
DICTIONARY OF BROAD SCOTS is at the end of this book.
DONAL GRANT
CHAPTER I.FOOT-FARING.
CHAPTER II.A SPIRITUAL FOOT-PAD.
CHAPTER III.THE MOOR.
CHAPTER IV.THE TOWN.
CHAPTER V.THE COBBLER.
CHAPTER VI.DOORY.
CHAPTER VII.A SUNDAY.
CHAPTER VIII.THE GATE.
A young man stands at the edge of his familiar hillside, ready to leave the safety of his home for the first time. As he descends the winding sheep‑track, the landscape unfurls in sweeping Scottish valleys, a mixture of bright summer light and distant, brooding mountains. Stripped of a shoe and forced to walk barefoot, he confronts both the physical discomfort and the lingering shadows of his past, finding a quiet strength in the simple act of moving forward.
The narrative follows his unhurried journey, pausing at streams to cool his feet and letting the rhythm of the road set his thoughts. Along the way, he reflects on the values of self‑reliance versus material comfort, while the ever‑present Scottish dialect adds a vivid, local colour. This first act invites listeners into a world where the ordinary trek becomes a meditation on memory, resilience, and the promise of new horizons.
Language
en
Duration
~16 hours (957K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
John Bechard. HTML version by Al Haines. Smart quotes and italics, Lisa Wadsworth. Updated: 2022-12-10.
Release date
2000-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1824–1905
A Scottish writer, poet, and minister whose fairy tales helped shape modern fantasy, he wrote with warmth, spiritual depth, and a gift for wonder. Best known for works like Phantastes, The Princess and the Goblin, and At the Back of the North Wind, he remains a beloved influence on generations of readers and writers.
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