THE LAST DITCH

Glenfinnan 1

Mossy Young Pretender
Glenfinnan

Glenfinnan Viaduct

 

Glenfinnan 2

Towering treason

I kept my resolution not to visit Skye this time, but only just. I took Speranza for a last run in the Highlands along the Road to the Isles to the ferry port at Mallaig. It began pleasantly enough but after thirty miles the error messages and 'safe mode' returned.  I restarted the engine a couple of times and they went away for long enough to complete the run as planned and get home. I am convinced the problem is merely electronic and not mechanical. I will nurse Speranza home to London via North Wales, where I plan to visit my parents and have booked her in at Joe Macari's next Friday.

It was interesting to visit the Glenfinnan Monument. I managed to ease my bulk through the narrow hatch at the top of the tight spiral staircase so as to get up close with the statue of Charles Stuart. Few countries in the world are tolerant enough to permit the glorification of a traitor. I began by finding it irritating, but progressed to feeling proud that we are so forgiving.

I still find it hard to understand how anyone can admire 'Bonnie' Prince Charlie though. He cost the lives of many in an incompetent, half-hearted attempt to seize the throne. The slight setback of Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn failing to show up with the Welsh Catholics (thereby perhaps giving us the unpleasant verb 'to Welsh') was enough to make him turn tail. 

He died ignominiously, of syphilis, in France and would have been far better forgotten by history. On the positive side, his exploits gave us one of my favourite Scottish songs. Again, it does us credit as a nation that it can be enjoyed despite its treasonous sentiments!

The map of my progress can be seen here.

5 responses to “Almost Skye”

  1. james higham Avatar

    Oh flower of Scotland. Oh moss of Scotland?

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  2. CherryPie Avatar

    I have an amusing memory of the Glenfinnan Monument from many years ago. I climbed up that narrow stairway, popped my head up out of the hatch and realised that I couldn’t set foot on that narrow platform (not exactly vertigo, but a fear of heights in certain circumstances).
    I said to Mr C I am going back down and I tried to decenend the spiral staircase. Right behind me was a foreign gentleman who gallantly tried to help me up through the hatch which he thought I was struggling with. There were a few difficult moments, then I was able to decend back to my comfort at the bottom of the tower.
    There is a photo of me standing at the bottom 😉
    I have always been more circumspect in ascending towers since then. There are many I can do, but only at my own pace so that unfortunately rules out lots of main tourist attractions.

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  3. Tcheuchter Avatar
    Tcheuchter

    Tom,
    I entirely agree with your comments on Charles Stuart, but have to correct you on one point: the Glenfinnan monument is not a monument to Charles, nor is the statue atop the tower of him. The statue is of “a Highlander” and the monument was erected in memory of the Highlanders who rose for their country, however misguided they may now be judged.
    http://www.theblackwatch.co.uk/index/raising-of-the-regiment
    That great Highland regiment, the Black Watch was raised to police the Highlands and the last paragraph on the page linked to above is an interesting speculation:
    “The remainder of the Regiment proceeded to Flanders for action against the French. It must remain a question for speculation whether the 1745 Rebellion could ever have taken place had The Black Watch been left fulfilling its role in policing the Highlands rather than being posted to the Continent two years previously.”
    OT, but if ever you get the chance to see the play Black Watch I urge you to do so. I do not like a lot of foul language in my entertainment, but given that the play is based around a group of squaddies in the desert I feel it is justified in this case. It also has one of the slickest bits of business I have ever seen on stage.
    I’m glad you enjoyed your visit to God’s Own Country and sorry that Speranza misbehaved. I find a Hyundai very reliable. 😀

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  4. Tom Avatar

    I think your view on the identity of the figure was the spin at the time but the materials on display at the site now say it was always intended to be the young pretender. You don't buy a supercar for reliability but Speranza has never yet failed to get me where I was going. She just sometimes makes a highly-strung fuss about it. B-)

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  5. Tcheuchter Avatar
    Tcheuchter

    It must be 25 years since I stopped there, though I pass it often enough. I shall investigate further. If you ask anyone here they too will say “A Highlander”.
    I look forward to reading about your next trip.
    Best wishes,
    Alec.

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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