RHIND, or RHYND, a parish, in the county of Perth, 2 miles (S. E.) from Perth; containing 402 inhabitants. This place, which derives its name, of Gaelic import, from its situation on a point of land at the confluence of the rivers Tay and Earn, was the resort of the celebrated Wallace, who, while meditating the deliverance of his country from a foreign yoke, was obliged to take shelter among its woods and recesses. The parish is about four miles in length and one mile in average breadth. It is bounded on the north and east by the Tay, which separates it from the parishes of Kinfauns and St. INIadoes; and on the south by the Earn, which separates it from the parish of Abernethy. Rhind comprises I7OO acres, of which, with the exception of 100 acres in woodland and plantations, and about fifty acres waste, the whole is arable. The surface is varied; towards the rivers forming a tract of level land, and in other parts rising gradually till it attains a considerable elevation. From the recent connexion of some islands in the Tay with the main land, by the construction of an artificial isthmus of reeds and branches of trees to collect and detain the mud deposited at the reflux of the tide, a compact and solid bank of fertile soil has been formed, which adds both to the extent and variety of the surface. The scenery is rich; the banks of the rivers in general are lofty and abrupt, and are planted with trees of various kinds, of stately growth. The hills, also, are embellished with thriving plantations, and command extensive and interesting views over a wide tract abounding with picturesque objects, and enlivened by the constant passing and repassing of vessels in the Tay, which here attains a considerable breadth. In the lower districts the soil is a clay intermixed with a rich black loam; and in the upper, of a more light and gravelly cjuality, but under good management rendered fertile. The water, which might otherwise lodge on the level lands, is carefully removed by draining; and the system of agriculture is in every respect much improved: among the crops are, wheat, of excellent quality and raised in great abundance, and lately potatoes, of which large quantities are grown for the London markets. The farm buildings and offices are substantial and commodious, and every improvement in implements of husbandry is eagerly adopted by the tenants. The annual value of real property in the parish amounts to £.')485. A salmon-fishery in the Tay affords employment to some of the inhabitants, and produces to the proprietors a rental of £600 per annum. There is no village. The roads are kept in repair by statute l,il)onr. Rhind is ecclesiastically iu the presbytery of Perth, synod of Perth and Stirling, and in the patronage of the Earl of Wcmyss and March: the minister's stipend is £225. 10. li., with a manse, and a glebe valued at £17 per annum. The old church was inconveniently situated in an angle of the parish, and had become dilapidated; a new church has been erected in a more convenient position. The parochial school af- fords education to about seventy children; the master has a salary of £34. 4. 4., with the fees, and a good house and garden. There are some slight remains of the nunnery of Elcho, which, from the beauty of their site, form a picturesque and romantic ruin; and on the bank of the river Tay are the ruins of the ancient castle of Elcho, consisting chiefly of a lofty tower, the walls of which are formed of hard and very durable stone. The tower is crowned with a battlement, the ascent to which, by a spiral staircase, is still in tolerable preservation; a new roof has been added to preserve it from further decay, and from the battlement is obtained a most pleasing view of the surrounding country. Elcho Castle was for many generations the residence of the ancestors of the present noble proprietor, the Earl of Wemyss and March, who takes the title of Baron Elcho from this place. There is a chalybeate spring: but it is not much frequented.