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    • 1. Inch Keith to St Andrews
    • 2. Arbroath to Aberdeen
    • 3. Slains Castle to Fort George
    • 4. Inverness to Fort Augustus
    • 5. Anoch to Glenelg
    • 6. Armadale to Raasay
    • 7. Portree to Dunvegan
    • 8. Ullinish to Armadale
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    • 11. Iona to Mull
    • 12. Oban to Inveraray
    • 13. Tarbet to Edinburgh
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12. Oban to Inveraray

A Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland by Samuel Johnson
To Boswell's account of this part of their journey

Inveraray

On the next day we began our journey southwards. The weather was tempestuous. For half the day the ground was rough, and our horses were still small. Had they required much restraint, we might have been reduced to difficulties; for I think we had amongst us but one bridle.

We fed the poor animals liberally, and they performed their journey well. In the latter part of the day, we came to a firm and smooth road, made by the soldiers, on which we travelled with great security, busied with contemplating the scene about us. The night came on while we had yet a great part of the way to go, though not so dark, but that we could discern the cataracts which poured down the hills, on one side, and fell into one general channel that ran with great violence on the other. The wind was loud, the rain was heavy, and the whistling of the blast, the fall of the shower, the rush of the cataracts, and the roar of the torrent, made a nobler chorus of the rough musick of nature than it had ever been my chance to hear before. The streams, which ran cross the way from the hills to the main current, were so frequent, that after a while I began to count them; and, in ten miles, reckoned fifty-five, probably missing some, and having let some pass before they forced themselves upon my notice. At last we came to Inverary, where we found an inn, not only commodious, but magnificent.

The difficulties of peregrination were now at an end. Mr. Boswell had the honour of being known to the Duke of Argyle, by whom we were very kindly entertained at his splendid seat, and supplied with conveniences for surveying his spacious park and rising forests.

After two days stay at Inverary we proceeded Southward over Glencroe, a black and dreary region, now made easily passable by a military road, which rises from either end of the glen by an acclivity not dangerously steep, but sufficiently laborious. In the middle, at the top of the hill, is a seat with this inscription, 'Rest, and be thankful.' Stones were placed to mark the distances, which the inhabitants have taken away, resolved, they said, 'to have no new miles.'

In this rainy season the hills streamed with waterfalls, which, crossing the way, formed currents on the other side, that ran in contrary directions as they fell to the north or south of the summit. Being, by the favour of the Duke, well mounted, I went up and down the hill with great convenience.

From Glencroe we passed through a pleasant country to the banks of Loch Lomond, and were received at the house of Sir James Colquhoun, who is owner of almost all the thirty islands of the Loch, which we went in a boat next morning to survey. The heaviness of the rain shortened our voyage, but we landed on one island planted with yew, and stocked with deer, and on another containing perhaps not more than half an acre, remarkable for the ruins of an old castle, on which the osprey builds her annual nest. Had Loch Lomond been in a happier climate, it would have been the boast of wealth and vanity to own one of the little spots which it incloses, and to have employed upon it all the arts of embellishment. But as it is, the islets, which court the gazer at a distance, disgust him at his approach, when he finds, instead of soft lawns; and shady thickets, nothing more than uncultivated ruggedness.

Where the Loch discharges itself into a river, called the Leven, we passed a night with Mr. Smollet, a relation of Doctor Smollet, to whose memory he has raised an obelisk on the bank near the house in which he was born. The civility and respect which we found at every place, it is ungrateful to omit, and tedious to repeat. Here we were met by a postchaise, that conveyed us to Glasgow.

To Section 13

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  • eBooks Index
  • Johnson: W. Isles Main Page
  • 1. Inch Keith to St Andrews
  • 2. Arbroath to Aberdeen
  • 3. Slains Castle to Fort George
  • 4. Inverness to Fort Augustus
  • 5. Anoch to Glenelg
  • 6. Armadale to Raasay
  • 7. Portree to Dunvegan
  • 8. Ullinish to Armadale
  • 9. Armadale to Coll
  • 10. Mull to Inch Kenneth
  • 11. Iona to Mull
  • 12. Oban to Inveraray
  • 13. Tarbet to Edinburgh
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HomeJohnson - W. IsleseBooks IndexJohnson: W. Isles Main Page1. Inch Keith to St Andrews2. Arbroath to Aberdeen3. Slains Castle to Fort George4. Inverness to Fort Augustus5. Anoch to Glenelg6. Armadale to Raasay7. Portree to Dunvegan8. Ullinish to Armadale9. Armadale to Coll10. Mull to Inch Kenneth11. Iona to Mull12. Oban to Inveraray13. Tarbet to EdinburghDiscoverSite IndexA-Z IndexesCategoriesFind AccommodationTours & Holidays ▼Tour OperatorsWalking Holidays and GuidingWildlife Tours & HolidaysGolf Tours and HolidaysMotorhome HireCruising & CharterArts, Crafts & Photo HolidaysSite ResourcesLate AvailabilityWhat's On?What's New?Links CollectionsHotel ReviewsScotfaxBiographyeBooksBook ReviewsBookshopSite InfoContactSite InformationHow to FeatureWebsite Design ServicesTwitter: Follow UsCookies & PrivacyCopyright, T & C