From Wood to Ridge

By Sorley MacLean
Image of From Wood to Ridge/O Choille Gu Bearradh: Collected Poems in Gaelic and English
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Contemporary Gaelic poetry from Sorley MacLean. The poem is an evocation of the people of Hallaig, a township that was completely cleared in the early 1850s, with most of the inhabitants shipped to Australia. It’s not only about the awful things which happened to so many people all those years ago, but also the sense of loss in terms of what Scotland might be today had the clearances not taken place.

Experts who have recommended this book

In an interview on The Highland Clearances

Interview Extract:

You’ve recommended another piece of creative writing: Sorley Maclean’s "Hallaig". Sorley Maclean was originally a Gaelic poet, is that right?

He was entirely a Gaelic poet. The book’s entitled Collected Works in Gaelic and English, but he never wrote a poem in English: he wrote all his poetry in Gaelic and then translated it. He grew up in Raasay, a little island just off the coast of Skye, and I’d say he’s seen as the greatest Gaelic poet of the 20th century. One person who has written most perceptively about "Hallaig" is Seamus Heaney, who made his own translation. As Heaney indicated, in some ways the poem is quite straightforward and simple.

The township of Hallaig was completely cleared in the early 1850s and most of the inhabitants were shipped to Australia. The poem is an evocation of the people who were there – particularly the young girls, as they are walking into the township, who begin as birch trees and are transformed: "The men lying on the green/At the end of every house that was,/The girls a wood of birches/Straight their backs, bent their heads."

It’s not just a lamentation for the desolate nature of the place, although it is partly that – it’s also an evocation of what the Highlands might have been without what, in the English translation, is described as "the heartache of the tale".

Read full interview

About James Hunter

Professor James Hunter is director of the Centre for History, University of the Highlands and Islands. He is the author of 12 books about the Highlands including A Dance Called America, The Making of the Crofting Community and On the Other Side of Sorrow: Nature and People in the Scottish Highlands.  He was the first director of the Scottish Crofters Union. He also chaired Highlands and Islands Enterprise, the north of Scotland’s development agency.