No AdvantagesThis parish possesses no advantages. Upon the hills the soil is in   many places mossy and fit for nothing. The air in general is moist.   This is occasioned by the height of the hills which continually   attract the clouds and the vapour that is continually exhaled from   the mossy ground . . . The nearest market town is fifteen miles away   and the roads so deep as to be almost impassable. The snow also at   times is a great inconvenience, often for many months we can have no   intercourse with mankind. And a great disadvantage is the want of   bridges so that the traveller is obstructed when the waters are   swelled . . . Barley oats and potatoes are the only crops raised.   Wheat rye turnips and cabbage are never attempted . . .There are ten proprietors of land in this parish: none of them resides in it.Contribution by the Minister of Ettrick Parish, in the county of Selkirk, to the Statistical Account of Scotland, 1799    The Ettrick Valley lies about fifty miles due south of Edinburgh, and   thirty or so miles north of the English border, which runs close to   the wall Hadrian built to keep out the wild people from the north.   The Romans pushed farther, and built some sort of fortifications   called Antonine's Wall between the Firth of Clyde and the Firth of   Forth, but those did not last long. The land between the two walls   has been occupied for a long time by a mix of people—Celtic people,   some of whom came from Ireland and were actually called Scots, Anglo-Saxons from the south, Norse from across the North Sea, and possibly   some leftover Picts as well.The high stony farm where my family lived for some time in the   Ettrick Valley was called Far-Hope. The word 
hope, as used in the   local geography, is an old word, a Norse word--Norse, Anglo-Saxon,   and Gaelic words being all mixed up together in that part of the   country, as you would expect, with some old Brythonic thrown in to   indicate an early Welsh presence. 
Hope means a bay, not a bay filled   with water but with land, partly enclosed by hills, which in this   case are the high bare hills, the near mountains of the Southern   Uplands. The Black Knowe, Bodesbeck Law, Ettrick Pen—there you have   the three big hills, with the word 
hill in three languages. Some of   these hills are now being reforested, with plantations of Sitka   spruce, but in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries they would   have been bare, or mostly bare—the great Forest of Ettrick, the   hunting grounds of the Kings of Scotland, having been cut down and   turned into pasture or waste heath a century or two before.The height of land above Far-Hope, which stands right at the end of   the valley, is the spine of Scotland, marking the division of the   waters that flow to the west into the Solway Firth and the Atlantic   Ocean, from those that flow east into the North Sea. Within ten miles   to the north is the country's most famous waterfall, the Grey Mare's   Tail. Five miles from Moffat, which would be the market town to those   living at the valley head, is the Devil's Beef Tub, a great cleft in   the hills believed to be the hiding place for stolen cattle—English   cattle, that is, taken by the reivers in the lawless sixteenth   century. In the lower Ettrick Valley was Aikwood, the home of Michael   Scott, the philosopher and wizard of the twelfth and thirteenth   centuries, who appears in Dante's 
Inferno. And if that were not   enough, William Wallace, the guerrilla hero of the Scots, is said to   have hidden out here from the English, and there is a story of   Merlin—
Merlin—being hunted down and murdered, in the old forest, by   Ettrick shepherds.(As far as I know, my ancestors, generation after generation, were   Ettrick shepherds. It may sound odd to have shepherds employed in a   forest, but it seems that hunting forests were in many places open   glades.)Nevertheless the valley disappointed me the first time I saw it.   Places are apt to do that when you've set them up in your   imagination. The time of year was very early spring, and the hills   were brown, or a kind of lilac brown, reminding me of the hills   around Calgary. Ettrick Water was running fast and clear, but it was   hardly as wide as the Maitland River, which flows past the farm where   I grew up, in Ontario. The circles of stones which I had at first   taken to be interesting remnants of Celtic worship were too numerous   and well kept up to be anything but handy sheep pens.I was travelling by myself, and I had come from Selkirk on the   twice-a-week Shoppers' Bus, which took me no farther than Ettrick   Bridge. There I wandered around, waiting for the postman. I'd been   told that he would take me up the valley. The chief thing to be seen   in Ettrick Bridge was a sign on a closed shop, advertising Silk Cut.   I couldn't figure out what that might be. It turned out to be a   well-known brand of cigarette.After a while the postman came along and I rode with him to Ettrick   Church. By that time it had begun to rain, hard. The church was   locked. It disappointed me, too. Having been built in 1824, it did   not compare, in historic appearance, or grim character, to the   churches I had already seen in Scotland. I felt conspicuous, out of   place, and cold. I huddled by the wall till the rain let up for a   bit, and then I explored the churchyard, with the long wet grass   soaking my legs.There I found, first, the gravestone of William Laidlaw, my direct   ancestor, born at the end of the seventeenth century, and known as   Will O'Phaup. This was a man who took on, at least locally, something   of the radiance of myth, and he managed that at the very last time in   history—that is, in the history of the people of the British   Isles—when a man could do so. The same stone bears the names of his   daughter Margaret Laidlaw Hogg, who upbraided Sir Walter Scott, and   of Robert Hogg, her husband, the tenant of Ettrickhall. Then right   next to it I saw the stone of the writer James Hogg, who was their   son and Will O'Phaup's grandson. He was known as The Ettrick   Shepherd. And not far from that was the stone of the Reverend Thomas   Boston, at one time famous throughout Scotland for his books and   preaching, though fame never took him to any more important ministry.Also, among various Laidlaws, a stone bearing the name of Robert   Laidlaw, who died at Hopehouse January 29th 1800 aged seventy-two   years. Son of Will, brother of Margaret, uncle of James, who probably   never knew that he would be remembered by his link to these others,   any more than he would know the date of his own death.My great-great-great-great-grandfather.As I was reading these inscriptions the rain came on again, lightly,   and I thought I had better start to walk back to Tushielaw, where I   was to catch the school bus for my return ride to Selkirk. I couldn't   loiter, because the bus might be early, and the rain might get   heavier.I was struck with a feeling familiar, I suppose, to many people whose   long history goes back to a country far away from the place where   they grew up. I was a naive North American, in spite of my stored   knowledge. Past and present lumped together here made a reality that   was commonplace and yet disturbing beyond anything I had imagined.MEN OF ETTRICK
Will O'PhaupHere lyeth William Laidlaw, the far-famed Will o' Phaup, who for   feats of frolic, agility and strength, had no equal in his day . . .Epitaph composed by his grandson, James Hogg, on Will O'Phaup's   tombstone in Ettrick Kirkyard.    His name was William Laidlaw, but his story-name was Will O'Phaup,   Phaup being simply the local version of Far-Hope, the name of the   farm he took over at the head of Ettrick Valley. It seems that   Far-Hope had been abandoned for years when Will came to inhabit it.   The house, that is, had been abandoned, because it was situated so   high up at the end of the remote valley, and got the worst of the   periodic winter storms and the renowned snowfall. The house of   Potburn, the next one to it, lower down, was until recently said to   be the highest inhabited house in all of Scotland. It now stands   deserted, apart from the sparrows and finches busy around its   outbuildings.The land itself would not have belonged to Will, it would not even   have been leased to him—he would have rented the house or got it as   part of his shepherd's wages. It was never worldly prosperity that he   was after.Only Glory.    He was not native to the valley, though there were Laidlaws there,   and had been since the first records were kept. The earliest man of   that name I have come across is in the court records of the   thirteenth century, and he was up on charges of murdering another   Laidlaw. No prisons in those days. Just dungeons, mainly for the   upper class, or people of some political importance. And summary   executions--but those happened mostly in times of large unrest, as   during the border raids of the sixteenth century, when a marauder   might be hanged at his own front door, or strung up in Selkirk   Square, as were sixteen cattle thieves of the same name—Elliott—on   a single day of punishment. My man got off with a fine.Will was said to be "one of the old Laidlaws of Craik"—about whom I   have not been able to discover anything at all, except that Craik is   an almost disappeared village on a completely disappeared Roman road,   in a nearby valley to the south of Ettrick. He must have walked over   the hills, a lad in his teens, looking for work. He had been born in   1695, when Scotland was still a separate country, though it shared a   monarch with England. He would have been twelve years old at the time   of the controversial Union, a young man by the time of the bitter   failed Jacobite Rebellion of 1715, a man deep into middle age by the   time of Culloden. There is no telling what he thought of those   events. I have a feeling that his life was lived in a world still   remote and self-contained, still harboring its own mythology and   local wonders. And he was one of them.The first story told of Will is about his prowess as a runner. His   earliest job in the Ettrick Valley was as shepherd to a Mr. Anderson,   and this Mr. Anderson had noted how Will ran straight down on a sheep   and not roundabout when he wanted to catch it. So he knew that Will   was a fast runner, and when a champion English runner came into the   valley Mr. Anderson wagered Will against him for a large sum of   money. The English fellow scoffed, his backers scoffed, and Will won.   Mr. Anderson collected a fine heap of coins and Will for his part got   a gray cloth coat and a pair of hose.Fair enough, he said, for the coat and hose meant as much to him as   all that money to a man like Mr. Anderson.Here is a classic story. I heard versions of it—with different   names, different feats—when I was a child growing up in Huron   County, in Ontario. A stranger arrives full of fame, bragging of his   abilities, and is beaten by the local champion, a simple-hearted   fellow who is not even interested in a reward.These elements recur in another early story, in which Will goes over   the hills to the town of Moffat on some errand, unaware that it is   fair day, and is cajoled into taking part in a public race. He is not   well dressed for the occasion and during the running his country   breeches fall down. He lets them fall, kicks his way out of them, and   continues running in nothing but a shirt, and he wins. There is a   great fuss made of him and he gets invited to dinner in the public   house with gentlemen and ladies. By this time he must have had his   pants on, but he blushes anyway, and will not accept, claiming to be   mortified in front of such
 leddies.Maybe he was, but of course the leddies' appreciation of such a   well-favored young athlete is the scandalous and enjoyable point of   the story.Will marries, at some point, he marries a woman named Bessie Scott,   and they begin to raise their family. During this period the boy-hero   turns into a mortal man, though there are still feats of strength. A   certain spot in the Ettrick River becomes "Will's Leap" to   commemorate a jump he made, to get help or medicine for someone who   was sick. No feat, however, brought him any money, and the pressures   of earning a living for his family, combined with a convivial nature,   seem to have turned him into a casual bootlegger. His house is well   situated to receive the liquor that is being smuggled over the hills   from Moffat. Surprisingly this is not whiskey, but French brandy, no   doubt entering the country illegally by way of the Solway Firth—as   it will continue to do despite the efforts late in the century of   Robert Burns, poet and exciseman. Phaup becomes well known for   occasions of carousing or at least of high sociability. The hero's   name still stands for honorable behavior, strength, and generosity,   but no more for sobriety.Bessie Scott dies fairly young, and it is probably after her death   that the parties have begun. The children will have been banished,   most likely, to some outbuilding or the sleeping loft of the house.   There does not appear to have been any serious outlawry or loss of   respectability. The French brandy may be worth noting, though, in the   light of the adventures that come upon Will in his maturity.								
									 Copyright © 2006 by Alice Munro. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.