| 
       BY  
      JAMES T. MITCHELL, F.S.A. (SCOT.)  
      EDITOR, WESTERN HOME MONTHLY 
      I am honored in being 
      invited by the publishers to write a word or two in the form of an 
      introduction to this most interesting volume from the pen of my good 
      friend Malcolm A. Macqueen. 
      The author is a successful 
      lawyer and man of affairs, as well as a facile writer, but he is more than 
      that-he is a Highlander, with that pride of race surging through his 
      blood-stream that has for years stimulated his people to high ideals and 
      noble action-and that in brief has brought to the Gael the respect of all 
      other peoples. Though three generations have separated him from the land 
      of his fathers, the Isle of Skye, his enthusiasm has not grown cold, but 
      rather have his affections for all that the Highlander stands for as a 
      citizen of the Empire and a factor in the world's civilization been 
      intensified. He combines with a strong admiration for the early Scottish 
      Canadian pioneers, a mystical and spiritual love for all that is beautiful 
      in life - a truly Hebridean characteristic. 
      The book will be received 
      with a real joy not alone by his many friends throughout Canada and by his 
      ain folk in his beloved Island home, Prince Edward, but by all who admire 
      the perseverance, endurance and nobility of character displayed by those 
      who faced the struggles of an unexplored land. 
      The narrative goes back to 
      1803 when Lord Selkirk arrived with his first Canadian settlement of 
      Highlanders. Graphically and tenderly he takes up the story from the 
      moment of the landing and traces his people in genealogical succession as 
      well as their influence throughout all parts of the continent of America. 
      For this masterly labor of 
      love no amount of research seemed too great or too tedious for the author. 
      Indeed he has placed all of us whose hearts still go out in warmth to the 
      old home across the seas, under a very deep obligation. While all other 
      peoples manifest a regard for the place of their birth and the ashes of 
      their fathers, it seems to me that in the Hebridean this worthy sentiment 
      finds its most beautiful expression. Time and distance in his case do not 
      weaken it-neither do generations efface it. 
      It was because of his 
      admiration for those who set the path and blazed the trail that we are 
      privileged to read a book of this nature-and a more worthy subject he 
      could not have chosen. 
      Fortunate indeed is Canada 
      or any other land that has among its intellectual citizens men like the 
      author, who from the pressing exactitudes of professional, commercial and 
      social life, take time to preserve memories that will always be an 
      uplifting and patriotic influence. 
      
        
         |