“Implore his aid, for
Proteus only knows
The secret cause and cure of all thy woes,
But first the wily wizard must be caught,
For unconstrain’d he nothing tells for naught.
Nor is with prayers, or bribes, or flattery bought,
Surprise him first, and with strong fetters bind.”— Geobgics.
Of all the old mythologic
existences of Scotland—half earth, half air—there was none with whom the
people of Cromarty were better acquainted than with the mermaid. Thirty
years have not yet gone by since she has been seen by moonlight sitting
on a stone in the sea, a little to the east of the town ; and scarce a
winter passed, forty years earlier, in which she was not heard singing
among the rocks, or seen braiding up her long yellow tresses on the
shore. Like her contemporaries the river-wraiths and fairies—like the
nymphs and deities, too, of the Greeks and Romans—she was deemed
scarcely less material than the favoured individuals of our own species,
who, in the grey of the morning or at the close of evening, had marked
her sitting on some desert promontory, or frolicking amid the waves of
some solitary arm of the sea. But it is not so generally known, that
though in some respects less potent even than men—than at least the very
strong and very courageous—she had a power through her connexion with
the invisible world over human affairs, and could control and remodel
even the decrees of destiny. A robust, fearless man might treat her, it
is said, as Ulysses did Circe, or Diomedes Venus; but then, more potent
than these goddesses, she could render all his future undertakings
either successful or unfortunate, or, if a seafaring man, could either
bury him in the waves or protect him from their fury. It is said, too,
that like the Proteus of classical mythology (and the coincidence, if
merely such, is at least a curious one), she never exerted this power in
a good direction except when compelled to it. She avoided in the daytime
shores frequented by man, and when disturbed by him in her retreats,
escaped into her native element; but if he succeeded in seizing and
overpowering her, she always purchased her release by granting him any
three wishes he might form, 3onnected with either his own fortunes or
those of his friends. Her strength, however, was superior to that of
most men ; and, if victorious in the struggle, she carried the
unfortunate assailant with her into the sea.
It is now nearly a
hundred and twenty years since honest John Reid, the Cromarty
shipmaster, was positively the most unhappy man in the place. He was
shrewd, sensible, calculating, good-humoured, in comparatively easy
circumstances, and at this time in his thirtieth year. The early part of
his life had been spent abroad ; he had voyaged over the wide Pacific,
and traded to China and both the Indies; and to such purpose— for he was
quite the sort of person one would most like to have for one’s
grandfather—that in about fourteen years after sailing from Cromarty a
poor ship-boy, he had returned to it with money enough to purchase a
fine large sloop, with which he engaged in the lucrative trade carrying
on at this period between Holland and the northern ports of Scotland.
His good luck still followed him ; nor was he of the class who are
ingenious in discovering imaginary misfortunes. What is more, too, he
was of so cool a temperament, that when nature rendered him capable of
the softer passion at all, it seemed as if she had done so by way of
after-thought, and contrary to her original intention. And yet, John
Reid, with all his cool prudence, and his good humour and good fortune
to boot, was one of the unhappiest men in the place—and all this because
he had been just paying his addresses to one of its prettiest girls.
He had first seen Helen
Stuart when indulging in a solitary # walk on the hill of Cromarty,
shortly after his return from the Indies. Helen was fully twelve years
younger than himself, slightly but elegantly formed, with small regular
features, and a complexion in which the purest white was blended with
the most exquisite red. Never before had the sailor seen a creature half
so lovely; he thought of her all the evening after, and dreamed of her
all the night. But there was no corresponding impression on the other
side; the maiden merely remembered that she had met in the wood with the
newly-arrived shipmaster and described him to one of her companions as a
strongly-built man of barely the middle size, broad-shouldered and deep-chested,
with a set of irregular, good-humoured features, over which a tropical
sun had cast its tinge of the deepest bronze.. Helen was a village
heiress, with a good deal of the pride of beauty in her composition, and
a very little of the pride of wealth, and, with what was perhaps as
unfavourable to the newly-formed passion of Reid as either, a romantic
attachment to that most perfect man of the imagination, the maid’s
husband—a prince in disguise, the Admirable Crichton in a revised
edition, or the hero of an old ballad. '
This dangerous, though
shadowy rival of the true lover, who assumes in almost every feminine
mind a shape of its own, was in the present instance handsome as Helen
herself, with just such a complexion and such eyes and hair; and,
excelling all men in fine clothes, fine speeches, and fine manners, he
excelled them in parts, and wealth, and courage too. What had the
robust, sunburned sailor of thirty to cast into the opposite scale 1
Besides, Helen, though she had often dreamed of courtship, had never
seriously thought of marriage; and so, partly for the sake of her ideal
suitor, partly through a girlish unwillingness to grapple with the
realities of life, the real suitor was rejected.
Grave natures, says
Bacon, are ever the most constant in their attachments. Weeks and months
passed away, and still there was an uneasy void in the mind of the
sailor, which neither business nor amusement could fill—a something
which differed from grief, without affecting him less painfully. He
could think and dream of only Helen Stuart. Her image followed him into
Holland among the phlegmatic Dutchmen, who never break their hearts for
the sake of a mistress, and watched beside him for many a long hour at
the helm. He ever saw her as as he had first seen her on the hill; there
were trees in the background, and the warm mellow flush of a setting
sun, while in front there tripped lightly along a sylph-looking
creature, with bright happy eyes, and cheeks glowing with crimson.
He had returned from ene
of his voyages late in April, and had risen, when May-day arrived, ere
the first peep of daylight, in the hope of again meeting Helen among the
woods of the hill. Were he but to see her, barely see her, he could be
happy, he thought, for months to come ; and he knew she would be
gathering May-dew this morning, with all her companions, on the green
slopes -of Drieminory. Morning rose upon him as he sauntered eastward
along the edge of the bay; the stars sunk one by one into the blue; and
on reaching a piece of rocky beach that stretches along the brow of the
hill, the sun rose all red and glorious out of the Firth, and flung a
broad pathway of flame across the waters to the shore. The rocks, the
hill, the little wavelets which came toppling against the beach, were
tinged with the orange light of morning; and yet, from the earliness of
the hour, and the secluded character of the scene, a portion of terror
might well have mingled with one’s quieter feelings of admiration when
in the vicinity of a place so famous for the wild and the wonderful as
the Dropping-Cave. But of the cave more anon. Darkness and solitude are
twin sisters, and foster nearly the same emotions ; but they failed this
morning to awaken a single fear in the mind of the shipmaster, sailor as
he was, and acquainted, too, with every story of the cave. He could
think of only Helen Stuart.
An insulated pile of
rock, roughened with moss and lichens, which stands out of the beach
like an old ruinous castle, surmounted by hanging bartisans and broken
turrets, conceals the cave itself, and the skerries abreast of it, from
the traveller who approaches them from the west. It screened them this
morning from the view of the shipmaster, as, stepping lightly along the
rough stones, full of impossible wishes and imaginings, he heard the low
notes of a song. He looked round to ascertain whether a boat might not
be passing, or a shepherd seated on the hill; but he could see only a
huge overgrown seal that had raised its head over the waves, and seemed
listening to the music with its face towards the east. On turning,
however, the edge of the cliff, he saw the musician, apparently a young
girl, who seemed bathing among the cliffs, and who was now sitting half
on the rock, half in the water, on one of the outer skerries, opposite
the cave. Her long yellow hair fell in luxuriant profusion on her snowy
shoulders, and as she raised herself higher on the cliff, the sun shone
on the parts below her waist with such dazzling brightness, that the
sailor raised his hands to his eyes, and a shifting speck of light, like
the reflection of a mirror, went dancing over the shaded roughnesses of
the opposite precipice. Her face was turned towards the cave, and the
notes of her song seemed at times to be answered from it in a chorus,
faint and low indeed, but which could not, he thought, be wholly
produced by echo.
Reid was too well
acquainted with the beliefs of the age not to know that he looked upon
the mermaid. And were he less a lover than he was, he would have done
nothing more. But, aware of her strange power over the destinies of men,
he only thought that now or never was his opportunity for gaining the
hand of Helen. “Would that there were some of my lads here to see fair
play!” he muttered, as, creeping amid the crags, and availing himself of
every brake that afforded the slightest cover, he stole towards the
shelf on which the creature was seated. She turned round in the moment
he had gained it; the last note of her song lengthened into a shriek;
and with an expression of mingled terror and surprise, which clouded a
set of the loveliest features, she attempted to fling herself into the
water ; but in the moment of the attempt, the brawny arms of the
shipmaster were locked round her waist. Her arms clasped his shoulders
in turn, and with a strength scarcely inferior to that exerted by the
snake of India when struggling with the tiger, she strove to drag him to
the edge of the rock; but though his iron sinews quivered under her
grasp like the beams of his vessel when straining beneath a press of
canvas, he thought of Helen Stuart, and bore her down by main force in
the opposite direction. A fainter and a still fainter struggle ensued,
and she then lay passive against the cliff. Never had Reid seen aught so
beautiful—and he was convinced of it, lover as he was—as the half-fish
half-woman creature that now lay prostrate before him.
“Man, what with me?” she
said, in a tone of voice which, though sweet as the song of a bird, had
something so unnatural in it that it made his blood run Cold. “Wishes
three,” he replied, in the prescribed formula of the demonologist, and
then proceeded to state them. His father, a sailor like himself, had
been drowned many years before ; and the first wish suggested to him by
the circumstance was, that neither he himself nor any of his friends
should perish by the sea. The second—for he feared lest Helen, so
lady-looking a person, and an heiress to boot, might yet find herself
the wife of a poor man—was, that he should be uninterruptedly fortunate
in all his undertakings. The third wish he never communicated to any one
except the mermaid, and yet no one ever failed to guess it. “Quit, and
have,” replied the creature. Reid slackened his hold; and pressing her
tail against the rock until it curled to her waist, and raising her
hands, the palms pressed together, and the edge to her face, she sprang
into the sea. The spray dashed to the sun ; the white shoulders and
silvery tail gleamed for a moment through the green depths of the water.
A slight ripple splashed against the beach, and when it subsided, every
trace of the mermaid had vanished. Reid wiped his brow, and ascending by
one of the slopes of the hill towards the well-known resorts of his
town’s-women—not the less inclined to hope from the result of his
strange contest—he found Helen Stuart seated with one of her companions,
a common acquaintance, on the grassy knoll over the Lover’s Leap. The
charm, thought he, already begins to work.
He bowed to Helen, and
addressed her companion. “The man of all the world,” said the latter,
“whom we most wished to see". Helen has been telling me one of the
strangest dreams; and it is not half an hour yet since we both thought
we were going to see it realized ; but you must assist us in reading it.
She had just fallen asleep last night, when she found herself on the
green slope covered with primroses and cuckoo-flowers, that lies, you
know, to the west of the Dropping-Cave; and there she was employed, she
thought, as we have been this morning, in gathering May-dew. But the
grass and bushes seemed dry and parched, and she had gathered only a few
drops, when, on hearing some one singing among the rocks beside the
cave, she looked that way, and saw you sleeping on the beach, and the
singer, a beautiful lady, watching beside you. She turned again to the
bushes, but all was dry; and she was quite unhappy that she could get no
dew, and unhappy, too, lest the strange lady should suffer you to sleep
till you were covered by the tide; when suddenly you stood beside her,
and began to assist her in shaking the bushes. She looked for the lady,
and saw her far out among the skerries, floating on the water like a
white sea-gull; and as she looked and wondered, she heard a shower of
drops which you had shaken down, tinkling against the bottom of the
pitcher. And only think of the prettiness of the fancy!—the drops were
all drops of pure gold, and filled the pitcher to the brim. So far the
dream. But this is not all. We both passed the green primrose slope just
as the sun was rising, and—can you believe it?—we heard from among the
rocks the identical song which Helen heard in her dream. It was like
nothing else I ever listened to ; and now here are you to fill our
pitchers with gold, like the genie of a fairy tale.”
“And so you have really
heard music from among the rocks?” said Beid. “Well, but I have more
than heard it—I have seen and conversed with the musician; the strange
unearthly lady of Helen’s dream. I have visited every quarter of the
globe, and sailed over almost every ocean, but never saw the mermaid
before.”
“Seen the mermaid!”
exclaimed Helen.
“Seen and conversed with
the mermaid!” said her companion; “Heaven forbid! The last time she
appeared at the Dropping-Cave was only a few days before the terrible
storm in which you lost your father. Take care you repeat not her words—
for they thrive ill who carry tales from the other world to this.”
“But I am the creature’s
master,” said the sailor, “and need not be so wary.”
He told his story; how he
had first seen the mysterious creature sitting in the sea, and breathing
exquisite music, as she combed down her long yellow tresses ; how he had
stolen warily among the crags, with a heart palpitating betwixt dread
and eagerness; and how, after so fearful a struggle, she had lain
passive against the cliff. Helen listened with feelings of wonder and
admiration, dashed with terror ; and in returning home, though the
morning was far advanced, and the Dropping-Cave a great way below, she
leaned for support and protection on the arm of the sailor—a freedom
which no one would have remarked as oyer great at May-day next year, for
the sailor had ere then become her husband. For nearly a century after,
the family was a rising one ; but it is now extinct. Helen, for the last
seventy years, has been sleeping under a slab of blue marble within the
broken walls of the Chapel of St. Regulus ; her only daughter, the wife
of Sir George Mackenzie of Cromarty, lies in one of the burying-grounds
of Inverness, with a shield of I know not how many quarterings over her
grave; and it is not yet twenty years since her grandson, the last of
the family, died in London, bequeathing to one of his Cromarty relatives
several small pieces of property, and a legacy of many thousand pounds.
There is on the northern
side of the Firth of Cromarty, a shallow arm of the sea several miles in
length, which dries during stream tides throughout almost its entire
extent, and bears the name of the sands of Nigg. Like the sandjs of the
Solway, it has been a frequent scene of accidents. Skirting a populous
tract of country on both sides, it lies much in the way of travellers;
and the fords, which shift during land floods and high winds, are often
attempted at night, and occasionally at improper times of the tide. A
narrow river-like channel in the middle, fed by the streams which
discharge themselves into the estuary from the interior, and which never
wholly dries,, bears the name of “ The Pot,” and was infamous during
even the present century for its death-lights and its wraiths, and for
the strange mysterious noises which used to come sounding from its
depths to either shore previous to “ a drowning.” Little more than half
a century ago, a farmer of the district who had turned aside to see an
acquaintance, an old man who lived on the northern shore of the sands of
Nigg, found him leaning over the fence of his little garden, apparently
so lost in thought that he seemed unconscious of his presence. “What
ails you, Donald?” inquired the visitor. “There will be a drowning
to-day in the Pot,” replied Donald. “A drowning in the Pot!—what makes
you say so?” “Do you hear nothing?” “No’o—and yet I rather think I
do;—there are faint sounds as of a continual knocking—are there not?—so
very faint, that they seem rather within the ear, than without; and yet
they surely come from the Pot;—knock, knock, knock—what can it mean?”
“That knocking,” said the old man, “has been sounding in my ears all
this morning. I have never known a life lost on the sands but that
knocking has gone before.” As he spoke, a horseman was seen riding
furiously along the road which skirts the opposite shore of the estuary.
On reaching the usual ford, though the rise of the tide had rendered it
impracticable for more than an hour before, he spurred his horse across
the beach and entered the water. “Surely,” said the old man to his
friend, “that madman is not taking the ford, and the sea nearly at
full?” “Ay, but he is though,” said the other; “if the distance does not
deceive me, it is Macculloch the com-agent, in hot haste for the Tain
market. See how he spurs through the shallows j and see, he has now
reached the Pot, and the water deepens—he goes deeper, and deeper, and
deeper. Merciful heavens ! he is gone!” Horse and rider had sunk into
one of the hollows. The horse rose to the surface a moment after, and
swam to the shore ; but the rider had disappeared for ever. A story of
nearly the same part of the country connects the mysterious knocking
with the mermaid.
In the immediate
neighbourhood of the Old Abbey of Feam, famous for its abbot, Patrick
Hamilton, our first Protestant martyr, there stood, rather more than
ninety years ago, a little turf cottage, inhabited by a widow, whose
husband, a farmer of the parish, had died’ suddenly in the fields about
ten years before. The poor woman had been within doors with her only
child, a little girl of seven years of age, at the time; and when,
without previous preparation, she had opened the door on a hurried
summons, and seen the corpse of her husband on the threshold, her mind
was totally unhinged by the shock. For the ten following years she went
wandering about like a ghost, scarce conscious apparent]yof anything; no
one ever heard her speak, or saw her listen ; and save that she retained
a few of the mechanical neatnesses of her earlier years—which, standing
out alone on a groundwork of vacuity, seemed akin to the instincts of
the inferior animals—her life appeared to be nearly as much a blank as
that of the large elm-tree which stretched its branches over her
cottage. Her husband’s farm, shortly after his death, had been put into
the hands of a relation of the family, a narrow sordid man who had made
no generous use, it was thought, of the power which the imbecility of
the poor woman and the youth of her daughter gave him over their
affairs; it was at least certain that he became comparatively wealthy,
and they very poor ; and in the autumn of 1742, the daughter, now a
pretty girl of seventeen, had to leave her mother on the care of a
neighbour, and to engage as a reaper with a farmer in the neighbouring
parish of Tarbat. She had gone with a heavy heart to work for the first
time among strangers, but her youth and beauty, added to a quiet
timidity of manner, that showed how conscious she was of having no one
to protect her, had made her friends; and now that harvest was over, she
was returning home, proud of her slender earnings, and full of hope and
happiness. It was early on a Sabbath morning, and her path winded along
the southern bank of Loch-Slin, where the parish of Tarbat borders on
that of Fearn.
Loch-Slin is a dark
sluggish sheet of water, bordered on every side by thick tangled hedges
of reeds and rushes ; nor has the surrounding scenery much to recommend
it. It is comparatively tame—tamer perhaps for the last thirty years
than at any former period; for the plough has been busy among its green
undulating slopes, and many of its more picturesque thickets of alders
and willows have disappeared. It possesses, however, its few points of
interest; and its appearance at this time in the quiet of the Sabbath
morning, was one of extreme seclusion. The tall old castle of Loch-Slin,
broken and weather-worn, and pregnant with associations of the remote
past, stood up over it like some necromancer beside his mirror ; and the
maiden, as she tripped homewards along the little blind pathway that
went winding along the quiet shore—now in a hollow, anon on a
height—could see the red image of the ruins heightened by the flush of
the newly-risen sun, reflected on the calm surface that still lay dark
and grey under the shadow of the eastern bank. All was still as death,
when her ear suddenly caught a low indistinct sound as of a continuous
knocking, which heightened as she went, until it was at length echoed
back from the old walls; and which, had she heard it on a week morning,
she would have at once set down as that of the knocking of clothes at a
washing. But who, she thought, can be “knocking claes” on the Sabbath?
She turned a projecting angle of the bank, and saw, not ten yards away,
what seemed to be a tall female standing in the water immediately beyond
the line of flags and rushes which fringed the shore, and engaged
apparently in knocking clothes on a stone, with the sort of bludgeon
still used in the north country for the purpose. The maiden hurried
past, convinced that the creature before her could be none other than
the mermaid of Loch-Slin; but in the midst of her terror she was
possessed enough to remark that the beautiful goblin seemed to ply its
work with a malignant pleasure, and that on a grass plot directly
opposite where it stood, there were spread out as if to dry, more than
thirty smocks and shirts, all horribly dabbled with blood. As the -poor
girl entered her mother’s cottage, the excitement that had borne her up
in her flight suddenly failed, and she sunk insensible upon the floor.
For a moment the mother seemed roused by the circumstance, but as her
daughter recovered, she again relapsed into her accustomed apathy.
The spirits of the maiden
were much flurried, and there was one to whom she would have fain
communicated her strange story, and sought relief in his society from
the terror that made her heart still palpitate against her side. But her
young cousin (the son of her unkind relation, the farmer), with whom she
had so often herded on the same knoll, and wrought on the same
harvest-furrow, had set out for a neighbouring farm, on his way to
church, and so there was no probability of her seeing him before
evening. She sickened at the gloom of her mother’s cottage, where the
scowling features of the mermaid seemed imprinted on every darker
recess; and, taking her mother by the hand, she walked out with her to
the fields. It was now about an hour after noon, and the sun in his
strength was looking down in the calm on the bare stubbly campaign, and
the old abbey in the midst, with its steep roof of lichened stone, and
its rows of massy buttresses. The maiden could hear the higher notes of
the congregational psalm as they came floating along the slope from the
building, when—fearful catastrophe!—sudden as the explosion of a powder
magazine, or the shock of an earthquake, there was a tremendous crash
heard, accompanied by a terrific cry; a dense cloud of dust enveloped
the ancient abbey, and when it cleared away, it was seen that the
ponderous stone roof of the building had sunk in. “ 0 wretched day!”
exclaimed the widow, mysteriously restored by the violence of one shock
to that full command of her faculties which she had lost by another, and
starting at once from the deathlike apathy of years, “O wretched day!
the church has fallen, and the whole congregation are buried in the
ruins. Fearful calamity!—a parish destroyed at a blow. Dear, dear child,
let us haste and see whether something cannot be done—whether some may
not be left.” The maiden followed her mother to the scene of the
accident in distraction and terror.
As they approached the
churchyard gate they met two young women covered with blood, who were
running shrieking along the road, and shortly after an elderly man so
much injured, that he was creeping for support along the wall. “Go on,”
he said to the widow, who had stopped to assist him; “I have gotten my
life as a ransom, but there are hundreds perishing yonder.’
They entered the
churchyard; two-thirds of the roof had fallen, and nearly half the
people were buried in the ruins; and they could see through the
shattered windows men all covered with blood and dust, yelling, like
maniacs, and tearing up the stones and slates that were heaped over
their wives and children. As the sufferers were carried out one by one,
and laid on the flat tombstones of the churchyard, the widow, so
strangely restored to the energies of her better years, busied herself
in stanching their wounds or restoring them to animation; and her
daughter, gathering heart, strove to assist her. A young man came
staggering from among the ruins, his face suffused with blood, and
bearing a dead body on his shoulders, when, laying down his charge
beside them, he sunk over it in a swoon. It was the young cousin of the
maiden, and the mutilated corpse which he carried was that of his
father. She sobbed over him in an agony of grief and terror; but the
exertions of the widow, who wonderfully retained her self-possession,
soon recovered him to consciousness, though in so weak a state from
exhaustion and loss of blood, that some time elapsed ere he was able to
quit the burying-ground, leaning on the arm of his cousin. Thirty-six
persons were killed on the spot, and many more were so dreadfully
injured that they never recovered. The tombstones were spread over with
dead bodies, some of them so fearfully gashed and mangled that they
could scarce be recognised, and the paths that wended throughout the
churchyard literally ran with blood. It was not until the maiden had
reached her mother’s cottage, and the heart-rending clamour had begun to
fall more faintly on the ear, that she thought of the mysterious washing
of Loch-Slin, with its bloody shirts, and felt that she could understand
it.
There were lights that
evening in many a cottage, and mourners beside many a bed. The widow and
her daughter watched beside the bed of their young relative, and though
the struggle for life was protracted and doubtful, the strength of his
constitution at length prevailed, and he rose, pale and thin, and taller
than before, with a scar across his left temple. But ere the first
spring had passed, with its balmy mornings and clear sunshine days, he
had recovered his former bloom, and more than his former strength. The
widow retained the powers so wonderfully restored to her; for the
dislocation of faculty effected by one shock had been completely reset
by another, and the whole intellect refitted. She had, however, her
season of grief to pass through, as if her husband had died only a few
days before; and when the relations of the lately perished came to weep
over the newly-formed graves that rose so thickly in the burying-place,
and around which the grass and hemlock stalks still bore the stain of
blood, the widow might be seen seated by a grave covered with moss and
daisies, and sunk so low that it was with difficulty its place could be
traced on the sward. Of the ten previous years she retained only a few
doubtful recollections, resembling those of a single iiight spent in
broken and feverish dreams. At length, however, her grief subsided; and
though there were louder and gayer guests at the bridal of her daughter
and her young cousin, which took place about two years after the washing
of the mermaid, there were none more sincerely happy on that occasion
than the widow. |