Old-Lore Miscellany
OLD-LORE
MISCELLANY
OF
ORKNEY, SHETLAND, CAITHNESS AND SUTHERLAND.
VOL. IV. PART I. JAN., 1911
NOTES.
New Subscribers.
The following new subscribers
for 1911 have been added to the roll:---
The Most Hon. The Marquis
of Stafford.
Corsie, W. A. C., "Orcadia,"
Ashford Avenue, Hornsey, London, N.
Morrison, Miss, I, Mount
Hooly Street, Lerwick.
Pilkington, Thos., of
Sandside, 19, Princes Gardens, London, S.W.
Quaritch, Bernard, II,
Grafton Street, New Bond Street, London, W.
Sinclair, J. E., Wyndham
House, Aldeburgh, Suffolk.
Wales, National Library
of, c/o Sydney V. Galloway, Pier Street, Aberystwyth.
.---The border design of the cover has been taken from that of the illuminated
address which was presented to Mr. Eiríkr Magnússon last June in recognition
of his services to Northern Literature, and to the Club. This cover has
now been adopted for the Year-Book and the Saga-Book of the Club, and
is also appropriate for the Miscellany and Caithness and Sutherland Records
seeing that Caithness and Sutherland are represented on it. The Arms of
Iceland, Norway, Denmark, and Sweden are placed on Viking shields at the
four corners, and the Club badge---a Viking Ship---at the top. The latter
is on a shield surmounted by a coronet, taken from the arms of the Norse
Jarl of Orkney, the Club having been originally founded as an Orkney Society.
Interlaced V.C.'s, for Viking Club, form the lower border; and O.S.C.S.
for the Old Norse Jarldom of Orkney, Shetland, Caithness and Sutherland,
form the other borders.
SANDWICK TROWS.---The house of Pow in Sandwick is still remembered as
a place where people from the surrounding districts met to drink "change
ale." Liscenses in these day were obtained by any who wished them.
A man from Hestwall, having been at Pow, fell asleep on the homeward journey,
near the Howans of Hurtisgarth, a well-known fairy resort. He was awakened
by a loud noise, and saw the brae covered with riders. Greatly excited
he ran home without delay. On relating his experience to an old woman
who resided at Aith, she said, fortunately the fairies got neither of
what they were after that night, a daughter having been born about that
time in the house of Aith, and a cow was found in the byre nearly strangled
at daylight.
A farmer in the township
of Kirkness was long annoyed with water-trows from the adjoining loch.
When drying corn in the kiln, if he went into the house, he always found
the ingle or kiln fire put out on his return. They were continually playing
tricks and putting things out of order about his premises. At length it
occured to him, when attending his kiln, that instead of going outside,
he would conceal himself under some newly-thrashed straw in the barn.
Having adopted this plan, in a short time two trows made their appearance
and took a seat by the ingle. On attempting to get near them the straw
moved slightly, whereupon one trow said to his companion: "Strae's
gae'n," but was reassured by the reply: "Sit still and warm
thee wame. Weel kens thoo strae canna gang." Eventually the farmer
got quite near, and emerging from his retreat, belaboured the intruders
with the flail, with such effort that he was never troubled with such
visitors again.
In Yesnaby, Sandwick,
a woman resided who is said to have had the power to stop bleeding without
leaving her house, however far distant the subject might be. On one occasion
she was visited by a farmer who implored her intervention, as one of his
horses had met with an accident, and was bleeding so profusely that the
blood was running out of the stable door. The woman expressed doubt whether
she could help as the last one she had assisted had returned nothing for
the cure. But she told him to go home and she would do her best. When
he arrived the bleeding had stopped, and the animal came round all right.---Wm.
Smith, Newark, Sandwick, Orkney.
SHEEP-MARKS.---The following
illustrations of sheep ear-marks as used by the krü of Catfirth, Nesting,
Shetland, is supplied by Mr. James S. Augus, of Lerwick.
illustration #1
Records
of sheep-marks in Holm, Orkney.
- June 2:Magnus Cromertie,
son of deceased Magnus C., shoemaker---and hole in right lug and a bit
behind on the left lug. Extracted from Register of Sheep Marks, by Thomas
Allan, clk. C. Allowed a skirt in the left nose. W. Craigie.
- June 1:Robert Langskeal,
son of John L., in Blomore---a prick mark in the left lug, a hole on
the right lug, a bit before and a skirt in the right nostril. Now sold
by J. L., who lived in Westergraves, and now in Kirkwall, to David L.,
his brother's son.
- March 3:David Langskaill,
son of deceased Peter L., in Ingastack---3 laps in left lug, a shear
mark in right lug, a bit behind and the tail off. Extracted from New
Register of Sheep-marks of the parish of Holm, by David Petrie, Junior,
No. 53, p. 11th .
- March 3:Isobella
Langskaill, daughter of David L. in Ingastack---3 laps in left lug,
a bit behind, a bit behind in right lug and a wool on the face.
- March 3:Peter
Langskaill, son of David L., Hensbuster-by-East---a helmin before and
one behind on the left lug, a hole in the right and a bit before, and
a skirt in the right nose.
- March 3:David
Langskaill, son of David L., in Ingastack---a shear mark in right lug
and two bits before, 3 laps in left lug.
- June 27:Margaret
Petrie Langskaill---a hole in right lug and crossbitted, a bit behind
on the left.
I
am obliged to Mr. W. Laird, Kirkwall, for the above notes, from which it
will be obvious that if any of these Registers of Sheep-marks are still
available they would be of great value for genealogical purposes.---A. W.
Johnston.
EEL-LORE.---(Miscellany,
Vol. I., page 296). The form I heard it in South Yell, was:---
Eele
eele andi
Cast
a knot abut di tail
I
slip de whar I fan de.
-- T.
M.
SHETLAND COUNTING-OUT RHYMES,etc.---(Miscellany,
Vol. I., page 296, Vol. II., p. 134, and Vol. III., p. 56).
Like the Revd. Mr. Williamson
of Insch, the form I was accustomed to when a boy at Burravoe, Yell, was:---
Eetam,
peetam, penny pie,
Jinkam,
joory, janny jie.
White
fish, black troot,
Gibbe
gaa, doo's oot.
About the year 1867, a family
from Lunnasting settled in South Yell, when we learned from the boys the
following form:---
Eetam,
peetam, penny plump,
A'
the ladies in a lump.
First
shu cust, an' dan shu drew,
And
it must be gou.
I have been told that the
following form was also used in South Yell:---
Eetam,
peetam, penny pie,
Peppy
lury, jinky ji,
Black
fish, white troot,
Errie,
orrie, ye are oot.
The following was also known
in South Yell:---
Up
hill and down dale,
And
tho' ye gather a' da day (or ta doom's day),
Ye
widna gather a hand fu (i.e., mist).
--- T.
M.
EIKON BASILIKE.---The "Guardian"
of Sept. 23rd,
1910, says that among the relics in the Loan Collection of the Ecclesiastical
Art Exhibition in connection with the Church Congress at Cambridge, there
was an early copy of the "Eikon Basilike," dated 1648, which was
purchased in the Shetland Islands, and given by the purchaser to the present
owner---Canon Ross Lewin. It would be interesting to know the history of
this copy, whether it had been a long time in Shetland, and to whom it formerly
belonged. The first edition of the "Eikon Basilike" was published
a few days after the execution of Charles I., which took place on January
30th, 1648-9. It
passed through fifty editions in twelve months.---T.M.
THE BUSH OF KAITNESS.---In
Notes and Queries of the "Aberdeen Journal" for Sept. 28th,
1910, is a reply by R. R. to a query by W. Lachlan Forbes:---what is meant
by "the Bush of Kaitness," in Mr. William Forbes' preface (page
3), to his continuation of Matthew Lumsden's Genealogy of the Family of
Forbes, that from the year 1371 till Flowdowne in the year 1513, the said
Lord Forbes had the whole guiding of His Majesty's affairs betwixt the Cairne
of Mount and the Bush of Kaitness. The explanation given by R. R. is that
the Bush of Kaitness was a famous shrub, which grew at the extreme northerly
point of Caithness, and the quotation referred to simply means that from
1371 to 1513, the Lords of Forbes held supreme command from the Cairn o'
Mount over the whole north of Scotland, but excluding the Orkney and Shetland
Islands.---T.M.
THE GREAT AUK.---In the
"Shetland News" of Oct. 8th,
1910, is an interesting note by J. F., who says that the last pair---a male
and a female---of the Great Auk in Orkney or Shetland, were killed at Papa
Westray in 1812. The body of the male bird was sent to a Mr. Bullock, after
whose decease it was purchased for £15 5s. 6d., and placed in the British
Museum, where it still remains.---T. M.
GOLSPIE (SUTHERLAND).---Various
derivations have been assigned to this place-name. The main feature of the
place is undoubtedly the gorge or gil (old form geil, genitive geilar).
The hamlet was originally at the burn's mouth, geilar-óss (or 'oyce' or
mouth). Add -bær or -bú, Norwegian -bö, Gailic -bigh, English -by, and you
get geilar-óss-bú, which contracts into geil-ar's-by, geilsbigh, almost
the old Gaelic name geishbigh, geilshpie, English Golspie.
But there is no oyce or
óss at Golspie. The Burn runs straight into the sea. So, in spite of all
temptations, it would seem more correct to attribute the first part of the
word to a personal name, making its genitive case in s. Two such names,
Kol and Gol, are available, and Golspie (p for b being de règle on a Highland
tongue) means The Settlement of Kol or Gol---Kolsby or Golsby---probably
the latter. An old variant is Gollesby. ----J. G.
SUTHERLAND PLACE-NAMES.----The
Rev. Adam Gunn has an interesting paper on "Some difficult Sutherland
Place-Names," in the November number of the Celtic Monthly. He deals
with such names as Creich, Rogart, Golspie, Farr, Assynt, Kinlochbervie,
etc. His derivation of Farr has novelty on its side at any rate. No satisfactory
explanation, he says, has yet been given of Farr. The vowel is long in English,
and short in Gaelic. There is a Norse word far, a boat, and the village
of Farr bears some resemblance to a boat. Parish names, however, are very
largely derived from the names of the parish churches, and these again from
saint-names. The best known saint of Sutherland is St. Bar, founder of the
Church of Dornoch; and the most likely solution of Farr is that it comes
from Bar. Clachan Bhar or Eaglais Bhar evolves into Clachan Far in the northern
dialect (cp. bhar, from, off, which is far in Rob Donn's and Mary MacPherson's
poems). That his fame and name extended to the North coast is clear from
the place-name Monàr, the holy loch of this parish, where his name is commemorated
(mo-fhionn-bhar).
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