56 STUDIES OF NATURE 



pilgrims not unfrequently find ourselves joining 

 in some wild and guttural Scottish chorus, 

 which echoes again and again from the over- 

 hanging rocks by the shore. A stranger would 

 hardly have known what to make of a grave 

 and reverend person shouting, at such an early 

 hour of the morning, and at the top of his 

 voice 



With a hey, ho, yeddle ; 



And a yeddle, ho, high ; 

 Coomlachie, Ecclefechan, 

 Ardnamurchan and Mulga'ie, 



With a hey, ho, high ! 



At Sannox, a mile and a half from Corrie, 

 there are two glens .coming down to the sea 

 the South Glen and the North Glen. In going 

 to Loch Eanza you pass the mouth of the first, 

 and turn into the second. The South Glen is 

 the grander of the two. It is a deep and 

 narrow hollow, down into which the great 

 mountains sweep boldly ; and, at the end, the 

 flat face of Cior-Mhor forbids egress except by 



