therefore, 
be ridiculous to fuppofe, that we, who had 
accefs to the original fo long before them- 
felves, mould have occafion, at laft, to 
borrow from the copy, and thus to acquire 
the little polifh he allows us, at fecond- 
hand only. 

Page ioth. When fpeaking of the uni- 
verfity of St. Andrews, the Doctor fays, 
<c That the univerfities in Scotland are 
" mouldering into duft.*' This remark is 
the more extraordinary, as a great part of 
St. Salvator's college was built from the 
foundation not above twenty years ago, 



( 33 ) 

It cati hardly be believed, therefore, that 
fuch a vifible tendency to decay could al- 
ready have taken place, though, inftead 
of folid ftone, the, building had been 
conftru&ed of fuch brittle materials as 
Englijh bricks. 

He next complains, with more virulence 
than juftice, of the neglected flate of the 
chapel of St. Leonard's college. But as 
that college has been, with great propriety, 
diflblved, a ftrict attention to its chapel, 
which is no longer wanted for religious 
purpofes, does not appear neceflary. The 
chapel of St. Salvator's, however, which, 
within thefe few years, has been very 
neatly repaired, and that at a considerable 
cxpence, has entirely efcaped the Doctor's 
notice. Not a word of this; otherwife> 
as it now fupplies the place of the other, 
the dilapidation would haveLeen accounted 
for, and this heinous charge of facrilege 
D fliewn 



( 34 ) 

{hewn to be unjuft. To be confiftent, 
therefore, it was necefTary to be filent. 
And the Doctor's tender regard to deco- 
rum, in this inftance, illuftrates a beautiful 
obfervation of his own, in the page I have 
laft quoted, when he fays, " Where there 
" is yet ftiame, there may in time be vir- 



tue." 



The library of St. Andrews is the next 
object of his remarks, which, he tells us, 
" is not very fpacious. 5 ' This, however, 
is a vague and indefinite way of fpeaking, 
to which the Doctor is rather too frequently 
addicted. General terms convey no dif- 
tinct ideas ; and, if he wifhed to be under- 
ftood, he fhould have given the feveral 
dimenfions, that the public might judge for. 
themfelves. For my own part, I am at a 
lofs to know what he means by very 
fyas'wus* It is not, indeed, fo fpacious as 
St. Paul's ; but it is fufficiently large and 

elegant, 



( 35 ) 

elegant, as a repofitory of books, for any 
literary fociety in the kingdom. 

He informs us, that the gentleman by 
whom it was fhewn, hoped to mortify his 
Englifli vanity, by telling him, that they 
had no fuch library in England. This 
obfervation, I confefs, was needlefs; and, 
perhaps, unjuft. But, be that as it may, 
the Doctor feems determined to have his 
revenge, by faying fomething to difpa- 
rage it. 

Nothing can be more uncandid and 
erroneous, than the account he gives of 
the rates at which the different claffes of 
fludents may pafs their feflion, or term, 
at St. Andrews. His calculation, in gene- 
ral, falls fhort of the neceflary expences, 
by more than one half. Formerly, per- 
haps, the fums he mentions might have 
been nearly fufficient ; but it is well known, 
D 2 that, 



( 36 ) 

that, of late years, the expence of an aca- 
demical education in Scotland, as is pro- 
bably the cafe in England too, has increafed 
very confiderably. 

When a man attempts to inform the 
Public in any thing, he fhould take fome 
care to be firfl well informed himfelf. 
But our traveller, on moft occafions, feems 
not to be very nice in that refpedt. Mi- 
nute enquiries might either be troublefome, 
or not fuit his purpofe; and, therefore, 
to cut the matter fhort, and come eafily at 
his point, he often makes a confident afier- 
rion fland for authority. 

The Doclor, at length, takes leave of 
St. Andrews; though not, to do him juf- 
tice, without making decent mention of 
the kindnefs of the profefTors. But even 
that, he fays, " did not contribute to abate 
*' the uneafy remembrance of an univerfity 

*' declining, 



( 37 ) 

" declining, a college alienated, and a 
" church profaned and haftening to the 
" ground." From thefe circumftances he 
is led into a train of reveries, which he 
concludes in thefe pathetic words: " Had 
" the univerfity been deftroyed two centu- 
" ries ago, we fhould not have regretted 
** it; but to fee it pining in decay and 
" ftruggling for life, fills the mind with 
" mournful images and ineffe&ual wimes." 

This is certainly fine language ; and a 
proof, no doubt, of fine feelings. I hear- 
tily fympathize with his generous diftrefs, 
efpecially as there is no remedy but Ineffec- 
tual ivijhes. But I muft tell the good man, 
for his comfort, that the matter is not quite 
fo bad as his too lively imagination repre- 
fents it; and that the mournful images 
which fill his mind, are the mere vagaries 
of a diftempered fancy. His readers, there- 
fore, need not be too deeply imprefled 
D 3 with 



( 38 ) 

with the calamities he fpeaks of; as it is 
not the firft time, I am told, that the Doc* 
tor has amufed the public with a Falfe 
Alarm, 

But to follow our traveller a little more 
clofely on this fubjet. What he calls an 
unvverfay declining , muft certainly refer to 
the college of St. Leonard; for I have 
mentioned a little above, that the college of 
St. Salvator had undergone a thorough re- 
pair within thefe laft twenty years. As 
this, then, is what ought, in propriety, to 
be now called the univerfity, the other be- 
ing diflblved ; and as he acknowledges the 
the abilities of the profeflbrs ; the moft 
partial, I think, muft fee the folly, as well 
as the falfehood of this affertion. But had 
thofe walls, which he defcribes as pining in 
decay, and the other univerfities in Scot- 
land, of which he gives not a much better 
produced as few eminent men, as 

fome 



( 39 ) 

fome other univerfities that might be 
named, the Doctor's antipathy to this 
country had not, perhaps, been fo great ; 
nor would he, probably, have taken the 
trouble of examining our feminaries of 
learning upon the fpot. 

As to his alienated college, he faves me 
the trouble of faying much on that head, 
by confefling (page 10.) that u the diffolu- 
tion of St. Leonard's college was doubtlefs 
neceflary." If this be fo, why complain 
of the meafure ? To be neceflary and yet a 
reproach, feems rather fomewhat incom- 
patible, and prefents us with a combination 
of terms, for which, perhaps, we can find 
no authority, unlefs in the Doctor's Dic- 
tionary. 

We come now, along with the Doctor, 

to the melancholy talk of viewing " a 

church profaned and haftening to the 

D 4 ground." 



( 40 ) 

ground." This church is no other than 
the old chapel of the annexed, not the 
alienated, college of St. Leonard. Its 
having been formerly confecrated by the 
Romifli rites, may give fome little Jillip to 
the Doctor's zeal ; but in what manner it 
has been profaned of late years, unlefs he 
means by the Prejbyterian religion, I am 
unable to conjecture. Since the diflblution 
of the feminary to which it belonged, it 
has ceafed to be occupied as a place of wor- 
fhip. I fee no profanation, therefore, in 
applying it to any other ufeful purpofe ; as 
no degree of fanctity can furely remain 
in the walls. The Scots, at leaft, do 
not carry their veneration for fuch relics 
fo far as the Doctor did in the ifland of 
Jona, as we fhall fee in its proper place ; 
a circumftance which is no bad index tQ 
his religious 



Page 1 6th. Ke represents <e the whole 

country as extending in uniform naked- 

6 nefs, 



nefs, except that in the road between 
Kirkaldy and Cowpar, he patted for a few 
yards between two hedges." Here I 
could venture to lay an hundred to one, 
that our doughty traveller miftook two 
extenfive parks for two fmall hedges ; 
from whence we may form an idea of 
the corrednefs of his defcription. This 
notable gentleman came to Scotland with- 
out eyes to fee the objeds that lay in his 
way ; and therefore to follow him through 
the account he gives of his journey with 
too much confidence, would be literally 
trufting to a blind guide. 

He pafles very rapidly through the town 
of Dundee, for fear, I fuppofe, of being 
obliged to take notice of its increafmg 
trade. Befides a variety of other extenfive 
and profitable manufactures, the dying of 
linen yarn is brought to a greater degree 
of perfection in that place, than any where 
D 5 dfe 



( 42 ) 

elfe in Great Britain. As this is a very 
curious art, and employs fome thoufands 
of people, one would think it as deferv- 
ing of notice, as many other things that 
attracted the Doctor's attention. 

To fee commerce flourifh, induftry re- 
warded, and the poor have bread, are 
objects which would have given pleafure to 
a benevolent mind ; and they would have 
been related with rapture. But England 
had not yet made any great progrefs in this 
branch ; and the Doctor did not choofe to 
acknowledge, that his countrymen were in 
any thing outdone by the Scots. I profefs, 
I mean nothing local in this remark. But, 
as the Doctor is fo very ready to fpeak out, 
when the balance is on the other fide ; I 
think it but juftice to claim that {hare of 
comparative merit, which his filence has 
here denied us* 

His 



( 43 ) 

His next flage was Aberbrothick, to 
which he pays a very unufual compliment, 
on account of its ancient and magnificent, 
but now decayed monaftery ; for he tells 
us, in page 2oth, " that he mould fcarcely 
have regretted his journey, had it afforded 
nothing more than the fight of Aberbro- 
thick." 

I know not with what degree of plea- 
fure the Doctor furveyed the ruins of this 
venerable pile ; but his abrupt defcription 
of it cannot convey much to the reader, 
nor induce any other ftranger to travel fo 
far for the fame fight. He endeavours to 
account for this deficiency, by pleading 
the approach of night, which obliged them 
to defift from their refearches. Had there 
been no other day to fucceed that night, 
this indeed might be fome excufe ; but it 
affords none for not returning next morn- 
ing, to have a more cosyplete view of an 



( 44 ) 

object, which he owns had captivated his 
fancy fo much. 

There was no occafion, however, to call 
in the afliftance of the night to conceal 
from his' readers, a fcene which did fome 
credit to the country. The Doctor, while 
in Scotland, never faw more than he was 
willing to communicate. He touches very 
ilightly, or not at all, on fuch objects as 
might excite the curiofity of the inquifi- 
tive ; but the moft trifling handle for 
obloquy is greedily laid hold of, and 
tedioufly difplayed. 

Page 2 1 ft. At Montrofc, he complains 
much of the behaviour of the Inn-keeper. 
But, happily for this nation, he found out 
that his hoft was an Englishman, other- 
wife " every mother's fon of us" would 
have been reprobated for his fake. 

Whil? 



( 45 ) 

While at this place, he obferves, that 
our beggars " folicit filently, or very mo- 
deftly." Here, one would naturally expect, 
he had found fomething to fpeak well of j 
but not fo with the Doctor. He begins a 
harangue on the merits of the begging- 
trade, and concludes in favour of clamour 
and perfeverance. When a man will not 
allow the filent modefty of a Scotch beggar 
to efcape the lam, it is enough to mew that 
he is determined not to be pleafed. 

I intended to have made a remark on 
what I thought an impropriety in our tra- 
veller's language, when he fays that " the 
hedges near Montrofe are vijlone" But I 
{hall leave the thorn of correction for the 
abler hand of Lexiphanes ; a name which 
the Doctor may long remember, for a 
former complete trimming of his Vocabu- 
lary. 



In 



(. 46 ) 

In his way from Montrofe, he obferves, 
" that the fields are fo generally plowed, 
that it is hard to imagine where grafs is 
found for the horfes that till them." 
Alas ! what {hall poor Scotland do to pleafe 
the good Doctor ? In one place he finds too 
little tillage, in another too much. Not 
long ago, he told us, " that the whole 
country was extended in uniform naked- 
uefs ;" but here he feems to forget himfelf, 
and fays, " the harveft, which was almoft 
ripe appeared very plentiful/' A country 
covered with a plentiful crop, cannot cer- 
tainly be called naked. But let the reader 
account for fuch caprices, and reconcile 
flich contradictions, if he can. 

He infinuates, page 24, that there are 
no robbers in Scotland. But, as he feldom 
beftows with the one hand, without taking 
away with the other, he concludes his ob- 
fervatipn by adding, " But where there 

are 



( 47 ) . 

are fo few travellers, why fhould there be 
robbers ?" If he means any thing by this, 
it muft be, that the poverty with which he 
every where brands the Scotch nation., makes 
the poorer fort honeft. This is one good 
confequence from a misfortune at leaft; 
but the conclufion will by no means follow. 
Riches and poverty are relative all the 
world over; and confequently, where 
there is but little wealth, the wants of 
the moft indigent, will be as effectually 
relieved by depredations on their neigh- 
bours, as in more opulent countries. In 
fpite of the Doctor's fophiftry, therefore, 
a pretended want of inducements to rapine, 
fails to account here for the want of the 
practice. The fafety with which, as he 
confefles, he purfued his journey, both 
by night and by day, called for a more 
generous interpretation. It is principle 
alone, and neither the penury or paucity 
of its inhabitants, that exempts the travel- 
ler 



( 48 ) 

Jer in Scotland from the terrors of the 
piftol and dagger. 

This communicative gentleman, among 
other curious anecdotes, informs us, that 
he feldom found in Scotland any method 
of keeping their windows open, when there 
was occafion for admitting frefli air, but 
by holding them up with the hand, un- 
lefs now and then among good contrivers 
there be a nail which one might flick into 
a hole to keep them from falling. The 
misfortune is, whatever the Doclor meets 
with but once, if it fuits his purpofe, he 
will make univerfal. That he might meet 
with fome inftances of what he mentions, 
I will not difpute ; nor in remote corners, 
nor even elfewhere when the pullies may 
happen to be out of order, do I think it a 
bad fhifc ; and if our neighbours of the 
South have not a nail y or fome fuch expe- 
dient, in the like circumftances, they are 

not what he calls good contrivers, 

For 



( 4.9 ) 

For once, however, he feems to feel a 
confcious blufh for the futility of his ceri- 
fures ; and we find him have the good grace 
to offer an apology for abafing himfelf fo 
far, as to mention fuch trifles as nails to 
fupport windows, by alleging, " that the 
great outlines or charaderiftic of a nation 
are to be marked out not in palaces, or 
among the learned, but among the bulk 
of the people." This is certainly a juft 
pbfervation, in which I heartily agree with 
him ; and had he begun to mark out thefe 
outlines or characleriflics a little nearer 
home, he might, perhaps, have found 
fewer novelties on this fide of the Tweed. 

Page 48. He obferves, <c A Scotch army 
was very cheaply kept after the time of 
the Reformation." I know not indeed, 
how cheap thofe armies might have been 
to their friends ; but the hiftory of England 
can vouch that they often proved very dear 
to their enemies. To be particular on this 
E head 



( 5 ) 

head would be invidious ; nor fhall the 
Doctor's malevolence provoke me to draw 
afide the veil which a happy union between 
the two kingdoms has long fmce, among 
men of fenfe and moderation, thrown over 
paft tranfactions. 

In reflecting upon the ruinous ftate of 
our cathedrals, he faces about for once, 
and tells the Engliih likewife, that " their 
cathedrals are mouldering by unregarded 
dilapidation." Here his own countrymen 
exclaim againft his want of candour, and 
clearly convict him of a moft audacious 
mifreprefentation, by pointing out feveral 
large fums which have been lately ex- 
pended on the reparation of fome of their 
churches. 

We have reafon to complain of him in- 
almft every page ; and the prefent inftance 
of his infmcerity may fatisfy others that 
we have not always had fair play. Intro- 
ducing 



I 



C 51 ) 

ducing the Scots, he might hope, as the 
fcene lies at a diftance, to exercife the 
common, though not very honourable pri- 
vilege of a traveller, without fear of dif- 
eovery. But what fliall the world think of 
a man who, regardlefs of the infamy, ven- 
tures to trefpafs where detection is un- 
avoidable ? A fenfe of fhame and a regard 
to truth generally go together; and -when 
a man has loft the one, he feldom retains 
the other^ 

He fays, pages 50, i, that <e the firfl 
orchard and plantation of oak he faw in 
Scotland was at Fochabers," though it is 
well known there were feveral of both 
kinds in his way, had he been difpofed to 
obferve them. But where the Doctor could 
not get a good dinner, a circumftance 
which is generally thought to have an un- 
common influence on his narrations, he 
feldom found any agreeable objects. At 
any rate it does not feem a very judicious 
E 2 fit nation 



ft 

C 5* ) 

fituation for orchards, to place them fo near 
the road, that a perfon who hardly fees his 
finger-length before him fhould be able to 
defcry them. 

At Forres, Dr. Johnfon " found nothing 
worthy of particular remark." Mr. Pen- 
nant^ however, was a little more fortunate 
here, as well as every where elfe. " Near 
Forres," fays that gentleman, " on the 
road fide is a vaft column three feet ten 
inches broad, and one foot three inches 
thick ; the height above the ground is 
twenty-three feet ; below, as is faid, twelve 
or fifteen feet. On one fide are numbers 
of rude figures of animals and armed men, 
with colours flying : fome of the men 
feemed bound like captives. On the oppo- 
fite fide was a crofs included in a circle, 
and raifed a little above the furface of the 
fame. This is called king Sueao^s- Hone, 
and feems to be, as Mr. Gordon conjec- 
tures, erected by the Scots, in memory of 

the 



( 53 ) 

the final retreat of the Danes." This mo- 
nument of Scotch triumph over the Danes, 
who had put England under the .yoke, 
Dr. Johnfon did not fee, or he did not 
choofe to record an event fo much to their 
honour. 



Before he left Forres, he might have 
found fomething worthy of remark in con- 
templating the ruins of the old caftle, 
which flood at the weft end of the town, 
and was formerly a place of great extent 
and flrength. He might likewife have 
entertained himfelf agreeably by taking a 
view, from the town, of the fertile plain 
below, which ftretches for many miles 
towards the fea, as well as to the Eaft and 
\Veft ; and where he could have feen 
gentlemen's feats, with hedges, trees, and 
every other mark of cultivation, fcattered 
before him in the rnoft delightful pro- 
fufion. But the Doctor mentions none of 
thofe things, as it was not his intention to 
E 3 give 



give his reader the leail favourable idea of 
the grandeur of our anceflors, or the in- 
duftry of the prefent times. 

Not far from this town, in his way to 
Nairn, he had an opportunity of feeing the 
caftle of Tarnaivay, an ancient and noble 
feat of the Earls of Murray. Here he 
would have found, what he pretends fo 
often to have looked for in vain, parks, 
plantations, and natural woods in abun- 
dance ; which, with other beauties of na- 
ture and art, might fufficiently compenfate 
for the trouble of a fhort peep as he went 
along ; it would not have taken him much 
out of his way, and he would have made 
a fhift to vilit a popifo church, or even 
the ruins of one, at a greater diftance. 

Of Fort George^ which he owns to be 
the moft regular in the iflarid, he mentions 
little elfe than the good entertainment he 
received at the governor's table. His pre- 
tence; 



f 55 ) 

tence for not giving a more particular 
account of this important place 'is, " be- 
caufe he could not delineate it fcienti- 
fically," as he phrafes it. But the true 
reafon was, that he did not wifti his coun- 
trymen to know that there was any thing 
in the North of fo fuperior a nature, and 
fo well worth their feeing. Had Fort 
George, inftead of what it is, been the 
meaneft and moft irregular in the ifland, 
the good Doctor would have found other 
language to delineate it, if he could not 
be fcientifically exat ; or, in other words, 
where fcience failed, farcafm would have 
done the reft. 

Page 54. One 'can hardly forbear fmi- 
ling to hear him talk of Scotland being 
conquered by Cromwell. But a man muft 

r 

have little knowledge of facts, or ftill lefs 
honefty, who can gravely advance fuch an 
opinion ; as it is well known to every perfon 
who is in the leaft acquainted with hiftory, 
E 4 that 



C 56 ) 

that Scotland has never been conquered. 
The country has been often invaded, and 
its armies have been fometimes defeated, 
but it never yet has fubmitted to a foreign 
yoke. 

To reduce Scotland was an attempt that 
defied the whole power of the Roman 
empire, even at the height of its glory. 
The Danes, who made fo eafy a conqueft 
of ^England, acquired nothing but death 
and graves in Scotland ; and the united 
fraud, force, and perfeverance of Edward I. 
and fome of his fuccefibrs, though always 
alTifted by a powerful faction in the 
country, could never fubdue the fpirit of a 
people who were determined to be free, 
and difdained the control of an ufurper. 

But in order to clear up this matter a 
little, it is neceflary to flop the Do&or for 
a while, in his journey and conqueft s, and 

defire him, by way of prelude, to look 

<,,..- ... . - . 

back, 



( 57 ) 

back, and fee what antiquity fays on the 
fubjed. 

In the year 55 before Chrift, when 
Julius Ctfar invaded Britain, it is known 
he was repulfed with confiderable lofs. 
Afterwards, in the year 165, it appears 
from hiftory, that the Caledonians cut the 
Romans to pieces ; while the Englifh hifto- 
rians, however ready on moft occafions to 
do ample juftice to their country, do not 
pretend to fay, that South Britain, at that 
sera, made any ftand againft that warlike 
people. 

Ammlanus Marcellinus owns that the 
North Britons killed Follafandus, a Roman 
general, and Neftariacs^ count of the ma- 
ritime coaft. Thsodofiusi one of the moft 
renowned generals of the times, was then 
fent with a powerful army againft them, 
and relieved the city of London, then 
under dreadful apprehenfions from the 
North Britons. 

After 



C 58 ) 

After repeated attempts of the Romans 
to conquer the Caledonians, the emperor 
Severus went himfelf in perfon againft 
them, in the year 208, with the ftrength 
of the whole empire ; and though he had 
the affiftance of South Britain, and of part 
of the fouth of Scotland, then Roman pro- 
vinces, he was contented at laft, after a 
lofs of more than feventy thoufand * men 
in one campaign, to treat with them and 
the Meates f, and ereft a new wall to flop 
their incurfions. 

Twenty years after the death of Severus, 
the Caledonians were confidered as fuch 
formidable enemies, that Dio tells us, in 
his account of the difpofition of the Roman 
legions, about the year 230, that the Ro- 
jmans kept two legions on the borders 

* Stillingfleet t an Englifti -writer, acknowledges on the 
authority of Tacitus, that the Romans loft feventy thoufand 
men in one year, fighting againft the North Britons. 

f The ancient name of the people in that part of Scot- 
land which lies on the fouth of the river Clyde. 

againft 



againft the unconquered Britons ; whereas 
one legion was fufficient to keep all the? 
reft of Britain in fubjection *. 

This is the account which the moft 
candid and unexceptionable of the Roman 
hiftorians give of this matter. From hence, 
therefore, it appears, that the Romans, 
eyen at a time when they were matters of 
the known world, and had attained to their 
higheft pitch of grandeur, were fometimes 
obliged to compound matters with the 
Caledonians, and at laft utterly to abandon 
all thoughts of conquering a people whom 
they generoufly confefled to be the moft 
warlike they had ever encountered. 

Here, I muft own, I cannot help being 
in fome pain for the poor Doctor's fitua- 
tion, as he muft fatljjlrain hard to fwal- 
Jow this harfh pill ; and yet, difagreeable 

Lib. Iv. 564. 

' 

as 



( 60 ) 

as it is, down it muft go, fmce tliis" is not 
a flory founded upon Scotch narration. 

But further, it will readily occur to the 
intelligent iaeader, that the inroads of the 
Romans, as well as thofe of Edward I. 
hardly reached, and never went beyond 
Dmim-alba ; fo that at the worft, fuppoling 
all the tract to the fouthward to have been 
completely conquered, inftead of being only 
over-run fometimes, the greateft part of 
the country muft ftill have retained its 
liberty. 

I am fenfible, that with fome a common 
anfwer to all this is, " that the conqueft of 
Scotland was not worth while." Should 
Dotor Johnfon choofe to retreat under 
the fame cover, let him inform us, if 
he can, why fo fenfible a people as the 
Romans fhould perfevere fo long, and 
be fo very obftinate in their laft effort, 
as to facrifice feventy thoufand men in 

the 



the purfult of fo contemptible an object ? 
And why Edward J. of England, among 
whofe failings folly has never been reckoned 
the chief, fhould have employed almoft 
his whole life, and wafted fb much blood 
and treafure, on the fame unprofitable 
attempt ? From hence, I think, it does not 
feem very probable, that fuch an acquifi- 
tion was formerly deemed a matter of fo 
little confequence ; .whatever may now be 
the opinion of a wifer pofterity. It muft 
be conferled, however, that the anpwer is 

fc/ 

a convenient one ; it is like cutting the 
Gordian knot^ which could not be untied. 

As to the conqueft fo ridiculoufly afcribed 
to Cromwell, little need be faid to fuch as 
are acquainted with the circumftances of 
thofe times. A powerful party of the Scots 
had early oppofed the impolitic meafures 
of the king, and they were the firfl to 
appear in the field againfl him; though 
from different motives, they had embarked 

in 



in the fame enterprife with Cromwell, and 
confequently there, could be no ground o 
quarrel between them. When, therefore, 
that regicide went afterwards to the North, 
it was not to conquer a whole kingdom, 
but only to curb a party that ftill continued 
to at for the royal caufe ; and even in that 
he was afiifted by many of their own coun- 
trymen, who were fanguine enemies to the 
Houfe of Stuart. Had he gone with more 
ambitious views, and againft an united 
people, his expedition might have ended, 
like many others from the fame quarter, in 
a manner which Dr. Johnfon would not 
choofe to relate. 

None furely can be weak enough to be^ 
lieve that Cromwell could do more in a 
few weeks, than the moft renowned com- 
manders had been able to atchieve in as 
many centuries. The whole glory of this 
conqueft, therefore, muft belong to the 
Doflor alone. What could not be done in 

the 



the field, he has accomplimed in his clofet, 
and Jhamed the fword of the foldier with 
one dafh of his pen. 

The Doctor next proceeds to enumerate 
the many and great advantages which we 
derived from the lofs of our freedom. He 
fays, page 55, " Cromwell civilized them 
by conqueft, and introduced by ufeful 
violence the arts of peace :" and then, as 
the fum total of thefe valuable arts, he 
adds very gravely, <e that he was told at 
Aberdeen, that the people learned from 
Cromwell's foldiers, to make ihoes and to. 
plant kail." 

Thefe to be fure were two very goof 
things, as they adminiftered at once both to 
our external and internal wants ; but that our 
traveller fliould be told fo at Aberdeen, feems 
rather a little fufpicious. That has long 
been a city of extenfive trade and frequent 
ihtercourfe with the continent of Europe : 

it 



( 64 ) 

it cannot be fuppofed, therefore, that the 1 
people were ftrangers to the making of {hoes 
at that period; unlefs we can fuppofe at 
the fame time, that no fuch thing as fhoes 
were then in ufe any where elfe; and that 
Cromwell's foldiers were afterwards dif- 
perfed among all nations, as fo many 
mljjlonary coblers y to inftruct the people in 
that ufeful art of peace. 

But let the Doctor's credibility ftand or 
fall by his own teftimony. He acknow- 
ledges (page 56), that the Scots are in- 
genious and inquifitive, that they had 
early attained the liberal arts, and ex- 
celled in ornamental knowledge. Is it con- 
iiftent with fuch a defcription then, that a 

manual art for fupplying fo eflential a con- 

. 

. veniency of life, fhould be totally unknpwri 

to them ? Even among a ruder people, the 

feelings of nature would certainly fuggeft 

expedients, however imperfect, to guard 

j againft 



( 65 ) 

againft the rigours of particular feafons and 
climates. 

We come next to confider the probability 
of what relates to the article of kail. Dr. 
Johnfon would no doubt infinuate, that 
kail and other garden vegetables had 
abounded in England long before they were 
cultivated in Scotland ; but if he confults 
Anderfon's Hiftory of the Rife and Progrefs 
of Commerce, he will find that our fouthern 
neighbours have fo little to boaft of in this 
particular, that in 1509 there was not a 
fallad in all England, and that cabbages, 
carrots, turnips, and other plants and roots, 
were imported from the Netherlands. The 
whole country could not furnifli a fingle 
fallad, &c. for Henry the Eighth's queen, 
till gardeners and different forts of plants 
were brought from foreign countries. 

Let this be compared with what we read 
in a hiftory of Scotland by John Leflie, 
popifh bifhop of Rofs, who flourifhed in 
F the 



( 66 ) 

the year 1560, and dedicated his book to 
the pope. la the fecond edition of this 
work, printed at Rome in 1675, the Doctor 
will find, that in the bifhop's time Glaf- 
gow was a market famous not only for 
wine, &c. &c. but that it likewife abounded 
in orchards and garden herbs *. And 
again, that Murray was famous for all 
forts, of corn, and likewife for orchards, 
&ct- It is not very likely then, that a 
country which abounded in thefe things 
fhould want fo ordinary an article as com- 
mon kail. 

From hence it appears, as bifliop Leflie 
wrote about a century before Cromwell 
went to Scotland, that Dr. Johnfon*s ac- 
count of this matter cannot be juft. And 
indeed I am apt to think, if he had any 
information at all, it was a mere trick of 

* Page n. Glafguam celeberrimum emporium vini, 
aquse vitae, Brogat. &c. &c. &c. pomiferis hortis et horten- 
fibus herbis abundans. 

-j- Page 26. Moravia omni frumenti genere, pomiferis 
hortis, &c. deleftat. 

fome 



( 67 ) 

fome wag, who diverted himfelf with his 
Englilh vanity, and now laughs at his weak- 
nefs for recording a Canterbury tale. 

After concluding his hljlory of kail, the 
Doctor gives a fpecimen of his abilities as 
a philofopher. " How they lived without 
kail," fays he, " it is not eafy to guefs : 
they cultivate hardly any other plant for 
common tables, and when they had not 
kail, they probably had nothing." What 
force of reafoning ! how beautiful, how 
juft the conclufion ! The fable of the Cha- 
meleon needs no longer give furprife. Air 
is fomething to live upon ; but this miracle 
of EngHQi erudition has found out, that a 
whole nation of people can live for ages 
upon nothing. All great difcoveries, to be 
fure, have been referved for that favourite 
fpot of heaven, called England. But Dr. 
Johnfon's nathmg furpafles every thing-Z 

In the laft quoted page, he acknowledges, 

** that literature, foon after its revival, found 

F 2 its 



( 68 ) 

its way to Scotland ; and that from the 
middle of the fixteenth century, almoft to 
the middle of the feventeenth, the politer 
ftudies were very diligently purfued." ' 
The force of truth feems, for once, to have 
unfealed the Do&or's eye-lids. But the 
apparent candour of this confeffion is 
effaced by his concealing, that the Scots 
had likewife their fhare of the fciences 
before the fubverfion of learning. Such 
of them as were known in Europe at the 
time, were cultivated at I, Oronfa, and 
other places, fo early as the fifth and fixth 
centuries. Collum Cille> or St. Columba, 
came to I about the year 565, and of his 
age the forty-third ; which was an hundred 
and thirty-five years after the building of 
that abbey by Fergus II. 



King Ed'win^of Saxon race, firft embraced 
Chriftianity only in 627 ; whereas it had 
prevailed in Scotland fmce 165. Ofivald, 
king of Northumberland, fent for learned 
men to Scotland in 634. St. Aidan was 

confecrated 



( 69 ) 

confecrated bifhop of Northumberland in 
635. Finan, from lona, fucceeded him in 
652. Colman fucceeded Finan in 661, but 
retired to Scotland again in 664, when the 
difpute about Eafter and the Tonfure was 
decided in the fynod againft him. 

In the reign of Malduinus, who fucceeded 
to the crown of Scotland in 668, Buchanan 
fays, u the Scottifh monks propagated the 
" doctrines of Chrift over almoft all Eng- 
" land, and had fo inftruded the Englifh 
" youth, that now they Teemed able of 
" themfeives to preach the gofpel in a 
" proper manner to their countrymen ; 
" but their envy againft their mafters grew 
" in proportion to their learning; and 
" their prejudice in this refpect went fo 
<c far, that the Scottifh monks were obliged 
*' to return to their own country. Though 
" this contumely cut off, at that time, the 
<c concord between the two nations, the 
"_ modefty of thofe who had received the 
F 3 infult, 



( 7 ) 

' infult, kept both kingdoms from an 
" open war." 

From this event, the violence on one 
fide, and moderation on the other, the 
reader can eafily trace out the ancient cha- 
radteriftic of the two nations ; and, if we 
may judge from that good temper with 
which the Scots have, of late years, borne 
the inveftives of their fouthern neigh- 
bours, the fame traits of national character 
will ftill appear uniformly to diftinguifli 
both. The indecent fcurrilities of a 
Churchill, a Wilkes, and others, and more 
latterly, the coarfer attacks of a Johnfon, 
have not hitherto met with any other 
mark of refentment than a filenf con- 
tempt. 

In the Bifhop of Rofs's book * we 
may fee, that about the year 273, there 

* Floruere circa haec tempora (A. D. 273) apud Scotos 
Amphibalus, Modacus, &c. &c. nuilticjue alii viri, doftrina 
et religione infignes, Dei cultores (Culdei noflra lingua vul- 
gari difli), Pag, 115. 

flouriflied 



{ 7' ) 

flourifhed among the Scots, Amphibalus, 
Medacus, and many other men eminent 
for their learning and religion, who were 
worfhippers of God, and called, in our 
common language, viz. the Galic, Cul- 
dich (or Culdees). 

We may obferve from the famous paffage 
in Tertullian, wrote about A. D. 209, that 
there were already believers in Chrift, evett 
in thofe parts of the ifland which ths Ro- 
mans had not been able to fubduef. 

Before the end of the fourth century the 
Chriftian religion was fpread from one end 
of the province of Valencia to the other; 
a fpace comprehending the fouth-weft part 
of t Scotland, from the Sol way Frith to Dun- 
barton. St. Ninian was born of Chriftian 
parents in what was afterwards called Gal- 
loway, and formed the one extremity of 
this province ; and in the other, near Dun- 
barton, St. Patrick was alfo born of 

f- Britannorum inaccefla loca, Chriilo veio fubdita. Ter- 
tullian. contra Judxos, cap. 7. 

F 4 Chriftian 



( 72 ) 

Ohriftian parents, and in a place wholly 
peopled by Chriftians. And thofe two 
faints became, by themfelves and their 
difciples, the firft apoftles of the Pi&s and 
Scots, both in Scotland and in Ireland. 
Laft of all, the Saxons of the north of 
England were alfo converted by St. Aidan, as 
already mentioned, in the feyenth century. 

Thefe few hints relative to the rife and 
progrefs of civilization in general, and of 
Chriftianity in particular, in both king- 
doms, will, it is to be hoped, pull down 
one ftory at leaft of the Doctor's height, 
and fatisfy the Public that the odds, in point 
of time, is greatly in favour of Scotland. 

Page 57. He fays, " the Scots muft be 
for ever content to owe to the Englifh all 
their elegance and culture." Had the 
Dodor been here giving an account of any 
other nation in Europe, I make no doubt 
but he would likewife have found fome 
opportunity of making a fimilar claim in 



( 73 ) 

favour of old England. Our good neigh- 
bours have been always pretty remarkable 
for the mode/I virtue of felf-applaufe, and 
confidering their own country, at all times 
and in all things, as the true ftandard of all 
perfe&ion. 

What has been already faid, concerning 
our early connection with France, may be 
a fufficient anfwer to the abfurdity and 
arrogance of this aflertion. It is with an 
ill grace, indeed, that the Englifh pretend 
to be a model of tafte for others : they 

~\ * 

themfelves are daily copying from the 
Gallic fchool ; and though 'they have been 
long under tutorage, the world have not 
yet conceived any high opinion of their 
elegance and culture. In fpite of difcipline, 
there is ftill a roughnefs in their manners 
which has rendered them proverbial. 

But the frequent repetition of the above 
remark, to be found in the Doctor's per- 
formance, 



( 74 ) 

formance, renders it neceflary to have re- 
courfe to a few fads, for fetting that matter 
in a proper light : and, therefore, I muft 
recal his attention to fome circumftances 
relating to the ftate of the two kingdoms, 
long before any friendly intercourfe be- 
tween them could give us an opportunity 
of receiving thofe boa/led improvements. 

In the year 1234, ftraw was ufed for 
the king's bed in England. In 1300, wine 
was fold in England, only by apothecaries, 
as a cordial. But it was then quite other- 
ways in Scotland, becaufe of our extenfive 
trade, in proportion to the commerce of 
thofe days, with ^France and Spain ; and 
till I adverted to this circumftance, it often 
furprifed me to find frequent mention made, 
in many of our ancient Gallic poems, of 
the drinking of wine and burning of wax 
in the habitations of our chieftains. In 
1340, the parliamentary grants to the king 
of England were only in kind j and thirty 

thoufand 



( 75 ) 

thoufand facks of wool was this year's 
grant. In 1505, the firft (hilling was 
coined in England. In 1561, Queen Eli- 
zabeth wore the firft pair of knitted filk 
ftockings that ever were in that country.- 
In 1543, pins were firft made in Eng- 
land ; and before that time the ladies ufed 
Jkeivert. 

To all this let me oppofe, but particu- 
larly to the Jkeivers of the Englifh ladies, 
the account which the Bifhop of Rofs gives 
of the drefs of the women among the 
ancient Scots. We fhall there find, " that 
<c they were clothed with purple and em- 
" broidery of moft exquifite workmanfhip, 
" with bracelets and necklaces on their arms 
" and necks, fo as to make a moft graceful 
*' appearance *." Nor needs it be matter 

* Malierum habitus apud illos (fell, prifcos Scotos) de 
entiffimus erat. Nam talari tunics, arte phrygia ut pluri- 
mum confeflae, amplas chlamydes atque illas qutdem poly- 
mitas, fuperinduerunt. lllarum hrachia armillis, et colla 
monilibus elegantius ornata, maximam habenc decoris fpeciem. 

55' 

Of 



of furprife how the Scots had opportunities 
of procuring fuch ornaments, fince the 
fame authpr fhews they -had, at that time, 
a confiderable trade with: France and Spain, 
from Inverlochay, near Fort William *. 

After this view of the matter, it is diffi- 
cult to fay, whether we are to accufe Dr, 
Johnfon of ignorance, or infmcerity, in what 
he has fo boldly^ but with fo little appear- 
ance of juftice, afferted. It is certain, had 
he been in the leaft acquainted with the 
hiftory of his own country, he might eafily 
have feen fl that the Englim have been a 
little too trdy in their own improvements, 
to fupport them in any decent claim of hav- 
ing civilized their neighbours, 

But notwithstanding all that can be faid 

to the contrary, the Doctor feems deter- 

' 

* Ad Loucbaeae oflia fita olim erat opulentiffima civitaa 
Inverlothasa appeilata, ad quam Galli, Hifpanique, com- 
mercii caufa frequentius trajecerant. Hac poitea a Norvegis, 
Danifque everfa, et nunquam a nobis ueinceps, qux noftra eft 
jgnavia, in/lauraiur. Pag, 23. 

mined, 



( 77 ) 

mined, right or wrong, to maintain his 
pofition. He therefore goes on, and tells 
us again very roundly, " that till the union 
made the Scots acquainted with Englifh. 
manners, their tables were coarfe as the 
feafts of Efldmeaux, and their houfes filthy 
as the cottages of Hottentots." There is 
an expreffion among lawyers, " that what 
proves too much, proves nothing." It is 
juft fo with my 'worthy friend the Doctor, 
in this place : he has laid on his Jilt h fo very 
thick, that I am of opinion it will fall off 
by its own weight. 

But in the name of wonder, who could 
expect fuch a remark to drop from the pen 
of a man on whom the witty Lord Chejler- 
fdd, many years ago, beftowed the appel- 
lation of, Hottentot *? His lordfhip was 

When talking of our Author, the Earl of Cheflerfield 
faid, " that he could never confider Dr. Johnfon in any 
other point of view than as a more readable kind of 
Hottentot." 

allowed 



( 78 ) 

allowed not only to be a good judge of 
character, but likewife to have a good hand 
at drawing a likenefs. It was, therefore, 
unlucky in our Author to come blundering 
out with an expreffion which muft call to 
our remembrance this ftriking fpecimen of 
the noble artift's {kill. For I will be bold 
to affirm, that no man has ever yet feen 
Dr. Johnfon in the act of feeding^ or 
beheld the infide of his cell in Fleet-Jlreet, 
but would think the feafts of EJkimeaitx 
or the cottages of Hottentots injured by a 
comparifon. 

But fuppofing the Doctor's charge to 
hold good in very diftant times, let me afk 
him whether England and every other 
country under the fun has not had 
its ages of ignorance and barbarity ? 
If this folemn pedant will deign to look 
back, he will find many things in the 
hiftory of his own country which ought to 
convince him that civilization did not begin 

very 



( 79 ) 

very early there, nor advance with a quick 
pace. I am always forry when I am 
obliged to trace out anecdotes of this kind ; 
but his ill-manners and want of candou* 
render it neceflary. 

Alfred the Great, who died in the year 
900, complained " that from the Hummer 
to the Thames there was not a prieft that 
underflood the Liturgy in his mother- 
tongue ; and that from the Thames to the 
fea there was not one that could tranflate 
the eafieft piece of Latin. This univerfal 
ignorance, and the little relifh the Englifh 
had for arts and fciences, made the King 
invite learned and ingenious foreigners."' 
In 1167 King Henry the Second fends to 
Ireland, and caufes build a palace of r w attics 
in Dublin, after the manner of the country, 
wherein he keeps his Chriftmas. It was 
not till 1209 that London began to be 
governed by a Mayor ; and fo near our 

own 



( 80 ) 

own times as the year 1246 moft of the 
houfes in that capital were thatched with 
JlraiV) the windows were without glafs, 
and all the fires flood to the wall without 
chimneys. In the year 1300, and after- 
wards, almoft all the houfes in England 
were built of wood, &c. &c. 

Such facts as thefe are the fureft tefts of 
the progrefs of civilization in any country, 
as they fhew the tafte and manners of the 
inhabitants at different periods of time. 
If the Doctor doubts their authenticity, he 
will find them confirmed by Rapin and 
other hiftorians. 

As our traveller gives us only his own 
authority for what he fays of Scotland at 
the time of the union, a teftimony which 
the reader, by this time, cannot think 
altogether unexceptionable ; let us now fee 
what others have reported of the ftate of 

civilization 



civilization among us long before that 
period. 

When Margaret, daughter of Henry the 
Seventh of England, became the Queen of 
our James the Fourth, fhe was attended to 
the Scotch court by many of the firft nobi- 
lity of both fexes ; and yet the Englifli 
hiftorians of thofe days allow, that they 
were fully equalled, or even excelled, by the 
Scotch nobility, in politenefs of manners, 
the number of their jewels, and the richnefs 
of their drefs ; and particularly, that the 
entertainments they received at the houfes 
of our great people did not yield to any 
thing they had ever 



In 1546, Contarini was Pope's legate in 
Scotland ; and upon his return to the con- 
tinent, he celebrated the Scotch nation as 
a polite and hof pit able people. He bore 
this teftimony to their merit, though he 
could not fucceed in the object of his em- 
G bafly; 



( 82 ) 

bafly ; which was, to fupport the Romifli 
religion, then faft declining in that king- 
dom, on account of the intolerable cruelties 
of Cardinal Betoun. But this prelate, very 
unlike to Dr. Jobnfon, could not permit his 
prejudices as an ambaiTador to warp his 
veracity as a man. 

The Queen of James the Fifth, though 
a princefs of fo civilized a nation as France, 
acknowledged, " that the court and inha- 
bitants of Scotland were the moft polite 
and civilized fhe had ever feen, and the 
palace of Linlithgow the moft magnifi- 



As a further fpecimen of our tables, let 
us take the Earl of Athole's feaft to James 
the Fifth, as related by Lindfay the hifto- 
rian. 

The Earl of Atholes Feaft to "James 7. 
" Syne (then) the next fummer the 
" King paft to the Highland to hunt in 

" Athole, 



st Athole, and took with him his mother; 
'* Margaret Queen of Scotland, and ari 
*< EmbafTador of the Pope's, who was iii 
' Scotland for the time. The Earl of 
" Athole, hearing of the King's coming, 
ic made great provifion in all things per- 
" taining to a Prince, that he was as well 
*' ferved and eafed, with all things necef- 
* { fary to his eftate, as he had been in his 
" own palace of Edinburgh. For I heard 
*' fay, this noble Earl gart (caufed) make 
" a curious palace to the King, .to his 
" mother, and to the Embaflador, where 
<l they were fo honourably eafed and lodged ' 
" as they had been in England, France^ 
'* Italy, or Spain, concerning the time, 
and equivalent for their hunting and 
** paftime ; which was builded in the midft 
^ of a fair meadow, a fair palace of green 
** timber, wind witti green birks, that 
'* were green both under and above; which 
'* was famioned in four quarters, and in 
* l every quarter and nuik thereof a great 
G 2 round, 



<>e 



" round, as it had been a block-houfc, 
*' which was lofted and gefted the fpace of 
* l three houfe height ; the floors laid with 
" green fcarets and fpreats, med warts 
<{ and flowers, that no man knew whereon 
" he zeid, but as he had been in a garden, 
" Further, there were two great rounds in 
" ilk fide of the gate, and a great port- 
" culleis of tree, falling down wjth the 
" manner of a barrace, with a draw-bridge, 
tc and a great ftank of water of fixteen 
" foot deep, and thirty foot of breadth. 
" And alfo this palace within was hung 
41 with fine tapeftry and arrafles of filk, 
" and lighted with fine glafs windows in 
" all airths (directions); that this palace was 
Ce as pleafantly decored with all neceflaries 
" pertaining to a Prince, as it had been 
" his own palace-royal at home. Further,: 
" this Earl gart make fuch provifion for 
" the King, and his mother, and the Em- 
*' Uaflador, that they had all manner of 

" meats, 



** meats, drinks and delicates that were to 
" be gotten at that time, in all Scotland, 
" either in burgh or land ; that is to fay, 
<: all kind of drink, as ale, beer, wine both 
" white and claret, malvery, mufkadel, 
fi hippocras and aqua vitae. Further, there 
" was of meats, white-bread, main-bread, 
" and ginge-bread, with flefhes, beef, 
" mutton, lamb, veal, venifon, goofe, 
*' grice, capon, coney, cran, fwan, par- 
" tridge, plover, duck, drake, brifle-cock, 
" and pawnies, black-cock and muir-fool 
" cappercaillies : and alfo the flanks that 
<c were round about the palace were full 
" of all delicate fifties, as falmonds, trouts, 
" pearches, pikes, eels, and all other kind 
*' of delicate fifties that could be gotten in 
<c frefti waters ; and all ready for the ban- 
ic ket. Syne were there prpper ftewards, 
" cunning baxters, excellent cooks and 
* c potengars, with confections and drugs 
* e for their deferts : and the halls and 
G 3 " chambers 



*5 chambers were prepared with coftly bed- 
<c ding,' veflel and napery, according for a 
" king ; fo that he wanted none of his 
". orders more than he had been at home 
" in his own palace. The King remained 
*' in this wildernefs, at the hunting, the 
* { fpace qf three days and three nights, 
** and his company, as I have fhewn. I 
" heard men fay, it coft the Earl of 
" Athole, every day, in expences a thqu- 
f e fand pounds. 

" The EmbafTador of the Pope, feeing 
<c this great banquet and triumph which 
* c was made in the wildernefs, where there 
" was no town near by twenty miles> 
c thought it a great marvel, that fuch a 
*' thing mould be in Scotland, confidering 
" that it was named the end of the world 
? c by other countries ; and that there mould 
*' be fuch honefty and policy in it, efpecially 
*' in the Highland, where there was fo much 
f c wood and wildernefs. But moft of all, 

< this, 



( 8; ) 

*' this EmbalFador marvelled to fee, when 
*' the King departed, and all his men took 
* c their leave, the Highland-men fet all 
" this fair place on a fire, that the King 
'* and the EmbafTador might fee it. Then 
" the EmbafTador faid to the King, " I 
" marvel, Sir, that you fhould thole (fuffer) 
" yon fair place to be burnt, that your Grace 
" has been fo well lodged in." Then the 
" King anfwered the Embaffiulor, and faid, 
'*' It is the ufe of our Highland-men, 
" though they be never fo well lodged, 
" to burn their lodging when they de- 
" part." See Lindfay's Hiftory of Scot, 
p. 266, &c. 

From thefe circumftances it may appear, 
fhould the Journey to the Hebrides fur- 
vive its author, how miferably deceived 
they muft be, who, in future times, fhall 
take the Doctor's account of Scotland for 
truth. When, therefore, he boafts of the 
advantages which, in thefe refpecls, the 
Q 4 Scots 



( 88 ) 

Scots have derived from the union, he 
ought to have affigned a caufe, why we 
were lefs refined in the beginning of the 
eighteenth century, than our forefathers 
have been proved to have been fome cen- 
turies before. Either, then, he is unac- 
quainted with, our ancient manners, or he 
grofsly mifreprefents our modern character. 
His ignorance, therefore, or his malice, 
whichever the Doctor fhall think the moft 
eligible, can only account for the prefump- 
tion of his aflertions. 

But were we to admit, with our traveller, 
that the Englifh, have taught us how to 
procure any of the good things of this life, 
it might fairly be faid, that they have like- 
wife taught us the art of /pending them. 
We daily fee more of a cl unify affectation, 
taftelefs extravagance, and giddy diffipa- 
tion, which many of our countrymen carry 
home with them from the fouth fide of the 
Tweed, than of polite improvements, or 

V-feful 



inventions. If thefe are the advan- 
tages which Dr. Johnfon means to charge 
againft us in favour of the Englifh, as the 
precious effects of the union, he has an un- 
doubted right to perfift in his claim, and 
we are ready to acknowledge ourfelves their 
Debtors. 

At the fame time, we do not mean to 
difclaim all advantages from the union, but 
only to {hew, that they are not of that 
kind which Dr. Johnfon infmuates. Con- 
fidered in a political light, it was certainly 
a wife and falutary meafure for both king- 
doms ; but, even in that view, the Englifli 
are the principal gainers. The Doctor 
cannot well deny this^pofition, if he but 
recollects, that the Englifli were the firft 
to propofe the union, and that it was at 
length carried with difficulty in Scotland. 
They call themfelves a generous people; 
but we cannot fuppofe them to be fo very 
ptravagantly fo, as to take fo much pains 

in 



( 9 ) 

in prefling a meafure, from which WE 
were to reap the chief advantages. If this 
really was the cafe, they had furely a much 
greater love and affection for their fellow- 
fubjecls of the North in the reign of Queen 
Anne t than, I am afraid, they poflefs for 
them in the reign of George the Third 
if we are to judge of the whole nation 
from the fample given us by Dr. Johnfon t 
who is reckoned one of their wifeft an4 
belt men. 

Page 58 brings our traveller to a road 
upon which " no wheel had ever rolled.** 
There can appear nothing extraordinary 
in this remark, unlefs the good Doctor had 
afierted, at the fame time, that every bye- 
road in England was fit for a carriage. 
We have already feen, that in 1300 all 
the houfes in England were built of wood ; 
and long after that period it was accounted 
a fort of luxury to ride in a two- wheeled 
cart. Befides, if we may credit even 



( 9' ) 

hiftorians, their favourite Queen. 
Elizabeth had np other mode of travelling, 
than by riding behind one of her domeftics ; 
which evidently (hews, that the rolling of 
wheels has not been fo very long known, 
or generally practifed, even in England 
itfelf. But further, I am credibly in- 
formed, that within thefe forty years, a 
time, I prefume, within the Doctor's re- 
membrance, moft of the roads within 
twenty miles of London were hardly fit 
for rijding, much lefs for carriages. Who 
then b,ut our traveller could remark, that, 
in the remote and unfrequented parts of the 
mountains of Scotland, there were not rer 
gular poft roads f 

In page 60 he finds out, that c< civility 
feems part of the national character of 
Highlanders.' 1 If ever Dr. Jobnfon has 
his good-humoured intervals, this compli- 
ment certainly efcaped him in one of 
|hem. But how are we to reconcile this 
I with 



( 9O 

with the epithets of rude, barbarous, grofs, 
and favage, &c. which, in other parts of 
his work, he fo. liberally beftows on the 
whole nation ? If the decent behaviour of 
common borfe-hirers, to ufe a Scottifli ex- 
preffion, who attended him in his journey, 
extorted this confeffion from him, we can- 
pot well fuppofe, that he found the better 
fort of people deficient in agreeable qualifi- 
cations. Either, then, the Doctor means 
fomething by \.\\z civility of his horfe-hirers, 
which is not underftood by others, or his 
national epithets can have no foundation 
in truth. We fhould, therefore, be glad to 
hear him give fome confident explanation 
of thefe particulars ; as the civility 'of a 
fude and barbarous, or, in other words, of 

an uncivilized people, conveys an uncom- 

, 
mon fort of idea. For my part, I have 

looked into his own Dictionary, and could 
not find, even in that perverter of the 

. * 

Englifli language, any definition of the 

above 



(93 ) 

above terms that can make them hang 
together. 

When riding along the fide of Loch 
Nefs, a ray of good-humour feems to have 
ftolen into the Doctor's mind. For a while 
we find him pleafed with the goodnefs of 
the road, and the cheerful nefs of the day ; 
but this fudden gleam, like funfliine before 
a ftorm, was of {hort duration. His natural 
gloomiriefs foon returns; and his reftlefs 
caprice finds a thoufand faults. At that 
feafon of the year no mortal, but himfelf, 
could have quarrelled with the objects 
around him. If ever the wild magnifi- 
cence of nature could pleafe, that day's 
journey furnifhed ample matter of enter- 
tainment. Even his own defcription of the 
fcene through which he pafled, in fpite of 
all his endeavours to the contrary, conveys 
enough to the mind of the reader to make 
him regret that he has not a more perfect: 
view. 

He 



( 94: ) 

He gives, here and there, a peep of forri 
beauties which he faw ; but unluckily, as 
On moft other occafions, he feems lefs 
willing to exhibit thefe at full length, than 
to point out a " rock fdmetimes towering 
in horrid nakednefs." 

From the banks of Loch Nefs the Doctor 
turns his obfervation to its waters. He 
had been told at Fort Auguftus, that it 
tbntiniies open in the hardeft winters, 
though another lake not far from it Is 
covered with ice. This being an excep- 
tion from the common courfe of things, 
he feems much difpofed to doubt tne fail: ; 
for he will not fuffer nature to fport with 
her own laws in Scotland, except in pro- 
ducing deformities. Then, indeed, fhe may 
play a$ many wild pranks as fhe thinks 
proper ; and fhe pleafes him the better, the 
more, like himfelf, fhe becomes a Rambler. 



( 95 ) 

As there could be no motive to deceive 
him in a matter of fo little confequence to 
the country, as the freezing or not freezing 
of Loch Afc/r, it is ftrange he fhould ex- 
pofe his own weaknefs, by taking fo much 
pains to render it doubtful. He difputes 
this trivial fact with a folemnity truly ridi- 
culous. At length, however, finding him- 
felf unable to give any decent colour to his 
objections, he endeavours to account for 
fo fingular a phenomenon; though ftill with 
this cautious provzfo^ " if it be true." But 
this he does in a manner fo very unphilo- 
fophical, as clearly fhews, either that na- 
tural inquiries have not made a great 
part of the Doctor's ftudies, or that his 
genius is not much adapted to fuch nice 
refearches. Every man has his peculiar 
gift from nature ; and to compile vocabu- 
laries, or compound hard words, feems to 
be the tafk which (he has allotted for our 
traveller. He ought therefore to confine 

himfelf 



C 96 ) 

himfelf to his proper province, remember- 
ing the maxim, nefntor ultra crepidam. 

N * 

In Glenmorifon, the Doctor feems fur- 
prifed, that the innkeeper's daughter (hewed 
no fort of embarraffment in his prefence. 
So, indeed, are moft others who have read 
that paflage, as fhe certainly had never 
feen " bis like" before. But the little 
gipfy* it feems, was not to be moved by 
the elegance of his figure, the foftnefs of 
his addrefs, or the fplendour of his reputa- 
tion. She was faucy enough to appear 
perfect miftrefs of herfelf, without betray- 
ing the leaft mark of diffidence, confufion, 
or the melting power of love. 

At this place he takes care to refrefh our 
memory with his bounty to the foldiers, 
wliom he pafled on the road, and who' 
came to the fame inn to fpend the evening. 
One would be jtempted to think, that ads 
of generofity are but rare things with the 
6 Doctor, 



( 97 ) 

boclor, when he dwells fo oftentatioufly oil 
this trifling piece of liberality. 

In page 58, he discovers what feems to 
have been one of his motives for undertak- 
ing his journey, namely, an inclination to 
difiuade all fuch ftrangers as would be 
directed by him from ever vifiting Scotland, 
as being altogether unworthy of the atten- 
tion of the curious. In proof of this he 
fays, " that uniformity of barrennefs can 
afford little ainufement to the traveller; 
that it is eafy to fit at home and conceive 
rocks, and heath, and waterfalls ; and that 
thefe journeys are ufelefs labours, which 
neither impregnate the imagination nor 
enlarge the underftanding." 

If rocks, heath, and waterfalls conftitute 
uniformity, I (hould be glad to learn from 
the Do&or wherein variety confifts ? As to 
his reafoning in the above paflage, he faves 
me the trouble of a refutation, by having 
H imme- 



( 98 ) ' . ' 

immediately after refuted himfelf. After 
the eafy mode of information which he 
had propofed, viz. by fitting at home and 
conceiving what we pleafed, who would 
expeft to hear him, in the fame page, ex- 
prefs himfelf as follows ? " But thefe ideas 
are always incomplete, and, till we have 
compared them with realities, we do not 
know them to be juft. As we fee more, 
we become poflefled of more certainties, 
and confequently gain more principles of 
reafoning, and found a wider bafis of 
analogy. Regions mountainous and wild, 
thinly inhabited, and little cultivated, make 
a great part of the earth ; and he that has 
never feen them, muft live unacquainted 
with much of the face of nature, and with 
one of the great fcenes of human exift- 
ence." Let the reader now judge of the 
confiftency between this language and what 
he had before aflerted, " that thefe jour- 
nies are ufelefs labours, which neither 
$ impregnate 



( 99 ) 

impregnate the imagination nor enlarge 
the underftanding." 

We have oftener than once feen the 
Doctor in the fame aukward fituation, fay- 
ing and unfaying in the fame breath. 
Who but himfelf would not have drawn 
his pen through the former lines, after 
adding the latter ? But he feems to be above 
cancelling any thing he has once fet down ; 
otherwife he is too indolent to give himfelf 
the trouble of correction. 

After endeavouring to imprefs the mind 
of his reader with the wildnefs of the hills 
of Glen'morifon, he feems afraid of having 
faid too much, and making the country 
appear too remarkable, even by allowing 
it to be fo very mountainous. He there- 
fore inftantly fweeps away this negative 
compliment by afking, " yet what are 
thefe hillocks to the ridges of Taurus, or 
thefe fpots of wildnefs to the defarts of 
H a America?" 



America ?" This churlim author will not 
allow us to excel even in wildnefs. 

It was in thefe hills, while fitting on a 
bank to let the horfes reft, about the middle 
of the day, that the Doctor tells us he 
" firft conceived the thought of his narra- 
tion." Should we pay his veracity the 
compliment of believing this to be true, 
we muft certainly allow him to be endowed 
with a retentive memory. There are fo 
many mnuti& in the preceding part of his 
narration^ that it is furprifmg they could 
occur without the affiftance of fome pre- 
vious memorandums ; and yet we can fee 
no reafon for his being at that trouble, be- 
fore he had conceived the thought of mak- 
ing ufe of them. 

Speaking ftill of the fame fpot, he fays, 
" We were in this place at eafe and by 
choice, and had no evils to fuffer or to 
fear." If this was really fo, how can he 

fay 



fay afterwards, page 98, that the High- 
landers live by theft and robbery ? It was 
certainly very bold in the Doctor to fear 
nothing, in the midft of their wildeft 
mountains, if the character he gives the 
inhabitants be juft. But, indeed, it is not 
eafy for any reader, who is unacquainted 
with the country, to form -any confident 
idea of the people from Dr. Johnfotf* 
vague and contradictory accounts of them. 

Pages 98, 99, he fays, that <c thirty years 
ago no herd had ever been conducted 
through the mountains, without paying 
tribute in the night to fome of the clans." 
This, however, is a grofs mifreprefenta- 
tion. There are many people ftill living, 
who drove hundreds of cattle through the 
mountains long before that period, and 
never once paid the tribute he mentions. 
Here, therefore, we may retort upon him- 
felf the fubftance of a fage obfervation, 
which, in page 63, he applies to the High- 
H 3 landers 



( 102 ) 

]anders concerning the freezing of Loch 
Nefs ; and that is, that accuracy of narra- 
tion is not very common with him, and 
that he is feldom fo rigidly philofophical as 
not to reprefent as conftant, what is fome- 
times only cafual. 

He acknowledges, page loo, that " the 
different clans were unconnected with the 
general fyftem, and accuftomed to reve- 
rence only their own lords." If this 
really was fo, their quarrels with their 
neighbours, and the mutual injuries refult^ 
ing from them, are to be explained on the 
fame liberal principles as thofe which daily 
happen between the moft independent 
ftates, The rule of morality is the fame 
in both cafes; and injury always juftifies 
retaliation, whether we fpeak of the High-* 
land clans, or of larger communities. 

Under the fame head, in fpeaking of the 
power of the chiefs } he fays, " thofe who 

Bad 



( I0 3 ) 

had thus the difpenfation of law, were by 
confequence themfelves lawlefs. Their 
vaflals had no fhelter from outrages or 
oppreffions ; but were condemned to en- 
dure, without refiftance, the caprice of 
wantonnefs, and the rage of cruelty." 
Here the Doctor betrays his total ignorance 
of the ancient law of chieftainry. The 
chiefs, or difpenfers of laws, as he calls 
them, knew their own intereft much better 
than ever to think of adopting the Doctor's 
tyrannical plan. They were under a necef- 
fity of acting in a much more humane and 
mild manner towards their clans, or people, 
as they knew that their own fecurity and 
importance depended on their attachment ; 
and that, without that, their power and 
influence would be nothing. Even he 
himfelf confefles, page 195, " that the 
laird was the father of his clan." I 
leave it to himfelf to reconcile fo glaring 
a contradiction ; and to convince the 
H 4 world, 



world, if he can, that a cruel oppreflbr 
and a kind father are one and the fame 
thing. 

In page 109 he mentions an old anec- 
dote, which, he fays, he was told at Sir 
Alexander Macdonald's table, and which 
relates to a very barbarous effect of the 
feuds between two of the clans, if in reality 
fuch an event ever exifted ; though, at the 
fame time, we are not to fuppofe that the 
fame fpirit of revenge, in thofe remote and 
lefs polifhed times, was peculiar to the 
Highlands. But be that as it may, he 
takes occafion to make the following re- 
mark: " Narrations like this," fays he, 
* l however uncertain, deferve the notice of 
a traveller, becaufe they are the only re- 
cords of a nation that has no hiftorians, 
and afford the mo(l genoiine reprefentation 
of the life and character of the ancient 
Highlanders," 

Here 



Here it is obfervable, that the Doctor 
admits the teftimony of Highlanders, be^ 
caufe, in his opinion, it makes againft 
their country. But had the matter been in 
their favour, he would neither have re- 
corded nor believed it. 

It may, perhaps, be true, that High- 
landers in general have been too negligent 
in committing to writing what related to 
their country. In remote ages, they trufted 
too much to their Bards and Seannachies, 
as other nations then did. What they 
wrote at lona and elfewhere, on that and 
Other fubje&s, was deftroyed by various 
accidents. Hiftorians affirm* that lona 
fuffered fix different devaftations in the 
tenth century alone. What efcaped thofe 
ravages was carried away either by that 
generous friend to learning and the Scots 
nation, Edward the Firft, in the fame fpirit 
of meeknefs in which he butchered the 
Welch Bard*) or afterwards by Oliver 

Cromwell, 



Cromwell> and other fcourges and de- 
ftroyers of antiquities, who wanted to abo- 
lifh every monument of the ancient inde- 
pendence of this nation ; or, laftly, by our 
own priefts at the time of the Reformation. 

Every thing relating to the Highlands, 
in particular, has met with many difcourage- 
ments of late years. This, no doubt, has 
occafioned many other valuable vouchers 
to be buried in an oblivion, from which, 
in all probability, we ftiall never be able to 
recover them. 

The Doctor is egregioufly miftaken 
when he fays that the Highlanders have 
no particular hiftorians. It feems he has 
never heard of Macaulay, the two Macpber* 
fens, Martin, the Dean of the Ifles, &c. 
It is to the hiftorical and other fuperior 
merits of fome of thefe gentlemen, that 
their country is indebted for fo much of 
the Do&or's critical regard. Had they 

never 



never written fo well, he had never been 
fo fcurrilous. Hinc illas lachrym<e ! Buchan- 
nan too was a Highlander ; as was likewife 
/. Ninian, who was born in Galloway, 
then an Highland country ; and &. Patrick 
was born near Dumbarton. 

His obfervations in the four following 
pages are of fo extraordinary a nature, 
and furnifh fuch unequivocal proofs of his 
rancour and malevolence, that I (hall give 
them at full length. 

Pages no, m, 112, 113. <c My inqui- 
ries about brogues gave me an early fpecimen 
of Highland information. One day I was 
told, that to make brogues was a domeftic 
art, which every man praclifed for him- 
felf, and that a pair of brogues was the 
work of an hour. I fuppofed that the 
hufband made brogues as the wife made 
an apron, till next day it was told me, 
that a brogue-maker was a trade, and that 

a pair 



a pair would coft half a crown. It will 
eafily occur, that thefe reprefentations may 
both be true, and that in fome places men 
may buy them, and in others make -them 
for themfelves ; but I had both the ac- 
counts in the fame houfe within two 
days. 

" Many of my fubfequent inquiries upon 
more interefting topics ended in the like 
uncertainty. He that travels in the High- 
lands may eafily faturate his foul with 
intelligence, if he will acquiefce in the firft 
account. The Highlander gives to every 
queftion an anfwer fo prompt and peremp- 
tory, that fcepticifm itfelf is dared into 
filence, and the mind finks before the bold 
reporter in unrefifting credulity ; but if a 
fecond queftion is ventured, it breaks the 
enchantment; for it is immediately difco- 
vered, that what was told fo confidently 
was told at hazard, and that fuch fear- 
kfihefs of aflertion was either the fport 

of 



of negligence, or the refuge of igno- 
rance. 

" If individuals are thus at variance with 
themfelves, it can be no wonder that the 
accounts of different men are contradictory. 
The traditions of an ignorant and favage 
people have been for ages negligently heard, 
and unfkilfully related. Diftant events 
muft have been mingled together, and the 
actions of one man given to another. 
Thefe, however, ars deficiencies in ftory, 
for which no man is now to be cenfured. 
It were enough, if what there is yet oppor- 
tunity of examining were accurately in- 
fpe&ed, and juftly reprefented; but fuch 
is the laxity of Highland converfation, 
that the enquirer is kept in continual 
fufpenfe, and, by a kind of intellectual retro- 
gradation, knows lefs as he hears more.' 1 

In this learned harangue on the important 
fubject of orogtic-fnaking, the Doctor makes 

a double 



( "0 ) 

a double difcovery. Firft, lie mews, that 
two different accounts may be given of the 
fame thing, and yet both may be true. In 
the next place, he proves, after making 
this acknowledgment, that the fubfequent 
part of his criticifm has no object; and, 
confequently, that it is as nugatory in itfelf 
as his conclufions are falfe and improbable. 
To make a filly ftory about the art of 
brogue-making the teft of national can- 
dour and fincerity, is too ridiculous for any 

pen but that of Dr. 

* 



It is true, in order to account, in fome 
meafure, for his going beyond his laft y he 
tells us, that many of his fubfequent in- 
quiries upon more interefting topics ended 
in the like uncertainty. It were well if he 
had mentioned what thefe interefting topics 
were, to whom his inquiries were addrefTed, 
and what anfwers he received. A know- 
ledge of thefe circumftances would enable 
us to decide more certainly on the merits 

of 



of his fucceeding remarks. The Do&or, 
lefs anxious, perhaps, to " faturate his foul 
with intelligence," than to fatiate his pre- 
judices againft Scotland with the means of 
mifreprefentation, might have adopted fuch 
a mode of inquiry as would beft anfwer his 
purpofe. 

He might, for inftance, queftion one of 

his brogue-makers concerning fome nice 

point of antiquity, to which the poor fellow 

could make but a very imperfect anfwer. 

The next taylor he met with might vary, 

in fome circumftances, from the former; 

and a third perfon, not better informed 

than either of them, might differ a little 

from both. What then ? Is there any 

thing furprifing or uncommon in all this ? 

Or can fuch a variation in the accounts of 

illiterate mechanics juftify the Doctor's 

general inference, " that there can be no 

reliance upon Highland narration ?" 

Should 



Should there remain the leaft doubt upon 
this head, let me fuppofe, for argument's 
fake, that I am making a fimilar tour 
through fome parts of England. In the 
courfe of my travels, I fee the ruins of 
fbme old abby, or, as the Doctor would 
more elegantly exprefs it, .the " dilapidated 
remains of ancient fandtity." I wifh to 
know fomething of its hiftory, and accoft 
the firft labourer I find ia the neighbouring 
fields to obtain information : he gives me 
very honeftly, no doubt, fome confufedy<;/77/>.r 
of what he had heard concerning it ; but his 
ftory is full of perplexity, and feveral parts 
of it differ confiderably from others. I then 
inquire of one after another, but with little 
better fuccefs. At length, tired with the 
deficiencies and contradictions of former 
accounts, I apply to the 'Squire and Parfon 
of the parifh ; hoping, from men of their 
more enlarged notions, to have my curio- 
fity fully fatisfied. Their tales, are more 

plaufible, 



( "3 ) 

plaufible, but ftill defective, and differ* 
in feveral particulars, from each other. I 
find myfelf, therefore, obliged to fit down 
in the dark, and go in fearch of other 
objects of curiofity fomewhere elfe. But> 
wherever I go, I often meet with the fame 
difappoiritments. 

That this might fometimes be the fate 
of a traveller in England, or, indeed, in 
any other country, none, I believe, will 
pretend to doubt. Were I, therefore, in- 
clined to revenge my fruftrated inquiries, 
by making life of the Doctor's illiberal 
pencil, it would be eafy to delineate the 
Englifli character in the fame unfavourable 
colours. I am fure, in doing fo, I fhould 
do the people of that country much in- 
juftice; but I fhould have exactly the^fame 
reafons for charging them, in the lump, 
with ignorance and a difregard to truth. 
Becaufe every man I met with could not 
anfwer every queftion I chofe to put to 
I him, 



( "4 ) 

him, I might pronounce them all a nation 
of blockheads. And becaufe different men 
differed a little fometimes in their relations 
of facts, I might fay, with the fame peremp- 
tory aflurance as hath been faid by our 
Author above, that " fuch is the laxity of 
Englifh converfation, that the inquirer is 
kept in continual fufpenfe, and, by a kind 
of intellectual retrogradation, knows lefs 
as he hears more." 

Befides, it deferves to be confidered, 
that many of thofe whom the Doctor 
thought proper to interrogate, might not 
have Englifh enough to underftand his 
queftions, or return diftinct anfwers; that 
others might not be competent judges of 
the fubjects propofed to them, and confe- 
quently might give defective or erroneous 
accounts, from a too forward zeal to oblige 
a ft ranger as far as they were able ; and, 
likewife, that, even among the higher and 
more intelligent ranks of people, it was 

weak 



( H5 ) 

weak and abfurd to expert an uniformity 
of narration. Men, according to their 
opportunities, derive their knowledge from 
different fources. Authors themfelves are 
not always agreed in their communications 
upon the fame topics. We cannot there- 
fore fuppofe that their readers will think 
alike. 

A judicious author would have attended 
to thefe things, to avoid the imputation 
of malice or folly to himfelf. When a 
man attempts to traduce a whole people, 
he ought to ftand upon firm ground. But 
here, amidft a number of bold affertions, 
there is not a fingle fact produced, which 
will not apply to any fpot oh the face o 
the earth, as well as to the Highlands of 
Scotland. By endeavouring to prdve too 
much, therefore, the Doctor proves no- 
thing; as fuch indifcriminate abufe can 
never obtain credit, even with the moft 
credulous. The excefs of his rancour has 
I 2 effectually 



effectually defeated its own purpofe ; and 
he is literally in the fituation of thofe 
reptiles, wliich, as naturalifts tell us, are 
fometimes poifoned by their own flings. 

As the Doctor acknowledges he was 
every where hofpitably received by the 
Highlanders, let the world judge of the 
man, by this fample of his gratitude for 
their civilities. To fearch for information 
among the lower orders of the people, to 
tamper with their fimplicity, to lie in wait 
for their anfwers, and catch at every trifling 
incoherence in their difcourfe, was, beyond 
defcription, mean and ungenerous. But 
to do all this with the infidious purpofe of 
retailing their crude opinions to the public, 
a? the ftanclard of all Highland learning 
and fcience, is a fpecies of literary aflaflina- 
tion, with which the world was not ac- 
quainted before the Doctor publimed his 
Journey,. 

There 



There is one excufe, however, for this 
part of our Author's conduct, and that is, 
that it was unavoidable. He had one 
favourite purpofe toTerve, of which I {hall 
take notice in its proper place ; and to pave 
the way for that, it was neceflary to dif- 
credit all Highland narration. When the 
Doctor has an object in view, nothing 
muft ftand in his way ; he goes on with 
giant ftrides. Probability, truth, and de- 
corum muft yield to his ftubborn refolution, 
and all be facrificed to his infolence, caprice, 
or difguft. When his prejudices operate, 
we look in vain for thofe reftraints, either 
from (hame or virtue, which regulate the 
writings of others. He can be abfurd 
without a blum, and unjuft without re- 
morfe. 

Before I difmifs this article, I will juft 

take notice of, what one would leaft expect, 

an inaccuracy in the Doctor's language. 

In the paflage laft quoted, he fays he was 

I 3 told, 



( "8 ) 

told, " that a brogue-maker was a trade." 
He certainly meant to have faid, that 
brogue-making was a trade. This, how- 
ever, is but a trifling flip of his pen, and 
the mere effect of inadvertency ; nor do I 
mention it with any defign to make it an 
object of criticifm. I wifh the fame inno- 
cent careleflhefs could be pleaded for more 
material miftakes. 



Page 113, in fpeaking of the garb 
he fays, " The fame poverty that made it 
then difficult for them to change their 
clothing, hinders them now from chang- 
ing it again.'* The truth is ? however, 
that an attachment to their ancient garb 
made the firft change difagreeable, and not 
willingly complied with ; and a fecond 
change, at the time alluded to, was ftill 
prevented by a Britifh ad of parliament, 
which the Doctor feems willing to over- 
look, that he might have an opportu- 
nity, according to his ufual candour, of 

afligning 



( "9 ) 

aligning a more favourable reafon of 
his own. 

Page 1 1 6, he fays, " The fummer can 
do little more than feed itfelf, and winter 
comes with its cold and its fcarcity upon 
families very flenderly provided." As the 
Doctor never, fpent a winter in the Hebrides^ 
it is fomewhat extraordinary, how he 
fhould pretend to know fo much of the 
diftreffes of that feafon. But thofe who 
have patted what he calls the dark months 
in thofe parts, could tell a very different 
tale. A particular provifion muft be made 
for the winter every where ; and that, 
together with what the fummer can fpare, 
and which greatly exceeds what the Doctor 
would infmuate, makes the fhort days, in 
the Hebrides, as comfortable as any part of 
the year. 

In the fame page he proceeds to obferve, 

" It is incredible how foon the account 

I 4 of 



of any event is propagated in thefe narrow 

X 

countries by the love of talk, which much 
leifure produces, and the relief given to 
the mind, in the penury of infular conver-. 
fation, by a new topic. The arrival of 
ftrangers at a place fo rarely vifited, excites 
rumour, and quickens curiofity. I know 
not whether we touched at any corner 
where fame had not already prepared us a 
reception." Here it is to be obferved, that 
the hofpitality and civility, which hive 
been univerfally allowed to predominate 
among Highlanders, fince the firft accounts 
we have had of them, are exduded from 
any fhare in their defire of feeing ftrangers. 
He fays, curiofity was their chief motive. 
This may pafs well enough with the fuper- 
ficial j but with more obfervant readers it 
will not do, as he unluckily tells us, iii 
page 238, that the fame people are totally 
void of curiofity. 

Page 



( I" ) 

t 

4 

Page 1 20, he fays, c * There are no houfes 
in the iflands where travellers are enter- 
tained for money." This, I fuppofe, he 
would reckon no great difappointment. 
He had occafion to expend but very little 
money in Scotland ; and that little he 
always mentions with regret. But did he 
inquire for inns at Broad-ford, Port-ree, 
or Dunvegan ? I apprehend not. He knew 
he might have found them there ; and fo he 
did not chufe to hazard the queftion, as he 
wimed to have an apology for living in a 
more private and lefs expenfive manner. 
"With his ufual inconfiftency, however, he 
acknowledges, in page 151, that he dined 
at a public-houfe. 

Page 128, he tells us, that " the mili- 
tary ardour of the Highlanders is extin- 
guimed." I mould be glad to know upon 
what the Doctor founds this aflertion. 
The contrary is fo univerfally acknow- 
ledged, that few of his own countrymen, 

I believe, 



( 122 ) 

I believe, will allow it to be juft. The 
laft war bears ample teftimony to their 
valour, and proves that they ftill retain the 
fpirit of their anceftors. The fuccefles of 
that glorious period have been afcribed, in 
a great meafure, to their bravery. Prince 
Ferdinand has diftinguifhed them by public 
thanks 'in the field. Every other General 
tinder whom they ferved has been lavifh in 
encomiums on their courage, and the un- 
common intrepidity of their behaviour. 
The Britifh fenate itfelf has recorded their 
praifes. And in particular the panegyric 
of Mr. Pitt) fpoken in the Houfe of Com- 
mons a little before he was created Earl of 
Chatham, is a monument to their military 
fame, which defies the impudent but feeble 
attacks of a pedants envy and malice. 

In the fame page he fays, <c Of what the 
Highlanders had before the late conqueft 
of their country, there remain only their 
language and their poverty." What he here 

dignifies 



( "3 ) 

dignifies with the name of conqueft, is the 
defeat of a few rebels at Culloden. Becaufe 
an handful of malcontents, who had taken 
up arms, were routed and difperfed, is the 
Doctor hardy enough to call that a national 
conqueft ? The general loyalty of the 
Scotch, at that time, rendered a general 
conqueft as unneceflary as a general refift- 
ance would have rendered it impracticable. 
But this is much of a piece with his Crom- 
wellian conqueft, which has been already 
difproved. It is truly pitiable to find a 
man of his years, and reputed erudition, 
fo blinded by prejudice, as gravely to ad- 
vance for facts what the moft illiterate 
cannot believe, and every fchool-boy could 
confute. 

He takes every opportunity to inculcate 
the poverty of the Scotch. This feems to 
be a rich topic to him ; and, without it, I 
know not how he could have eked out his 
work, It is fo often obtruded upon the 

reader, 



( 124 ) 

reader, and that too when he would leaft 
expect it, that one muft naturally think 
there was a want of other matter. When, 
therefore, he labours moft to prove their 
poverty as a people, he infallibly proves 
his own as an author, at the fame time. 

He introduces this fubject very unnecef- 
farily, as ufual, in the laft quotation. I 
{hall juft cohtraft what he fays there with 
fome other paffages from himfelf, and 
leave the reader to draw his own inference. 
At the bottom of page 121, and the be- 
ginning of page 122, he fays, <{ He that 
fhall complain of his fare in the Hebrides^ 
has improved his delicacy more than his 
manhood." In page 124, " The breakfaft 
is a meal in which the Scots, whether of 
the Lowlands or mountains, muft be con- 
fefled to excel us. The tea and coffee are 
accompanied not only with butter, but 
with honey, conferves, and marmalades. 
If an epicure could remove by a wifh, in 

queft 



( '25 ) 

queft of fenfual gratifications, wherever he 
had flipped he would breakfaft in Scot- 
land." Page 125, "A dinner in the 
Weftern Iflands differs very little from a 
dinner in England." 

Here we have the moft undoubted proofs 
not only of plenty, but of elegance. What 
now is become of that poverty into which 
the Doctor had fo unmercifully plunged us 
but a little ago ? His charity has at length 
prevailed ; and the fame hand that had 
funk us fo low, has raifed us at once to 
affluence. When a man is fo much at 
variance with himfelf, the leaft we can fay 
is, that his teftimony can have but little 
effect. But, as I have promifed, I will not 
take up time in pointing out inconfiften- 
cies, which cannot efcape the moft carelefs 
obferver. 

Page 129, he fays, " A longer journey 
than to the Highlands muft be taken by 

6 him 






( 126 ) 

him whofe curiofity pants for favage virtues 
and barbarous grandeur." As the Doctor, 
in many places before, had fo liberally 
beftowed the epithets rude, favage, and 
barbarous upon the Highlanders, one 
would think, from the foftening ft rain of 
this paflage, that our traveller, after a more 
intimate acquaintance with them, had found 
reafon to alter his ftyle, and confequently 
that there would be a truce vrhhfcurritities 
for the future. But many of the following 
pages will (hew, that there is no fuch 
reformation in the Doctor's language. This 
is but a fhort fufpenfion, not an entire 
ceflation, of obloquy and abufe. He only 
elevates a little, to make the fall the greater ; 
and his compliments, like the tears of the 
crocodile, are but a deceitful prelude to an 
approaching facrifice. 

Page 15*1, our traveller comes to Dun- 
*vegan y where, he fays, he was agreeably 
entertained by Lady Mackod t "who had 

refided 



refided many years in England, and knew 
all the arts of fouthern elegance, and all 
the modes of Englifti ceconomy." This 
manner of accounting for the goodnefs of 
his reception is, at beft, but a bad compli- 
ment to that lady, as Old England is made 
to run away with more than half the 
praife. 

But there is fomething as nationally 
invidious in the above remark, as it is 
indelicate to Lady Macleod. It certainly 
is intended to infmuate, that he had found 
the bulk of our Scotch-bred ladies deficient 
in point of accomplifhments. If he did 
not mean thus much, I fhould be glad to 
know what he meant by fo improper art 
introduction of a long refidencc in England^ 
to fet off Lady Macleod^ character. Had 
he already forgot the ladies of Raafay* 
whom he had left but a day or two before, 
and whom he often mentions in a manner 
that feems to render a refidence in England 

nowife 



nowife neceflary for attaining all the arts 
of elegance, and the modes of a perfed 
ceconomy ? But his own words will make 
the beft comment upon this fubject. In 
finiming his defcription of Raqfay, he fays, 
page 149, " Such a feat of hofpitality, 
amidft the winds and waters/ fills the ima- 
gination with a delightful contrariety of 
images. Without is the rough ocean and 
the rocky land, the beating billows and 
the howling ftorm ; within is plenty and 
elegance, beauty and gaiety, the fong and 
the dance." 

Page 154, " A Highland laird," he fays, 
" made a trial of his wife for a certain 
time, and if (he did not pleafe him, he 
was then at liberty to fend her away." 
As there never was a law in Scotland 
authorifing fuch a cuftom, the Doctor 
fhould have told us where he had made 
this wonderful difcovery. He gives one 
inftance, indeed; of a gentleman fending 

back 



back his wife to her friends; and moft 
other countries, I believe, could furnifh 
many; but the bad confequences of the 
feud occafioned, on this account, between 
the two different clans, even as related by 
himfelf, is fufficient to prove, that the 
practice could never have been common.' 
There is fuch an unfortunate contrariety 
in moft of the Doctor's narratives, that he 
generally furnifhes an antidote againft the 
poifon which he means to communicate. 

Page 155, he talks of people " lying 
dead by families as they flood.'* Lying 
as they flood is a mode of expreflion which 
none but a Lexicographer, who can give 
to words what meaning "he pleafes, would 
venture to put upon paper. ' It would 
appear, from this accurate phrafe, as if 
the Doctor intended to enrich the Engli/h 
language by fupplies from the Info efta- 
blifhment. 

K From 



From an anxiety to annihilate, if pof- 
fible, every veftige of antiquity in the 
Highlands, he is at much pains, in pages 
160, 161, 162, to explain away a Dun y or 
Danifli fort, of which there are many in 
the country, into a fence for fecuring 
cattle from thieves. This attempt is the 
more chimerical and abfurd, as it cannot 
be conceived how fo fmall an area, though 
much larger than he makes it, could con- 
tain fuch a number of cattle as would 
compenfate the trouble of rearing it ; and 
which, according to his own account of 
the matter, muft have been very great. 

The dimenfions of this building, as 
ftated by Dr. Johnfon, are very erroneous. 
He fays the area is but forty-two feet in 
diameter, and the height of the wall only 
about nine ; but the fact is, that the former 
is feventy-two feet, and the latter about 
fifteen and upwards; So fmall a fpace, at 
beft, could not have anfwered the purpofe 

afligned 



( 

afligned to it by the Doctor ; but, accord- 
ing to his own meafure, it would have 
been altogether ufelefs. In thofe paftoral 
times, it could not contain the cattle of a 
fmgle individual, who was of confequence 
enough to raife fuch a fabric ; much lefs 
could it afford fhelter for the ftock of a 
whole clan, or a country. 

The height is another argument againft 
the Doctor's hypothefis. Even the nine 
feet, which he allows, were by far too 
much for a mere fence from thieves ; as 
the half of that would have been fully 
fufficient. He is apt enough, at other 
times, to accufe the Highlanders of lazinefs 
and poverty. How, then, will he be able 
to account for fo great a fuperfluity of 
labour and expence, when, inftead of nine 
feet, the height is, at leaft, fifteen ? A 
direct anfwer to this queftion muft puzzle 
even Dr. Johnfon ; and it would certainly 
put any other man, in the fame fituation, 
K 2 to 



to fomething more than a difficulty it 
would put him to the blufti. 

" The walls," he fays, <c are very 
thick." This likewife is againft him, as a 
moderate degree of thicknefs would have 
been fufficient to refift the fudden incur- 
fions of freebooters. They never carried 
any levelling inftruments, and they gene- 
rally remained too fhort a time to overcome 
the ftrength of 'very thick walls by manual 
force alone. 

Another, and perhaps not the lead 
forcible objection to our Author's idea, is, 
that he tells us, " within the great circle 
were feveral fmaller rounds of wall, which 
formed diftincl: apartments." Ingenuity 
itfelf muft be at a lofs to conceive how 
fuch a contrivance as this could have been 
devifed for the more convenient ftowage of 
cattle. But Dr. Johnfon faves his reader 
the trouble of thinking long about the 
5 matter, 



( '33 ) 

matter, and folves the difficulty by faying, 
that thefe interior apartments " were pro- 
bably the flickers of the keepers." This, 
I think, fettles the point at once. For, if 
the whole of the great circle is fubdivided 
into a number of fmaller chambers, which 
were occupied by the keepers, it is evident 
there could be no room for the cattle. The 
Doctor has with one flroke of his pen over- 
turned his own fyftem, and clearly proved 
againft himfelf, that the Duns, or Towers, 
fo frequent in the iflands, were intended 
as flickers for men, and not for beafts. 

Had he acquiefced in the natural account 
of this matter, which, he fays, was given 
him by Mr. Macqueen, it would have faved 
him all the trouble of framing an opinion 
of his own, as well as the ridicule of being 
at length obliged to abandon it as untenable. 

The antiquity of thofe buildings cannot 

be exactly known ; but it is highly probable 

K 3 that 



( 134 ) 

that they are of Danijh origin. They 
might have been ufed partly as fortrefles, 
and partly as fignal-houfes, from which 
the gok-man, which in the Danifh lan- 
guage fignifies zftgnal-man, generally gave 
the alarm, and announced the approach of 
ftrangers either by fea or land. 

Page 170, he fays, the feas are commonly 
top rough in winter for nets, or boats, fo 
that the inhabitants cannot fifh. This afler- 
tion feems the more extraordinary, as he had 
faid before, page 156, that while he was 
in the Hebrides^ though the wind was ex- 
tremely turbulent, he had never feen very 
high billows. Here, however, he had an 
hypothecs to fupport. He wanted to have 
another ftroke at the poverty of the inha* 
bitants ; and therefore he found it necefTary 
to make ',the fea ftormy, that by depriving 
them of fifh he might create a famine, as 
he flatly fays, that other provifion fails at 
that feafon. When the good Doctor has a 

point 



( 13S ) 

point of this nature to carry, he laughs 
at the reftridlions of confiftency and com- 
mon fenfe. 

Page 175, we find the Dodor at Oftig in 
Sky y where he was hofpitably entertained 
for fome days by Mr. Martin Macpherfon, 
minifter of Slate^ and fon to the late reve- 
rend and learned Dr. John Macpherfon> 
formerly minifter of the fame parilh. 

As our traveller was now upon the fpot 
where Dr. Macphcrfon had fo long refided, 
and where he had fo fuccefsfully employed 
his talents as a writer, one might naturally 
expert that he would have taken fome 
opportunity of mentioning fo diftinguifhed 
a character with refpedt. By fuch a tribute 
to the memory of the father, he would 
have repaid the hofpitality of the fon in 
the moft agreeable manner ; while, at the 
fame time, by doing juftice to another's 
merit, he would have given a generous 
K 4 proof 



( '36 ) 

proof of his own candour and impar- 
tiality. 

But, inftead of that, the Doctor chufes 
to be filent ; and we hear not a fingle word 
of Dr. Macpbcrfon or his writings. This 
muft certainly be owing to one or other of 
thefe caufes, or to both ; either to the 
jealoufy of a little mind, which is incapable 
of conferring praife ; or to our traveller's 
unwillingnefs to inform the public, that an 
author of fuch eminent abilities was a 
native of the Highlands. 

Among other things, Dr. Macpherfon 
had written profefledly, and in a mafterly 
manner, on the antiquities of his country ; 
not from that tradition, which Dr. John- 
fon explodes, but, to ufe one of our tra- 
veller's expreffions, from the <l unconta- 
minated fountains of Greek and Roman 
literature." Where tradition completed 
the figure, of which the ancients drew the 

outlines. 



( '37 ) 

outlines, Dr. Macpherfon paid it that atten- 
tion which it claims from writers whofe 
object is truth ; where it differed from in- 
conteftible authorities, he rejected it with 
proper contempt. 

But it was not convenient for Dr. John- 
fon's plan to mention even the name of a 
native of the Highlands, whofe know- 
ledge as a fcholar, and elegance as an 
author, reflected fo much honour on his 
country. As our dogmatical journalift 
wifhed to draw a veil over the hiftory of 
our country, as well as over the genius of 
our countrymen, it would have been a 
fpecies of literary fuicide to have taken 
any notice of a writer whofe induftry and 
talents have placed the exiftence and truth 
f both beyond difpute. The directing his 
readers to Dr. Macpherforfs works, would 
infallibly pull down the fabulous fabric 
which Dr. Johnfon intended to raife; and 
we mull, therefore, commend his prudence, 

whilft 



( '38 ) 

whilft we exclude him from every pretence 
to candour. 

Let me, therefore, tell the Doctor, that 
he would have done much greater juftice to 
the public, as well as to Scotland, if, in- 
flead of trufting to his own ingenuity in 
many things, he had related the opinions 
of Dr. Macpherfon and others. A few 
anecdotes from thofe authors would have 
been full as valuable to the purchafers of 
his book, as telling them, fhat, one day^ 
Mr. Bofwell borrowed a boys fijhing-rod 
and caught a cuddy ; with a thoufand 
other impertinent trifles of the fame na- 
ture. 

Page 183, in fpeaking of minerals, he 
fays, " Common ores would be here of no 
great value ; for what requires to be fepa- 
rated by fire muft, if it were found, be 
carried away in its mineral ftate, here 
being no fuel for the fmeltirig-houfe or 

forge." 



( 139 ) 

forge.*' If this be true, how happens it 
that feveral Englifh companies come to 
different parts of the Weft coaft for char- 
coal, and bring ore all the way from Eng- 
land to be there fmelted ? Befides, it is 
well known that there is pit-coal in Mull\ 
and, I am told, it is likewife to be had in 
one or more of the other iflands. 

Immediately after, he adds, " Perhaps, 
by dill-gent fearch in this world of ftone, 
fome valuable fpecies of marble might be 
difcovered. But neither philofophical cu- 
riofity nor commercial induftry have yet 
fixed their abode here." Had our doughty 
itinerant himfelf carried any reafonable 
{hare of " philofophical curiofity" along 
with him, he might have obferved abund- 
ance of white marble near Corichattachan> 
where he acknowledges he had been twice. 

Page 1 86, he fays, " The cattle go from 
the iflands very lean, and are not offered 

to 



to the butcher till they have been long 
fatted in Englifh paftures." The cattle that 
are fent from the iflands are not generally 
fo very lean when they fet out, but they 
naturally become fo before they are driven 
fix or feven hundred miles. Were the 
fatteft bullocks in England to travel in the 
fame manner to the iflands, they would 
probably not be very fit for being offered 
to die butcher when they arrived there. 
If the Doctor doubts the fact, let him 
drive a live ftock before him, when he fets 
out on his next journey, and I will be an- 
fiverable for the confequence. 

Page 204, " The inhabitants," fays 
he, " were for a long time perhaps not 
unhappy ; but their content was a muddy 
mixture of pride and ignorance, an in- 
difference for pleafures which they did not 
know, a blind veneration for their chiefs, 
and a ftrong conviction of their own im- 
portance." It may with more truth be 

faid, 



( HI ) 

faid, that this obfervation is a muddy mix- 
ture of a ftill lefs honourable pride and more 
contemptible ignorance \ a total indifference 
for truth, if the contrary can but ferve the 
turn ; a blind prejudice againft the whole 
Scottifh nation ; and zjlrong conviction in 
the Author's own mind, that he has here, 
as on many other occafions, mod infa- 
moufly and grofsly mifreprefented them. 

As to our pride, he fays in the following 
page, " Their pride has been crufhed by 
the heavy hand of a vindictive conqueror." 
This is another retrofpeft to the year 
1745. If ever the faying, that " old men 
are twice children" was verified by ex- 
ample, it is certainly on the prefent occa- 
fion. The peevifh veteran has once taken 
it into his head to fay, that the Scotch 
were then conquered, and he muft be 
allowed to fay fo ftill, or there can be no 
peace with him. He therefore diverts him- 
felf with founding the horn of victory, as 

an 



( I 4 2 ) 

an overgrown lubberly boy would be pleafed 
with the noife of his rattle, or the blowing 
of his ' 



I have already endeavoured to place this 
matter in its proper light. I (hall now 
borrow a little of the Doctor's own afTift- 
ance to flrengthen my arguments. Page 
207, he fays, " To difarm part of the High- 
lands, could give no reafonable occafion 
of complaint. Every government muft be 
allowed the power of taking away the 
weapon that is lifted againft it. But the 
loyal clans murmured, with fome appear- 
ance of juftice, that, after having defended 
the king, they were forbidden for the 
future to defend themfelves ; and that the 
fword mould be forfeited, which had been 
legally employed. Their cafe is undoubt- 
edly hard," &c. 

Whoever reads this paflage will require 
little further proof, that the idea of a 

national 



( 143 ) 

national conqueft is moft abfurd, and that 
the Doctor himfelf has furnimed a decifive 
argument againft it. After this conceffion, 
could any one expert to hear him fay in 
the very fame page, " But the law, which 
followed the victory of Culloden, found 
the whole nation dejected and intimi- 
dated ?'* He tells us in one place, that 
there were loyal clans, and that they de- 
fended the king. What occafion then had 
the whole nation to be dejefted and intimi- 
dated, unlefs we can fuppofe that neaf two 
millions of people, who were innocent, 
were to be involved in the guilt of a few 
thoufands ? Such bare-faced contradictions 
are an anfwer to themfelves. 

But let me tell . the Doctor, that without 
the afliftance of the loyal clans he mentions, 
the victory of Culloden had never been 
heard of. Had he known, or rather ad- 
verted to this, I am perfuaded he would 
have been at lefs pains to celebrate an event, 

wherein 



wherein the Scotch themfelves had more 
than an equal {hare. 

The rebellion of 1 745 was only a partial 
infurrection of a few difcontented chiefs 
and their followers. Neither were thofe 
gentlemen the heads of the moft nume- 
rous clans ; nor did the whole of their 
refpective tribes attend them to the field. 
Only nine parifhes in the Highlands con- 
tributed a part of their inhabitants towards 
furnifhing the rebel army. It would feem, 
however, that Dr. Johnfori > & fears, and 
probably the fears of thofe about him at 
that time, had magnified the danger to a 
very high degree; and that may be one 
reafon for his exalting the fuppreflion of 
an inconfiderable tumult into a fpkndid 
victory. If the Doctor is not afhamed 
to confefs his own panic, he ought not, for 
decency's fake, to have expofed that of his 
country. 

That 



( '45 ) 

That the infurgents met with little 
encouragement in Scotland, is evident. 
Their whole number amounted hardly to 
feven thoufand ; and of thefe about two tfcou- 
fand were Englifh. That a much greater 
proportion of our fouthern neighbours did 
not repair to the fame ftandard, was by no 
means owing to their poflefling a greater 
fhare of loyalty. The difaffedion of moft 
of their leading men, and the meafures 
they had concerted, are well known ; they 
only waited for fome favourable moment 
to declare their intentions ; in which, it 
muft be allowed, they {hewed themfelves 
much more prudent, if lefs refolute, than 
the Scotch. 

He goes on to difcufs what he had 
aflerted in page 204, as above quoted. 
Having " crufhed our pride by the heavy 
hand of a vindictive conqueror, " in the 
manner we have feen, he comes next to 
L expofe 



expofe rather than to coramiferate our 
ignorance. 

Ol "''' " 

Page 206, he fays, cc Their ignorance 
grows every day lefs, but their knowledge 

is yet of little other ufe than to fhew them 

1 
their wants. " As to the.firft part of this 

pompous apophthegm, " that our, ignorance 
grows every day lefs," I fhall only ob- 
ferve, that if the fame thing cannot be faid 
of our friends the Englifh, they muft be 
a much duller people than I ever took 
them for. In regard to the fecond, he 
gives our knowledge its proper ufe. When 
people find out their wants, they will 
foon fall upon means to fupply them. 
From the parade which accompanies this 
piece of intelligence, one would be apt, 
at firft fight, to expect a great deal from 
it; but, when we examine it more nar- 
rowly, we fhall find it only informs us, 
that as our knowledge becomes greater, 
our ignorance grows lefs. 

But 



( '47 ) 

But to be a little more ferrous with the 
Doctor, let me afk him, in what that ig- 
norance confifted, which is fo miracu~ 
culoujly growing lefs, by our learning to 
know more ? 

He feems to conned it with what he 
calls " an indifference for pleafures which 
we did not know," Does he mean the 
fafhionable pleafures of the Englifh metro- 
polis ? If he does, he has, at laft, paid us 
no fmall compliment. To make frequent 
vows at the fhrine of the voluptuous god- 
defs, is no great fign of the wifdom of any 
people. The puny fize and meagre form 
which mark out her votaries, afford no 
great temptation to follow their example. 

I would gladly hope, however, that Dr. 
Johnfon is not a ferious advocate for in- 
temperate pleafures ; as it would give me 
a much worfe opinion of his morals, 
at leaft, than I would wifti to entertain. 
L * Though 



Though he has been a Rambler in his 
younger days, he would certainly cut a 
bad figure as an old Rake. To fay no 
worfe, it would be ridiculous in the ex- 
treme* to fee fuch an aggregate of un- 
fafliioned matter " tottering, with paralytic 
flride, after fenfual gratifications, and auk- 
wardly affuming the light airs of modern 
libertinifm." 

I have already given feveral proofs that 
the Scotch were not behind their neigh- 
bours, either in ufeful or ornamental im- 
provements, many centuries ago. I will 
now mention fome other circumftances, to 
fhew that the Doctor's charge of what he 
calls ignorance cannot apply to thofe times. 
To give his aflertion weight, therefore, 
he ought to have told us when this national 
misfortune commenced, and wherein it 
now confifts ; for it muft appear fomewhat 
unaccountable, that the Scotch, who had 
once their full proportion of the improve- 
ments commonly known in Europe, fhould 

have 



( 149 ) 

have made a retrograde motion, while 
other nations have been in a progreffive 
flate. 

As to the ftate of learning among us, 
we have already feen how that matter, 
flood in very early times. In particular, 
it has appeared from hiftory, that St. Aydan 
and others were ferit from Scotland, in the 
feventh century, to inftrut fome of the 
Doctor's countrymen in the firft principles 
of Chriftianity. In fucceeding times it 
muft be allowed, that learning had con- 
fiderably declined among our anceftors ; 
but, even in that refpect, the Scotch had 
only their fhare of the fame Gothic cloud 
which, for a feafon, darkened the face of 
all Europe. This misfortune was owing 
every where to the Roman Catholic clergy, 
with whom it was an eftablifhed maxim, 
that " ignorance was the mother of devo- 
tion." In mentioning the effecT:, there- 
fore, the Doctor ihould have afligned the 
L 3 caufe; 



caufe ; but as that could not be done with-? 
out a juft cenfure on his favourite fed, he 
chufes to leave it behind the curtain. He 
takes -fuch frequent opportunities of ex- 
tolling the piety of monks, priefts, and 
cardinals, that the dulleft of his readers 
may eafily difcover his attachment to their 
tenets. 

In regard to fuch arts and manufactures 
as were then commonly known over 
Europe, there are many proofs to {hew, 
that they were anciently cultivated, not 
only in Scotland at large, but even in the 
Hebrides, in as great perfection as any 
where elfe. As to the iflands in particular, 
I might venture to aflert, that fome inge- 
nious arts, which were well underftood by 
our forefathers, are now in a great meafure 
loft, from that change in our modes of life 
which time and circumftances have intro- 
duced. This may appear a paradox to the 
Doctor, and perhaps to fome others ; but 

I mould 



I (hould find no difficulty in proving it .to 
be true, if fuch a difcuffioa ftiould appear 
to be neceflary. 






That a knowledge of the feveral arts 

9 

muft have been very generally diffeminated 
over the Highlands, there can be no reafon 
to doubt. It is well known that our kings 
refided often in that part of their domi- 
nions, as at Dunftaffnage, Dunmacfni- 
chain, or Berigonium, Inverlochay, Inver- 
nefs, and Logirate, &c. It is natural, 
therefore, to fuppofe, that they had at all 
thofe places a number of artifts of all kinds, 
becoming their ftate and quality ; and like- 
wife, that the {kill and knowledge of thefe 
men muft neceflarily be communicated to 
others. Several of the caftl.es and magni- 
ficent palaces wherein the kings refided 
are ftill to be feen, though our traveller 
feems to have been determined to take no 
notice of them. 

L 4 But 



( '5* ) 

But though no king of Scotland had 
ever refided in the Highlands, our feveral 
chieftains lived in all the ftate of inde- 
pendent princes. Like the feudal lords of 
all other countries, they were often at vari- 
ance with fome of their neighbours ; and 
that rendered it abfolutely neceflary, that 
they fliould be provided with the means 
of every fpecies of accommodation, either 
for peace or war, within their own terri- 
tories. This is another undeniable proof, 
that a very large proportion of the High- 
landers muft have been well fkilled in the 

different arts. 

i 

There are yet many monuments of an- 
cient mafonry among us, of different kinds, 
which greatly excel any thing of that 
nature in modern times. The curious 
hieroglyphics on fome of our tombs de- 
ferved particular notice, though Dr. Johri- 
foti pafles over them in fileqce. Among 
pther things, the huge mafles of ftone fet 

up 



up in druidical circles, particularly thofe 
fupported . upon other ftones for druidical 
altars, and the obelifks ereded in com- 
memoration of battles, are demonftrable 
proofs of our knowledge of mechanics. 

Many monuments of this kind are ftill- 
to be feen, not only upon the continent or 
main-land of Scotland, but likewife in the 
iflands ; though many others, within the 
memory of fome people ftill living, have 
been deftroyed to make way for the plough, 
or by other accidents. In particular, at 
Irwerliver on the fide of Lochete, at Glen- 
cetkn in Qlenete, in different parts in Ifla t 
and at Callanu and Barvas in the ifland 
of Lewis, there are mafles of fuch enor- 
mous fize and weight, as could not be raifed 
by any number of men that could ftand 
round t ' urn. Clachan-an-Truifeil near Bar- 
vas, particularly, is from two to two and 
a half feet thick, fix feet broad, and from 
feventeen to eighteen feet above ground. 

As 



( 1*4 ) 

As the ftone (lands in a peat-tnofs, or bog, 
there can be no lefs than a third part of it 
under ground ; and it is probable there may 
be more. .There are no ftones or quarry* 
of the fame kind nearer to it than the 
fea-fide, from which it ftands about half a 
mile, on the afcent of a fteep hill, and 
having a deep bog between. 

In trie ifland called from O'Cbormaic, on 
the coaft of Knapdale y and I think on the 
riorth-eaft fide, there is a fmall com- 
modious harbour, a great part of which is 
fur rounded with a wall or quay, ex- 
tremely well built ; and the foundation of 
it is fo deep, that it cannot be feen even at 
low water. What is remarkable of this is, 
that it is fo old that no one pretends to 
know, even by tradition, when or by whom 
it was built. 

The Fletchers of Glenlyon, in Perth- 
fhire, were the moft famous arrow-makers 

of 



( '55 ) 

of their time, fo long as that weapon con* 
tinued to be ufed. 

The fmelting and working of iron was 
well underftood, and conftantly pradifed, 
over all the Highlands and Iflands for 
time immemorial. Inftead of improving 
in that art, we have fallen off exceedingly 
of late years, and at prefent make little or 
none. Tradition bears, that they made it 
in the blomary way ; that is, by laying it 
under the hammers, in order to make it 
malleable with the fame heat that melted 
4t in the furnace. 

There is ftill in the Highlands a clan 
of the name of Mac Nuithear> who are 
defcended from thofe founders, and have 
from thence derived their furname. I am 
likewife well informed, that there is in 
Glenurchy, in Argylefhire, a family of the 
name of Mac Nab, who have lived in the 
fame place, and have been a race of fmiths, 

from 



C '56 ) 

from father to fon, for more, perhaps, 
than three hundred years paft; and who, 
in confequence of the father having in- 
ftrucled the fon, have carried down fo 
much of their ancient art, that they excel 
all others in the country, in the way of 
their profeflion ; even thofe taught in the 
fouth of Scotland, as well as in England, 
not excepted. A tinker or fmith of the 
name of Mac Feadearan y a tribe now almoft 
extinct, was the moft famous of his time 
for making arrow-heads. 

% 

It is certain that Mac Donald was for- 
merly poflefTed of moft of the iveftern ifles, 
as well as of feveral large diftricts upon the 
continent or main-land. He had many 
places of refidence, fuch as Ardtormifh y 
&c. ; but the moft common one was in an 
ifland in Lochfinlagan in I/la. Near this 
place, and not far from Port AJkaic on 
the found of Ifla, lived the fmith Mac 
Cregie (that is, the fon of the Rock), and 

his 



( 157 ) 

his pofterity for a great; length of time. 
There is ftill pointed out, by the inhabit- 
ants, the rock out of which he dug his 
iron ore. Near the rock is a large folid 
Hone, of a very hard confiftency, on which 
he knapped his ore ; and, at a little diftance, 
there is a cafcade on a rivulet, where flood 
his mill for polifhing, or otherwife pre- 
paring the iron which he had manufac- 
tured. Here he and his defcendents made 
complete fuits of armour, according to the 
fafhion of the times ; fuch as helmets, 
fwords, coats of mail, &c. The IJla hilt 
for the broad fword is well known, and 
fo famous as to have become proverbial. 

As to our navigation^ there is reafon 
to believe that it bore a near proportion to 
that of our neighbours : fea-engagements 
with Birlins were very common in the 
Highlands till of late. Lymphad, or Gal- 
ley, was the fame witb Lwgb-fhad (Long- 
(hip), or Birlin. 

There 



( '58 ) 

There was a fhip of war built in Scot- 
land, in the minority of James IV. the 
equal of which had never been built in 
Britain, nor feen upon the feas in thofe 
times. Its dimenfions I am not juft now 
able to afcertain ; but they have been accu- 
rately defcribed by feveral of our hiftorians, 
whom I have not at prefent an opportunity 
of confulting* 

In 1490, Andrew Wood, with two Scots 
fliips, took five mips belonging to the 
Englifh, though much fuperior to his own 
in fize. With the fame two fhips he after- 
wards took three Englim mips, the beft 
that could be picked out of Henry the 
Eighth's whole fleet, and equipped for the 
purpofe. They were commanded by Ste- 
phen Bulb as admiral, the only man in 
England that could be found to undertake 
the expedition ; and they had the further 
advantage of being clean out of the dock, 

while 



( >S9 ) 

while Wood had been fome time uporl a 
cruife on the coaft of Holland, and totally 
ignorant of the trap that was intended for 
him on his return. 

From this the Doctor may perceive, that 
we could and did cope with the formidable 
fleets of England, and even obtained fignal 
advantages over them, at a time long prior 
to that in which he continues to reprefent 
us as a nation of ignorant favages and 
barbarians. 

With refpecl: to carpentry, or joiner's 
work, we have flill many fpecimens, in 
oak, of very high antiquity, which greatly 
excel any thing that is done by modem 
artifts. 

Our fhields, or targets, likewifc, con- 
fifting of wood, leather, and often a plate 
of fteel, with regularly placed and polilhed 

brafs 



brafs ftuds, which fometimes formed dif- 
ferent figures and reprefentations of things, 
prove, beyond a doubt, that we had people 
very early who could work with dexterity 
in a variety of materials. 

Many more inftances might be given; 
but thofe above, I flatter myfelf, will be 
fufficient to convince the Doctor, though 
perhaps he may not confefs it, that fuch 
arts as were known to other nations, were 
not at any period of time unknown in 
Scotland. The EngHJh are but too apt to 
claim a fuperiority, in moft things, over 
all their neighbours; but we know per- 
fectly well, that they can boaft but of few 
inventions, and that they are not over 
remarkable for making quick improve- 
ments on the inventions of others. But I 
wifti not, by any means, to launch into 
general reflections, for the indifcretion of 
Dr. Johnfon and a few others. 

We 



We are fully fatisfied ourfelves, and fo> 
we hope, are others, that it is not our 
ignorance or want of genius that has 
brought fuch a deluge of falfehood and 
abufe upon us from our worthy traveller* 
It is fomething elfe, which he himfelf 
thinks the reverfe of thefe, that has pro- 
voked fo much afperity ; and we hope we 
{hall always continue to furnifli him with 
the fame reafons for jealoufy and detrac- 
tion. We wifh not that Dr. Jobnfon fhould 
ever fpeak of us in a different %le. As his 
pride and envy know no bounds, he is fel- 
dom obliging where others would confer 
applaufe. His cenfure, therefore, implies 
a claim to merit* 

In a long firing of quaint axioms, he 
tells us, page 211, *' That the martial 
character cannot prevail in a whole people, 
but by the diminution of all other virtues." 
By this, he endeavours to rob the High- 
landers of every thing that is valuable, but 
M their 



their bravery. He could devife no means 
to deprive them of that, and therefore he 
was refolved to leave them no other quali- 
fication. But, in aiming this thruft at the 
Scotch, he feems not aware what a deep 
wound he gives to Old England at the 
fame time. His own countrymen will not 
eafily give up their claim to the marti.al 
character ; and yet, I believe, they would 
not chufe to confirm the Doctor's reafon- 
ing, by renouncing their pretenfions to 
all other 'virtues. The French, Germans, 
and Swifs, are all allowed to pofTefs the 
martial character ; but their politenefs, hu- 
manity, and other virtues cannot be called 
in queftion. Among individuals, it has 
commonly been obferved, that the moft 
cowardly were always the moft cruel and 
barbarous. I thought likewife that the 
fame maxim had been eftablifhed in regard 
to nations; and I muft think fo (till, 'till 
fomething ftronger has appeared againft it 
than has been advanced by Dr. Johiifon. 

When 



When a man is at variance with the 
common fenfe of mankind, his opinions 
may, at firft, furprife a little by their 
novelty; but the furprife excited by im- 
pudent fingularity is foon followed by 
contempt. 

In the fame and the following page, he 
fays, " Every provocation was revenged 
with blood, and no man that ventured into 
a numerous company, by whatever occa- 
fion brought together, was fure of return- 
ing without a wound." What the Doctor 
fays here is, fo far, very right. No man cer- 
tainly could be fure of any thing that was to 
happen, without the gift of prefcience ; but 
there was a much greater probability of a 
man returning fafe, in the cafe he ftates, 
than that an inhabitant of London, after 
going to bed, {hall not have his houfe 
.robbed, or his throat cut, before next 
morning. 

M 2 Different 



Different interefts, as happened in all 
other countries, under the feudal inftitu- 
tion, made different clans fometimes inter- 
fere with one another. The fame caufes, 
I believe, are attended with fimilar effects 
in moft parts of England, even in this 
refined age. There are few contefted elec- 
tions, I am told, without producing tumult, 
diforder, danger, and fometimes death. 
In regard to thofe of the fame clan, at the 
time alluded to, they not only lived peace- 
ably together, but likewife in the moft 
friendly manner; and generally with lefs 
defign upon each other than, I am afraid, 
is to be found among fome people who 
confider themfelves as much more civi- 
lifed. Were the Doctor's reprefentation of 
the country juft, it muft certainly have 
been long fince depopulated. 

Page 213, he fays, " The power of 
deciding controverfies, and of puniming 
offences, as fome fuch power there muft 

always 



always be, was entrufted to the lairds of 
the country, to thofe whom the people 
confidered as their natural judges. It 
cannot be fuppofed that a rugged proprietor 
of the rocks, unprincipled and unenlight- 
ened, was a nice refolver of entangled 
claims, or very exact in proportioning 
punifhment to offences." To make good 
his point, the Doctor here takes fomething 
for granted. 

Why fhould he fuppofe the lairds to be 
unprincipled^ though fome of them might 
happen, now and then, to be fomewhat 
unenlightened in the intricate points of 
law ? In matters of equity, which were 
the only queftions that could come before 
them, and thefe by a reference from both 
the parties, a man of a good understanding 
and folid fenfe might not make a bad 
arbiter ; and Highlanders in general have 
not been reckoned deficient in a reafonable 
{hare of fagacity. Thofe whom the Doctor 
M 3 calls 



calls nice rcfohers of entangled claims, are 
often as great confounders of plain cafes. 

But the Doctor's obfervado'ns on the 
mode of distributing juftice among the 
Highlanders muft fall to the ground, as 
they are not founded upon jnatter of fail. 
The chiefs never fat as judges, either in 
civil or criminal cafes. The ctinftitution 
of the Highlands, if the expreffion may 
be ufed, was exactly the fame with that of 
all other countries, where the feudal fyftem 
of government prevailed. The chief, as 
proprietor of the land, nominated a judge 
to decide upon differences between his 
'tenants. In matters of property, there lay 
an appeal to the King's courts in a regular 
gradation. 

In criminal cafes, though the culprit 
was tried in 'the diftrict where the crime 
was committed, a jury was fummoned from 
the whole county, and formed in^ the fame 

juft 



juft and unexceptionable manner as is 
pradifed at prefent by the High Court of 
Jufticiary in Scotland. The jurymen did 
not confift, as I am informed they fre- 
quently do in the Doctor's country, of low 
and unenlightened tradefmen and mechanics. 
On the contrary, they were men of landed 
property in the county ; all gentlemen of 
confequence and confideration, who had a 
character to lofe by any deviation from 
the eftablifhed maxims of juftice ; of which, 
as they are imprinted on the human mind, 
the bulk of mankind are judges in every 
country. The number of the jurymen, 
likewife, was always greater in Scotland 
than in England ; which was an additional 
fecurity for juftice. 

The Doctor makes fome amends for 
what he had fo rafhly aflerted, in the next 
paragraph. " When the chiefs," adds he, 
w were men of knowledge and virtue, the 
convenience of a domeftic judicature was 
great. No long journies were neceflary, 
M 4 great. 



( 168 ) 

no artificial delays could be pradtifed ; the 
character, the alliances, and interefts of 
the litigants were known to the court, and 
all falfe pretences were eafily detected. 
The fentence, when it was paft, could not 
be evaded ; the power of the laird fuper- 
feded formalities, and juftice could not be 
defeated by intereft or ftratagem." Here 
he fpeaks with more decency, though he 
is ftill wrong in the principle. 

Page 215. " The roads are fecure in 
thofe places, through which, forty years 
ago, no traveller could pafs without a con- 
voy." To borrow a little of his own polite 
language, it may juftly be laid here, that 
the Doctor is either " unprincipled" or 
" unenlightened." His information, if he 
had any, was certainly very bad ; and if 
he fpeaks at hazard, the infamy of his 
mifreprefentation is apparent. 

I am forry when the Doctor obliges me 
to draw comparifons between the two kingr 

doms ; 



( 169 ) 

doms; but I muft inform him, that the 
Highlanders never lurked on the public 
roads to difturb ordinary travellers, like 
the banditti who at prefent infeft all the 
roads in England. A robbery or murder 
was always a rare thing in the Highlands. 
Even in the rudeft times our anceftors dif- 
dained fuch practices ; it is not therefore 
probable, that the prefent generation fhould 
be lefs civilifed than their forefathers. 

Whatever hoftilities they committed, it 
was always openly and avowedly ; and only 
by way of reprifal on thofe with whom they 
were at enmity. The moft polite nations 
in Europe take ftill the fame advantagss, 
when in a ftate of war with their neigh- 
bours. When therefore two clans were at 
variance, it might happen, indeed, that 
thofe belonging to either of them might 
fometimes find it convenient to travel in 
larger parties than ufual for fecurity, efper 
2 cially 



cially if their route led them near the terri- 
tories of the other. 

If the Doctor's convoy was not of this 
fort, I am at a lofs to find it out. I never 
heard of any other ; and even the neceflity 
of that did not come fo far down as he 
dates it. In any other cafe, a fingle tra- 
veller might pafs from one end of the 
country to the other unmolefted, and with 
much lefs danger of infult or depredation 
than even in Fleet-Jlreet^ where, I am told, 
the pure Dr. yobnfon has not difdained to 
fix his abode. 

In the very next fentence of the fame 
page, he fays, " All trials -of right by the 
fword are forgotten." This mode of de- 
ciding points of right would, I confefs, 
have been a reproach to our forefathers, 
had it been only in ufe among them. But 
as the fame kind of appeal prevailed in 
England, and other European countries, at 

the 



the fame time, it is rather fomewhat little 
in this great man to exhibit that cuftom 
now, as a characteriftic of the ancient 
Highlanders. 

Page 227, he obferves> " England has 
for feveral years been filled with the at- 
chievements of feventy thoufand High- 
landers employed in America. I have 
heard from an Englifli officer, not much 
inclined to favour them, that their beha- 
viour deferved a very high degree of mili- 
tary praife; but their number has been 
much exaggerated. One of the minifters 
told me, that feventy thoufand men could 
not have been found in all the Highlands, 
and that more than twelve thoufand never 
took the field." The number faid 4 to have 
been employed in America, if the Doctor 
ever heard fuch a report, was certainly 
much exaggerated, No more than about 
five thoufand were' employed on the Ame- 
rican fervice 5 and thofe were only the 

Royal 



Royal Highlanders, with Frazer's and 
Montgomery's regiments. The former con- 
fided of two battalions of eleven hundred 
each ; and each of the latter had fourteen 
hundred men. They did not act in a 
body together; every corps had a feparate 

destination. 

' 

Though there were not feventy thoufand 
Highlanders employed in America, nor 
indeed in the whole fervice, there were 
certainly more than that number of men 
raifed in Scotland, during the courfe of the 
laft war ; but a large proportion of thefe 
were Loivlanders ; and they, likewife, did 
much honour to the Britifh arms, as well 
as to their native country. The Doctor, 
however, makes the Scotch levies all High- 
landers, and fends the whole feventy thou- 
fand to America, as he could not allow the 
atchievements of which he had heard to 
five thoufand only. This furnifhes an 
equal proof of his admiration and envy. 



( 173 ) 

As the Doctor is never long of one mind, 
he foon veers about, and reduces his feventy 
thoufand to twelve. He fays he was told 
by one of the minifters, that feventy thou- 
fand men could not be found in all the 
Highlands, and that more than twelve 
thoufand never took the field. 

The Doctor, on more occafions than one, 
feems to have been much indebted to the 
Scotch clergy for intelligence ; at leaft, he 
often adduces them as vouchers for what 
he fays. It is remarkable, however, that 
when he makes ufe of their teftimony for 
any thing that derogates from the import- 
ance of the country, he always conceals 
their names. This has a very fufpicious 
look, as we have no direction for invefti- 
gating the fact ; and none of thofe gentle- 
men can find himfelf refponfihle to refute 
an anonymous charge. 

* 

I will 



( '74 ) 

I will allow the Doctor, if he pleafes, 
that feventy thoufand men could not eafily 
be found in the Highlands, to enter the 
fervice all at one time ; and, I believe, it 
might even diftrefs Old England itfelf to 
furnifh an equal number of efficient re- 
cruits on a fudden emergency. But I will 
deny that no more than twelve thoufand 
Highlanders were employed in our different 
armies, in the courfe of the laft war ; and 
I will be bold to aver, that no minifter 
ever gave him the information he pretends. 
There is not a minifter in Scotland, much 
lefs in the Highlands, but knows the con- 
trary. There were, at one time, fifteen 
battalions of Highlanders, diftmguifhed by 
their native drefs ; which may be reckoned 
at fixteen thoufand men at leaft : for if 
two or three of thofe corps, and I am fure 
there were no more, fell a little (hort of 
their full complement of a thoufand each, 
all the reft had a furplus much more than 
fufficient to make up the deficiency. 

In 



In this there can be no deception. Who- 
ever has curiofity enough, may have re- 
courfe to the War-office for a confirmation 
of the fact. Befides, it is certain, that 
many more than the number I have juft 
now mentioned, were difperfed through 
other regiments, without any external dif-* 
tin&ion as Highlanders. We had con- 
ftantly recruiting parties among us, and 
they feldom beat up without finding 
volunteers. 

Hence we find that our author is not 
more lucky in the ftories which he palms 
upon others, than in the fidelity of his 
own obfervations ; but he does not always 
deal in anonymous authority. He pro- 
fefledly places fome things to Mr. Bofive/l's 
account, which I am forry to fee. Had I 
therefore an opportunity of meeting that 
gentleman, I would certainly afk him, 
whether his fellow-traveller, Dr. Samuel 
i) had not taken improper liberties 
3 with 



with his name ? and if he avowed the fads, 
I would not hefitate to tell him, that, if he 
had not ignorance for an excufe, he had 
{hewn little regard to candour. 

As to the Englifh officer, who profefled 
himfelf not much inclined to favour the 
Highlanders, but owned that their beha- 
viour deferved a very high degree of mili- 
tary praife, the Doctor has done him a 
kindnefs in fupprefiing his name. If 
known, he could hardly have accounted to 
the world for fo ftrange an antipathy ; and 
though concealed, if he has lived to fee the 
journey to the Hebrides, and recollecls 
himfelf in the above paffage, he muft feel 
fomewhat aukwardly in his own mind. 
To avow a diflike, and to acknowledge a 
claim to praife at the fame time, exceeds 
even the ufual extravagance of Englifh 
prejudice. 

Page 



Page 230, he fays, " The traveller, who 
comes hither from more opulent countries, 
to fpeculate upon the remains of pafloral 
life, will not much wonder that a common 
Highlander has no ftrong adherence to his 
native foil." The attachment of Scotch- 
men in general, and of Highlanders in 
particular, to their native country, has 
always been remarkable, even to a degree 
of enthufiafm ; which certainly would not 
have been the cafe, were that country as 
deftitute of comfortable enjoyments as the 
Doctor often reprefents it; He is here 
confuted by the general voice of his own 
countrymen, who daily upbraid the Scotch 
for their national adherence. His afTer- 
tion, therefore, muft lofe credit on both 
hands. The Highlander will fpurn the 
malignant infmuation with contempt ; and 
no Englifhman will believe it. 

But as Dr. Jobnfon will prove the moil 

unexceptionable evidence againfl himfelf, 

N I {hall 



( 1 7 8 ) 

I {hall to this pafTage oppofe another from 
his own work. When he was leaving 
dnoch in Glenmorrifon, where he had ftaid 
a night, and was fo much captivated with 
the genteel appearance and behaviour of 
his landlord's daughter, he tells us, that 
their hoft, when they left his houfe in the 
morning, walked by them a great way, 
and entertained them with converfation 
both on his own condition and that of the 
country. " From him," continues he, 
page 79, " we firft heard of the general 
diflatisfadion (the raifmg of the rents), 
which t is now driving the Highlanders 
into the other hemifphere ; and when I 
aiked him whether they would flay at 
home, if they were well treated, he an- 
fwered with indignation, that no man wil- 
lingly left his native country." This, I 
prefume, will be deemed a fufficient com- 
ment upon the preceding quotation. 



It 



It is not the firft time we have feen the 
Doctor's narrations at crofs purpofes with 
each other. We can account for his mif- 
reprefentations from his prejudices ; his 
contradictions, however, will require a 
different folution. A badnefs of heart may 
induce a man to calumniate others ; but 
there is a degree of infanity in- expofing 
one's own (hame. 

Page 238. We have here another of 
our traveller's inconfiftencies. " The ge- 
neral converfation of the Iflanders,". fays 
he, "has nothing particular. I. did not 
meet with the inquifitivenefs of which I 
have read, and fufpecT: the judgment to. 
have been rafhly made." How will this be 
reconciled with what he has faid before in 
page 1 1 6, where he defcribes the fame 
people as full of curiofity and of the love 
of talk ? 

N 2 But 



But the cafe is fo very different from 
what the Doctor alleges in this place, that 
the inquifitivenefs of the common people in 
the Highlands has been generally thought 
to border upon a good-natured kind of 
officioufnefs. I do not mention this as a 
circumftance very much to be applauded ; 
but it is harmlefs at leaft, and mews that 
the Doctor has formed a wrong eftimate of 
that part of their character, if he ftates the 
matter as he really found it. Many of 
them, however, for want of his language, 
might be unable to exprefs their cliriofity, 
let it be ever fo great. 

As to the better fort, they were always 
very delicate in their inquiries, as th,e 
Doctor's anfwers were generally rude and 
unmannerly. While in the Hebrides, he 
was for the moft part fo fulky and ill- 
humoured, that even their afliduities to 
pleafe him feemed to give offence. It may 
3 naturally 



naturally be .fuppofed, therefore, that a 
people always remarkable for their polite- 
nefs to ftrangers, would be very fhy in 
obtruding any thing that might prove dif- 
agreeable to their gueft. When the Doctor 
was in a mood for converfation, they 
heard him with attention, and anfwered 
his queftions with civility; but, with all 
that curiofity and love of 'talk, which he 
has allowed them in another place, they 
feldoin ventured to folicit him for any 
information in return. The natural rough- 
nefs of his manners was fometimes fo 
exceffive, that he even treated the ladies 
with difrefpecl: ; and nothing but a regard 
to the laws of .hofpitality prevented the 
gentlemen often from fhewing marks of 
their difpleafure. 

Page 239. " There are now parochial 

fchools, to which the lord of every manor 

pays a certain ftipend. Here tke children 

are taught to read; but, by the rule of 

N 3 their 



( 182 ) 

their inftitution, they teach only Engli/h, 
fo that the natives read a language which 
they may never ufe or tinderftand." The 
Doctor undertakes to give too much inform- 1 
ation for the fhort ftay he made in the 
Hebrides. The time could not allow a 
proper inveftigation of fo many particulars, 
were he more difpofed to be faithful in his 
accounts ; and therefore it is no wonder 
that we fo often find him miftaken. 

Here he evidently confounds the paro- 
chial with the charity fchools. The former 
are provided with falaries in the manner 
he mentions ; but the latter are fupported 
by royal bounty. There has not been a 
parifh in Scotland for fome centuries with- 
out a parochial fchool ; and every thing 
within the compafs of the matter's know- 
ledge, who is always a man of univerfity 
education, is regularly taught. There is 
no prohibition againft teaching any thing, 

not 



C 183 ) 

not even the Gaelic, fo much the Do&or's 
abhorrence, excepted ; though, at the fame 
time, that is not a branch of education in 
thofe feminaries. 

The charity fchools are of much later 
inftitution; and, being intended originally 
for the poorer fort, the children pay no 
fees. The fame qualifications are not re- 
quifite in the m afters of thefe. They 
chiefly teach Englim, writing, and arith- 
metic ; though feveral of them teacb book- 
keeping likewife in fo great perfection as 
to fit the youth under their care for the 
counting-houfe. By their firft inftitution, 
it is true, they were prohibited to teach the 
Gaelic ; but the impropriety of that prohi- 
bition ftruck the managers fo forcibly after- 
wards, that in their next inftruclions they 
altered that claufe, and gave orders for 
teaching it. 

N 4 Page 



( '84 ) 

Page 240. In Sky, he fays, " The 
fcholars are birds of paflage, who live at 
fchool only in the fummer; for in winter 
provifions cannot be made for any confider* 
able number in one place. This periodical 
difperfion imprefles ftrongly the fcarcity of 
thefe countries." It may with more juftice 
be faid, that this account of the matter 
imprejfes much more jlrongly the author's 
uniform intention of mifreprefenting fads. 
The very reverfe of what he here fays is 
true ; for the fchools over all the Highlands 
are much more frequented in winter than 
in fummer. I have already had occafioo 
to mention, that the winter is far from being 
a feafon of fcarcity in the Hebrides ; as the 
people, by that kind of providence which 
is common to all mankind, prepare for it 
in due time. Nor is the abience of feveral 
of the fcholars in fummer owing to the 
illiberal caufe affigned by Dr. Johnfon, as 
affe&ing the winter. The children of the 

lefs 



kfs opulent fort of people, who are fit for 
domeftic fervices, are more wanted in that 
feafon at home. 

Page 242. The Iflanders, fays he, " have 
no reafon to complain of infufficient paftors ; 
for I faw not one in the iflands whom I 
had reafon to think either deficient in learn- 
ing or irregular in life ; but found feveral 
with whom I could not converfe without 
wiming, as my refpect increased, that they 
had not been Prefbyterians." A few lines 
after he goes on, " The minifters in the 
iflands had attained fuch knowledge as may 
juftly be admired in men who have no 
motive to ftudy, but generous curiofity, or, 
what is ftill better, defire of ufefulnefs ; 
with fuch politenefs as fo narrow a circle of 
converfe could not have fupplied, but to 
minds naturally difpofed to elegance." 

Some regard to truth and candour has 
prevailed for once. But notwithftanding 

thefe 



thefe generous efFufions, for which fome 
acknowledgments are due to the Doctor, 
let me afk him, how this account of the 
Highland clergy, for their learning an4 
politenefs, accords with what he fays, in 
page 376, of our Scotch education ? Speak- 
ing there of the univerfities of Scotland, 
he declares, that " men bred in them ob- 
tain only a mediocrity of knowledge, be- 
tween learning and ignorance." As none 
of thofe gentlemen were bred any where 
elfe, it will readily occur to the reader, 
that fuch oppofite accounts of the Highland 
minifters and the Scotch colleges cannot be 
both true. He will therefore judge for 
himfelf which to reject. 

But whatever refpect Dr. Johnfon had 
for the minifters as men, he feems to have 
no charity for them as Prejbyterians. His 
confeffion on that head may ferve as a key 
to many other things s and mews that much 
juftice and impartiality is not to be expected 

from 



from a man who is not afhamed to own 
fuch prejudices. The compliment to the 
minifters, therefore, ends in a fa tire upon 
himfelf. 

In the fame page he fays, he " met with 
prejudices fufficiently malignant among the 
Prefbyterians, but they were prejudices of 
ignorance." As he does not fpecify the 
nature of thofe prejudices, no reply can 
be made. His difpofition, I believe, was 
fufficiently malignant to have pointed them 
out, had there been any that could have 
ferved his purpofe. By being particular, 
a man aflumes an air of truth at leaft ; but 
a general aflertion will not do, at this time 
of day, from Dr. Jobnfon. We have 
already feen too much laxity in his obfer- 
vations to give him credit for more than 
he is able to render probable, if not to 
prove. But while the good Doctor talks 
of malignant prejudices among the Prefby- 
terians, as being the effects of ignorance, 

let 



.88 ) 

let me civilly afk him, if he muft not be 
fufpedted of ignorance, to what more dig- 
nified caufe we are to impute thofe malig- 
nant prejudices of his own, which have 
disgraced almoft every page of his work ? 

Page 245. " There is in Scotland, as 
among ourfelves, a reftlefs fufpicion of 
popifh machinations, and a clamour of 
numerous converts to the Romifh religion. 
The report is, I believe, in both parts of 
the ifland equally falfe. The Romifh reli- 
gion is profefled only in Egg and Canna, 
two fmall iflands, into which the Reforma- 
tion never made its way. If any miffiona- 
ries are bufy in the Highlands, their zeal 
.entitles them to refpect, even from thofe 
who cannot think favourably of their doc- 



trine." 



We have here a frefh and very ftriking 
inftance of the Doctor's attachment to the 
Romifh religion. He affe&s to diibelieve 

the 



( 1*9 ) 

the reports of numerous converts being 
made, left people fhould take the alarm, 
and put a flop to the practice ; and he 
concludes the paflage with a very curious 
argument in favour of toleration. No one, 
I believe, will doubt his refpect for popiflx 
miflionaries ; but how their zeal, in propa- 
gating their tenets, fhould entitle them to 
refpect from thofe who difapprove of them, 

is fomething beyond my comprehenfipn. 



In confining the Romifli religion in the 
Highlands to Egg and Canna only, he 
muft be either ignorant or infmcere. It is 
fomevvhat furprifing, indeed, that a man, 
who, as he terms it himfelf, came pur- 
pofely " to fpeculate upon the country," 
fhould return fo very ill informed iu a 
matter of fo much confequence. Had he 
taken a little more pains, he muft have 
heard, that there were many of the Romijh 
religion in Strath-glafs, Brae- mar, Loch- 
aber, and Glengary; and that the inha- 
bitants 



bitants of Cnoideart, Muideart, Arafaig, 
Morthair, South-Uift, and Barra, in all a 
vaft extent of country, are Roman catholics 
almoft to a man. 

This is a more juft flate of the fact than 
what has been given by the Doctor. He 
will not, I fuppofe, be difpleafed to hear 

it ; and I am forry I cannot help giving 



him the further pleafure of alluring him, 
that the Romi/h religion has been confider- 
ably upon the growing hand in all the 
three kingdoms for feveral years paft. 

Page 246, he fays, " The ancient fpirit 
that appealed only to the fword is yet 
among the Highlanders." This furely 
muft appear a bold aflertion, after telling 
us before, in page 128, " That the mili- 
tary ardour of the Highlanders was extin- 
guifhed," and ftill more directly, in page 
215, " That all trials of right by the 
fword are forgotten." When the Doctor 

has 



has a turn to ferve, he throws out at 
random whatever fuits him beft ; and 
when another purpofe requires a different 
account of the very fame matter, he is 
not over fcrupulous about altering his 
detail. The poor Highlanders muft be 
moulded into all ihapes, to conform with 
his views. At one time, we fee them an 
abject and difyir'itcd race of men; at .ano- 
ther, they fwagger in all the favage pride 
of their " ancient ferocity " 






When we meet with fuch grofs and 
palpable contradictions, it would be a mild 
conftruction only to fuppofe that the Doctor 
fometimes forgets what he has fai$ before. 
This is as far as charity can go. But the 
writer who needs our charity is in a more 

contemptible fituation than the wretch who 



lives by it. 

In page 248, our traveller comes to exa- 
mine the queftion of the fee ond fight ; and 
4 it 



it is truly furprifing to fee with what a 
credulous weaknefs he endeavours to defend 
fo vifionary an opinion. Other things, 
which are believed by every man in the 
country, which are probable in themfelves, 
and are fupported by all the evidence that 
a reafonable man could expedt, the Dotor 
often rejeds ; but this point, abfurd in 
itfelf, uncountenanced by any decent au- 
thority, and to which only a few of the 
moft ignorant vulgar give the leaft faith, 
he maintains with a zeal which mews him 
to be amamed of nothing but thinking like 
other men. 

In attempting to define the fecond Jigbt, 
he feems to be much at a lols. In page 
149, he calls it a faculty, for power, 
he fays, it cannot be called; and yet, 
in page 154, he veers about fcgain, and 
calls the fecond fight of the Hebrides a 
power. 



If 



( '93 ) 

If there is any real diftin&ion between 
a faculty and a power, it would appear, 
from this variation of language, that the 
Doctor has not been able to find it out. 

His reafonings upon the fubject, for 
they cannot be called arguments, may 
amufe fome readers, but they can convince 
none. They are too obfcure to be under- 
flood by the illiterate, and they want 
flrength to imprefs men of knowledge. 
But though our peregrinator has not been 
afhamed to exhibit his own fuperftitious 
credulity, it is a daring piece of infolence 
to introduce the names of a Bacon and a 
Boyle to give credit to fuch ridiculous non- 
fenfe. 

Such a faculty or power, or whatever 
the Doctor pleafes to call it, muft always 
have depended, if ever it exifted, upon 
fome fuperior agency, and confequently 
muft have been excited at particular times 
O for 



( 194 ) 

for fome good purpofes. We can fee no ade- 
quate reafon, therefore, for the fecond fight 
being local ; and ftill lefs, if poflible, for its 
being confined to the lower ranks of people. 
To have anfwered the intention of fuch a 
gift, it ought to have been general, in 
China, and at the Land's End^ as well as 
in the Hebrides ^z.^ conferred upon the 
rich and the learned, as well as upon the 
poor and the ignorant. 

In fupport of the fecond fight, Dr. John- 
fen ufes only two particular arguments, if 
they deferve that name, which feem worthy 
of any notice. In page 254, he fays, 
" Where we are unable to decide by ante- 
, cedent reafon, we muft be content to yield 
to the force of teftimony." This, in ge- 
neral, is certainly a very juft obfervation, 
and worthy of a better fubjecl;. Had the 
Doctor always applied it in cafes where 
a rational teftimony was to be obtained, 
he would have been entitled to that claim 

to 



( '95 ) 

to candour which he has fo often for* 
feited. 

His next plea is as follows : in the 
fame page he fays, ie By pretenfion to 
fecond fighty no profit was ever fought or 
gained. It is an involuntary affection, in 
which neither hope nor fear are known to 
have any part. Thofe who profefs to feel 
it, do not boaft of it as a privilege, nor are 
cdnfidered by others as advantageoufly 
dlftinguifhed. They have no temptation 
to feign, and their hearers have no motive 
to encourage the impofture." 

Here the Doctor is evidently under a 
very grofs miftake. Whatever he may 
think, if he really writes as he thinks, it 
is a well known fact, that thofe who have 
pretended to the fecand fight always con- 
fidered it as a peculiar diftinction, of which 
they were not a little vain ; and it is no 
lefs true, that fuch as were weak enough 
O2 to 



( '96 } 

to pay any regard to their pretenfions 
were always afraid of offending, and defi- 
rous of pleafing them, as believing they 
had a communication with a fuperior order 
of beings. "Whether the artful might not 
find here a temptation for impofture, I 
fliall leave the reader to judge. 

If this faculty, power, or affection, had 
ever any exiftence, except in the prefump- 
tion of the defigning or the imagina- 
tion of the credulous, it is now vifibly 
upon the decline, without any lofs to the 
country ; and it is to be hoped a few years 
more will extinguifh the very memory of 
fo great a reproach to the human under- 
ftanding. In proportion as the light of 
knowledge has dawned upon mankind, 
their eagernefs for wonders and belief in 
fupernatural endowments have gradually 
abated. We may, therefore, naturally 
expect that the fecond fight of the Hebrides 

will 



( 197 ) 

will foon fhare the fame fate with the late 
witchcrafts of Old England. 

The Doctor fays, that one of the minifters 
told him that he came to Sky with a refo- 
ution not to believe the fe c ond fight ; a 
declaration which he (hews a willingnefs 
to cenfure, as implying an unreafonable 
degree of incredulity. But as our traveller 
feems to have gone to Sky with a refolution 
to believe nothing elfe, we (hall leave the 
merits of his credulity in this cafe, and 
incredulity in all others, with the impartial 
public. 

I fhall now difmifs this fubject, as un- 
worthy of any further difcuffion, and per- 
mit Dr. Jobnfon, with all his pretenjions 
to philofophy, to believe the fecond fight 
as long as he pleafes. It is a harmlefs 
delufion, and can hurt nobody. Some 
minds have a ftronger propenfity to fuper- 
ftition than others; and there is the lefs 
O 3 reafon 



( '98 ) 

reafon to be furprifed at this inftance of it 
in the Dodor, that I am told he was one 
of thofe 'wife men who fat up whole nights, 
fome years ago, repeating paternojlers and 
other exorcifmsi amidft a group of old 
women, to conjure the Cock-lane ghoft. 

Our traveller next proceeds to other 
obfervations. In pages 256 and 257, he 
fays, " As there fubfifts no longer in the 
iflands much of that peculiar and difcrimi- 
native form of life, of which the idea had 
delighted our imagination, we were willing 
to liften to fuch accounts of paft times as 
would be given us ; but we foon found 
what memorials were to be expected from 
an illiterate people, whofe whole time is a 
feries of diftrefs ; where every morning is 
labouring with expedients for the evening ; 
and where all mental pains or pleafure 
arofe from the dread of winter, the ex- 
pectations of fpring, the caprices of their 
chiefs, and the motions of the neighbour- 
ing 



( 199 ) 

ing clans ; where there was neither fliame 
from ignorance, nor pride from know- 
ledge ; neither curiofity to inquire, nor 
vanity to communicate." 

Were this reprefentation of the Iflanders 
true, it is certainly a very difmal one. 
But it is always fome confolation to the 
miferable, to find others in no better a fjtu- 
ation than themfelves. Let us compare 
this account with what he gives us, a 
little before, of the human race in general. 
In page 250, he fays, " Good feems to 
have the fame proportion in thofe vifionary 
fcenes, as it obtains in real life : almoft all 
remarkable events have evil for their bafis, 
and are either miferies incurred, or miferies 
efcaped. Our fenfe is fo much ftronger 
of what we fuffer, than of what we enjoy, 
that the ideas of pain predominate in 
almoft every mind. What is recollection 
but a revival of vexations, or hiftory, but 
a record of wars, treafons, and calamities ? 
4 Death, 



( 200 ) 

Death, which is confidered as the greateft 
evil, happens to all. The greateft good, 
be it what it will, is the lot but of a 
part." 

Here is exhibited a picture of human 
life more ghaftly than the Gorgon's head, 
and fufficient to chill every breaft with 
horror. We may naturally confider the 
Doctor, while he wrote in this manner, 
to have been actuated by a deep fit of 
melancholy and defpair ; and what he fays 
of the Iflanders fo foon afterwards, feems 
to have been dictated under the remains of 
the fame gloomy paroxyfm." Thofe who 
find an exact reprefentation of their own 
Hate in the general portrait of mifery here 
given, can have no re'afon to contemplate 
the inhabitants of the . iflands as diftin- 
guifhed by peculiar calamities. But fuch 
as can perceive no fimilitude of themfelves 
in that frightful group (and it is to be 
hoped there are many), will be naturally 

difpofed 



difpofed to make fome allowance for an 
extraordinary dam of colouring in the 
Doctor's account of the Hebrides. 

Though the matter might be fuffered 
to reft here, it may be worth while to 
examine the rhapfody of our traveller, 
concerning the Iflanders, fomewhat more 
minutely. I mail therefore beg the Doc- 
tor's leave to analyfe that remarkable para- 
graph ; that by contrafting its feveral parts 
feparately, with what he has advanced on 
other occafions, we may the better deter- 
mine what degree of credit he can claim 
from the public. As he is to be weighed 
in his own balance, he will have him- 
felf only to blame, if " ha is found 
wanting" 

<e We foon found what memorials .were 
to be expected from an illiterate -people.'* 
His panegyric on the learning and polite- 
nefs of the .Highland clergy has been 

already 



( 202 ) 

already obferved : in page 119, he acknow- 
ledges that he never was in any houfe of 
the iflands, where he did not find books 
in more languages than one; adding, in 
the beginning of the next page, that lite- 
rature is not neglected by the higher rank 
of the Hebridians : and, from what he 
fays of the inn-keeper at Anoch, and others 
of the fame clafs, it is evident that he 
often found an unexpected degree of edu- 
cation in the intermediate fpheres of life. 

"With what confidence then can Dr. 
Johnfon talk of an illiterate people ? So 
indifcriminate a charge is certainly intended 
to be underftood as general ; but if there 
is any truth in himfelf, it cannot appear 
to be juft. He has admitted learning 
among the Iflanders, where a man of fenfe 
and candour would expect to find it any 
where elfe ; and to infmuate that it goes 
no further, if that really be his meaning, 
is but giving a frefh proof of his own 

abfurdity. 



abfurdity. He has, therefore, no other 
alternative. He muft either ftand con- 
victed of infmcerity in his accounts of the 
higher and middle ranks of men, or he 
muft confine the appellation of illiterate 
to the very loweft of the people. If he 
chufes the latter, he can derive no great 
credit from the remark he makes ; as it 
appears from his own words, that it was 
among this order only that he fought for 
what he calls memorials. 

In that cafe, it is no great wonder if he 
was often difappointed. But that can be 
deemed no peculiar reproach to the infe- 
rior inhabitants of the iflands, till .the 
Doctor proves that every cottager in Eng- 
land is a man of letters, and capable of 
fatisfying the curiofity of a traveller in the 
niceft points of inquiry. 

" Every morning is labouring with ex- 
pedients for the evening." This is a proof 
Z of 



of their induftry at leaft, in contradiction 
to that lazinefs and aver/ton to labour, with 
which the Doctor fo often upbraids them 
in other places. That the time prefent 
fhould labour for the future can appear 
nothing remarkable* as we generally find 
it to be the ' great, bufinefs of life .in every 
country whatever. We, therefore, can fee 
nothing here to find fault with, unlefs it 
be that Dr. Johnfon was angry becaufe 
thofe favages and barbarians, as he fre- 
quently calls them, were as wife and pro- 
vident as their neighbours. 

" All mental pains or pleafure arife 
from the dread of winter, the expectation 
of fpring, the caprices of their chiefs, 
and the motions of the neighbouring 
clans." 

There has been occafion to fhew, more 
than once, that the winter is not fo very 
dreadful a feafon in the Hebrides^ as our 

traveller 



traveller reprefents it. I fhall therefore 
refer this part of the argument to the 
reader's recollection of what has been 
already faid. 

As to the evils to be apprehended from 
the caprices of the chiefs, the Doctor him- 
felf is kind enough, as on moft other 
occafions, to help me out with an anfwer. 
He takes frequent opportunities to obferve, 
that the patriarchal authority of the chiefs 
is, in a great meafure, abolifhed ; but I 
fhall only take notice of what he fays in 
pages 205 and 215. 

In the former of thefe he tells us, " That 
the chiefs being now deprived of their 
jurifdiction, have already loft much of 
their influence, and that they are in a fair 
way of being foon diverted of the little 
that remains." Whether this be true or 
not, is of little confequence in the prefent 
queftion ; it is fufficient to (hew that the 
5- Doctor 



( 206 ) 

Doctor is inconfiftent with himfelf. Irt 
the laft-mentioned page, after comparing 
the prefent with ancient times, he fays, 
" that now, however, there is happily 
an end to all fear or hope from malice or 
from favour;" and a little after, "that 
the mean are in as little danger from the 
powerful as in other places." 

If the Doctor has not been miftaken in 
thefe obfervations, I would afk him, on 
what foundation he now builds the caprices 
of the chiefs ? 

The motions of the neighbouring clans 
ceafed with the jurifdictions and other pre- 
rogatives of the chiefs. The Doctor is 
fufficiently fenfible of this change, and is 
at abundant pains, in other places, to fhew 
by what means it was effected j though, 
in his ufual way, having a particular pur- 
pofe to anfwer at this time, he is refolved 
to keep up the old cuftom. 

A paffage 



A paflage or two from himfelf will 
difcover, whether he has always given 
reafon to believe that there is now any 
caufe of dread from the motions of the 
neighbouring clans. In page 206, he 
fays, " The chief has loft his formidable 
retinue ; and the Highlander walks his 
heath unarmed and defencelefs, with the 
peaceable fubmiflion of a French peafant 
or Englifli cottager." In page 359, he 
obferves, that the infular chieftains have 
quitted the caftles that flickered their an- 
ceftors, arid generally live near them, in 
jnanfions not very fpacious or fplendid : 
" Yet," fays he, " they (the modern houfes) 
bear teftimony to the progrefs of arts and 
civility, as they fhew that rapine and fur- 
prife are no longer dreaded." 

Can there be a greater variance than 
between thefe two paflages and what our 
author infmuates in regard to the neigh- 
bouring clans ? Or can any thing be more 

clearly 



clearly demonflrative of Dr. Johnfon^ par- 
tial, vague, and contradictory mode of 
writing ? 

" There is neither fhame from igno- 
rance, nor pride from knowledge." Un- 
lefs the Doctor has a mind to retract what 
he formerly allowed in favour of the clergy, 
gentry, and middle rank of people, this 
obfervation can only regard the loweft clafs 
of the inhabitants; and we have already 
feen with how little reafon or juftice they 
can become the objects of fuch critical 
animadverfion. It is not their natural 
character to be thought ignorant of fuch 
things as commonly belong to their ftate 
and fituation in life ; and few, I believe, 
of the fame rank in other countries, ex- 
tend their knowledge much beyond thofe 
bounds. 

Had the Doctor and they been able to 
converfe freely in the fame language, he 

would 



( 209 ) 

would have difcovered in them a degree 
* of acutenefs, fagacity, and intelligence, 
not very common perhaps in the fame 
ftation of life; and which, I am perfuaded, 
he would have had no great inclination to 
relate. That much, with a knowledge of 
their own domeftic operations and con- 
cerns, is all that could be expected from 
them; and it ought to have exempted 
them from ib fcurrilous an attack. A 
comprehenfive view of the prefent ftate of 
the country, or a minute acquaintance with 
the hiftory of former times, was not to be 
obtained in huts and cottages. Their ig- 
norance of fuch matters muft neceflarily 
be great, and their knowledge but little. 
There can, therefore, be no reafon for 
Jhante from the one, nor for pride from 
the other. 

" Neither curiofity to inquire, nor vanity 

to communicate." In different parts of his 

work, he gives a very different account of 

P their 



their curiofity. In particular, in page 1 16, 
he reprefents them as much addicted to 
curiofity, a love of talk, and a fondnefs 
for new topics of converfation. But the 
Doctor has a peculiar knack at making 
them what he pleafes, and unmaking them 
again, as different purpofes may require. 

If they have really fo little defire to com- 
municate, as is here aflerted, I fhould be 
glad to know how he came by thofe nume- 
rous anecdotes in his Journey to the He- 
brideS) relating to the ancient friendfhips, 
feuds, intermarriages, military alliances, 
and other tranfadions, of many of the 
infular chiefs. He often infifts that we 
have no written vouchers for thefe things, 
nor any other authority than what is 
founded on tradition alone. If this be 
true, I can fee no other channel through 
which he could have received his intelli- 
gence, than by communication from the 
inhabitants. 

Either 



( an ) 

Either then, contrary to what the Do&or 
has afierted elfewhere, there mu'ft be re- 
cords to furnifh fuch materials; or, con- 
trary to what he aflerts in this place, the 
people muft have had fome little vanity, 
or defire, at leaft, to communicate. I main- 
tain the affirmative of both ; but both 
cannot be as the Doctor fays, unlefs, in- 
deed, we can fuppofe him to have obtained 
a retrofpeclive view of things, by means 
of his favourite faculty of the fee 'end fight. 

Befides this general argument, which 
I think is conclufive, the Doctor himfelf 
furnifhes a variety of inftances to prove a 
communicative difpofition in the High- 
landers. Of thefe I fhall feled: only a 
few. 

The old woman whofe hut he entered, 

by the fide of Loch Nefs, feems to have 

been fufficiently communicative ; for he 

tells us, page 67, " that fhe was willing 

P 2 enough 



enough to difplay her whole fyftem of 
economy." This much, furely, is all the 
information that could be expected from 
her. The Doctor, in his turn, feems as 
willing to defcribe as me was willing to 
difplay ; and it muft be confefled that he 
has acquitted himfelf in that part with 
great dexterity. The minutenefs of trifling 
detail and the garrulity peculiar to an old 
woman are fo happily hit off, that one 
would think it natural for our traveller 
to exhibit that character. Were fuch a 
reprefentation wanted in a fcenic enter- 
tainment, Dr. Johnfon promifes fair to 
give general fatisfaction. His landlord at 
Anoch, Hkewife, feems to have had no 
great averfion to a pretty free communica- 
tion ; and the Doctor acknowledges his 
being indebted to him for many particu- 
lars, which he was defirous to know, 
relating to that part of the country. But 
the moft direct inftance againft the Doctor's 

aflertion 



( 213 ) 

aflertion we have in page 251. He there 
tells us, that their defire of information 
was keen, their inquiry frequent, and that 
every body was communicative. 

Enough, I prefume, has been faid upon 
thefe heads for the conviction of the reader, 
and too much, perhaps, for his patience ; 
but as the attack was complicated, it was 
neceflary the defence againft each part 
fhould be particular. 

In the above paflage, the whole artillery 
of Dr. Jotinfons malice is brought to the 
field at once. Before, he generally levelled 
but one engine at a time ; namely, either 
the pride, the poverty, or the ignorance 
of the country. But here he plays them 
off all together ; and that they might not 
fail of the intended execution, he has taken 
care to fuccour them with a frefli recruit of 
calumny. 

P 3 Aa 



sv ufual, he aflerts with a boldnsfs that 
bids defiance to contradiction ; but an info- 
lent and peremptory manner, the pomp 
of an inflated di&ion, and the grng/e of a 
quaint and laboured antithefis, are left to 
fupply the place of argument and proof. 
By fuch a parade, no doubt, he hoped to 
do much ; but we have feen how Httle he 
has been able to efrcft. The weapons 
which he aimed with fo much care have 
been flung in vain. His own tefttrnony 
has blunted the point of every fhaft. 

We can therefore only fay, that if Dr. 
Johnforfs praifes be well founded, his cen- 
fures muft be deftitute of truth. It is 
impoffible we can give our aflent to con- 
traries at one and the fame time. But 
whichever we may chufe to believe, our 
author ftands in that mortifying kind of 
predicament, that he can be trufted no, fur- 
ther than he agrees with other writers. 

This 



( "5 ) 

This defcription in caricature, which the 
Doctor gives of the Iflanders in general, 
feems fo much the more inexplicable, that 
he fpeaks favourably of every individual 
whom he had occafion to know or con- 
verfe with. 

The behaviour even of the lower clafs 
of people, on every occafion, feemed to 
pleafe him. The two horfe-hircrs, who 
attended him from Invernefs to the ferry- 
paflage for Sky^ acquitted themfelves fo 
much to his fatisfaction, for their fidelity, 
care, and alertnefs, that he recommends 
them at parting to any future travellers. 
When travelling from place to place, in 
the different iflands which he vifited, the 
men who were occafionally employed either 
as guides, or to walk by his horfe through 
rough grounds, have all obtained their 
{hare of his praife, for their care, atten- 
tion, and civil behaviour. . The rowers of 
boats, or mariners of veflels, in paffing 
P 4 from 



from one ifland to another, he allows to 
be dexterous and obliging. Every hut he 
enters gives him ftriking fpecimens of ho- 
fpitality, and the kind and liberal difpofi- 
tion of the inhabitants. Wherever there 
is a houfe, he fays, the traveller finds a 
welcome. And, in fhort, it was the good 
behaviour of the lower clafs of people that 
drew from him that remarkable obfervation 
in page 60, " that civility feems part of 
the national character of Highlanders.** 

As to the better fort, again, he may be 
faid to be even lavifh of praife. His enco- 
miums are as frequent as there were fami- 
lies he vifited, or perfons he converfed 
with. A few inftances of this kind will 
be fufficient. 

At the laird of Mackinnon's in Sky, the 
company was numerous and genteel, and 
fo very agreeable to the Doctor, that their 
convention fufficiently compenfated the 

interruption 



( 217 ) 

interruption given to his journey by the 
badnefs of the weather. At Raafay* he 
was enchanted by every fpecies of ele- 
gance. At Dunvegan, the feat of the laird 
of Macleod t he had tafted lotus, and was 
in danger of forgetting that he was ever 
to depart. The amiable manners, and many 
other virtues, of the young laird of <?<?/, 
are frequently and liberally difplayed. At 
Dr. Maclean's, a phyfician in Mull, he 
found very kind and good entertainment, 
and very pleafing coeverfation. At Inch 
Kenneth, the refidence of Sir Allan Maclean, 
he fays he could have been eafily per- 
fuaded to a longer ftay ; but life could not 
be always pafled in delight. And, of Mr. 
Maclean^ a minifter in Mull, at whofe 
houfe he ftaid a night, our traveller fays, 
that the elegance of his converfation, and 
ftrength of judgment, would make him 
confpicuous in places of greater cele- 
brity. 

After 



, ( 218 ) 

After hearing Dr. Johnfon give fuch 
teftimonies as thefe, in favour of the High- 
landers, could any one believe, that in the 
paflage I have laft quoted from his work, 
he was fpeaking of the fame people ? Indi- 
*uidualfy, he allows them to be entitled to 
commendation; but collectively^ he loads 
them with (lander and abufe. Though 
every man is civil, the whole taken toge- 
ther make a nation of favages and barba- 
rians. Though he faw plenty and elegance 
every where, the country is pining in 
poverty, and deftitute of every comfort of 
life. And though he gives fo many in- 
ftances of an uncommon fhare of learning 
and knowledge being pretty widely diffufed 
among them, he pronounces them, in the 

bulk, to be an illiterate and ignorant 

, 
people. 

This furely is a very extraordinary way 
of drawing conclufions. To prove its 
abfurdity, would be to prove a felf-evident 

proportion. 



proportion. As well might Dr. Jobnfon 
pretend to tell us, that if a number of 
pieces of pure gold were to be fufed toge- 
ther in a furnace, the product would turn 

, 

out a mafs or aggregate of a bafer metal. 



- 



Page 257, he obferves, that in the houfes 
of the chiefs were preferved what accounts 
remained of paft ages. ." But the chiefs," 
fays he, ." were fometimes ignorant and 
carelefs, and fometimes kept bufy by tur- 
bulence and contention ; and one genera- 
tion of ignorance effaces the whole feries 
of unwritten hiftory. Books are faithful 
repofitories, which may be a while neg- 
leded or forgotten; but when they #re 
opened again, will again impart their in- 
ftru&ion : memory once interrupted, is not 
to be recalled. Written learning is a fixed 
luminary, which, after the cloud that had 
hidden has patted away, is again bright in, 
its proper ftation. Tradition is but a 
5 meteor, 



meteor, which, if once it falls, cannot be 
rekindled." 

Here the Doctor is making his ap- 
proaches very faft, and is now almoft on 
the point of fpringing the mine which he 
has been fo long in digging. In this place 
he prepares his reader, by an artful infi- 
nuation, for what he means to afTert boldly 
afterwards. To invalidate the credit of 
Highland antiquities, feems to have been 
the great object of his journey. As the 
Doctor hates the trouble of much inquiry, 
and to accomplifli this end in the moft 
cafy and compendious manner, he finds it 
neceflary firft to fuppofe that we had no 
written accounts of pad ages, and then, 
but without any proof, to convert that 
fuppofition into a matter of fact, 

I am as ready as Dr. Johnfon to ac- 
knowledge the fuperiority of books over 
mere tradition, when they are written with 

candour 



candour and care. But even books therti- 
felves are not always to be trufted. There 
are falfe books as well as falfe traditions ; 
and the journey to the Hebrides , I am. 
afraid, is one of thofe books which will 
not be thought to deferve the name of a 
faithful repofitory. As to the circumftance 
of our writings, I fhall fpeak to that point 
in its place ; and doubt not but the good 
Doctor will appear to as much difadvantage 
in that part of his ftory, as he has already 
done in many other cafes. 

Let us fuppofe, however, in the mean 
time, were it only for argument's fake, 
that, fome centuries ago, there were few 
or no written authorities among us ; what 
would be the confequence ? Not furely that 
general one which Dr. Johnfon fo unlogi- 
cally affirms, namely, " That one genera- 
tion of ignorance effaces the whole feries 
of unwritten hiftory." One or more chiefs, 
at a particular time, might, as he fays, be 
* 3 carelefs, 



222 

carelefs, not very knowing, or kept bufy 
by turbulence and contention ; but I fee no 
reafon to conclude from thence, that the 
whole of the chiefs, ana 1 all the generation 
of men then living, fhould be Ib too. Un- 
lefs, therefore, contrary to all probability, 
we are to fuppofe this much, our traveller's 
inference cannot follow, and his argument 
amounts to nothing. For, if there could 
not be a whole generation of ignorance at 
once, the whole feries of unwritten hiftory 
could not be effaced. 

At the fame time, I am not inclined to 
lay more ftrefs upon mere vague tradition 
than other men. I am certain I would 
truft it as little as the fcrupulous Doctor 
himfelf, and perhaps even a little lefs than 
he would, when it might feem to lean to 
a favourable purpofe. In defending the vul- 
gar doclrine of \\\efecond fight ^ he had no 
better foundation to reft upon ; and yet he 
finds no difficulty in telling us upon that 

head, 



( 223 ) 

head, that when we are unable to decide 
by other reafons, we muft be content to 
yield to the force of fuch teftimony. 

Tradition, however, in the liberal fenfe 
of the word, has, in all ages, been deemed 
of fome weight ; and the beft writers have 
often appealed to it, not only when other 
evidence has been wanting, but likewife 
as an auxiliary proof. The tradition re- 
garded by the Highlanders, in matters of 
any confequence, was of that nature which 
could not eafily deceive them. It was fo 
clofely interwoven with the cuftom and 
conftitution of the country, that it could 
not be feparated from them ; and it was 
handed down from one generation to ano- 
ther, not by Ba^ds and Seannachies only, 
but by the general voice and confent of a 
whole nation. 

It was not of that vague and uncertain 
nature which Dr. Johnfon reprefents it to 

be; 



( 224 ) 

be -, nor of that weak and unmanly kind, 
which he himfelf has admitted, on parti- 
cular occafions, as fufficient. But one 
thing is perfectly evident, that when tra- 
dition is for the country, the Doctor rejects 
it ; and when it operates on the other fide, 
he admits it as proof. Such a partial mode 
of reprefentation fpeaks for itfelf. 

That the Highlanders were not fo liable 
to be impofed upon by the flattering com- 
pofitions and tales of their Bards and 
Sea'htidc&ies, as our traveller would infi- 
nuate, is beyond all difpute. Befides thofe 
who were employed in thofe profeflions, 
there were multitudes in the country who 
fpent moft of their leifure hours in hearing, 
recording, and rehearfing the atchieve- 
ments of their anceftors and countrymen. 
Among thefe, there were many who com- 
pofed poems in a ftrain equal to the Bards 
themfelves ; and fuch private perfons were 
always a check upon the Bards and Sean- 

nachies 



( -25 ) 

liachies by profeffion, to prevent their de- 
viating from the truth. 

Though the Bards and Seannachies are 
no longer retained as formerly, this cuftom 
in the country is not yet difcontinued. I 
myfelf, as well as thoufands flill alive, have 
feen and heard inftances of what I have 
juft now mentioned. Had the t)otor 
chofen it, he might likewife have been a 
witnefs to fuch recitals, notwithftanding 
the curfory view he took of the country. 
He acknowledges, however, that he had 
feen fome who remembered the practice. 
This much from him is pretty well ; 
though, by putting the matter a little fur- 
ther back, it mews a vifible defign to nar- 
row the real truth. 

But though the Doctor's curiofity did 
not lead him this far, he might very eafily, 
had he been a little more inquifitive, have 
heard much more concerning this matter 

than 



( 226 ) 

than he has thought fit to communicate. 
It is not to be fuppofed that the High- 
landers would have concealed any thing 
of what they knew, though he fometimes 
infmuates as much, had he but known how 
to make his inquiries agreeable. 

But the misfortune was, that the Doctor 
was commonly deficient in that refpect. 
His firft queftion was generally rude, and 
the fecond a downright infult. This furely 
was not the moft likely way to encourage 
intelligence. Yet there is ftill more reafon 
to believe, from the general tenor of his 
work, either that he chofe to avoid know- 
ing what might be in favour of the country, 
or to mifreprefent or fupprefs it when 
known, than that he mould be refufed in- 
formation, had he been capable of afking 
it like a gentleman. 

No other traveller but himfelf has at- 
tempted to tax the inhabitants of this 
5 country 



(22; ) 

country with a difpofition to conceal the 
truth. I could cite feveral inftances from 
his own tour to prove the contrary. In 
particular, the ftories which he relates of 
the kirk of Culloden, and of the cave in 
the ifland of Egg, are manifeftly againft 
.the country. Is it credible, therefore, that 
they fliould be lefs ready to communicate 
faithfully what might be in its favour ? 
But as the Dodtor gives thefe, and fuch 
like anecdotes, without the leaft expreffion 
of diffidence, it would feem that he never 
believed he was told the truth, but when 
he was told fomething to the prejudice of 
Scotland. 

Page 258. It feems to be univerfally 
fuppofed, fays he, that much of the local 
hiftory was preferved by the Bards, of 
whom one is faid to have been retained by 
every great family. He then tells us, that 
he made feveral inquiries after thefe Bards, 
and received fuch anfwers as, for a while, 

made 



( "8 ) 

made him pleafed with his increafe of 
knowledge j but, alas ! he adds immedi- 
ately after, that he was only pleafed, " as 
he had not then learned how to eftimate 
the narration of a Highlander." 

This fage remark at the end of his 
paragraph is owing to the fame important 
caufe, as a fimilar obfervation formerly 
about the bufmefs of brogue -making \ 
namely, fome inconfiderable variation in 
the fubfequent accounts he received. At 
one time he was told that a great family 
had a .Bard and a Seannachie^ who were 
the poet and hiftorian of the houfe ; and an 
old gentleman faid, that he remembered 
one of each. But unluckily, another con- 
verfation informed him, that the fame man 
was both Bard and Seannachie; and this 
variation difcouraged the accurate and con- 
ft/lent Dr. yohnfon. 



It 



22 9 ) 

It is the more furprifing to hear him . 
exprefs any difcouragement in this cafe, 
that he immediately after gives fo eafy 
and natural a folution of the difficulty 
himfelf, if it may be thought deferving of 
that name. He fays very properly, as he 
faid before concerning the two different 
accounts of brogue-making , that the practice 
might be different in different times, or at 
the fame time in different families. This 
mofl certainly was the true ftate of the 
matter; and this plain account of it re- 
moves the ftumbling-block at once. 

I will venture to affert, from my own 
perfonal knowledge of fome people, from 
whom the Doctor received a great part of 
his intelligence, that the affair was ex- 
plained to him in this very manner upon 
the fpot. I will ftill go further ; I have 
authority to fay fo. It is, therefore, worfe 
than childifh in our author to continue ftill 
to exprefs his diftruft, on account of a 

to 



( 23 ) 

circumftance fo clearly reconcileable both 
to reafon and truth, and for which he 
himfelf has furnifhed a folid and fatisfadtory 
explanation. 

To difcover doubts in fuch plain cafes, 
is a mark of weaknefs ; but to lay hold of 
them as a handle for general calumny, if 
a man is not a downright ideot, is wicked 
to the laft degree. Such trivial variations 
are not only common, but even unavoid- 
able, in the difcourfe of different perfons, 
all the world over ; and if that could be 
reckoned a valid objection, we find likewife 
from experience, that the writings of the 
moft approved authors are liable to the 
fame condemnation. 

We have often feen our traveller driven 
to pitiful fhifts to criminate the country ; 
but, like many others, the prefent one 
happily proves only his own rancour and 
difmgenuity, not the infmcerity of Scotch 

or Highland narration, 

But 



( 231 ) 

But to follow out this matter a little 
further, as the Doctor builds fo much upon 
it afterwards, let me ferioufly afk him, if 
he really found fo much improbability in 
the above narrations, as to make him the 
complete infidel he pretends ? If he did, 
he is truly a man " of little faith ;" of 
much lefs, indeed, than I fhould have 
expected from the conjurer of the Cock- 
lane ghoft, or the champion of the fecond 
fight. 

Was the Doctor weak enough to believe, 
that the world would deem it a fufficient 
argument to overturn any fact, that one 
part of its hiftory was related by one per- 
fon, and another part by another ? Yet, by 
his own confeflion, this is clearly the cafe 
in the prefent point in difpute. In Eng- 
land, I prefume, and in every other country 
whatever, a man might receive, from 
different people, different parts of inform- 
ation concerning the fame thing. That, 

however. 



however, could be no juft ground for 
charging the inhabitants with impofition. 

In fuch a cafe, I believe, the Doctor 
would be ready enough to acquit the Eng- 
hfo, and perhaps any other nation but the 
Scotch. If this be fo, it only proves, that 
he was fo ridiculoufly extravagant as to 
expect more from the Highlanders than 
from any other people. But how could 
he imagine that every man he met with, 
even the moft illiterate in other refpects, 
mould be a complete mafter of the whole 
hjflory and antiquities of his country ? 
None but a fnarling Cynic would find fault 
with a deficiency of this kind ; and no 
man of a moderate degree of experience in 
common life would expect fuch abfolute 
precifion, even from the moft knowing of 
the better fort themfelves. 

But let me interrogate my good friend 
the Doctor a little further. Did he never 

read 



( 2 33 ) 

read in one hiftorian any particular that 
was omitted by another ? Did he ever read 
any two hiftqrians who were exactly the 
fame ? and, if they were exactly the fame 
in all points, would he call their works 
different hiftories ? Does he think it im- 
poflible, that any two writers, having each 
the ftricleft regard to truth, fhould difagree 
in fome points of narration relating to the 
fame fact ? and, if they fhould fo difagree, 
does he think that would be a fufficient caufe 
for rejecting their authority, and impeaching 
their veracity, in all other cafes whatever ? 

If the Doctor anfwers thefe queries 
in a manner that is confiftent with 
the common fenfe of mankind, he muft 
drop his objections to the accounts which 
he received of the brogue-makers and Sean- 
nachies ; unlefs he intends to maintain, 
that tradition ought to be more certain and 
infallible than his " faithful repofitory" of 
written hi/lory. 

If 



( 234 ) 

If any thing more fhould be wanting to 
convince Dr. Jobnfon of the inconclufivenefs 
of his reafoning, let me entreat his leave 
to ftate a fimilar cafe ; for, as the Bards 
and Seannacbies were of the domeftic order 
of people, I mall confine myfelf to that 
line. 

Let us fuppofe, then, that a traveller in 
England is told, that, in one houfe, there 
is both a cook-maid and a chamber-maid, 
but that, in another houfe, the fame per- 
fon aded in thefe two different capacities. 
This is exactly a parallel inftance with that 
under confederation ; and none, will doubt, 
I prefume, but there are many examples 
of both kinds on the fouth-fide of the 
Tweed. Where tjien would be the incon- 
fiftency in thefe different accounts ? Or 
would it be reafonable to infer, from fuch 
a difference in the economy of different 
families, either that the intelligence muft 
be falfe, or that the exigence of fuch 

female 



( 235 ) 

female occupations was rendered doubtful ? 
And yet one or other of thefc muft follow, 
if the Doctor's conclufions concerning the 
Bards and Seannachies are allowed to be 
juft. 

I could have illuftrated this fubjecT: from 
the various profeflions of the parti- coloured 
gentry ; but I chofe to exemplify in the 
female line, as the Doctor, I am told, is 
more than commonly attached to the fex, 
for a man of his advanced years. I fhali 
leave him, therefore, to fettle the matter 
with Kate and Moll, as well as he is able; 
and doubt not, but the " priftine remi- 
nifcence of juvenile jucundity" will induce 
him, for their fakes at leaft, to renounce 
an argument which would infallibly de- 
prive the poor wenches of their places. 
Should he provoke them by his obftinacy, 
I am in fome pain for the confequences. 
The Doctor's '* mode of ratiocination," I 
afraid, could not long hold out againft 

the 



( 236 ) 

the more fmiple but 'weighty arguments of 
ihefpit and mop-faff. 

There appears nothing in the accounts 
concerning the Bards and Seannachies^ 
which fo much difcouraged the Dodlor, 
that can either call in queftion the belief of 
their own exiftence, or throw the leaft 
doubt on the hiftories of the families in 
which they refided. In moft great houfes 
there was one of each; while, in fome 
others, there was a Bard only. In the 
latter cafe, however, the accuracy of the 
family hiftory could be but little affeded ; 
as the Bard, whofe buiinefs it was to repeat 
the genealogies of the chiefs, and to fmg 
the atchievements of their anceftors, muft 
be no inconfiderable Seannachie, or anti- 
quarian, in order to be qualified for thofe 
purpofes. 

The Bards and Seannachies were not only 

" fuppofed," as Dr. Johnfon exprefles him- 

j felf, 



( 2 37 ) 

felf, " to preferve the local hiftory," but 
they actually did preferve it ; and they 
were not only " faid to have been retained 
by every great family," but they really 
were retained. The truth of this does not 
reft upon tradition alone. The charters 
of many great families bear witnefs con- 
cerning them ; and they are likewife men- 
tioned by many eminent writers. Both 
thefe, as being written authority, muft 
almoft perfuade the unbelieving Doctor 
himfelf to renounce his infidelity. 

Mr. Innes, who, in general, is no great 
friend to the Bards, tells us, that in the thir- 
teenth century, at the coronation of Alex- 
ander III., a Highland Bard pronounced 
an oration on the genealogy of the kings 
of Scotland. As this happened in the year 
1249, before the deftru&ion of fo many of 
our records by Edward I. of England, and 
in the prefence of the three eftates of the 

kingdom, 



kingdom, affembled on that occafion, we 
may naturally fuppofe the Bards and Sean- 
nachies of thofe times to have been pretty 
accurate in their accounts ; otherwife, it 
muft have been difficult to find one who 
would venture to undertake fuch a tafk. 
At fo public a folemnity there muft have 
been many prefent who could have con- 
tradicted him, if he erred in his narration ; 
and amidft the multitude of written tefti- 
monies then exifting, he was fure of being 
detected, fuppofing none of his auditors 
had been able to correct him. 

The fame author allows, in page 237, 
that this genealogy was one of the moft 
accurate performances of the kind which 
had ever exifted. 

The fame circumftance is mentioned by 
all Fordun's continuators, and 'likewife by 
Major. 

Ammianus 



( 2 S9 ) 

Ammlanus MarceHinus, book xv. page 
51, fays, " The Bards fung the remarkable 
atchievements of their heroes, in verfe, to 
the fweet melody of their harps." 

Vakfius* who pretends to write notes 
on this author, betrays a grofs ignorance 
of his meaning, as well as of the profeffion 
or employment of the Bards, when he fays, 
in page 93, " that the Bards were a fpecies 
of parafites or buffoons, who diverted the 
foldiers at their banquets with their jefts 
and mimical geftures." This is a moft 
falfe and ridiculous account of the matter, 
and entirely explains away the meaning of 
his author ; for Ammianus Marcellinus fays 
no fuch thing. Befides, it is well known 
that they had others who acted in the capa- 
city he mentions ; that is, jefters, who 
likewife conftituted a part of their domeftics, 
as well as the Bards. 



( 240 ) 

In page 258, the Dodor fays, " that an 
old gentleman told him, that he remem- 
bered one of each," namely, a Bard and 
a Seannachie. There was no occafion to 
make the gentleman very old to remember 
this much, as will foon be made appear. 
But Dr. Johnfon does not chufe to flop 
here ; for, in the very next page, he fets 
every evidence for the extftence of either 
Bards or Seannachies* beyond all memory 
whatever. His words are, " I was told 
by a gentleman, who is generally acknow- 
ledged the greateft m after of Hebridian 
antiquities, that there had been once both 
Bards and Senachies ; and that Senachi fig- 
nified the man of talk, or of converfation ; 
but that neither Bard nor Senachi had 
exifted for fome centuries." 

Here the teftimony of the old gentle- 
man, who faid that he had feen both a 
Bard and a Seannachie, is entirely fet 

afide, 



afide, by the contrary teftimony of another, 
gentleman, who, as Dr. Jobnfon fays, told 
him, that none of either had exifted for 
fome centuries. I am rather apt to fufpect 
the accuracy of the Doctor's reprefentation, 
concerning this latter gentleman. Almoft 
every man in the Highlands knows the 
contrary to be true ; and if any one told 
him what he afferts, we may doubt his 
title to the character of an antiquarian. 
But the Doctor, with his ufual caution, 
conceals his author's name ; which cer- 
tainly was prudent, as by this means the 
hazard of a perfonal refutation is avoided. 

It was well judged in the Doctor, how- 
ever, to make his gentleman fo great a 
mafter of Hebridian antiquities. By this 
policy he fecures a better title to be be- 
lieved ; and immediately after, he makes 
his own ufe of what he pretends to have 
received from fuch undoubted authority. 
" Whenever the practice of recitation was 
R difufed," 



difufed," fays he, tl the works, whether 
poetical or hiftorical, perifhed with the 
authors ; for in thofe times nothing had 
been written in the Earfe language." 

There has been occafion to obferve> 
oftener than once, that it was the great 
object of the Doctor's 'Journey, to find out 
fome pretence or other for denying the 
authenticity of the ancient compofitions in 
the Gaelic language ; and now that defign 
begins to unfold itfelf beyond a poflibility 
of doubt. To effect his purpofe, he takes 
a fhort but very ingenious method. He 
finds it only neceflary to fay, that no Bards 
have exifted for fome centuries; that, as 
nothing was then written in the Gaelic 
language, their works muft have perifhed 
with themfelves; and confequently, that 
every thing now attributed to them, by 
their modern countrymen, muft be falfe 
and fpurious. 



As the Do&or gives no authority for the 
fafts, from which he draws this inference, 
he might as well have remained at home, 
as he fays upon another occafion, and have 
fancied to himfelf all that he pretends to 
have heard on this fubjecl:. His bare word, 
without leaving Fleet-Jlreet> would have 
been juft as good as his bare word after 
returning from the Hebrides. A Journey, 
however, was undertaken ; though there 
is every reafon to believe, that it was not 
fo much with a view to obtain information, 
as to give a degree of fanction to what he 
had before .refolved to aflert. 

But though there had really been no 
Bards or Seannachies for fuch a length of 
time, and though the Gaelic had really 
been an unwritten language, there is no 
reafon for fuppofmg that all the ancient 
compofitions periftied immediately with 
their authors. I have already {hewn, that 
the pra&ice of recitation was not formerly 
R 2 confined 



( 244 ) 

confined to the Bards and Seannachies alone, 
and that it is not altogether difufed even 
in our own times. It muft therefore fol- 
low, that many of their works would ftill 
be preferved by this means only, even 
after the Bards and Seannachies, by pro- 
feflion, might ceafe to exift. 

There is no neceffity, however, for truft- 
ing to this argument alone. I may hereafter 
take an opportunity of fhewing, that the 
Gaelic has not always been an uncultivated 
language ; which will weaken one part of 
the foundation on which the Doctor builds. 
In the mean time, I fhall produce fome 
fads to evince, that the domeftic offices in 
queftion exifted much later than he is wil- 
ling to allow ; and that, I prefume, will 
go nigh to fap the remaining part of his 
fabric. 

It is not neceflary, nor will I pretend ex- 
actly to fay, when the office of Seannacbie, as 
s diftinO; 



diftind from that of Bard, fell into difufe. 
By this I mean only the Seannachie by 
profeilion ; for as to Seannachies from 
choice, and for the amufement of them- 
felves and friends, they have always exift- 
ed j and there are feveral, and thofe not 
contemptible ones, both of the better and 
lower fort of people, ftill living in the 
country. It will be enough to (hew, from 
well known facts, that the regular pro- 
feffion of Bard, who occafionally like wife 
officiated as Seannachie, has not been fo 
long out of fafhion. 

The Maceivens had free lands in Lorn 
in Argylefhire., for acting as Bards to the 
family of Argyle, to that of Breadalbane, 
and likewife to Sir John Macdougal of 
Dunolly, in 1 572. The two laft of the race 
were Airne and his fon Neil. 

I have now before me an Elegy upon 

the Death of Sir Duncan DOIV Campbel of 

R 3 Glenurchy, 



( 246 ) 

Glenurchy, compofed by Neil Macewen. 
The date, which is 1630, is in the body 
of the poem. How long he lived after 
this, I cannot take upon me to fay ; but as 
there is much of the hiftory and genealogy 
of the family interwoven with the per- 
formance, he muft certainly have been 
both Bard and Seannachie. 

John Macodrum in North Uift, who is 
{till alive, and not a very old man, had a 
yearly allowance from the late Sir James 
Macdonald of Slate, which, I believe, may 
be ftill continued, by the prefent Lord 
Macdonald. I have, in my pofleffion, 
many of his competitions, which are far 
from being deftitute of merit. 

I have likewife, in my hands, fome 
poems, compofed by one Bard Mathonach\ 
in one of which he acknowledges to have 
received gold from the earl of Seaforth, at 
parting on board the fhip that was to carry 

his 



his benefactor out of the kingdom, after 
the battle of Sheriffmuir, in the year 1715. 
Another of his poems is in praife of the 
late Lord Lovat, who made him a prefent 
of a gun. Whether he was retained in the 
official quality of Bard, by either of thofe 
noblemen, I cannot pretend to determine. 

Many of my readers know, that one of 
the moft remarkable Bards of modern 
times, was John Macdonald^ defcended of 
the family of Keppoch in Lochaber. He 
was commonly called John Lorn ; and 
fometimes John Mantach or Mabach, from 
an impediment in his fpeech. He com- 
pofed as many poems as would fill a pretty 
large volume. A great number of them 
are ftill extant, and many of them are in 
my pofleffion. Moft of his compofitions 
have great merit. 

He lived from the reign of Charles I. to 

the time of king William. But what may 

\* R 4 ftartle 



ftartle Dr. Johnfon not a little, Charles II. 
fettled a yearly penfion upon him, for 
officiating as his Bard. As many of his 
poems mention the chief tranfactions of 
the times, as wdl as the names of the 
princes, chiefs, and nobility, whofe at- 
chievements he fung, they carry their 
dates in their bofoms, and fix the aera in 
which they were compofed. He lived to 
an extreme old age, fo that there are ftill 
a few people of very advanced years who 
remember to have feen him. 

But to come more clofely to the point. 
I wifli the Doctor may preferve his 
temper and patience when I inform him, 
that Neil Macvuricb^ defcended of the 
famous race of Macvurichs, Bards and 
Seannachies to the Clanronald family, is 
ftill alive, and enjoys free lands from Allan 
Macdonald of Clanronald, as his Bard and 
Seannachie. This man writes the Celtic 
or Gaelic character, which was, taught him 

by 



( 249 ) 

by his predeceflbrs, but he imderftands ho 
other language or charader whatever. 

This piece of intelligence muft equally 
furprife and gall our traveller ; but, as the 
thing is true, there is no .help for it. 
There is no fad whatever more certain or 
better known ; and it could be attefted by 
the moft reputable people in that part of 
the kingdom, if the evidence of ct High- 
land narration," which the Dodor has fb 
often reprobated, could be admitted as fatiGr 
fadory. But what is ftill more, he might 
eafily, while in the country, have had the 
laft and beft proof of what is here aflerted, 
even ocular demonftration. He might 
have feen the Bard Macvurich, and others, 
with his own eyes ; and he might likewife 
have had the fame unerring teftimony for 
the exiftence of many manufcripts in the 
Gaelic language, for feveral centuries 
back. 

This 





This mode of information, however, the 
Doctor always avoided. It would not have 
anfwered the purpofe with which he had 
fet out. His plan was laid ; and he never 

, f 

wifhed to fee or hear any thing that could 
induce him to alter it. As, therefore, he 
was determined to write in the very man- 
ner he has done, he has this one claim to 
virtue at leaft, that he did not chufe to 
write againft conviction. 

Thefe inftances are but a few of many 
that might be given ; but, I flatter myfelf, 
they will prove fufficient to fatisfy the 
public, if not even Dr. *johnfon himfelf, 
that his Hebridian antiquarian, if fuch 
there was, has grofsly mifinformed him ; 
and confequently, that the \ngeniousjyllo- 
gifm, which he has formed upon that in- 
formation, however agreeable to mode and 
fgure, is not agreeable to truth. 

Unlefs 



Unlefs the Doctor would have every 
teftimony rejected but his own, I hope 
I have given reafons for believing, that 
there have been always regular Bards and 
Seannachies in the country, and that there 
are ftill fome of both ; that the practice 
of recitation has not yet ceafed, and that 
the Gaelic has not been an unwritten 
language ; and, of courfe, that the Doctor's 
conclufion, from the oppofite premifes^ does 
not neceflarily follow, namely, " That the 
works of the ancient Bards and Seanna- 
chies, whether poetical or hiftorical, perifh- 
ed with the authors^" 

In addition to what has been faid, I can 
allure the reader, that many poems of the 
Bards I have already mentioned, as well as 
of feveral others, are in my own pofleffion ; 
and that many other gentlemen, in dif- 
ferent parts of the Highlands, have like- 
wife large collections, among which there 
are productions of very old dates. Thefe 

are 



f 2 5 2 ) 

are always open to the infpedtion of curi- 
ofity, when a ftranger fignifies a defire to 
fee them ; and a confiderable number of 
them have been lately published, in a 
moderate volume, for the fatisfaction of 
fuch as may not have an opportunity of 
vifiting the country, and feeing the ori- 
ginals. 

In regard to our hiftorical works of any 
long ftanding, I have already mentioned, 
that they fuffered greatly by the ravages 
of Edward the Firft, and of Cromwell. 
The Doctor ftill continues to reproach us 
with the want of them, though he knows 
by what means there is fuch a deficiency 
in our national annals; and that the un- 
happy divifions among ourfelves, at thofe 
two periods, gave an eafy opportunity to 
thofe inveterate enemies to the antiquities 
of Scotland, to deftroy fome part of our 
records, and carry off another. 

As 
X 



( 2 53 ) 

As it now appears, that many of our 
Seannachies were alfo Bards, it may natu- 
rally be fuppofed, that much of our ancient 
hiftory was in verfe. The fame practice 
obtained in all other nations, in the early 
ages, and in the like circumftances. Ac- 
cordingly, many of our poems confift of 
defcriptions of battles, deaths of heroes, 
and concife narratives of other hiftorical 
facts. 

Page 260, he fays, " Whether the man 
of talk was a hiftorian, whofe office was 
to tell truth, or a ftory-teller, like thofe 
which were in the laft century, and per- 
haps are now among the Irljh^ whofe trade 
was only to amufe, it now would be vain 
to inquire." It would be far from vain 
to make this inquiry , were it neceflary; 
but the matter has been already cleared 
up. The cafe is fufficiently plain ; but 
the Do&or generally creates doubts where 

there 



there are none, and puzzles his reader with 
difficulties of his own making. 

In the fame page, he proceeds, " Pro- 
bably the laureat of a clan was always the 
fon of the laft laureat. The hiftory of the 
race could no otherwife be communicated, 
or retained ; but what genius could be 
expected in a poet by inheritance?" 
Though the Doctor fpeaks doubtfully of 
this fact, he concludes with a triumphant 
query^ in the fame confident manner as if 
he had proved it. 

I fhall grant him, indeed, that genius, any 
more than other endowments, cannot be 
expected to go by inheritance ; and I fhould 
as little think it neceflary for the fon of 
the laft laureat, as he 'wittily calls the 
Highland Bard, to be a poet, as for the 
fon of our pompous journaliu 1 to be a pedant. 
Sons may often poffefs qualities very oppo- 
fite to thofe of their fathers. A mere 
2 blockhead 



blockhead has fometimes, no doubt, been 
the fon of a very good Bard ; and there 
can be no reafon why the offspring of 
even a Dr. Johrifon, though without a title 
by inheritance, fhould not hereafter be 
diftinguifhed for truth, candour, good 
breeding, and other virtues. 

If the fon of the lail Bard had a genius 
equal to the office, there is no doubt, but 
among a friendly and generous people, it 
would be reckoned an aft of juftice to 
prefer him to another ; but if he was 
found deficient in that refpect, it is evident, 
from the practice of the country, that. he 
could not fucceed. There were regular 
fchools for the education of Bards, called, 
in the Gaelic language, Scoil Bhairdeachd, 
in which the youth, or candidates for the 
profeffion, underwent a long courfe of dif- 
cipline ; and, after all this preparation, 
fuch as were found incapable were always 
rejected. From this it would feem, that 

thofe 



thofe who had the fuperintendency of thofe 
fchools paid a ftriS regard to the judicious 
rule of the ancients nafcimur poetz. But 
more of this hereafter. 

In the fame page he ftill goes on. 
" The nation was wholly illiterate. Nei- 
ther Bards nor Seannachies could write or 
read." I wifh the Dodor had fixed the 
period to which he alludes ; but that, like 
all other points accompanied with a charge, 
he prudently leaves undetermined. But 
let him choofe what time he pleafes, it 
will be eafy to fhew the fallacy and un- 
principled prefumption of thefe afTertions. 

The early introduction of learning into 
Scotland is acknowledged by all the hiftories 
of Europe. In the firft ages of Chriftianity, 
for our traveller, I fuppofe, does not carry 
his obfervations back to the times of the 
Druids, our learning, no doubt, was chiefly 
confined to the priefthood. But what 

then ? 



( *SJ ) 

then ? Will the Doftor pretend to fay, that 
the cafe was then different in any other 
country ? If he will not, I fhould be glad 
to know wherein the force of his firft 
aflertion confifts. While we had priefts only, 
the nation could not be " wholly illiterate'* 
at any period of time* 

Many inftances have been already men- 
tioned to prove the progrefs of literature 
among us, before the univerfal gloom of 
Gothic defolation ; and the Doctor himfelf 
acknowledges, in page 56, that foon after 
its revival it found its way to Scotland. 
Where then will he fix the period for 
juftifying his prefent aflertion? If there is 
truth in hiftory, if there is truth in Dr. 
Johnfon himfelf* what he now fays muft 
appear to be unjuft ; and that the Scotch 
nation was not illiterate at any time, or 
in any fenfe of the word, while other 
nations could pretend to have been more 
enlightened. 

S Being 



Being thus driven from his poft, our 
author has no refuge but in ignorance or 
wilful mifreprefentation. To a man of 
the leaft dignity of mind, or fenfe of 
honour, either muft be intolerable. But 
let him take whfch ftation he pleafes, he 
will find himfelf difappointed in both. 
He forfeits every pretenfion to wifdom or 
to virtue j whether he prefers the weak 
fhelter of the fool, or the more obftinate 
retreat of the knave. 

It is always with reluctance I have re- 
courfe to any afperity of language ; but the 
infolence and injullice of Dr. Johnfon de- 
mand fome feverity. When a man dares 
to traduce a nation with fo much indecent 
freedom, it would bcfalfe delicacy, indeed, 
not to treat him, in his turn, with all that 
contempt that is confident with truth. 
Oppofed to a whole people, an individual 
finks into nothing ; and, if he forgets the 
fuperior refpect that is due to the many, he 
4 neceflarily 



neceflarily divefts himfelf of all title to 
complaifance. 

As to his next afTertion, that " neither 
Bards nor Seannachies could write or read," 
I would afk him what he means ? If it is 
that the ancient Bards and Seannachies 
could not write or read Englifh, I will not 
, difpute the point. That language was as 
foreign to the old Celtic or Scotch Bards 
and Seannachies, as it is to the French or 
Italian poets and hiftorians at this day. 
Will the Doctor call the latter igrk.ant, 
becaufe they neither write nor read the 
language of his country ? If he will not, 
the abfurdity of his infinuation againft the 
former is too evident to require an anfwer 
on that account. 

But as he told us before, and repeats it 
afterwards, that nothing had been written 
formerly in what he calls the Earfe, his 
meaning more probably is, that our Bards 
and Seannachies could neither write nor 
S 3 read 



( 260 ) 

read any language whatever. If this really 
be fo, the anfwer is fhort and eafy, and I 
will tell him, without any ceremony, that 
the allegation is falfe and untrue. 

As to the Doctor's Earfe, it has a filthy 
found, and I muft reject it, as never being a 
word of ours. It is only a barbarous term 
introduced by ftrangers, and feems to be a 
corruption of Iriftj. The Caledonians al- 
ways called their native language Gaelic ; 
and they never knew it by any other name. 

If we go back to fo early a period as the 
inftitution of the monafteries or abbacies of 
7, or lona, Oronfay, and Ardchattan, &c. it 
is not to be doubted, but the ufe of letters 
was known in thofe feminaries, as well as 
in other places of the like kind in Europe. 
Were there no pofitive proofs of the facl: 
now exifting, it would be abfurd to the laft 
degree to deny it. Our monks muft have 
underftood the learned languages ; and they 
muft likewife have wrote them. 

This 



This much being granted, or rather 
felf-evident, I can fee no reafon to prevent 
them from writing in their own language, 
more than the religious in all other coun- 
tries. The Gaelic was the language in 
which they ufually converfed ; it was that 
into which it behoved the learned ones to 
be tranflated ; and I well know it is the 
language by which my own leflbns or 
exercifes at fchool have been often ex- 
plained to me, before I had acquired Eng- 
lifh enough to underftand them otherwife. 
I (hall proceed, however, to more poiitive 
proofs. 

Of what has been written at lona, I have 
heard, in particular, of a tranflation of St. 
Auguftine De Civitate Dei^ and a Treatife 
in Phyfic, which is very old. The former 
was in the pofleflion of the late Mr. Archi- 
bald Lambie, minifter of Killmartine in 
Argylefhire; and the latter was preferved 
S 3 in 



( 262 ) 

in the Advocates library at Edinburgh, 
where, no doubt, it is (till to be feen. 

Two brothers of the name of Rtthune 
were famous for the profeflion of phyfic, 
in the iflands of I/lay and Mull\ and they 
were defigned, from the places of their 
refidence, * Olla Uich and Olla Mulich. 
They were both educated in Spain, and 
were well verfed in the Greek and Latin 
languages; but they did not underftand 
one word of Englifh. 

Olla Ilich lived in the reign of James 
VI., and held free lands of his Majefty, 
as one of his phyficians. He wrote a 
Treatife in Phyfic, in the Gaelic character, 
with quotations from Hippocrates. This 
riianufcript was feen at Edinburgh fome 
years ago, by a gentleman of my acquaint- 

* Olla fignifies a Doftor or Profeffor in any fcience, parti- 
cularly in phyfic. 

ance, 



ance, in the pofTeflion of Dr. William Mac- 
y now the laird of Macfarlane. 



One Dr. O'Connacbar of Lorn, in Ar- 
gylefhire, wrote all his prefcriptions in 
Gaelic ; and his MS. has been feen by 
many gentlemen ftill alive in that county. 

There are, at prefent, two very old 
manufcripts in the pofieflion of a gentle- 
man in Argylefhire. One of them con- 
tains the Adventures of Smerbie More, one 
of the predeceflbrs of the family of Argyle ; 
who, as appears from the genealogy of 
that family, lived in the fifth century. 
The Doctor, perhaps, will not be much 
pleafed to hear, that the other contains the 
Hiftory of Clanuifneacbain, or the fons of 

Ufnoch, a fragment in Fingal. 

i 

The fame gentleman is likewife poflefTed 
of * Profnachadh Catha Chlann D.omhnuill> 

* A fpeech to cheer up the Macdonalds, when beginning 
the battle. 

84 at 



at the battle of Harlaw in 1411, compofed 
by Lacblan More Macvurich, the Bard. 
This performance is in exact alphabetical 
order, like the Doctor's famous Dictionary. 
It contains four epithets upon every letter of 
the alphabet, beginning with the firft letter, 
and ending with the laft. Every epithet 
upon the fame letter begins with vhat 
letter ; which proves to a demonftration, 
that fome of the Bards, at leaft, were not 
unacquainted with letters in that age. 

In the body of the genealogy of the 
JAacvuricb Bards, this piece is mentioned, 
as the production of the abovenamed 
Lachlan More. Since I began thefe Re- 
jnarks, the poem has been publilhed by Mr. 
Macdonald in his collection) where it may 

be feen by the curious, 

A 

So far were the Bards from neglecting 
learning, that, as I have already obferved, 
they had poetical fchools (Scoil Rbair-r 

ckachd 



( =65 ) 

deachd) regularly eftablifhed at Invernefs, 
in Sky, and other places. In thefe they 
went through certain exercifes, or pieces 
of trials, which were prefcribed to them. 
Such as did not acquit themfelves to the 
fatisfaclion of the proper judges, were 
rejected, as unqualified for the office; and 
this often happened, after many years 
ftudy and preparation. 

Their fubjecT:, or thefis, was often pro- 
pofed to them without any previous warn- 
ing *. It was generally a fentence, though, 
fometimes, but a fingle word ; and, at 
other times, it was altogether unintelli- 
gible, like the Barbara, celarent, Darii, 
ferio, &c. in logic. Of this laft fort was 
the fubjecT: which James VI. gave to fome 

* Biftiop Leflie obferves, page 54, that illis (pueris) 
cxempla illullrium virorum, ad quorum fe imiuitionem fin- 
gerent, rythmi cujufdam et carminis concentu, ad volupiatem 
illjftrata proponcre. * 

poets, 



( 266 ) 

poets, as a trial of ikjll in their pro- 

feflion *. 

I can aflert from as good authority as 
Dr. Johnfon can pretend to, that, during 
even the later periods, fome of the Mac- 
vurich (or Macpherfon) race of Bards kept 
an academy in Sky, where they taught the 
Greek and Latin languages, as well as the 
Gaelic art of poetry. 

If any ingenuous fenfe yet remains with 
the Doctor, he muft necefiarily feel fore 
at this account of the Scotch Bards. Igno- 

* SUBJECT. 

Snamhaul an Lach is an Fhaoilin 
Da chois chapail chaoilin chorr. 

ANSWER. 

'D fhuaras Deoch a Laimh Rl Alba, 
A Cup Airgid agus Oir ; 
An Aite nach do fhaoil mi f hetin. 
'S da chois chapail chaoilin chorr f . 

f The poet who performed beft was to get one cup-full of wine from 
the king's own hand, and another cup-full of gold, as his reward. 

miny 



( 267 ) 

zniny and difappointment flare him, at 
once, in the face. His impudent aflertions 
are difproved, and his darling purpofe de- 
feated. He muft therefore be doubly 
ftung, if he is capable of fhame from 
falfehood, or of chagrin for the failure of 
his project. 

But this forgery of our traveller, in aflert- 
ing that the Bards were fo very illiterate, 
feems the more extraordinary, 'as he ac- 
knowledges, that there were regular fchools 
or colleges in Sky t and other places, for 
the education of pipers. His admitting 
this fact gives additional ftrength to what 
has been advanced concerning the acade- 
mies of the Bards ; as it is not very likely, 
that a people, who were fo attentive to an 
inferior art, ftiould neglect the cultivation 
of genius, for a more important profelfion. 

It muft be confeflfed, however, that the 

fchools of the Bards began to be confider- 

i ** 

ably 



( 268 ) 

ably upon the decline, within thefe laft 
two centuries, Whether their not meeting 
with the ufual encouragement was owing 
to their prefuming too much on their own 
importance, to the introduction of new 
cuftoms, or to their profeflion not appear- 
ing fo neceflary after the revival of letters, 
it is not material to inquire : nor need we 
be more furprifed, that the race of Bards 
is now almofl extinct, than that we hear 
no longer of the Harpers, Scialachies (tale- 
tellers), and Jefters of former times, or 
that even the bagpipe itfelf is approaching 
to the eve of its laft groans. Our great 
people, like thofe of other nations, have 
found out new modes of amufement and 
expence, which probably, in their turn, 
will foon give way to others. 

Upon the decay of their own ferninaries 
at home, the Bards went to Irijh fchools 
of the fame kind ; the confequence of 
which was, . that they contracted much of 

the 



the Irifh poetical ftyle, and a fondnefs for 
talking the Irifh dialed of the Celtic lan- 
guage. 

Many of our own countrymen, who 
were ignorant of this fact, have miftaken 
fome of the writings and compofitions of 
thofe Irifh-bred Bards, for real Irifh. A- 
mong the performances of this kind now 
extant, there are feveral which we would 
not hefitate to conclude to be true Irifh, if 
we had not the moft convincing proofs to 
the contrary. 

We have a ftriking inftance of this in 
the Elegy on Sir Duncan Dow Campbel, 
which has been mentioned above, and was 
compofed by the Bard Maceiven in 1630. 
This poem is, in many places, altogether 
unintelligible to moft Highlanders ; though 
other productions of a much earlier date, 
as being compofed in the Albion dialect of 
the Celtic, are perfectly underftood. In 

particular, 



( 270 ) 

particular, there is a MS. poem by Mac- 
leaned Bard, in praife of Colin earl of 
Argyle, in 1529, a complete century be- 
fore the Elegy, which is entirely free from 

the obfcurities to be found in that per- 



formance. But Maceiven was one of thofe 
Bards who refided fome time in Ireland. 
His poem is in the Gaelic character, and 
in his own hand-writing ; and it is ftill 
preferved, among the papers of the family 
of Breadalbane, at Taymouth. 

Befides adopting much of the poetical 
language of Ireland, the Bards who went 
to that country for education wrote many 
things in imitation of Irim pieces. This 
has given occafion to that people to claim, 
as their own, various compofitions, which 
were in reality the productions of Scotch 
Bards. 

Though I flatter myfelf, by this time, 
ihat.the arrogant afiertions of Dr. jQbnfon 

will 



will appear fufficiently refuted, and confe- 
quently, that the conclufions he fo confi- 
dently draws from them muft fall harmlefs 
to the ground ; yet I {hall fubjoin a few 
obfervations more, which feem to offer 
themfelves properly in this place. 

It will not be denied, I believe, that our 
religious focieties muft have been poflefTed 
of learning. That they were fo in an 
eminent degree, appears from their being 
in fo great requeft among other nations ; 
for that of lona, in particular, fent pro- 
feflbrs to Cologne, Luvaine, Paris, and 
other places. Is it therefore probable, 
that, while they were employed in in- 
ftructing foreigners, their own countrymen 
alone mould remain uninformed ? Such a 
fuppofition is too violent for common 
fenfe. 

As a proof that learning was much cul- 
tivated among us, all the abbots, priors, 

and 



( 2 7 2 ) 

and monks, of thofe feminaries, were real 
Highlanders. The Doctor might have 
been fatisfied of this, from obferving the 
names of Macphingon (Mackinnon) and 
Mackenzie, on the tomb-ftones of two of 
the abbots of lona ; and the name of Mac- 
dougall, prior of Ardchattan^ upon his 
tomb-ftone at that place. 

The fame obfervation will hold, with 
regard to our nunneries. In that of lona, 
one of the abbeiTes is defigned, upon her 
tomb, in the patronymic manner, accord- 
ing to the cuftom of the country. The 
inicription both in Latin and in Gaelic is, 
' Domina Anna Donaldi Terleti filia, 
Ann Ni mhic Dhonuill mhic Thearlaich. 
In Englifh, it means, Ann the daughter 
of Donald the fon of Charles. 

At Oronfay^ and other places, the cafe 
was exactly the fame. If therefore our 
religious feminaries, which were not a few, 

were 



were filled with natives of the country, 
the nation cannot in any juftice be faid to 
have been illiterate; though, contrary to 
all probability, literature had been confined 
to thofe focieties alone. We likewife find, 
that there were monumental infcriptions, 
in the Gaelic language, in very early pe- 
riods of time. I fee no reafon then, if the 
Highlanders could cut out their language 
upon marble or ftone, why the,y might not 
be able to write it upon parchment or 
paper. 

Among other things, I might add, that 
as many of our kings, with their whole 
courts, refided often in the Highlands, it 
is to be prefumed, whatever was known 
any where elfe, muft have been known 
there alfo. 

Before the time of King Malcolm Cean 

More^ as may be judged from his very 

name, no other language but the Gaelic 

T was 



was fpoken in Scotland. It was in compli- 
ment to Margaret, the queen of that mo- 
narch, and the eldeft fitter of Edgar, that 
the Englijh language was firft introduced 
even at court. This happened in 1068-9; 
and, from that asra, we may date, at lead 
in the fouthern parts of the kingdom, the 
gradual decline of the Celtic^ once the de- 
light of all the courts of Europe. 

It continued long, after this, to maintain 
its ground in the Highlands; but even 
there, at laft, it began to be neglected to 
fuch a degree, that, but for the uncommon 
beauties of its poetical compofidons, it would 
fcarcely have exifted, except amongft the 
vulgar alone. But, of late years, the 
better tafte of a few has directed the atten- 
tion of others to its fuperior excellence; 
and now again it begins, as it were, to 
recover new life. 

Nothing 



Nothing can more effectually illuftrate 
the copioufnefs and energy of the Gaelic 
language than this, that feveral of the 
poems, which have been lately published, 
and are now fo much admired by the 
learned, were the extempore effufions of 
fome men, who were not otherwife very 
learned themfelves. But if, as Dr. Jobnfon 
exprefTes himfelf, they were ftrangers to 
the " fplendors of ornamental erudition," 
they were equally fo to that conftraint, 
which is occafioned by the unnatural fetters 
of modern criticifm. Genius prevailed 
over art ; and they have found the power 
to pleafe, without any guide but nature. 

To what has been already faid on thefe 
heads, I mail now beg leave to add the ' 
authority of Bifhop Leflie ; which moft 
people, I prefume, will deem fully as good 
in this cafe, as that of our intelligent and 
candid traveller. In page 157, that learned 
prelate fays, " that Eugenius VII., in the 
T 2 year 



year 699, took care to have many learned 
men aflembled together from all parts of 
his dominions, and to be fupported at 
his expence, who were to record not only 
the tranfactions or exploits of the Scots, 
but likewife thofe of all other nations." 

It may appear from hence, that the Sean- 
nachies, or hiftorians of thofe early times, 
were not an illiterate fet of men, who could 
neither write nor read. When they be- 
came afterwards fo very ignorant as the 
Doctor fays, is incumbent upon him to 
point out ; and before he urges that igno- 
rance as a reproach, if he really can make 
it appear, he ought likewife to prove, that 
their fouthern neighbours, at leaft, were 
more knowing at the fame time. 

I fhall next borrow an argument from 
Dr. Johnfon's Journey, to confute himfelf. 
Through the whole courfe of this work, 
his own contradictions have ferved me in 

much 



(' 277 ) 

much ftead ; and I take this opportunity of 
acknowledging my obligations, as the 
prefent afliftance is none of the leaft con- 
fiderable. 

What he fays, in fpeaking of lona in 
particular, feems very inconfiftent with 
what he has fo lately advanced concerning 
the total ignorance of the country. As 
the paflage is remarkable, I mall tranfcribe 
it for the fake of thofe who may not be 
pofleffed of his book. 

" We were now," fays he, page 346, 
" treading that illuftrious ifland, which 
was once the luminary of the Caledonian 
regions, whence favage clans and xoving 
barbarians derived the benefits of know- 
ledge, and the bleffings of religion. To 
abftract the mind from all local emotion 
would be impoflible, if it were endeavour- 
ed, and would be fooliih, if it were poflible. 
Whatever draws us from the power of 
T 3 our 



( 278 ) 

our fenfes; whatever makes the paft, the 
diftant, or the future predominate over the 
prefent, advances us in the dignity of 
thinking beings. Far from me and from 
my friends be fuch frigid philofophy as 
may conduct us indifferent and unmoved 
over any ground which has been dignified 
by wifdom, bravery, or virtue ! That man 
is little to be envied, whofe patriotifm 
would not gain force upon the plain of 
Marathon^ or whofe piety would not grow 
warmer among the ruins of lona." 

In thefe tranfports of a not unlaudable 
enthufiafm, the celebrity of lona, as an 
ancient feat of learning, is very ftrongly 
imprefTed. That title to fame muft, in- 
deed, be allowed to be juft, which could 
extort fuch glowing ftrokes of eulogy 
from the pen of Dr. Johnfon ; whofe tefti- 
mony, when favourable to Scotland^ no 
one can have reafon to fufpeft. 

it 



( 279 ) 

It will naturally occur to every reader, 
that inftitutions of this fort, and lona was 
but one of many, cannot afford proofs of 
an ignorant, rude, or barbarous people. 
The Doctor, by way of eminence, calls 
this the luminary of the Caledonian regions ; 
and to {hew that he does not dignify it 
with that appellation in vain, he fays it 
was a fource of knowledge and religion to 
the inhabitants of the country. It is true, 
he talks, as ufual, of favage clans and 
roving barbarians. But as this may be 
the effedt of a habit, which he cannot eafily 
lay afide, and by which, perhaps, he means 
no great harm, I fhall take no further 
notice of it at prefent, than only to obferve, 
that fuch rough epithets do not feem to be 
very happily chofen for the difciples of his 
revered Iona\ a feminary, which he ex- 
tols fo much for its wifdom and virtue. 

Without wrangling about words, there- 
fore, it is enough for my purpofe, that he 
T 4 has 



has allowed the Highlanders to have derived 
knowledge from Iona\ and for his o*wn pur- 
pofe, I am afraid, that conceffion will rather 
be a little too much. He will find it no eafy 
matter to perfuade the public, that a nation 
can be " 'wholly illiterate" and inftrnfted 
in know/edge at the fame time. There is 
a manifcft repugnance between thefe two ; 
and they never can be reconciled, unlefs, 
contrary to the ufual interpretation of the 
word, it will appear, from the Doctor's 
Dictionary, that knowledge is but another 
term for ignorance. 

This inconfiftency in the Doctor's man- 
ner of writing, exceeds thofe marvellous 
variations in the different accounts of 
brogue-making, which ftaggered our con- 
fcientious traveller fo much, as to make 
him queftion the veracity of " Highland 
narration." The reader will be able to 
judge, by this time, to which of the parties 
fuch 2ijligma moft properly belongs. Should 

he 



he think of transferring it to the Dodor, 
I am only afraid he may create fome em- 
barraffment to himfelf. Having already 
feen fo many of his contradictions, he muft 
find him fo' branded all over, that he will 
hardly know where to ftamp a new mark 
of difgrace. 

I know not what degree of force the 
Doctor's patriotifm might gain upon the 
plain of Mafatbon ; but if we are to 
judge of his piety from his regard to 
truth, it feems not to have grown remark- 
ably r warm among the ruins of lona. Ac- 
cording to his own decifion, therefore, 
" he is a man little to be envied." 

Having, as he thinks, though without 
other proof than his bare aflertion, efta- 
blimed the non-exiftence of literature 
among us, he proceeds to apply that nega- 
tive do&rine to our genealogies. 

Page 



Page 261, he fays, " The recital of 
genealogies has never fubfifted within time 
of memory, nor was much credit due to 
fuch rehearfers, who might obtrude ficti- 
tious pedigrees, either to pleafe their 
matters, or to hide the deficiency of their 
own memories. Where the chiefs of the 
Highlands have found the hiftories of their 
defcent is difficult to tell ; for no Earfe 
genealogy was ever written," 

What our author means by what he calls 
" within time of memory " I am at a lofs to 
know. If he means the memory of man, 
in its enlarged fenfe, he evidently contra- 
dicts himfelf in the preceding part of the 
fame paragraph, where he fays, that fuch 
recitals were anciently made when the heir 
of the family came to manly age. If he 
means the memory of any man now living, 
that would be but a trifling confideration, 
had it not even been already proved that 
the practice ftill continues. 

Ai 



As to the rehearfers of genealogies ob- 
truding fictitious pedigrees on their matters, 
the Highlanders in general were too atten- 
tive to that branch of their antiquities, and 
too well verfed in what related to their 
own defcent and connections in the country, 
to admit eafily of fuch an impofition ; 
though there had been no other means of 
preventing it, than by rehearfal only. But 
it will immediately appear, that they had 
other fecurities for accuracy in that point. 

When the Doctor tells us that " no 
Earfe genealogy was ever written," he 
ought to have told us likewife upon what 
authority he founds fo peremptory an 
aflertion. Contrary to a fimilar falfehood 
of his, it has been already proved, that 
many other things had been written in the 
Gaelic language. It is not, therefore, 
likely, that a people fo tenacious of their 
anceftry fhould leave the hiftories of their 

defcent 



( 284 j 

defcent unrecorded. But to prefumptive, 
I mall add pofitive proof. 

I have juft now in my poflefiion very 
complete genealogical accounts of fix dif- 
ferent families, <ulz. that of the Royal 
Houfe of Stuart, the family of Argyk) 
Macdonald) Mac Ian of Glenco, Macneil 
of Barra, and the Bard Macvurich. They 
are all written in the Gaelic language and 
character ; and as a proof that they have 
fubfifted for a confiderable length of time, 
it may be proper to inform the Doctor, 
that the laft perfon mentioned in the fecond 
of thefe genealogies is Archibald earl of 
Argyle, who fucceeded his father in 1661. 

I could appeal to many others of very 
ancient dates ; but this much will be fuffi- 
cient as an anfwer to our traveller's equally 
mode/I and well-founded affertion, that " no 
Earfe genealogy was ever written." I 

5 fliall 



{hall not, therefore, trouble the public with 
a- catalogue, which appears unneceflary. 
There is enough to fatisfy the candid ; 
and nothing, I know, will convince the 
captious. But fhould any one be ftill dif- 
pofed to pay lefs regard to my private 
teftimony, than to that of Dr. Johufon y he 
may be completely fatisfied by applying, 
in any manner he pleafes, to the heads of 
the families I have mentioned, or to any 
gentleman or clergyman in the country at 
large. 

It will not, I hope, appear now fo very 
" difficult to tell, where the chiefs of the 
Highlands have found the hiftories of their 
defcent." But though nothing of this kind 
had been anciently written in Gaelic, a 
man of lefs penetration than the Doctor 
might eafily have conceived, that the gene- 
alogies of our great families would natu- 
rally be preferved by the fame means, to 

which 



( 286 ) 

which the families of other countries owe 
the knowledge of their anceftry ; that is, 
by charters of lands, contracts of marriage, 
and fuch other deeds of a public or private 
nature as were always recorded every 
where, and connected the chain of family 
fucceflion. 

Page 262. " Thus hopelefs," fays he, 
*' are all attempts to find any traces of 
Highland learning. Nor are their primi- 
tive cuftoms and ancient manner of life 
otherwife than very faintly and uncertainly 
remembered by the prefent race." 

After what has been advanced, thus hope* 
kfs too, I truft, are all his malignant and 
impotent attempts to deftroy either the 
reality or credit of Highland learning. 
The traces of it are not fo obfcure as not 
to have been eafily found, had fuch a 
refearch made any part of his bufmefs. 
But he never inquired about any monument 

of 



( 287 ) 

of our antiquities, among fuch as were the 
ableft to inform him. He dreaded to hear 
difagreeable truths from the better fort; and 
therefore he either made no inquiries at all, 
or contented himfelf with the intelligence 
of the vulgar. 

As to what he fays about the " primitive 
cuftoms and ancient manner of life," his 
obfervation is too vague and indefinite, in 
point of time, to admit of an anfwer, if it 
otherwife deferved one. Are the cuftoms 
and manners of remote times otherwife 
than very faintly and uncertainly remem- 
bered by the prefent race of Engliflj ? I 
believe it would puzzle the omnipotent 
genius of the Doctor himfelf, to give fatis- 
factory accounts of thofe matters at any 
period before the Norman conqueft of his 
country, or even for fome centuries after- 
wards. There is a folly in the fubjecl: of 
this remark which challenges our contempt 

more 



( 288 ) 

more than a ferious reply. If it proves 
any thing, it is the meannefs and malig- 
nity of the author's own mind ; for it 
fhews, that there is nothing either fo ab- 
furd or trivial but he lays hold of, to form 
a ground of calumny againft the Scotch. 

In the fame page, he fays, " To the 
fervants and dependents that were not 
domeftics (and if an eftimate be made from 
the capacity of any of their old houfes 
which I have feen, their domeftics could 
have been but few) were appropriated cer- 
tain portions of land for their fupport. 
Macdonald has a piece of ground yet, called 
the Bards or Senachies field." 

It is evident in this place, that the 
Doctor eftimates the number of the do- 
meftics by a very falfe rule. What now is 
to be feen of the old houfes is generally 
the principal part only, and fometimes but 
a portion even of that. Around the caftle, 

which 



Which was always referved for the chief's 
own family, and fome of their moft parti- 
cular friends, there were feveral fmaller 
buildings for the accommodation of fuch 
other branches of the clan as might occa- 
fionally happen to be there ; and on the 
outfide of all thefe, were the lodging-houfefc 
of the domeftics. 

The traces of thofe exterior buildings ate 
ftill vifible in many places ; particularly in 
the neighbourhood of Lochfinlagan, at 
Dunivaig in Jjla^ and at Ardtorinifh in 
Morvein. They were likewife, no doubt, 
to be feen where the Doctor pretends to 
have made his obfervations ; but he chofe 
to fupprefs that circumftance, that he 
might take occafion to diminifh the 
grandeur of our ancient chieftains, in the 
number of their domeftics ; which was 
certainly much greater than in the prefent 
times. 

U His 



His mentioning a piece of ground, be- 
longing to Macdonald, which is ftill called 
the Bard's or Seannachie's field, furnifhes 
an argument againft himfelf. He faid fome 
time ago, that neither Bard nor Seannachie 
had exifted for feveral centuries ; and he 
has faid lately, that primitive cufloms were 
but faintly and uncertainly remembered 
by the prefent race of Highlanders. Now, 
with all due fubmiflion to the Doclor, I 
muft beg leave to obferve, that, take it 
which way he will, the one of thefe afier- 
tions muft refute the other. If the former 
be true, the name of the field gives one clear 
inftance of their remembering a primitive 
cuftom ; but if the Doctor chufes to abide 
by the latter, it neceflarily brings the ex- 
iftence of Bards and Seannachies nearer to 
our own times, than he had formerly 
admitted. 

In page 267, Dr. Johnfon enters into a 
kind of difquifition concerning the Earfe, 

the 



the vulgar appellation of the Gaelic lan- 
guage. Though he acknowledges that " he 
understands nothing of it," he pronounces 
it, upon an authority worfe, I fuppofe, 
than that of his horfe-hirers, " the rude 
fpeech of a barbarous people." To per- 
fons as ignorant of the language, and as 
prejudiced as the Doctor appears to be, this 
bold aflertion may pafs for matter of fact. 
But thofe who know the Earfe or Gaelic 
critically, know that our traveller has as 
much mifreprefented our language as he 
has done our manners. 

I have a flight knowledge, at leaft, of 
fome ancient languages ; I underftand a 
few living tongues ; and I can aver for 
truth, before the world, that the Gaelic is 
as copious as the Greek, and not lefs fuit- 
able to poetry than the modern Italian. 
Things of foreign or of late invention, 
may not, probably, have obtained names 
in the Gaelic language; but every object 
U 2 of 



( 29* ) 

of nature, and every inftrument of the 
common and general arts, has many vocables 
to exprefs it ; fuch as fuit all the elegant 
variations that either the poet or orator 
may chufe to make. 

"to prove the copioufnefs of our tongue, 
it is fufficient to allure the public, that we 
have a poetical dialect, as well as one fuit- 
able to profe only, that the one never 
encroaches on the other ; and yet that both 
are perfectly underftood by the moft illite- 
rate, or, if the Doctor rather chufe the 
word, the moft unenlightened High- 
landers* 

The chief defect in the Gaelic tongue 
proceeds from that, which is reckoned the 
greateft beauty in other languages. It has 
too many vowels and diphthongs, which, 
though fuitable to poetry, renders the pro- 
nunciation lefs diftinct and marked than 
happens in lefs harmonious and confe- 

quently 



C 293 ) 

quently more barbarous tongues. Some 
ignorant writers of the Gaelic have of late, 
it is true, briftled over their competitions 
with too many confonants ; but thefe are 



generally quiefcent in the beginning and 
end of wprds, and are preferved only to 
mark the Etymon. 

" Of the Earfe language," fays he, " as 
I underftand nothing, I cannot fay more 
than I have been told. It is the rude 
fpeech of a barbarous people, who had few 
thoughts to exprefs, and were content, as 
they conceived grofsly, to be grofsly under- 
ftood." If the Doctor was ever told what 
he has here afl'erted, it mutt have been by 
fome perfon as ignorant of the language as 
he profefles himfelf to be, and confequently 
fuch authority can carry no weight. That 
a Highlander, who could be the only judge 
of the matter, fhould have pafled fo un- 
favourable a verdict on his own language 
and countrymen, as to call the one a rude 
U 3 fpeech, 



( 294 ) 

fpeech, and the other a barbarous peoples 
is improbable to the laft degree. We mud 
fuppofe, therefore, that our traveller was 
never told fo, or that his informer was an 
ignorant and prefumptuous blockhead. 

It will not eafily be believed, that the 
Gaelic, which was the language of the 
Celtic nations, can be fo very rude a fpeech 
as the Do&or reprefents it ; or that a 
powerful people, who extended their domi- 
nion over all the countries between Cape 
Finifterre and the mouth of the river Oby 9 
could be fo very barbarous, and have fa 
fc'w thoughts to exprefs, Conqueft gene- 
rally civilizes either the victors or the van- 
quifhed. It is of no confequence to in- 
quire, what were the manners of our Celtic 
anceftors before they left their native homes. 
One thing is evident, that, after mingling 
with other nations, there appears.no reafon 
why their Scotch defcendants mould be 
more barbarous' than their other tribes. 

8 In 



( 295 ) 

In every country the public as well as 
private bufmefs of a people muft be tranf- 
acled in their native language ; and that, 
by degrees, will improve it into elegance. I 
know of no inftance to the contrary, except 
in England after the Norman conqueftj 
where, for many centuries, the inhabitants 
were obliged to learn the language, and to 
be governed by the laws of their French in- 
vaders. Many of their legal forms and 
fhrafesy as well as of their national cuf- 
toms, are ftill French. In particular, the 
ceremony of pafling bills in parliament is 
the fame with that which was introduced 
by their foreign lords ; and the nightly 
toll of the curfeiv is an everlafting but 
mournful monument of Norman defpotifm 
and Englifti fubjugation, 

Thefe circumftances, no doubt, contri- 
buted greatly to retard the improvement 
of the Englifh language; and accordingly 
we find, that it was long thought, as Dr. 
U 4 Johnfon 



Johnfon expreffes it, but a " rude fpeech" 
pven by the natives themfelves ; for their 
beft authors, till of very late, wrote always 
in Latin. 

The Gaelic was formerly the general lan- 
guage of all Europe. In Scotland it was 
long the common language, not only of the 
whole country, but likewife of the court. 
All the pleadings in the courts of juftice, 
as well as in parliament, were anciently 
in Gaelic; and we have undoubted tefti- 
monies, that even fo very lately as in the 
parliament held at Ardchattan in Argyle- 
(hire, in the reign of the great Robert 
Bruce, it was the language in which all 
their debates were carried on. 

It cannot furely appear, from thefe ch> 
eumftances, that the Gaelic was formerly 
an uncultivated tongue. If it has not re- 
ceived much improvement of late years, I 
am certain it has loft little of what it had. 
It is ftill the language of a. large traft o,f 

country ; 



country ; and there are many who write it 
with elegance and correctnefs. 

This, I think, is as little an evidence of 
the Earfe or Gaelic being at prefent a 
*< rude fpcech" as the Doctor's frequent 
encomiums on individuals are proofs of a 
" Barbarous people" 

But as it was a cuftom with the Greek 
and Roman authors to call every thing 
rude and barbarous which did not belong 
to themfelves, our traveller, perhaps, may 
think himfelf entitled to take an equal li- 
berty with whatever is not Englijh. If the 
greateft admirers of the ancients, however, 
cannot altogether acquit them of illiberality 
in that mode of fpeaking, how fhall we be ' 
able to find an excufe for Dr. Johnfon in 
afpiring to the fame privilege ? The great 
inferiority of his pretenfions heightens the 
offence ; and what was only blameable in 

them, 



them, becomes in him a ridiculous and 
unpardonable prefumption. 

" After what has been lately talked/* 
continues he in the fame page, " of High- 
land Bards, and Highland genius, many 
will ftartle when they are told, that the 
Earfe never was a written language ; that 
there is not in the world an Earfe manu* 
fcript a hundred years old ; and that the 
founds of the Highlanders were never ex- 
prefied by letters, till fome little books of 
piety were tranflated, and a metrical ver- 
fion of the Pfalms was made by the fynod 
of Argyle" 

As we have nothing here but repetitions 
of former aflertions, the whole of this 
paflage might be difmifled, as having been 
refuted in other places. But I fhall add a 
few things more, in confirmation of what 
has been already faid. 



( 2 99 ) 

That not only poems of confiderable 
length, but likewife genealogies of fami- 
lies, and treatifes on different fubjects, 
Lave been anciently written in the Gaelic^ 
has been proved by a variety of inftances. 
Let me now produce an additional tefti- 
mony from Mr. Innes. In page 603 of 
fris Inquiry, he mentions a chronicle of a 
few of our kings, from Kenneth Macalpine 
to Kenneth the Third, fon to Malcolm the 
firft ; and he fays, that the original chro- 
nicle or hiftory, from which that piece was 
extracted, feems evidently to have been 
written in the Gaelic language, and that 
fome time too before the year 1291. He 
Jias preferved, in his Appendix, the Latin 
chronicle, which is a copy of the ori- 
ginal. 

Befides the manufcripts already taken 
notice of, I could mention many more, 
were it neceflary, in this place, to trouble 

the 



( 300 ) 

the reader with a longer lift; and other 
gentlemen are acquainted with a ftill greater 
number than has come within my know- 
ledge. Thofe that yet remain afford more 
than a prefumptive proof, that there once 
muft have been more. I have already 
pointed out the means, by which moft of 
them were either deftroyed or carried 
away ; and even of fuch as are preferved, 
many, no doubt, are little heard of, by 
having fallen into hands that are ignorant 
of their contents. 

From the many accidents, therefore, to 
which old manufcripts are liable, it would 
be an unfair way of reafoning to fay, that 
becaufe they are not always to be feen, or 
becaufe every one is not acquainted with 
them, they never had exifted ; and yet this 
is the very ground upon which Dr. John- 
fon proceeds. If the firft perfon he chanced 
to interrogate did not fay that he had feen 
the Gaelic original of this or that particular 

fubied, 



fubject, he inquired no further, but im- 
mediately fet it down as a fad, that no 
body elfe had ever feen it, and that no 
fuch manufcript had ever exifted. 

At other times when he met with more 
intelligent people, who offered to direct 
him to old manufcripts, he would not 
fuffer himfelf to be convinced that any 
fuch things exifted ; and if they continued 
to aflert the fact, he generally broke out 
into an unmannerly rage, declaring, with 
great vehemence, that if there were any 
manufcripts in the Highlands, they could 
not be Gaelic ', but muft certainly be Irijh* 

Thus does Dr. Johnfon attempt to dif- 
prove all traces of Highland learning, by 
a twofold kind of method ; by refting fatif- 
fied, in his inquiry, with the anfwers of 
the ignorant ; and rejecting the affiftance 
of fuch as were better able to inform him. 

His 



His fecond aflertion fays, " that there is 
not in the world an Earfe manufcript a 
hundred years old." This is fufficiently 
refuted by the dates I have already men- 
tioned, none of which are later than the 
year 1630; which of itfelf alone, were 
there none of a higher antiquity, is enough 
to put our author to filence, if not to 
ihame. 

Among the old MSS. of cOnfiderable 
length, I took notice particularly of two. 
One gives the hiftory of Smerbie More, one 
of the anceftors of the Duke of Argyle* 
who lived in the fifth century, according 
to a MS. genealogy of that illuftrious fa- 
mily ; and the other contains the hiftory 
of the fons of Ufnoth. They are both in 
the Gaelic language and character, and are 
fo very old as to be difficult to be read. 
They are in the pofTeffion of Mr. Macintyre 
of Glenoe, near Bunaw in Argylefliire. 

But 



( 303 ) 

But as the Doctor may think it too great 
a trouble to travel again to the Highlands 
for a fight of old manufcripts, I fhall put 
him upon a way of being fatisfied nearer 
home. If he will but call fome morning on 
John Mackenzie, Efq; of the Temple, Se- 
cretary to the Highland Society at the 
Shakefpeare, Covent-Garden, he will find 
in London more volumes in the Gaelic 
language and character than perhaps he 
will be pleafed to look at, after what he 
has faid. They are written on vellum 
in a very elegant manner; and they 
all bear very high marks of antiquity. 
None of them are of fo modern an origin 
as that mentioned by the Doctor. Some 
have been written more than five hundred 
years ago ; and others are fo very old, that 
their dates can only be guefled at, from 
the fubjecls of which they treat. 

Among 



( 34 ) 

Among thefe are two volumes which are 
very remarkable. The one is a large folio MS* 
called An Duanmreadb Ruadh^ or the Red 
rhymer p , which was given by Mr. Macdonald 
of Glenealladel in Muideart to Mr. Mac- 
donald of Kyles in Cnoideart^ who gave it 
to Mr. Macpherfon. It contains a variety 
of fubjects, fuch as fome of Ojfians Poems, 
Highland Tales, &c. The other is called 
An Leabhar Dearg> or the Red Book^ which 
was given to Mr. Macpherfon by the Bard 
Macvurich. This was reckoned one of 
the moft valuable MSS. in the Bard's po- 
feflion. 

Since I began thefe Remarks, I have 
been informed by Mr. Macdonald, the 
publifher of the Gaelic poetry, that his 
uncle, Mr. Lachlan Macdonald in South- 
Uiftt was well acquainted with the laft of 
thefe manufcripts ; and as that gentleman 

is 



is a great matter of the Gaelic language 
and character, his opinion concerning its 
antiquity, from the character and other 
circumftances, is the more to be relied 
upon. 

To finifh this head at prefent, let me 
next inform the Doctor, that the Bard 
Macvurich alone is in pofleflion of a greater 
number of Gaelic manufcripts than the 
Doctor perhaps would choofe to read in. 
any language. At the earned and repeated 
requeft of Mr. Macdonald^ the publisher 
juft mentioned, the Bard has been at laft 
prevailed upon to open his repofitories, 
and to permit a part of them to be carried 
to Edinburgh^ for the fatisfaction of the 
curious, and the conviction of the incredu- 
lous. I myfelf have feen more than a 
thoufand pages of what has been thus ob- 
tained, as have hundreds befides ; and Mr. 
Macdonald aflures me, that what he has 
X got 



C ?c6 ) 

got leave to carry away, bears but a very 
fmall proportion to what ftill remains with 
the Bard. 

It feems almoft unnecefTary to mention 
that all thofe manufcripts are in the Gaelic 
language and character. Some of them 
have fuffered greatly by bad keeping ; but 
many more by the ravages of time. The 
character of feveral is allowed by all, who 
have feen the manufcripts, to be the moft 
beautiful they had ever beheld. 

From all this, let the public judge of the 
truth of the Doctor's third aflertion in the 
laft cited paragraph, " That the founds of 
the Highlanders were never exprefTed by 
letters till fome little books of piety were 
tranflated, and a metrical verfion of the 
Pfalms was made by the fynod of Argyle? 

Had he made the proper inquiries, he 
would have found that Mr, Robert Kirk^ 

miniftei 



( 307 ) 

inimfter of Ealquidder in Perthfhire; had 
wrote a metrical verfion of the Pfalms prior 
W that of the fynod of Argyle. The fame 
gentleman likewife wrote a Gaelic Voca- 
bulary, which is mentioned, I think, in 
Lbuyd's Archaeologia Britannica ; and from 
which I have fome extracts. But long 
before all this, there was publifhed a Gaelic 
Treatife on Religion by Bifhop Carfwell 
of Argyle. 

More inftances might be given ; but 
thefe, or any one of them indeed, rouft as 
effectually deftroy the veracity of the 
Doctor's aflertiori, as if a hundred had 
been produced. 

Though it has already appeared that 
much has been written in the Gaelic^ and 
there has, no doubt, been much more than 
we are now able to difcover, I am ready 
to admit that an equal proportion has not 
been printed in that language, as in mod 
X 2 others. 



( 308 ) 

others. That, however, is eafily accounted 
for. Before publifhing in vernacular lan- 
guages was much ufed in Europe, the 
Royal Houfe of Scotland had fucceeded to 
the crown of England. That event natu- 
rally induced men either of ambition or 
genius to repair to the feat of government, 
and rendered a more general cultivation of 
the Englifh language neceflary. As there- 
fore every perfon of any note in the High- 
lands underftood the Englifli perfectly, 
there could be no great encouragement for 
many publications in another language, 
which the poorer fort only had occafion to 
purchafe. Befides, as I obferved before, 
it was thought at one time good policy to 
fupprefs the Gaelic* though afterwards it 
has appeared to be a very bad one. 

In the fame page, our author proceeds, 
" Whoever therefore now writes in this 
language, fpells according to his own per- 
ception 



( 309 ) 

ception of the founds, and his own idea of 
the power of the letters. The Welch and 
the Irijh are cultivated tongues. The 
Welch, two hundred years ago, infulted 
their Englifh neighbours for the inftability 
of their orthography ; while the Earfe 
merely floated in the breath of the people, 
and could therefore receive little improve- 
ment." 

Nothing can be more falfe than what is 
here faid of the uncertainty of Gaelic 
orthography. It has a regular and efta- 
blifhed ftandard, as is well known to many 
gentlemen of tafte, candour, and curiofity, 
who, though not natives of the Highlands, 
have been at much pains to become ac- 
quainted with our language. I (hall only 
appeal to two refpectable evidences, namely, 
General Sir Adolphus Ougbton and Sir 
James Foulis. Thefe gentlemen will give 
a very different account of the matter from 
X 3 that 



that which is exhibited by Dr. Johnfon\ 
and yet they cannot be fufpedted of any 
national partiality for the Gaelic, as Sir 
Adolf bus is an EnglifbnMn^ and Sir James 
a South-country Scot. 

This much, together with the proofs 
already given of fo many manufcripts, 
treatifes, and books in the Gaelic language, 
is fufficient to (hew what truth is in the 
Doctor's aflertion, that our language ha 
merely floated in the breath of the people. 
It would be unneceflary, therefore, to en- 
large upon this branch of his doctrine. 

In allowing the Welch and Irijh to be 
cultivated tongues, our author feems not 
aware that he is paying an indirect compli- 
ment to the Gaelic at the fame time. The 
Welch has ever been acknowledged to be a 
dialect of the Celtic or Gaelic; and Mr. 
) a learned and worthy "YVelchman, 
8 who 



who travelled over all the Highlands, fays, 
in a letter of his to Mr. Rowland, author 
of Mond Antiqua, and publifhed towards 
the end of that work, that " about two- 
thirds of the Scots Gaelic is the fame with 
the Welch." As to the Irijh, it is well 
known to every proper judge to have a ftill 
greater affinity to our language ; for the 
Albion and Irifh Gaelic differ not perhaps 
fo much from each other as any two dialects 
of the Greek. 

But without meaning to derogate from 
the Welch and Info languages, I fliould 
be glad to hear the Doclor explain in what 
particular fenfe he calls them cultivated 
tongues. If it is only becaufe they form 
the common fpeech of their refpective coun- 
tries, the Gaelic, in that refpeft, ftands. 
upon an equal footing. I have heard of 
no memorable hiftories, no fyftems of phi- 
Jofophy or politics, which have been pub- 
X 4 lifted 



. ( 

lifhed in either of thofe languages. There 
are Welch and Irifli tranflations of the 
Bible, and perhaps of fome other fmall 

A. > i 

tra&s, fuch as the Doctor calls " little 
books of piety;" and printing, I believe, 
has not yet been carried much further in 
any of them. As therefore the Gaelic en- 
joys all thefe advantages at leaft, it feems 
to have equal pretenfions to {lability. 

Page 269. " That the Bards could not 
read more than the reft of their country-* 
men, it is reafonable to fuppofe ; becaufe, 
if they had read, they could probably have 
written ; and how high their compofitions 
may reafonably be rated, an inquirer may 
beft judge by confidering what ftores of 
imagery, what principles of ratiocination, 
what comprehenfion of knowledge, and 
what delicacy of elocution he has known, 
man attain who cannot read," 



Here the Do&or feems determined to go 
to the root of the matter at once. It was 
neceflfary for his defign to make the Bards 
appear incapable of recording their own 
compofitions, by aflerting that they could 
neither read nor write ; but as that alone 
would do but half his bufmefs, he refolves 
to. go a little further. Among his readers 
there might be fome fancy folks, who 
jnight take upon them to doubt that the 
Bards could always be fo very illiterate, if 
tljere was any learning in the country. 
The leaft fufpicion of this kind would have 
marred the whole plot ; and therefore it 
became abfolutely indifpenfible, with the 
next dafh of his pen, to make the reft of 
their countrymen as ignorant as he had 
made the Bards themfelves. As this needs 
no further comment, I {hall leave the 
Doctor, with all the benefit he can derive 
from pleading the law ofneceffity, to receive 
the verdict of the public. 



( SH ) 

As it has fo often appeared that Bards 
could both read and write, the pompous 
jargon, which clofes the above quotation, 
cannot apply to them, and confequently 
is only fo much ink fpilt. But, though 
the inference deduced therefrom by no 
means affects the Bards, there is a fallacy 
in the reafoning, which deferves to be 
noticed. 

I am as ready to admit the general ad- 
vantages which refult from books, as our 
bwk-ccixpilmg journalift himfelf ; but I 
cannot agree with him in thinking, that 
the^exercife of the mental powers depends 
entirely upon their afliftance. True genius 
fprings from nature : it is her gift alone : 
it may be improved by reading, but never 
can be fupplied. Every age and country 
has furnifhed inftancec of men, who, by 
dint of natural talents alone, have acquired 
a diftinclion, which others could never at- 
tain 



( 315 ) 

tain with their loads of learned lumber. 
Even the wilds of America have produced 
orators ; and poets have flourifhed beneath 
arcYic ikies. In the harangues of the In~ 
dian t there have been difcovered " prin- 
ciples of ratiocination," and a " delicacy 
of elocution," that would not difgrace a 
Cicero ; and, iq the free effufions of the 
Scandinavian mufe, there are often '* ftores 
of imagery," which would equally enrich 
and adorn the moft laboured compofitions 
pf Dr. Johnfon. 

In the fame page, our traveller proceeds : 
' The Bard," fays he, " was a barbarian 
among barbarians, who, knowing nothing 
himfelf, lived with others that knew no 
more." To know but little is a misfor- 
tune ; but to know nothing is the full mea- 
fure of mifery complete. 

At what time the whole country was in 
this forlorn ftate of combined ignorance 

and 



and barbarity, is not very eafy to tell. If 
it was before the eftablifhment of lona, 
which he extols fo much for learning and 
virtue, the Doctor, I am afraid, fpeaks 
from conjecture ; for the period is fo very 
diftant, that he could afcertain but little of 
the true condition of our anceftors before 
that time. But if it was afterwards, let me 
afk him, what becomes now of thofe " be- 
nefits of knowledge," and thofe " bleflings 
of religion," which he allows the clans, in 
p. 346, to have derived from that luminary 
of the Caledonian regions ? That furely 
was an unprofitable knowledge, which left 
the people ignorant ; and that a feeble re- 
ligion, under which they flill remained 
barbarians, 

In page 270, he mentions an illiterate 
poet lately in the Iflands, who, among other 
things, had compofed a dialogue, of which 
he heard a part tranflated by a young lady 



in 



in Mull, and thought it had more meaning 
than he expected from a man totally un- 
educated. Though this is but a faint way 
of acknowledging the merits of the dia- 
logue, the anecdote furnifhes one ftrong 
objection to his late doctrine, concerning 
the total incapacity of men who could not 
read. He feems fenfible of this ; and, 
to evade the force of it, he endeavours to 
account for the fact by telling us, that this 
man " had fome opportunities of know- 
ledge ; be lived among a learned people." 

This, however, is only changing his 
object with removing the difficulty ; for, 
as through the whole of his Journey, 
contradiction follows the IXactor like a 
fhadow, in attempting to avoid one abfur- 
dity, he here falls plump inro another. 
To derogate from the native genius of one 
poor poet, he now makes the ivhole Ifland- 
ers a learned people ; though, at other times, 

to 



to give the greater weight to his own mif- 
reprefentations, he mentions them in a dif- 
ferent language. In particular, we cannot 
have forgot how he chara&erifes them in 
p. 256, 257. He there fays, they are an 
illiterate people; that they have neither 
fliame from ignorance, nor pride in know- 
ledge; neither curiofity to inquire, nor 
vanity to communicate. 

He next tells us, that there is an anti- 
pathy between our language and literature ; 
and that " no man that has learned only 
Earfe is, at this time, able to read." - 
This antipathy, I believe, exifts no where 
but in the Doctor's brain ; and it has 
been already fhewn, that many who had 
" learned only Earfe" have, at all times, 
been able both to read and write. Such 
people correfpond regularly in the Gaelic 
language. 

His 



( 3 J 9 ) 

His remarks upon the different dialects 
of the Gaelic feem hardly to merit notice. 
If that circumftance be a defect, it has 
been the fate of all languages, even the 
mofl polimed. The Greek had many dia- 
le&s ; and, I believe, there is not a pro- 
vince hi France \ or a county in England, 
at this day, that has not many words and 
modes of pronunciation which are not well 
underftood in others. The inconveniency, 
however, has the fame remedy in the Gaelic 
as in other languages ; there is a written 
diclion, which pervades all dialects, and is 
underftood in every ifland. 

In p. 271, he fays, " In an unwritten 
fpeech, nothing that is not very ihort is 
tranfmitted from one generation to another. 
Few have opportunities of hearing a long 
compofition often enough to learn it, or 
have inclination to repeat it fo often as is 

neceflary 



( 3*0 ) 

neceflary to retain it ; and what is once 
forgotten is loft for ever.'* 

Having already given fo many proofs 
that the Gaelic is not " an unwritten 
fpeech," I might fave myfelf the trouble of 
any particular remarks upon this paflage ; 
but as there is fomething fpecious in the 
argument, which might impofe upon un- 
wary readers, a few collateral obfervations 
may not be improper. 

Though nothing had ever been written 
in the Gaelic^ the manners and cuftoms of 
the Highlanders were peculiarly adapted 
for preferving the various productions in 
their language. The conftant practice of 
recitation, which is not yet altogether dif- 
ufed, gave them u opportunities of hear- 
ing a long compofition often enough to 
learn it ;" and their defire to amufe them- 

felves 



felves in the folitudes of hunting, or a 
paftoral life, as well as to bear their part 
in focial entertainments, gave them " in- 
clination to repeat it as often as was necef- 
fary to retain it." 

In this manner did the inhabitants of 

. 

every village and valley fupply to them- 

felves the want of the more fafhionable 



amufements of towns and cities, and wear 
off the winter evenings alternately in each 
other's, houfes ; and in this manner have 
many things, " not very fhort,'* partly 
written and partly not written, been " tranf- 
mitted from one generation to another." 

By thefe means, there was no great 
danger of any thing being fo far forgotten 
as to be " loft for ever ;" for if any one 
perfon mould forget a particular part, there 
were always tboufands who remembered 
the whole. Befides, in poetical compofi- 
Y tions, 



( 322 ) 

tions, it is well known that the memory is 
greatly afllfted by the cadence and rhyme ; 
and as to fuch pieces of any length as we 
have in profe, they are the more eafily re- 
tained, as they generally confift of a va- 
riety of epifodes, depending on each other, 
and highly adapted to captivate the fancy. 

Among the latter kind are our Tales, 
which are, for the moft part, of confiderable 
length, and bear a great refemblance to the 
Arabian Nights Entertainments. One of 
thofe, in particular, is long enough to fur- 
nifh fubjecT: of amufement for feveral nights 
running. It is called Sctalachd Choife Ce, 
or Cian O Cathan's Tale; and though 
ScialachieS) or tellers of tales by profeflion, 
are not now retained by our great families, 
as formerly, there are many flill living, 
who can repeat it from end to end, very 
accurately. 

This 



This cannot appear improbable to thofe 
who confider, how much the memory is 
ftrengthened and improved by frequent 
ufe. When duly and conftantly exercifed, 
it is capable of furprifing exertions ; and 
we have fometimes read of inftances, which 
amount even to prodigies. 

I myfelf once knew a man, who, I am 
certain, could repeat no lefs than 15,000 
lines ; and there is now living one poet 
Macintyre, who can repeat feveral thou- 
fands. This man is altogether illiterate, 
though not a defpicable poet. Befides re- 
membering many of the compofitions of 
others, and likewife of his own not yet 
publifhed, he lately dictated, from me- 
mory, as many fongs, compofed by him- 
felf, as fill a fmall volume of 162 pages, 
and amount to upwards of 4000 lines. 

There is no doubt, but, in ages when 

the Highlanders had fewer avocations than, 

Y 2 at 



at prefent, there have been inftances of 
memory among them as far fuperior to 
thofe now mentioned, a& they are to that 
of Dr. Johnfon ; whofe weaknefs of reten- 
tion feems to be fo great, that he often 
forgets in the next page what he has ad- 
vanced in the preceding. 

But, if more feems necefTary, I muft 
requeft the Dodor to call to mind what 
was faid in anfwer to his attack upon the 
Poems of Offian, by W. Cambmifis, in the 
St. James's Chronicle of the 23d of March, 
I 77S- " I prefume," fays that gentle- 
man, " the Dodor muft remember boys at 
fchool, who would repeat one or all the 
Eclogues, or a Georgic of Virgil. I can 
with truth aver, and what many will af- 
firm, that there are feveral perfons in Wales, 
who can repeat the tranfaftions (however 
fabulous) of Arthur and his mil-ivyr, i. e. 
his thoufand heroes, which are as long as 

the 



the Poems of Offian." A little after, he 
adds, " We have ftill extant in the fame 
manner, i. e. handed down by tradition, 
fome of the poems of laliefyn pen Byrdd, 
i. e. the Chief of Bards, or Poets, in the 
Welch language, and they not inferior to 
modern poetry of high eflimation. Taliefyn 
flourished in the year 500." 

The practice of committing much to 
memory feems to be very old, and pro- 
bably was borrowed from the Druids, 
who, as we are affured by authors of credit, 
were obliged to get 20,000 lines by heart, 
before they were judged fit to exercife their 
office ; for it was an eftablifhed maxim 
among them, never to commit any of their 
religious tenets to writing. I hope the 
Doctor will not confider it as an affront, 
that I have taken the liberty to mention an 
hiftorical fact, which a man of his profound 
erudition might be fuppofed to know. 

Y 3 In 



( 3*6 ). 

In the fame page, he goes on : '< I be- 
lieve, there cannot be recovered, in the 
whole Earfe language, five hundred lines, 
of which there is any evidence to prove * 
them a hundred years old. Yet I hear 
that the father of Oflian boafts of two 
chefts more of ancient poetry, which he 
fupprefles, becaufe they are too good for 
the Englifh." 

I fhall make no other anfwer {o the firft 
part of this paflage, than by referring the 
reader to the numerous manufcripts, vo- 
lumes, and dates, which have been already 
mentioned. As to the anecdote relative to 
Mr. Macpherfon, whom our traveller far- 
caftically terms the Father of Oflian, I am 
glad to have it in my power to expofe its 
falfehood, by the moft direct and unequi- 
vocal proof. 

Though I had found fo many reafons to 
doubt the credit of Dr. Johnfon's bare af- 

fertion, 



( 327 ) 

fertion, and though the general character 
of the gentleman he accufes, rendered it 
highly improbable that he could have ex- 
prefled himfelf in terms fo inconfiftent with 
moderation, if not with prudence and good 
fenfe, yet I was defirous, in a point fo very 
delicate, to have fomething pofitive to pro- 
duce. As I had not the pleafure of Mr. 
Macpherfon's acquaintance, I requefted the 
favour of one of his friends, to whom I 
am known, to defire him to give a true 
flate of the matter. He was obliging 
enough to comply ; and Mr. Macpherfon's 
anfwer was nearly in thefe words : 

" Dr. Johnfon has either been deceived 
himfelf, or he wittingly deceives others. 
That I might have faid in company, that 
there ftill remained many poems in my 
hands untranjlated, is not improbable, as 
the fact is true ; but that I fhould have 
accompanied that aflertion with a farcafm 
Y 4 on 



( 338 ) 

on the English nation, is Impqfftble ; as I 
have all along mod thoroughly defpifed 
and detefted thofe narrow principles, which 
fuggeft national reflections to illiberal minds. 
I have lived in England long ; I have met 
with public favour ; I have experienced 
private friendship; and, I truft, I {hall not, 
like fome others, fpeak difrefpeclfally of 
the bulk of a nation, by whom, as indivi- 
duals, I have been uniformly treated with 
civility, and from whom I have often re- 
ceived favours. As I never courted the 
friendship, nor was ambitious of the com- 
pany, of Dr. johnfon, he cann'ot authen- 
ticate the afiertibn, from his own know- 
ledge ; and if lie received the anecdote 
from others, they either flattered his pre- 
judices, or impofed upon his weaknefs." 

Page 272, he gives fuch an account of 
Highland narration, as plainly difcovers 
what fort of people he interrogated. In 

one 






one place, he fays, " The inhabitants' 
knowing the ignorance of all ftrangers in 
their language and antiquities, perhaps are 
not very fcrupulous adherents to truth.'* 
Soon after, he adds, " They have inquired 
and confidered little, and do not always 
feel their own ignorance. They are not 
much accuftorned to be interrogated by 
others, and feem never to have thought 

upon interrogating themfelves," 

. 






After what we have heard the Doctor 
fay before, in favour of the clergy and 
better fort of people, it is evident he can 
here mean only the vulgar. What, then, 
are we to think of a man who could be 
weak enough to expecl: accurate intelligence 
from that clafs of the inhabitants, and af- 
terwards be fo very difingenuous as to 
characterife the whole country from their 
meafure of knowledge ? Their anfwers, I 
allow, could not always be fatisfq,ctory 
3 and 



( 330 ) 

and juft 5 but yet, though fuch poor people 
could have little elfe than the received 
traditions of the country to affift them, it 
is fimply impoflible they fhould always 
be in the wrong. It was when their 
anfwers came neareft to the truth, that 
they were moft offenfive to Dr. Jobnfon. 
A genuine account of the facts did not 
fuit his purpofe, and therefore it became 
neceflary to difparage the teftimony he 
received. To effect this, a double charge 
of ignorance and deceit, in the inhabitants, 
is made ufe of, though any one of them 
would have been fufficient. But it has 
been all along the peculiar misfortune of 
our traveller to overact his part; fo that 
by endeavouring to be too fecure, he has 
often defeated his own views, 

To corroborate the above remarks, the 

Doctor calls in the teftimony of his friend 

and fellow-traveller. " Mr. Bofwell," 

8 continues 



C 33' ) 

continues he, " was very diligent in his 
inquiries ; and the refult of his inveftiga- 
tions was, that the anfwer to the fecond 
queftion was commonly fuch as nullified 
the anfwer to the firft." 

Though Mr. James Bofwell was the 
fdus Achates of our " Peregrinator," his 
attendance and fervices are feldom " com- 
memorated" in the work now under con- 
fideration. The laft time he was men- 
tioned, we found him employed in the 
notable exploit of " catching a cuddy ;" 
now he is brought in by the head and 
fhoulders, as an evidence againft High- 
land narration. This fullen filence of our 
author, relative to his friend, is but a 
fcurvy kind of behaviour towards a man, 
who evidently wiftied, that his jolly-boat 
might be carried down in tow, along the 
tide of time, by this frjl-rate man of 
letters. 

Y 6 Mr. 



( 332 ) 

Mr. Bofwell, it feems, has made feveral 
attempts to place his own ftatue in one of 
the niches in the temple of Fame. HQ 
Joo, like our traveller, wrote tc a Journey.''. 
In a violent epifode in his work, he has 
introduced his learned friend in the cha- 
racter of a legiflator among the wilds of 
Corjica. There is more of ridicule> than 
of applaufe, in making a man, who has 
not the leaft command over his own paf- 
fions, " the fabricator of a fyftem of polity 
to an infant flate." But I dare fay, that 
Mr. Bofwell was ferious ; and that whaj: 
fome might confider as an injudicious piece 
of adulation, was actually the refult of a 
fixed admiration of the talents of his lite-* 
rary friend. 

The return made by this literary friend 
is more fuitable to his own malevolence, 
than to his gratitude to Mr. Bofwell. That 
gentleman's polite acquiefcence, he has 
moft probably perverted, in this place, to 
proof of a fadt, which he was refolved, 

at 



( 333 ) 

ai all events, to eftablifh. Mr. Bofwell, i| 
is well known, is as abfolute a ftranger tQ 
what Doctor Johnfon calls the Earfe lan- 
guage, as the Doctor himfelf j and, con-* 
fequently, the latter might as well have 
taken his own opinion upon the fubject, 
as to have called in the aid of his fellow- 
traveller's teftimony. 

There is, however, a degree of judg* 
ment, though none of candour, in the 
Doctor's conduct upon this occafion. The 
fuppofed teftimony of a native, who muft 
have had a natural attachment to his own 
country, could not fail to ftrengthen the 
probability of facts, tending to throw dif- 
credit on Scotland. In this light, even the 
acquiefcence of Mr. Bofwell was blameable; 
as he might have perceived the drift of the 
Doctor's query. Good-nature may be 
fometimes carried to an extreme that is 
culpable. To this weak, though amiable 
virtue, we are willing to afcribe Mr. Bof- 
well's conduct ; and not to a defire of fa- 
Y 7 crificing 



( 334 ) 

orificing every thing to the prejudices of a 
literary Moloch, whom he feems to have 
too much worfhipped. 

Page 273. " We were si while told," 
fays the Doctor, * { that they had an old 
tranflation of the Scriptures ; and told it 
till it would appear obfttnacy to inquire 
again. Yet by continued accumulation of 
queftions we found, that the tranflation 
meant, if any meaning there were, was 
nothing elfe than the Irlfh Bible." 

When the Doctor acknowledges that he 
was fo repeatedly told of an old tranflation 
of the Scriptures in the Gaelic language, 
and at the fame time avows his own obfti- 
nacy in disbelieving the fact, he gives a 
ftriking proof how difficult it was to con- 
vince him of any thing in favour of the 
country. A ftubborn incredulity in fuch 
circumftances, and a refolution not to be 
perfuaded, is one and tfye fame thing. If 
6 he 






he was to reject all teftimony, I would 
beg leave to afk him, in what manner he 
could propofe to be fatisfied ? He could not 
furely be abfurd enough to imagine, that 
every perfon, who mentioned the exiftence 
of fuch a manufcript tranflation, fhould be 
able to prove his aflertion, by producing a 
copy. It was a work of too great length and 
labour to be looked for in private hands. 

That there was fuch a tranflation, is 
beyond all doubt. It was lately in the 
library of Archibald Duke of Argyle ; and 
it is ftill> no doubt, in the pofleffion of 
his fucceflbrs. It was never printed, for 
reafons already obferved. Before the two 
kingdoms fell under the fway of one fove- 
reign, there was little printed any where 
in vernacular tongues. After that period, 
a kind of policy was adopted, though fince 
found to be a bad one, for refufing any 
public encouragement to the Gaelic lan- 

guage, 



( 336 ) 

guage^that the lower fort of people in the 
Highlands might be under a neceffity of 
learning the Englifh. The intention was,, 
to abolifh the chief national diftindtion 
between the inhabitants of both kingdoms, 
and affimilate them more to each other, by 
an uniformity of fpeech. This, for a long 
time, prevented any publication of confe- 
quence from appearing in our language. 
But the error has been at length difcovered ; 
and now the Gaelic, by degrees, has begun 
to find employment for the prefs. 

With regard to the other portions of 
Scripture, I fhall refer the Dodor to Mr. 
Pennant's Tour in 1769. In page 134 of 
the Appendix 3 he will find, that " Gilbert 
Murray archdeacon, afterwards bifhop of 
Murray, tranflated the Pfalms and Gofpels 
into the Irifh language and Scots Gaelic, 
in the I2th century." He may here 
obferve, that the Irifh language and the 

Scots 



( 337 ) 

Scots Gaelic are ufed as fynonymous 
terms. This, I have already taken notice, 
is a very improper way of fpeaking ; but 
as it has been fometimes a practice, on 
account of the very inconfiderable differ- 
ence between thefe two dialects of the 
ancient Celtic, to exprefs the one by the 
other, it is fufficient to deftroy the effect 
intended by our traveller, from the autho- 
rity of Martin, in the following paflage. 

" We heard," he goes on, " of manu- 
fcripts that were, or that had been in the 
hands of fomebody's father, or grand- 
father ; but at laft we had no reafon to 
believe they were other than Irifh. Martin 
mentions Irim, but never any Earfe manu- 
fcripts, to be found in the iflands in his 



time." 



The Doctor repeats the fame thing fo 

often, that, in following him through the 

progrefs of his Journey, I find myfelf like- 

Z wife 



wife led into tautologies, for which I muft 
beg the reader's indulgence. 

Had he inquired of the proper people, 
he wouM not have heard fuch a vague 
account of manufcripts, as that they only 
" were, or had been in the hands of fome- 
body's father, or grandfather." He would 
have met with gentlemen, who could have 
{hewn him there were manufcripts in their 
own hands ; and that they had been tranf- 
mitted in their families, through the hands 
of a long feries of forefathers. But the 
laugh, which the Doctor means to excite, 
by this mode of expreflion, is loft in the 
improbability of the fat which he relates. 
We behold, therefore, the harmlefs but 
pitiful trick of an old man, who hopes, but 
without effect, to cheat his reader into the 
belief of a fiction, by an attempt to put 
him firft in good humour. 

Though 



( 339 ) 

Though the manufcripts I have already 
mentioned are fufficient to eftablifh the 
antiquity, as well as the great diverfity of 
writing in the Gaelic language, I {hall 
here add a few obfervations more ; and 
hope it will be the laft time I fhall have 
occafion to refume any difcuffion on the 
fame fubjeft. 

There are ftill many other manufcripts 
in the Highlands, both in verfe and profe, 
which are of great antiquity, and of which 
I fhall take notice only of a few. 

Among the former, in particular are, 
a poem called Coachac na Srona, and the 
Aged Bard's Wifh^ both of which have 
been lately publifhed. Thefe, with a 
variety of others, feem to go as far back 
as the ages of hunting; for they contain 
not the fmalleft allufion to agriculture, or 
any of the modern arts of life. Among 
other circumftances of a very ancient 
Z 2 nature, 



( 34 ) 

nature, fome of them make frequent men- 
tion of a fpecies of deer, which has been 
extinct in the Highlands for fome cen- 
turies; and of which we know nothing 
now but from thefe poems, and from their 
huge heads and horns, which are often 
dug up in our bogs and mofles. Many 
will underftand, that the creature I mean 
is the Lon ; which was probably a fpecies 
of the elk or moofe deer. 

But to relieve our peregrinator, at once, 
from his " ivild-goofe chace" after manu- 
fcriptS). of which he could only learn that 
they formerly had been in fomebody'& 
hands, I will refer him to two gentlemen, 
who will give him a more pofitive inform- 
anon. Dr. Alexander Campbel in Argyle- 
fhire will, among other things, make him 
acquainted with a very old MS. in Gaelic 
character, which makes a large volume of 
a quarto fiz,e ; and which, with a variety 

of 



cf other fubjects, gives a particular account 
of the feuds which had formerly fubfifted 
between the families of Fion (or Fingal) 
and Gaul.- 

Dr. Camplel is 5 in every other view, a 
very refpectable character ; and his great 
age, being now upwards of eighty years, 
has enabled him, in particular, to acquire a 
very extenfive knowledge of the antiquities 
of his country. He was told by his father, 
the celebrated Mr. Colin Campbel minifter 
of Ardchattan, a man eminent for learn- 
ing in general, and for mathematical and 
antiquarian knowledge in particular, that 
the greateft part of the books of value 
belonging to lona, in the latter centuries, 
were carried to Doivay in French Flanders ; 
where the Scots had a feminary, which 
flill. continues. Here the curious will, no 
doubt, find fomething worth the trouble 
of inquiry. 

The 



( 342 ) 

The other gentleman I intend to men* 
tion, and who, after the many teftimonies 
already produced, fhall be the laft autho- 
rity I will advance on the fubjecT: of Gaelic 
manufcripts, is Mr. Maclachla n of Kilbride, 
He has been efteemed, and very defervedly, 
one of the greateft antiquarians, of his 
time, in the Highlands ; and our traveller 
will find in his family a variety of Gaelic 
manufcripts and fragments, which have 
been tranfmitted, from father to fon, for 
many generations. 

As for the antiquity of learning and 
writing in general, in Scotland, it is uni- 
verfally acknowledged by all nations ; and 
notwithstanding the many misfortunes 
which have befallen the works of our 
learned men, there ftill remain convincing 
proofs, that we had our full proportion of 
them in former times. I fhall but (lightly 
touch upon a few particulars. 

The 



( 343 ) 

The Doctor will ftartle, perhaps, when 
he is told, that Gildas was born at Dun- 
barton, which is {till the capital of a High- 
land county. Cumineus and Adamnanus 
were abbots of lona ; and befides the Life 
of St. Columba, they wrote other hiftorical 
treatifes. They fiourifhed above eleven 
hundred years ago ; and their writings that 
remain are fuftained as genuine by all the 
learned in Europe. They wrote before 
the Saxon hiftorian Beds. Gould we re- 
cover more of what has been anciently 
written at lona, there is good authority 
for believing, that we (hould find the lives, 
deaths, and chief actions of their kings, 
who, before the union of the Scottifh and 
Piclifh kingdoms, ufed to be crowned and 
buried there, recorded by thofe and other 
religionijls of that renowned feminary. 

An author of the I2th century men- 
tions Scots records, as then reckoned an- 
7* 4 cient. 



i ( 344 ) 

cient. He was cotemporary with Andrew 
bifliop of Caithnefs) who died in 1185, 
and is quoted by Camden. This writer, 
in a defcription of Albany , the ancient 
name of Scotland, fpeaks of our hiftories 
to this effect. " We read," fays he, " in 
the hiftories and chronicles of the ancient 
Britons, and in the ancient achievements 
and annals of the Scots and Picts, &c." 
This, I prefume, will fatisfy the moft fcru- 
pulous, that writings, which could be called 
ancient by an author of the I2th age, muft 
have been of no fhort ftanding. 

In the laft cited page, " I fuppofe," fays 
our traveller, " my opinion of the Poems 
of Offian is already difcovered." Indeed ! 
There is no need, furely, for a very 
uncommon degree of penetration to make 
this difcovery. The cloven foot has ap- 
peared long ago ; and a man muft be very 
d'ul!, who could not perceive which way 

it 



( 345 ), 

it pointed. To render the authenticity of 
thofe poems fufpicious, was the great 
object of his Journey ; and to facilitate 
the execution of that project has he 
tolled fo much before-hand in difcrediting 
Highland learning and narration. How 
far he has fucceeded in the preparatory 
part, the public will judge from what 
has gone before ; with what effect he now 
makes a more direct attack upon the poems 
themfelves, will appear from what follows,, 

I mail only premife, that I will not 
here, as on other occafions, quote the par- 
ticular objections of our traveller, and 
anfwer them one by one ; but continue the 
thread of obfervation, without any inter- 
ruption, and with as little perfonal appli- 
cation as poffible. The malignity of a 
few others, the prejudices of fevcral, and 
the weaknefs of many have fuggefted fimi- 
lar objections to the authenticity of OJunf.* 

Poems, 



( 34* ) 

Poems, which have lately come to my 
hands. I fhall therefore endeavour to 
obviate the whole upon the fame general 
ground. 

The concurrent tefUmony of a whole 
people, and the evidence of many refpect- 
able individuals, laid before the public by 
that elegant writer and refpectable clergyr 
man, Dr. Blair, have been found incapable, 
it feems, to fatisfy the minds of men, who 
are unwilling to give credit to any thing 
calculated to reflect honour on the anceftors 
of the Scotch nation. To perfuade fuch 
men of the truth of any fact, which they 
are refolved not to believe, is beyond my 
with, as well as my expectation. But as 
many candid and well-meaning perfons 
have been feduced into an error, by the 
bold a (Tertian 8 of the prejudiced and incre- 
dulous, I fhall examine, in a fuccinct 
manner, the objections on which they 

found their want of faith. 

8 Some 



( 347 ) 

Some derive an objection to the authen- 
ticity of OJJians Poems, from an alleged 
fupercilioufnefs in Mr. Macpherfon^ in re- 
fufing fatisfaction, on that head, to every 
writer, with or without a name, who 
choofes to demand that fatisfadion, at the 
bar of the public. Though I am told that 
fupercilioufnefs is no part of Mr. Macpher- 
fon's character, I think he has a right to 
aflume it on fuch occafions. To anfwer 
the queries of the prejudiced would have 
no effect ; and there can be no end to 
folving the difficulties ftarted by the igno- 
rant. The moft loud and clamorous are 
generally thofe who are leaft entitled to 
fatisfaction ; and were Mr. Macpberfon to 
defcend into a controverfy, upon a mere 
matter of fact, he would, in a manner, 
leave truth to the decifion of fophiftry. 

Mr. Macpherfon has done all that could, 
or ought to be expected. He has never 

refufcd 



( 348 .) I 

refufed the examination or perufal of his 
manufcripts to perfons of tafte and know- 
ledge in the Celtic language. Thefe are 
the heft, if not the only judges of the 
fubject ; and as thefe are perfectly fatisfied 
as to the authenticity of the poems, Mr. 
Macpherfon has a right to be totally indif- 
ferent to the incredulity of others. 

To extend the opportunity of judging 
for themfelves, to fuch as are converfant 
in the language of the ancient Scots, and 
yet have no opportunity of examining Mr. 
Macpherfon^ B originals, he has publifhed 
the feventh Book of Temora, He went 
further. He publifhed propofals for print- 
ing all the poems by fubfcription ; but, as 
no fubfcribers appeared, he juftly took it 
as the fenfe of the public, that the authen- 
ticity, as being a matter of fuch general 
notoriety, was abfolutely and decifively 

admitted. 

The 



( 349 ) 

The fpecimen, which the tranflator has 
published, carries to my mind, and, I truft, 
I have fome right to form a judgment on 
fuch fubjects, a thorough conviction, that 
the feventh Book of Temora is not of Mr. 
Macpherfon\ compofition. If it had been 
of his own compofition, how could he 
miftake the meaning of a pafTage in it, as 
it is evident he has done ? To every High- 
lander, to every man of candour in any 
country, this is a decifive proof of the 
authenticity of the poems. Neither the 
bold afiertions of the prejudiced, nor all 
the fophiilry of criticifm, can perfuade the 
world, that any man can miftake the 
meaning of what he has written himfelf. 

But though the Poems of Ojjian bear 
every internal mark of originality, though 
they convey no ideas, exhibit no orna- 
ments, contain no fentiments, which are 
not peculiarly Celtic^ according to the ac- 
counts 



( 350 ) 

counts we have received of Celtic manners 
from the ancients, WE, the natives of the 
Highlands, and f we certainly muft be 
allowed to be the beft judges of the matter, 
do not found their authenticity on internal 
proofs. Every man of inquiry, every 
perfon of the leaft tafte for the poetry, or 
turn for the antiquities of his country, has 
heard often repeated fome part or other of 
the poems publifhed by Mr. Macpherfon. 
Hundreds ftill alive have heard portions of 
them recited, long before Mr. Macpberfon 
was born ; fo that he cannot poflibly be 
deemed the author of compositions, which 
exifted before he had any exiftence him* 
felf. 

It is true, there is no man now living, 
and perhaps there never has exifted any 
one perfon, who either can or could repeat 
the whole of the Poems of OJfian. It is 
enough, that the whole has been repeated, 

in 



in detached pieces, through the Highlands 
and Ifles. Mr. Macphcrforfs great merit 
has been the collecting the disjecta membra 
poetz ; and his fitting the parts fo well to- 
gether, as to form a complete figure. 
Even the perfect fymmetry of that figure 
has been produced, as an argument againft 
its antiquity. But arguments are loft, and 
fads are thrown away, upon men, who 
have predetermined to refift conviction 
itfelf. 

In vain has it been alleged, that the age 
of hunting, in which the Fingalians are 
faid to have lived, cannot be fuppofed to 
have cultivated poetry. This objection is 
flarted by men, who are more acquainted 
with books than human nature. But had 
they even confulted their books, they 
might have received a complete anfwer to 
their objection. The Scandinavians, who 
lived in a country almoft as unfit for 

pafture 



( 35* ) 

pafture as for the plough, excelled in the 
beautiful and fublime of poetry. Their 
war fongs, their funeral elegies, their love 
fonnets, convey more exalted ideas of mag- 
nanimity, melancholy, and tendernefs, than 
the mod laboured compofitions of Greece 
and Rome, on the fame fubjecls. The 
allufions are few and fimple ; but they are 
calculated to imprefs the mind with that 
" glow of feeling," which fprings only 
from genuine poetry. 

Are the Indians of America any more 
than mere hunters ? Yet who can deny 
them a claim to the pofleffion of poetry ? 
Their whole language feems to be, as it 
were, itifetfed with poetical metaphor* 
Their orations at their Congreffes, upon 
matters of bufmefs, are all in the poetical 
ftyle. They referable more the fpeeches 
in the Iliad^ than thofe dry fyllogiftical 
difquifitions, which have banilhed all the 

beautiful 



(. 353 ) 

beautiful fimplicity of eloquence from 
modern public aflemblies. 

Befides, is there any perfon acquainted 
with the natives of the Highlands, who 
does not know, that fuch perfons as are 
moft addicted to hunting, are moft given 
to poetry ? One of the beft fongs preferved 
in MacdonalcTs collection of Gaelic poems, 
is altogether on the fubject of hunting, 
and the date of its compofition is fo old, 
that it lies beyond the reach of tradition 
hfeif. The folitary life of a hunter is 
peculiarly adapted to that melancholy, but 
fpirited and magnificent turn of thought, 
which diftinguifhes our ancient poetry. 

, 
But it is not neceflary to confider the 

Fingalians as mere hunters. We fre- 
quently find in Offian's Poems allufions to 
flocks and herds ; and a paftoral life has 
been univerfally allowed to have been 
A a peculiarly 



( 354 ) 

peculiarly favourable to the mufe. I could 
never fee, for my own part, any reafon 
for fuppofing that agriculture itfelf was 
unknown in the days of OJJian^ though it 
is not mentioned in his poems. With a 
contempt for every thing but the honour 
acquired by the fword, he perhaps con- 
fidered the plough as too mean an inftru- 
ment to be alluded to in compofitions 
chiefly intended to animate the foul to 
war. 

The dignified fentiments, the exalted 
manners, the humanity, moderation, ge- 
nerofity, gallantry, and tendernefs for the 
fair fex, which are fo confpicuous in the 
Poems of Ojfian y have been brought as 
arguments againft their authenticity. Thefe 
objections, however, proceed either from 
an ignorance of hiftory, a want of know- 
ledge of human nature, or thofe confined 
notions concerning the character of ages 

and 



( 355 ) 

and nations, which are too often enter- 
tained in certain univerfities. With the 
literature of ..Greece and Rome, they im- 
bibe fuch an exalted idea of claflic cha- 
racter, as induces them to confign to igno- 
rance and barbarifm, all antiquity beyond 
the pales of the Greek and Roman em- 



But had they confulted the hiftory of 
other nations, they might find that the 
want of refinement, which is called barba- 
rifm, does not abfolutely prove the want 
of noble and generous qualities of the 
mind. The powers of the foul are in 
every country the fame. Why then fhould 
not the Celtic Druid be as capable of im- 
preffing ufeful inftruction on the followers 
of his religion, as the bare-footed Selli *, 

* The Selli were certainly as unpolilhed as any Druid, i \ 
the moft barbarous and fequeftrcd parts of the Hi^nlands 
and Scottifo Ifles. 



Iliad xvi. v. 234, z^. 

A a 2 who 



( 356 ) 

who facrifked to Jupiter on the cold top 
of Dodona ? Or, by what prefcription has 
the neighbourhood of the Hellefpont a right 
to fentiments more exalted than thofe of 
the chieftain who inhabits- the coaft of the 
Vergivian ocean ? Have not many nations, 
who have been called barbarians, excelled 
the Romans in valour, and in that moft 
exalted of all virtues, a fincere love for 
their country ? 

Have not even the Canadians of North 
America, with fewer opportunities of im- 
provement than the Finga/ians t been found 
to poffefs almoft all the virtues celebrated 
in the Poems of OJpan * ? Why therefore 
ihould we deny to the ancient Caledonians 
what we cannot refufe to the modern 
neighbours of the Ejkimaux ? 

The truth is, that the refemblance at 
leaft, of all the virtues contained in the 

* Abbe de Ra)nal, torn. iv. 

Poems 



( 357 ) 

Poems of Ojjlan^ and which are probably 



exaggerated in the ufual manner of poetry, 
ftill remains in the Highlands of Scotland. 
The valour of the Highlanders is allowed 
by their greateft enemies; and the mod 
prejudiced cannot accufe them of cruelty. 
Battle feems always to have been more 
their object, than the rewards of victory. 
In the focial virtues, the loweft High- 
lander is not, even in this age, deficient. 
He is civil, attentive, and hofpitable to 
grangers, in a degree unknown in any 
other country ; and as to matrimonial 
fidelity and attachment, and delicacy to- 
wards women, the Highlanders are ex- 
ceeded by none ; I mean fuch of them as 
have not improved their manners into a 
neglect of trivial virtues, by a frequent 
intercourfe with Dr. Joknfoti's countrymen. 

In ancient times, the Highlanders had 

much better opportunities 10 learn exalted 

A a 3 fenti- 



( 358 ) 

fentiments, if fuch muft be learnt, than in 
later ages. The moft prejudiced of our 
opponents will allow,, that refinement is in 
every country, in a certain degree, an 
infeparable appendage of a court. In the 
days of Fingal, and for many ages after 
hfm, the Highlands were the feat of go- 
vernment. After the extinction, or rather 
the conqueft of the Pifls, the kings of the 
Scots fixed their refidence in the low 
country. When the fouthern parts of Scot- 
land were wrefted from the Saxons and 
Danes, an extenfion of territory and the 
danger of a fouthern enemy carried the 
feat of government ftill further from the 
jHighlanders. This circumftanee had cer- 

< 

tainly its weight in depriving the pofterity 
of the Fingallans of fome part of that 
exalted character, which diftinguifhed 
their anceuors, But their retaining ftill 
fo many of the virtues celebrated by Ojjlan, 
is certainly a good argument, that thofe 

virtues 



( 359 ) 

virtues might have exifted in their per- 
fetion, in more favourable times. 

But there is little occafion for fpeculatlve 
reafoning on a matter which is fo well 
eftabliflied by fad:. A whole people give 
their teftimony to the exiftence of the 
Poems of OJ/tan; and gentlemen of the 
firft reputation for veracity, and a capacity 
to judge of the fubject, have long ago per- 
mitted their names to be given to the 
public, as vouchers for many parts of the 
collection published by Mr. Macpherfon. 
Many more are ready to join their tefti- 
mony to that already given to the world. 
The truth is, that even the defending a 
matter of fuch notoriety, is the moft 
plaufible argument that the prejudiced 
could have brought againft the authenticity 
of the poems. 

To put the matter beyond the contra- 
diction of the prejudiced, and the unbelief 
A a 4 of 



of the moft incredulous, I am glad to be 
able to inform the public, that the whole 
of the Poems of Offian are fpeedily to be 
printed in the original Gaelic. In vain, 
will it be faid by Dr. Johnfon and others, 
who have manifeftly refolded not to believe 
the authenticity of the poems, that the 
fame man, who could invent them in 
Englifh, might clothe them in a Celtic 
drefs. To this I anfwer, that it would be 
impoffible for any perfon, let his talents 
be ever fo great, to impofe a tranjlatign^ 
for an original, on any critic in the Gaelic 
language. 

Dr. Johnfon will certainly permit me to 
afk him, Whether any of his countrymen 
could imitate the language of the age of 
Chaucer, fo as to pafs his own work, for a 
compofition of thofe times ? Dr. Johnfon's, 
critical knowledge of the Englifh language 
would fpurn the idea ; but I will venture 

to 



to affure the Doctor, that we have, among 
us, feveral perfons as converfant in the old 
Gaelic, as he himfelf is in the tongue of 
the ancient Saxons. 

In. the arrangement of the whole work, 
and even in the improvement of particular 
paflages, the public are perhaps indebted 
to, the tafte and judgment of Mr. Macpher- 
fon. Being perfectly mafter of all the tra- 
ditions relative to the Fingalian times, he 
has, no doubt, availed himfelf of that 
advantage, in placing the poems in their 
moft natural order ; and in reftoring the 
fcattered members of fuch pieces, as he 
found floating on tradition only, to their 
original ftations. As he colleded fome 
parts of the poems from what Dr. "John- 
fon would call the " recitation of the aged," 
in different parts of the country, he was 
certainly excufable in taking the " beft 
readings in all the editions/' if the expref- 
fion may be ufed. 

Thus 



( 36* ) 

Thus far we will admit, that Mr. Mao 
pherfon is the anther of the poems. But 
more we will neither grant to him, nor to 
Dr. Johnfon ; who feems not to be aware 
of the compliment he pays to a writer, 
who, by meriting his envy, has excited his 
malevolence. 

It has upon the whole appeared, that 
the knowledge of letters was introduced 
into the Highlands and Hebrides, in as 
early a period of time as into any of the 
neighbouring countries. That one of the 
firft ufes made of thofe letters was the 
recording of works of genius, as well as 
public events. That, as a collateral fecu- 
rity for handing down the compofitions of 
the poet, as well as the facts related by 
the hiftorian, there were Bards and Seana- 
cbies % educated in academies, and retained 
afterwards by the principal families in 
the Highlands and Ides. That thofe Bards 
and Seanachies were not ,an illiterate race 

of 



( 363 ) 

of men, apt to corrupt poetry and miftake 
facts. That both of them could, and 
actually did, write the Gaelic language, 
without receiving their knowledge of letters . 
through the medium of any other tongue. 
That the Bards and Seanachies were fo far 
from becoming extinct fome centuries ago, 
that a few of them ftill exift. That, befides 
the regular and retained Bards and Seana- 
chies, there were many other perfons, who 
executed the duties of their offices, through 
a particular turn of genius, or an attach- 
ment to the antiquities and poetry of their 
country. That of thefe feveral ftill exift ; 
and many more were exifting a few years 
ago. That the bufmefs of the eftablifhed 
Bards and Seanachies, as well as of thofe 
who followed the profeflions of both 
through pleafure, was to tranfmit poetry 
and hiftory to pofterity, fometimes by 
writing, butoftener by oral tradition. That 
the Poems of OJfian have been handed 

down 



( 364 ) 

down by thefe means, from age to age, to 
the prefent times. That, in old times, no 
doubt of their authenticity was ever enter- 
tained ; and that there are ftill exifting 
many hundreds, nay many thoufands, who 
are ready to atteft their coming down to 
them, from antiquity, with all the proofs 
neceflary to eftablifh an indubitable fact. 

The Doctor concludes his obfervations 
on the Poems of Offian^ by pafling two 
very fevere reflections ; the one of a per- 
fonal, the other of a national kind. As 
what he fays is pretty remarkable, I {hall 
give it in his own words. 

" I have yet," fays he, " fuppofed no 
impofture but in the publisher ;" and, a 
little after, he adds, " The Scots have 
fomething to plead for their eafy reception 
of an improbable fiction : they are fed need 
by their fondnefs for their fuppofed an- 
ceftors. A Scotchman muft be a very 

fturdy 



( 365 ) 

fturdy moralift, who does not love Scotland 
better than truth ; he will always love it 
better than inquiry ; and, if falfehood flat- 
ters his vanity, will not be very diligent to 
detect it." 

As an impofture is the laft thing of 
which a gentleman can be fuppofed guilty, 
it is the laft thing with which he ought to 
be charged. To bring forward fuch an 
accufation, therefore, without proof to efta- 
blifli it, is a ruffian mode of impeachment, 
which feems to have been referved for Dr. 
Johnfon. There is nothing in his " Jour- 
ney to the Hebrides** to fupport fo grofs a 
calumny, unlefs we admit his own bare 
affertions for arguments ; and the publifher, 
if by the publifher he means Mr, Macpher- 
fonj is certainly as incapable of an im- 
poflure, as the Doctor is of candour or 
good manors. 

The 



( 366 ) 

The indelicacy of fuch language is ob- 
vious. A gentleman would not have ex- 
prefled himfelf in that manner, for his 
own fake ; a man of prudence would not 
have done it, for fear of giving juft offence 
to Mr. Macpherfon. But the Doctor feems 
to have been carelefs about the reputation 
of the firft of thofe characters ; and the 
malignity of his difpofition feems to have 
made him overlook the forefight generally 
annexed to the fecond. Though he was 
bold in his aflertions, however, I do not 
find he has been equally courageous in 
their defence. His mere allegation on a 
fubjec~t which he could not poffibly under- 
fland, was unworthy of the notice of the 
gentleman accufed ; but the language* in 
which he exprefied his doubts, deferved 
chaftifement. To prevent this, he had 
age and infirmities to plead ; but not con- 
tent with that fecurity, which, I dare ven- 
ture to fay, was fufncient, he declared, 
8 when 



when questioned, that he would call the 
laws of his country to his aid. Men, who 
make a breach upon the laws of good 
manners, have but a fcurvy claim to the 
protection of any other laws. 

Nor will our traveller come better off 
with the public, in his more general aflault. 
No man, whofe opinion is worth the re- 
garding, will give credit to fo indifcrimi- 
nate a calumny : the Doctor, therefore, 
has exhibited this fpecimen of his rancour 
to no other purpofe, than either to gratify 
the prejudiced, 'or to impofe upon the weak 
and credulous. If any thing can be in- 
ferred from what he fays, it is only this, 
that he himfelf is not fo " very fturdy a 
moralift" as to love truth fo much as he 
hates Scotland. 

Soon after this, he tells us, that he left 
Sky to vifit fome other iflands. But as 

his 



( 368 ) 

his obfervations, through that part of hrs 
Journey > prefent nothing new, I fhall not 
follow him in his progrefs ; and the reader, 
I believe, as well as myfelf, will have no 
objection to be relieved, from his long at- 
tendance on fo uncouth a companion. We 
{hall leave him, therefore, to rail, in the 
old way, at the poverty, ignorance, and 
barbarity of the inhabitants ; while, with 
a peculiar confiftency, he acknowledges 
plenty, intelligence, and politenefs, every 
where. Neither mail we difturb his medi- 
tations among the ruins of lona ; but per- 
mit him to tread that once hallowed fpot 
with reverential awe, and demonftrate the 
true fpirit of his faith, by mourning over 
the " dilapidated monuments of ancient 
fancYity." 

When he tells us, page 376, that men 
bred in the univerfities of Scotland obtain 
only a mediocrity of knowledge between 

learning 



( 369 ) 

learning and ignorance, he contradicts his 
own atteflations to the contrary in a thou- 
fand different places. I formerly compared 
this paflage with his elogiums on the High- 
land clergy ; I muft now contraft it with 
what he mentions in two or three pages 
after. " We now," fays he, " returned 
to Edinburgh^ where I paffed fome days 
with men of learning, whofe names want 
no advancement from my commemoration." 
It was fomewhat carelefs in the Doctor, to 
fay no worfe, to hold fo very different a 
language in page 379, while the cenfure 
paffed on ouruniverfities, butfo little before, 
muft be recent in the reader's memory. 
But a regard to the trifling forms of con- 
fiftency feems never to have been an object 
of his attention. 

It happens luckily, however, that the 

reputation of the Scots for learning refts 

upon a better foundation than the opinion 

Bb of 



( 370 ) 

of Dr. Johnfon. The teftimony of the 
world is in their favour ; and, againft that, 
his praife or cenfure can have but little 
weight. The three learned profefiions 
bear witnefs to their knowledge and talents. 
In phyfic they fland unrivalled ; and in the 
pulpit and at the bar they have no fupe- 
riors. 

But, befides profeflional merit, the Scots 
have long occupied every other department 
of literature; and they have diftinguimed 
themfelves in each. The province of 
hiftory is, in a manner, yielded up to them ; 
they have added largely to the various 
ftores of philofophy and the mathematics ; 
and, in cridcifm and the belles lettres^ they 
have discovered abilities, and acquired ap- 
plaufe. Though they feldom defcend to 
the ludicrous ) yet they have not wanted 
writers, who have made fome figure in that 
walk. If the Doclor doubts the fad, I 
8 fhall 



( S7 1 ) 

fliall refer him, for information, to the 
author of Lexiphanes. 

I (hall now take a final leave of Dr. John- 
fan. That he fet out with an intention to 
traduce the Scots nation, is evident ; and the 
account he gives of his Journey {hews, with 
what a ftubborn malignity he perfevered ia 
that purpofe. Every line is marked with 
prejudice; and every fentence teems with 
the moft illiberal invectives. If he has 
met with fome correction, in the courfe of 
this examination, it is no more than he 
ought to have expected ; unlefs he feels in 
his own mind, what his pride perhaps will 
not allow him to acknowledge, that mifre- 
prefentation and abufe merit no paflion 
fuperior to contempt. 



FINIS. 



ERRATA. 

Page 4. line j. for about two years read fome years; 
ib. 20. for on read to. 
7. ' 9. /or Gallic mr</ Gaelic. 
!&.- id. for of read on. 

39. >\6.for no authority r^ad' no fynonimous au- 
thority. 

50. ult./or Introducing r^</ In traducing. 

57. iS'/or Follafandus rMtf' Fullofaudes. 

71. 5. /or Gallic read Gaelic. 

74. 18. for Gallic read Gaelic. 





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