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THE GENERAL'S HUT.

in many place's hang declining over passengers and higher than houses, so that 'tis frightful to pass by them."[1] A Volunteer describes the mountains "as high and frightful as the Alps in Spain; so we had nothing pleasant to behold but the sky."[2]

Our travellers halted for dinner at the General's Hut, a small public-house nearly eighteen miles from Inverness.[3] Here, says Johnson, Wade had lodged "while he superintended the works upon the road." I have seen it stated in a guide-book that on its site is built the Foyer's Hotel, but this is a mistake. In the Map of the Kings Roads made by General Wade, dated 1746, "the General Hutt" (sic) is marked just where the road takes a sudden

MAP OF FOYERS.

bend to the south, a short distance after which it passes the church of Burlassig. Dr. Garnett, who travelled through the Highlands at the end of the century, says that "the present public-house, which is still called the General's Hut, is very near the place where Wade had a small house, which was afterwards used as an inn. It commands a delightful view up the lake." The change of site must have been made, it would seem, between his visit and Johnson's.

  1. Ray's History of the Rebellion, p. 362.
  2. M. Hughes's Plain Narrative, p. 53. Alps, I suppose, he uses as Milton does for lofty mountains in general.
  3. In a Survey of the Province of Moray, published at Aberdeen in 1798, on pp. 333-34, the following table is given of the distances along the road which Johnson was following:—"From Inverness to the General's Hut, 17 miles 6 furlongs. From General's Hut to Fort Augustus, 14 miles 2 furlongs. From Fort Augustus to Unach [? Anoch], 9 miles. From Unach to Rattachan, 25 miles 5 furlongs. From Rattachan to Bernera, 9 miles.