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Extract from"Memoirs
of the Life of Sir Walter Scott"
by J. G.
Lockhart
Diary. Vol.4. 19th Aug. l8l4.
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"After breakfast, took the long boat
to see the remarkable natural curiosity, called 'Uamh Smowe, or the largest
Cave. After rowing about 5 miles to the westward of the entrance to the sea from
Loch Eriboll, we enter a creek, between two ledges of very high rocks, and
landing, find ourselves in front of the wonder we came to see. The exterior
parts of the cavern opens under a tremendous rock, facing the creek, and
occupies the full space of the ravine where we landed. From the top of the rock
to the base of the cavern, as we afterwards discovered by plumb, is 80 feet, of
which the height of the arch is 55 feet; the rest, being 27 feet. is occupied by
the precipitous rock under which it opens; the width is fully in proportion to
this great height, being 110 feet. The depth of this exterior cavern is 200
feet, and it is apparently separated by an intermediate column of natural rock.
Being open to daylight and the sea air, the cavern is perfectly clean and dry,
and the sides are incrusted with stalactites. This immense cavern is so well
proportioned, that I was not aware of its extraordinary height and extent, till
I saw our two friends, who had somewhat preceded us, having made the journey by
land, appearing like pigmies among its recesses. Afterwards, on entering the
cave, I climbed up a sloping rock at its extremity, and was struck with the
prospect, looking outward from this magnificent arched cavern upon our boat and
its; crew, the view being otherwise bounded by the ledge of rocks which form
each side of the creek. We now propose to investigate the farther wonders of the
Cave of Smowe. In the right or west side of the cave opens an interior cavern of
a difficult aspect. The height of this second passage may be 12 or 14 feet, and
its breadth about 6 or 8 feet, neatly formed into a Gothic portal by the hand of
nature. The lower part of this porch is closed by a ledge of rock, rising to a
height of between 5 and 6 feet, and which I can compare to nothing but the hatch
door of a shop. Beneath this hatch a brook finds its way out, forms a deep black
pool below the Gothic archway, and then escapes to the sea, and forms the creek
in which we landed. It is somewhat difficult to approach this strange pass, so
as to gain a view of the interior of the cavern. By clambering along a broken
and dangerous cliff, you can, however, look into it; but only so far as to see a
twilight space filled with dark-coloured water in great agitation, and
representing a subterranean lake, moved by some fearful convulsion of nature,
How this pond is supplied with water you cannot see from even this point of
vantage, but you are partly made sensible of the truth by a sound like the
dashing of a sullen cataract in the bowels of the earth. Here adventure has
usually been abandoned, and Mr Anderson only mentioned two travelers whose
curiosity had led them farther. We were resolved, however, to see the adventures
of this new cave of Montesinos to an end. Duff had already secured the use of a
fisherman's boat and its hands, our own long boat being too heavy and far too
valuable to be ventured upon this Coctyus. Accordingly the skiff was dragged up
the brook to the rock ledge or hatch which barred the interior of the cavern,
and there, by force of hands, our boat crew and two or three fishers raised the
boat's bow upon the ledge of rock, then brought her to a level, being poised
upon that narrow hatch and lastly launched her down into the dark and deep
subterranean lake within. The entrance was so
narrow, and the boat so clumsy, that we, who were all the while clinging to the
rock like sea fowl, and with scarce more footing, were greatly alarmed for the
safety of our trusty sailors. At the instant when the boat sloped inward to the
cave, a Highlander threw himself into it with great boldness and dexterity, and,
at the expense of some bruises, shared its precipitous fall into the waters
under the earth. This dangerous exploit was to prevent the boat drifting away
from us, but, a cord at its stern would have been a safer and surer expedient.
When our enfant perdu had recovered breath and legs, he brought the boat back to
the entrance and took us in. We now found ourselves embarked on a deep black of
irregular form, the rocks rising like a dome all around us, and high over our
heads. The light, a sort of dubious twilight, was derived from two chasms in the
roof of the vault, for that offered by the entrance was but trifling. Down one
of those rents there poured from a height of 80 feet, in a sheet of foam, the
brook, which, after supplying the subterranean pond with water, finds its way
out beneath the ledge of rock that blocks its entrance. The other skylight, if I
may so term it, looks on the clear blue sky. It is impossible for description to
explain the impression made by so strange a place, to which we had been conveyed
with so much difficulty. The cave itself, the cataract, the pool, would have
been each separate places of wonder, but all united together, and affecting at
once the ear, the eye, and the imagination, their effect is indescribable, The
length of this pond, or loch as the people here call it, is 70 feet, the breadth
about 50 feet at the narrowest, and it is of great depth. As we resolved to
proceed, we directed the boat to a natural arch on the right hand, or west side
of the cataract. This archway was double, a high arch being placed upon a very
low one, as in a Roman aqueduct. The ledge of rock
which forms this lower arch, is not above 2½ feet high above the water, and
under this we were to pass in the boat; so that we were fain to pile ourselves
flat upon each other, like a layer of herrings. By this judicious
disposition we were pushed in safety beneath this low-browed rock into a region
of utter darkness. For this, however, we were provided, for we had a. tinder box
of lights. The view back upon the twilight lake we had crossed, its sullen
eddies whirling round and round, and its echoes resounding to the ceaseless
thunder of the waterfall, seemed dismal enough, and was aggravated by temporary
darkness, and in some degree by a sense of danger. The lights, however,
dispelled the latter sensation, if. it prevailed to any extent, and we found
ourselves in a narrow cavern, sloping somewhat up from the water. We got out of
the boat, proceeded along some slippery places upon shelves of the rock, and
gained the dry land. I cannot say DRY, excepting comparatively. We were then in an
arched cave, 12 feet in the roof and about 12 feet in breadth, which went
winding into the bowels of the earth for about 100 feet. The sides, being like
those of the whole cavern, of limestone rock, were covered with stalactites, and
with small drops of water like dew, glancing like ten thousand sets of birthday
diamonds under the glare of our lights. In some places these stalactites branch
out into broad and curious ramifications, resembling coral and the foliage of
submarine plants. When we reached the
extremity of this passage, we found it declined suddenly to a horrible gulf, or
well, filled with dark water, and of great depth, over which the rock closed. We
threw stones, which indicated great profundity by their sound; and growing more
familiar with the horrors of this den, we sounded an oar, and found about 10
feet depth at the entrance, but discovered in the same manner, that the gulf
extended under the rock, deepening as it went, God knows how far. Imagination
can figure few deaths more horrible than to be sucked under these rocks into
some unfathomable abyss..... The mouth of this
ugly gulf was all covered with slimy alluvious substances which led Mr.
Stephenson to observe that it could not have any separate source, but must be
fed from the waters of the outer lake and brook, as it lay upon the same level,
and seemed to rise and fall with them, without having anything to indicate a
separate current of its own. Rounding this perilous hole, or gulf, upon the
aforesaid alluvious substance, which formed its shores, we reached the extremity
of the cavern, which there ascend: like a vent, or funnel, directly up a sloping
precipice, hideously black and slippery from wet and seaweeds. One of our
sailors, a Zetiander, climbed a good way, and by holding up a light, we could
plainly perceive that this vent closed after ascending to a considerable height;
and here, therefore, closed the adventure of the Cave of Smowe, for it appeared
utterly impossible to proceed further in any direction whatever. There is a tradition
that the first Lord Reay went through various subterranean abysses, and at
length returned after ineffectually endeavoring to the extremity of the Smowe
Cave." |
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