[Crest of clansfolk of Clan MacKay] Crest of Clansfolk of Clan MacKay

ROB DONN (Poet)

                                     -- Alasdair G. McKay

Although Rob Donn, who, throughout his life and afterwards, was normally referred to simply as "Rob Donn" without the appending of any surname, it appears that his ancesters were Calders and not MacKays. That his descendents also used the surname "Calder" would seem to indicate that he would have himself used that surname in the few circumstances in his life which may have required his use of a surname. (See also the note at the end of this article)

Rob Donn was born in 1715 and brought up by a MacKay who was a tacksman on Lord Redesdale's estate of Strathmore below Ben Hope. He came into the world, as did another Scottish poet two generations later, in a "blast o' Januar wind". As Rob Donn put this:

I was born in the winter
Among the lowering mountains,
And my first sight of the world
Snow and wind about my ears.
The Scotland into which Rob Donn came was one that was trying to settle itself down after a century or so of turmoil which had its origins in two 16th century cataclysms, the first being the Reformation and the second being the dynastic crisis precipitated by the birth of a "lass" Mary to James V.

Many of the Scots of the 1690's and early 1700's must have felt about the haranguing clergymen and the swashbuckling champions of the Stuart cause much as did a Lady Elphinstoun, whose ready wit, at the age of upwards of 100 years gave a succinct judgement on the turbulent times through which her long life had taken her.

According to Sir Walter Scott, this lady, a staunch Whig, was unwilling to receive John Grahame of Claverhouse, one of the Stuart swashbucklers, but had at length consented. Grahame observed to the lady that, having lived so much beyond the usual term of humanity, she must, in her time have seen many strange changes. "Hout na, sir," said Lady Elphinstoun, "the world is just to end with me as it began. When I was entering life, there was one Knox deaving us a' wi' his clavers and now as I am ganging out, there is one Claver'se deaving us a' wi' his knocks." ("Clavers being then common usage with the meaning of profitless chatter.)

This remarkable double pun of the old lady not only introduces us to the state of the world into which Rob Donn was born, but also emphasises the grave difficulty faced by one such as myself, who has no real knowledge of Gaelic, in attempting any assessment of the worth of a poet who spoke no other tongue and who was denied the gift of reading or writing even that language. Could the most erudite scholar translate Lady Elphinstoun's remark into Gaelic? How then are all of us who are not in a position to read a poet in the original language to appreciate his art? I fear that the answer must be: with great difficulty, if at all, given even the best of translations. The pun, the double entendre can require lengthy explanation to convey even the meaning so that the music of the poem is quite lost in the process. To begin to understand Rob Donn's stanza:

The King of Britain has no chamber
More delightful than the Cairn is to me
For it is private for young girls
And there are sounds there when you desire them;

Grass and trees, blossom and leaf,
And many hues upon them,
And birds and echo like harp strings
Playing the loveliest airs.

One must first know that there are two Gaelic words of similar pronunciation: cairn and cern. These have very different meanings. Cairn refers to the airy summit of a mountain or crag, whereas cern is the crowded stuffy communal servant's room of the tacksman's longhouse. While the cern might offer a lass the opportunity of catching the eye of her young man, she would wish to be in the spacious seclusion of the cairn before responding favourably to any of his advances. How can one feel the beauty of a poem if it is incomprehensible without such a long-winded, and still inadequate, commentary?

We must leave those Gaels who still have their ancestral tongue to revel in the poetry of Rob Donn as they do in the Fingalian lays of the ancient bards, and be content with understanding the meaning of the words he spoke. In stressing the importance of this aspect of Rob Donn's legacy, Ian Grimble, author of "The World of Rob Donn", goes as far as to state that "the most complete picture we have of the traditional Gaelic society of the Scottish Highlands before it underwent such a brutal transformation is preserved in the poetry of the Mackay country bard, Rob Donn.

Rob Donn lived at the lower end of the social scale in that half- feudal, half-avuncular society which we call a clan. As a sub-tenant of Iain MacEachainn, who was a third cousin of Lord Reay, Rob Donn and his brother Donald Dubh were not really supposed to be out shooting in the Reay forest for their own cooking pot (which might better perhaps have contained haggis). His verse on this topic echoes "the Lincolnshire Poacher":

There was blood on the front of your shirt
And it wasn't the book of the haunch of a goat
But the blood of a stag at rutting time.
And he was no robber was Donald Dubh.
Rob Donn is noted for his forthright comments on both the mighty and the meek. Once, after failing to elicit a response from the chief's son for better social services, he rebuked the man, on next seeing him in a new coat, with the remark: "there isn't a button or a button-hole in it that hasn't taken money off a poor man".

For all that, the Mackay chiefs and their kinsmen had done a reasonably good job of steering their clan through the turbulent 17th Century, particularly in that they had formed close ties with William of Orange and so ended up on the "right" side after the 1688 revolution. General Hugh Mackay of Scourie had been William's commander-in- chief in Scotland and had extinguished the military forces of Grahame of Claverhouse (the bonnie Viscount Dundee of Jabobite song) by the early 1690's. Endeavours of this kind involved considerable military recruitment within the clan, a practice which enabled the Mackays to export their unemployment problems and continued into Hanoverian times with contingents of soldiers heading to Europe, Ireland and America.

A byproduct of this activity could be a dearth of swains in the Mackay country. Of his brother, Donald Dubh, Rob Donn wrote, after the departure of a unit for Ireland had depleted the number of eligible bachelors:

When we heard the rumour
That the young men went away from here,
Two of them (i.e. girls) came from Cape Wrath
On the tracks of Donald Dubh.
Rob Donn himself served in the army, but not as a young soldier. His period of military service came in his late forties, when he appears to have held a position as a regimental bard. Perhaps he had realized the truth of the remarks of his contemporary, Dr.Johnson about the making of prose and poetry to the effect that none but a fool would take trouble over the composition of words but for payment. The three or four years he spent in this career allowed him travel and sojourn in the northern Scottish towns in a more leisurely way than his more youthful journeys to the south as a cattle drover.

At about the time of Rob Donn's birth the war of the Spanish succession drew to a close. This was a conflict into which Mackay soldiers were drawn through the close association with the Netherlands. As one of the provisions in the peace treaty, mainland Nova Scotia (of which Lord Reay was a hereditary baronet) had reverted from French rule to British. (Curiously and inexplicably, the administration of justice in that Province then followed English law instead of reverting to the quite distinct Scot's law, a fact commemorated at Fort Anne in Annapolis by a plaque which endures as a bronze barb in the flesh of every Nova Scotian of Scots origin -- see footnote below.)

It is unlikely that any of these shenanigans in Nova Scotia ever came to the attention of the Mackay chief, let alone his sub-tenants, for the American involvement of Mackays in the early eighteenth century was with warmer climes of the Caribbean and Georgia. Into the mouth of a young man departing to seek his fortune in Jamaica, but looking forward to returning, Rob Donn puts these words:

My journey lies to Jamaica
Many miles from this land,
And my thoughts are returning
To the shores of the Kyle.
I look forward to steering
Towards the goal of my travels
Beyond the Far Aird
Between the heathery islands.
Shorter sea voyages than that to America were commonly undertaken from one small harbour to another along the north coast of Scotland. Travellers in the Mackay country particularly disliked taking the land route between the Kyle of Tongue and Loch Eriboll over the peat bog called the Moine. (Even as late as the early 1950's, I can recall my family turning back at the Moine because of the road conditions, even although we were in a landrover.)

Such coastal trips could go wrong, for example, the one made by an unfortunate and seemingly unpopular man by the name of David, who was swept away to Orkney while trying to round Cape Wrath. Of this misadventure, Rob Donn commented, in terms of reminiscent of the sea shanty "hullaballoo balay"

How distressing and miserable the crossing
That David made to Orkney -
There went the cheese, the kelp and himself.

Your neighbours were on the lookout,
Seeking news in every bay,
And such was their anxiety that they couldn't shed a tear."

But when they heard of your return
From the seas without mishap
Then people shed tears in plenty.

Some journeys had to be made by land - particularly the droving of cattle to the fairs in the Scottish Lowlands at Crieff and Falkirk over 200 miles from the MacKay country. Although worked hard, the cattle drovers did have the opportunity of travelling to far-off parts. Rob Donn recounted the feelings of his master, a drover grown too old for that occupation:

My spirits are as heavy as lead
Because I am in the north while you are in the south.
The old man sits at home, alone with his memories.
In making the acquaintance of all the drovers
I wore out many a boot and spur.
I gained great fame with cattle
For many a day before I ceased.
Rob Donn seems to have enjoyed good rapport with his master Iain MacEachainn. When Iain cheated a Lowland cattle dealer, Rob retaliated with a scathing poem, one of the penalties Iain payed for becoming, through Rob's poetry, one of the best-recorded tacksman of his time.

Rob Donn himself seemed to have grown too old to leave us comment on the beginnings of the events leading up to the highland clearances. His talents, he confessed, were leaving him towards the end of his life in 1778.

This first edition of his poetry was not published until 1829, fifty years after his death, in a partly-Bowdlerised version by the Rev. Dr. Mackintosh Mackay. The survival of the verse in the oral tradition for half a century testifies to its powers of endurance.


Footnote on Plaque at Annapolis Royal

The text of the plaque at Annapolis Royal reads:

               This Tablet placed here by
          The Bench and Bar of Canada  AD 1921
       Marks the two hundredth anniversary of the
        establishment and sitting (in this fort)
               AD 1721 of the First Court 
            administering English Common Law
       within what is now the Dominion of Canada

      "Law Hateth Wrong"    Wingate Maxims  #146

Note added October 2005 (Alasdair McKay)

Captain Jim Munro of Dartmouth NS, who grew up in Durness, has shown me a fairly recent article by Hugh MacDonald of Melness, on the Kyle of Tongue, which relates to the ancestry of Rob Donn. MacDonald writes as follows:

" I don't forget things, people, or the names of people. Since I was a boy I got the older folk to tell me things and over my life I've made myself a genealogist of all the old families of Melness and North Sutherland. For years there's been a dispute as to who Rob Donn was. Many people claim that Rob Donn was a MacKay - especially the MacKays claim this. Now it's true that Rob Donn was adopted at the age of seven and brought up by the MacKay who was tacksman to the 1st Lord Redesdale, but Rob Donn's father was Donald Calder from Strathmore, and Rob Donn's name was Robert Calder. He had a son called Donald Calder and sometime his life that Donald moved to Melness. Donald then had a son called Robert and that Robert had a daughter called Rowanne Calder, whom my father knew very well. The Calder family knew who they were and they knew who Rob Donn was. He was a Calder. Any other story is just wishful thinking, or propaganda, or wrong."

[Thin Blue Line]
Copyright (C) 1988; Alasdair G. McKay, Ph.D.
Published "The Clansman," October 1988
Published "The MacKay Times of New Scotland," Spring 1994
[Thin Blue Line]
Author of above, Alasdair McKay, is widely known for his vocal renderings of Scottish song and poetry. Alasdair and his wife, Pat McKay, have made McKay's Nova Scotia Haggis since Dominion Day (now Canada Day) 1977.

[Thin Blue Line]
[New Scotland (Nova Scotia) -=- Where the Heart is Still Highland!]
[Thin Blue Line]
Back to:
[Scots in New Scotland (Nova Scotia)]
[Scottish Culture & Heritage: Scotland & New Scotland]
[New Scotland (Nova Scotia)] [Scottish Clan System]
[Scottish Clans] [Clan MacKay Home Page]

{*} [Credits] {*} Standard Disclaimer {*}
{*} Copyright (C) 1996 * All Rights Reserved {*}
[CCN Culture & Heritage] [Find] [Comment] [CCN Home]

[Long Marble Blue Line]