Song The loch is featured in a well-known song which was first published around 1841. The chorus is: :Oh, ye'll tak the high road, and I'll tak the low road, :And I'll be in Scotland afore ye; :But me and my true love will never meet again :On the bonnie, bonnie banks o' Loch Lomond. The song has been recorded by many performers over the years. The original author is unknown. One story is that the song was written by a Scottish soldier who awaited death in enemy captivity; in his final letter home, he wrote this song, portraying his home and how much he would miss it. Another tale is that during the
Jacobite rising of 1745 a soldier on his way back to Scotland during the 1745–46 retreat from England wrote this song. The "low road" may be a reference to the
Celtic belief that if someone died away from his homeland, then the
fairies would provide a route of this name for his soul to return home. Within this theory, it is possible that the soldier awaiting death may have been writing either to a friend who was allowed to live and return home, or to a lover back in Scotland.
Other , c.1924 • Loch Lomond (like
Loch Ness) is often used as a shorthand for all things Scottish, an image partly reinforced by the self-titled song. An archetype is the
Lerner and Loewe musical
Brigadoon. The opening lyrics of the song "
Almost Like Being in Love" are: "Maybe the sun gave me the power/For I could swim Loch Lomond and be home in half an hour/Maybe the air gave me the drive/For I'm all aglow and alive!" • It is mentioned in the song "
You're All the World to Me" from the musical film
Royal Wedding in the line: "You're Loch Lomond when autumn is the painter!" • The village of
Luss ("Glendarroch") on the shores of the loch was the location for the
TV soap Take the High Road, and the loch itself was given the fictional name Loch Darroch for the purpose of the series. • Luss ("Lios") and the islands nearby were used as the setting for
E. J. Oxenham's first book,
Goblin Island, published in 1907. • Loch Lomond is also the brand name of the
Scotch whisky drunk by
Captain Haddock in
Hergé's
comic book series
The Adventures of Tintin, featured prominently in
The Black Island. A non-fictional whisky by the same name is produced at the
Loch Lomond distillery. •
Loch Lomond is the opening track on guitarist
Steve Hackett's 2011 album
Beyond the Shrouded Horizon. • In
The Three Stooges episode "Pardon My Scotch" a gentleman asks 'Are you laddies by any chance from Loch Lomond?', whereupon Curly replies 'No we're from
lock jaw'. • One of the road signs in the
Merrie Melodies short "
My Bunny Lies over the Sea" points to Loch Lomond. •
Spike Milligan created an episode of
The Goon Show entitled
The Treasure of Loch Lomond. The main character, Neddie Seagoon, discovers he has Scottish heritage and travels to Scotland to claim a fortune owned by his uncle, who discovered a galleon full of treasure at the bottom of the loch. • In the
Mel Brooks film
Spaceballs, the character "Snotty" delivers the line "Lock one... lock two... lock three... Loch Lomond..." while locking transporters onto "President Skroob". • In Santa Cruz County, California, United States, lies
Loch Lomond, a small body of water named after Loch Lomond in Scotland. Near Loch Lomond, California, is
Ben Lomond which was named by Scot John Burns in 1851. • In Canada, there is a Loch Lomond by Thunder Bay, Ontario; a
Loch Lomond in Richmond County, Nova Scotia; as well as a Hamlet named for the loch in southern Alberta. • Loch Lomond features as the backdrop for a song sequence in the 1998
Bollywood film
Kuch Kuch Hota Hai. ==See also==