IONA
Sacred Isles—The Druid's Holy Isle—Brighit the Fire Goddess—Traces of Pagan
Customs—The 360 Crosses—Rude Stone Monuments-360 Sacred Stones at
Mecca—Black Stones—Magic Crystals—Solar Turns—St. Columba—His Work—His
Death—Tonsure—Book of Battles—Jacob's Pillow—The Reilig Orain—The
Nunnery—Massacre of the Monks—The Ruins—The Inn—Jackdaws—Hill of Dunil—Druidic
Circle—The Bay of the Boat—Pagan Baptism.
AU0NG the very varied phases of ecclesiastical life,
which we find in various corners of the earth, there is one which seems to
me to be especially attractive, wherever found—from a romantic and
picturesque point of view. I allude to those Holy Isles which
representatives of divers creeds, in widely-distant countries, have selected
as their homes—the centres from which to spread their particular form of
religious teaching.
Such are
the sacred isles of the Buddhists, both of China and Japan—the Isle of Putoo,
with its thousand quaint temples and monasteries, and innumerable throng of
yellow or lilac-robed monks and priests, arrayed in vestments as elaborate
as is the ritual they celebrate. Such too is the fascinating Holy Isle of
Enosbima, to which all good Japanese make devout pilgrimage as often as they
can allow themselves so pleasant a holiday. It is a most lovely spot, where
all is pretty, and bright, and externally fascinating.
Very different is the charm which attaches to the Holy
Isles of our own grey shores,--deeper seated, we would fain believe,—but by
no means so apparent on the surface. Northumbria claims as her own, the Holy
Isle of Lindisfarne, for ever hallowed by the presence of St. Cuthbert,—the
beads of whose rosary, multiplying miraculously, still strew the storm-swept
shores?
Celebrated as was the
Holy Isle of the East Coast, that of the West was still more famous, and I
need hardly say that one of our chief objects in visiting the Hebrides was
to make our pilgrimage from Oban to Iona, that little lonely isle round
which such countless memories have clustered from all ages; once the Holy
Isle of the Druids, and held most sacred by our Pagan forefathers, and in
later ages, that is to say, some thirteen hundred years ago, so hallowed by
the burning and shining light of that most energetic of
saints,—Columba,—that all races of northern Europe made pilgrimage thither,
in constant succession.
Though
best known to us as Iona, the Island is spoken of in all the oldest Irish
annals simply as I or lii, la, lo, Hy, Y or Yiwith that remarkably varied
spelling, so characteristic of old manuscripts,—a title denoting The Isle
par ecel1ence. Sometimes it was called Ithona, the Isle of the Waves, and
sometimes Ishona, the Blessed Isle.
What attraction it can have offered, to induce the
priests of the Sun to select it as their abode, it is hard to imagine, but,
from time immemorial, it was known as the Sacred Isle of the Druids—the mis
Druineach or Nan Druihean, "the Druid's Isle," by which name it is known to
the Highlanders of the present day. The Sons of Erin also retained the old
name, and long after St. Columba's time, they still spoke of the Holy Isle
as the Eilean Drunish.
It
certainly is a strangely perplexing mystery, to find an insignificant little
island, in this remote corner of the earth, exalted to a position of such
extraordinary honour,—an island situated in a region where the skies are
proverbially grey—where rain and mist by turns enfold the land, and where,
for weeks in succession, the great Sun does not vouchsafe one unclouded ray
to gladden his most devout worshippers.
One can understand that zealous priests of the Sun-God
should make their way to the mainland of Britain, as missionaries of every
manner of creed, are content to devote their lives to the spread of the
faith they hold true, no matter how uninviting their surroundings (and we
cannot suppose that the white-robed Druid priests found our ancestors in
their very cool full-dress of blue-wode, with the possible addition of a
wolf-skin, altogether congenial companions.
Whatever we know of these Druid teachers, seems to
suggest their having been of Eastern origin, notwithstanding Caesar's
statement that they were supposed to be an indigenous product of Britain,
and that persons wishing to study their tenets generally went from Gaul to
Britain for that purpose. We are told that they derived their name from the
oak-groves in which they taught the people to worship.' Yet the golden
knives with which they cut the sacred mistletoe were assuredly not
indigenous, nor was the familiar use of the Greek alphabet, in which they
recorded all public and private affairs, save such as related to their
religion (for these they deemed it unhallowed to commit to writing)—a
religion which emphatically taught the doctrines of immortality and of the
transmigration of souls.
Surely
the mere existence on these cold grey shores of a white- robed priesthood,
crowned with garlands of oak-leaves, who ministered barefooted in unroofed
temples open to every storm of heaven—astrologers, familiar with all the
mysteries of the starry heavens—magicians who worked miracles by the use of
magic crystals, and whose most potent talismans were ring-shaped "adder's
stones" supposed to be formed of the crystallized saliva of serpents
;—surely all these things bespeak the traditions of men who had originally
wandered to Britain from some warmer, sunnier clime.
We may gather a hint to the same effect, from the
symbols which we find sculptured on some ancient memorial stones of Pagan
Britain. Not only do we find elaborately-carved crescents, discs, double
wheels, linked together by a royal sceptre, such as might naturally suggest
themselves as emblems of the sun, but we also find Fish, Geese, Serpents,
and highly idealized Elephants and Camels,' the three last-named being
creatures which would scarcely have presented themselves to the minds of our
ancestors had not some tradition of these creatures reached them from the
eastern world. It is, therefore, very remarkable to find that the Elephant,
the Crescent, the Serpent, and the Goose, are sacred symbols, of very
frequent recurrence on the sculptured stones of Ceylon, where a planetary
worship (strangely similar to that which seems to have been the ancient
religion of Britain) has prevailed from time immemorial.
So very little is positively known concerning the
Druids that it is rather by inference, and by noting such traces of their
teaching as long survived in those Isles, that we gather even a vague,
shadowy image of the wise men and their tenets. Only from some slight
all'rsions in the classics, and from the somewhat apocryphal old Celtic
chronicles, do we gather something of their mythology, and of the names and
attributes of their deities.
One of these was the goddess Brighit, to whose special care were committed
all the Hebrides or :Ey-Brides, that is The Isles of Brighit or Bridgit. To
her, in her Christianised form, are also dedicated six parishes on the
mainland of Scotland, while the name of Kilbride, the Cell of Bridget,
occurs eighteen times, and the name also appears as Pan-Bride and Lian-Bride
(in Morayshire). The latter name tells its own story of the dubious saint,
Lian being simply the sacred grove of the Druids, hence Llan-Bride is the
grove of Brighit, the Celtic goddess. Her temples were attended by virgins
of noble birth, called the daughters of fire, or sometimes merely Breochuidh,
the fire-keepers. Like the ancient Persians, they fed this fire only with
one kind of peeled wood, and might never breathe upon the sacred flame. The
ancient Irish are said to have 80 greatly reverenced all fire that they
would not even put out a candle without uttering a prayer that the Lord
would renew to them light from heaven.
When Christianity began to make its difficult way in
these isles, it was so impossible to wean these vestal virgins from their
post, that it was found simpler to institute a Christian Order of Nuns of
St. Bridgit. To one of St. Patrick's converts was assigned this delicate
work of adapting things old to new meanings. St. Bridgit accordingly took up
her abode in the grove of sacred oaks, where the people were accustomed to
worship the goddess, and here she instructed them in the new faith. The
vestal virgins were thus transformed into the first Christian community of
religious women, and the temple of Bridgit at Kildare, became a great
convent.
To these Christian
nuns was sntrusted the care of the sacred fire, which from time immemorial
had been kept burning in honour of the Celtic goddess. When, on the Eve of
Good Friday, all other churches and convents extinguished their fire, not
relighting it till Easter Eve, the nuns of St. Bridgit always kept theirs
steadily burning, a practice which Giraldus Cambrensis says he knows not
whether to attribute to a desire to have warmth and food always ready to
bestow on all pilgrims and poor people, or whether it was done in obedience
to the Levitical command that the fire should be ever burning on the altar,
and never go out.
Thus the fire
of Bridgit was kept perpetually burning, till the year 1220, when it was
extinguished by order of the Archbishop of Dublin to avoid superstition and
scandal. So great, however, was the veneration in which it was held by the
people, that it was speedily rekindled, and was kept burning steadily until
the monastery was suppressed in the time of Henry VIII. The ruins of the
Fire House are still, or were till recently, to be seen.
This is all that I can gather concerning the protecting
goddess of the Hebrides, whose worship, as also that of Baal the Sun-god,
and Neithe the goddess of Wells, was so deeply rooted throughout the British
Isles, that even now-, traces of the old superstitions survive, and
occasionally crop up, to the disgust of the schoolmaster, and the delight of
the antiquarian.
Even on Iona
itself, which became so emphatically the centre of Christian teaching, many
long years elapsed ere all traces of the ancient faith were swept away. Even
in the last century, Pennant' was told by Bishop Pocock, that on the Eve of
St. Michael, the Wanders brought all their horses to a small green hillock,
whereon stood a circle of stones, surrounding a cairn. Round this hill,
they all made the turn eunwise, thus unwittingly dedicating their
horses to the sun. The Bishop also spoke of a remarkable cromlech,
consisting of two stones seven feet in height, with a third laid across
them.
Another old legend of the
Isle, quoted by several writers of the last century,2 tells of a circular
Druidic temple which has now disappeared (at least, we failed to find it).
It consists of twelve great stones, beneath each of which a human victim was
buried. That this may have been the case is probable, as Sir Walter Scott
has told us that the Picts thus bathed the foundation of their strong
buildings in blood, as a propitiation to the spirits of the earth, and that
sometimes a human body was thus buried beneath the foundation stone;
sometimes only that of an animal. The Welsh too, in building their strong
forts, found it necessary thus to appease the earth-spirits, otherwise they
would demolish by night, whatever was built during the day.
St. Columba himself has, very unfairly, been credited
with another legend, which assuredly belongs to pre-Christian times. It is
said that when he and his followers commenced building their chapel (the
first Christian Church on the Druid Isle) the power of the evil spirit so
prevailed, that the walls were overthrown as fast as they were raised. Then
it was revealed to the perplexed saint, that a compromise must be made, and
one last sacrifice offered to the powers of evil. Oran having generously
devoted his own life to the good cause was interred alive, and remained
three days in the grave. On the third day, St. Columba, wishing for one last
look at his friend, caused the earth and stones to be removed, when, to the
amazement of all, Oran sat up, and spake, .revealing strange stories of the
border land, more especially that the doctrine of Hell, as commonly
understood, was a mere fiction of priestcraft, having no real existence. St.
Columba having a firm faith in the Eternity of Evil, could by no means
suffer such revelations to proceed, so he ordered the earth to be thrown in
again, and the voice from the tomb was silenced. You see he lived in the
Dark Ages, before the Spirit of Enquiry was fully awakened.
Certain it is that the little church which was rebuilt
on the ver5 site of this original chapel, and is the oldest Christian
building on the Isle, is dedicated to the Saint, who is said to have here
endured this voluntary martyrdom.
At first sight it appears somewhat strange that the
long occupation of the Isle by the Druids, should have left so little mark,
whereas on the far less noted Isle of Lewis, there still remain such very
remarkable Druidic remains as those at Callernish or Loch Bernera, where
various monolithic circles, avenues, and a semi-circle, remain to puzzle
antiquarians. There are tumuli, and menhirs, one of tue latter being twenty
feet high, and broad in proportion. Most of the stones, however, only
average four feet in height.
The most remarkable feature in the Callernish stones is a circle,
sixty-three feet in diameter, formed by twelve stones, with a large central
obelisk. It is supposed that this circle represented the sun, and that the
twelve stones were the twelve signs of the Zodiac. From this circle four
lines of upright stones extend towards the four points of the compass. One
of these lines is double, and, moreover, twice the length of the other
three; thus producing the form of the Christian cross. Within the circle are
two small chambers built of stone.
We have seen that a similar Sun-temple, i. e. a circle
formed by twelve great stones, remained in Iona till the eighteenth century,
and we may well believe that when the island passed into the hands of
teachers of another creed, many of the ancient monuments were quickly turned
to account in building and in other ways.
But the most remarkable adaptation of old objects of
reverence by the new-corners, was that which appears to me to account beyond
doubt, for the existence on this tiny isle of no less than 360 sculptured
stone cro8se8, which remained till A.D. 1560, when, by the bigotry of the
Protestant Synod of Argyle, they were pronounced to be "monuments of
idolatrie," and the fiat went forth, that all should be cast into the sea.
Some, however, were happily rescued and taken to old churchyards and
market-places in the neighbouring isles, or on the mainland. They were all
very similar, being tall monoliths, generally of whinstone (a hard grey
stone, which is little affected by the rains and frosts of centuries), and
covered with intricate designs. Some were very elaborate round-headed
crosses; on others, the round-headed cross was simply carved on the slab.
Now it is exceedingly improbable that the missionary
brethren of Iona would have expended their energies on quarrying 360 great
blocks of whinstone, in order to carve such a multiplicity of crosses,
without any apparent object. But supposing they found the 360 monoliths
already erected, and receiving idolatrous worship from the people, nothing
could have been more in accordance with the ordinary practice of those days,
than to transform these menhirs into crosses, thereby turning these
memorials of a heathen worship to Christian uses.
We know that in all parts of the kingdom, these sacred
stones were (by order of Pope Gregory, A.D. 601), sprinkled with holy water;
and thus sanctified, while the people were still permitted to offer
sacrifices of blood, according to their old customs. The edict declares
that, as it is impossible to efface old customs from the obdurate minds of
the Britons, they may on great festivals continue to build themselves booths
and huts with boughs of trees, round about such old Pagan temples as have
been sanctified by the sprinkling of holy water, and may there continue to
sacrifice and feast on the flesh of cattle.
Thus in speaking of the first dawn of Christianity in
Armorica,
In Ireland too, Borlase has told us how Crosses were
carved on old Druidic monuments, that the people who could not give up their
superstitious reverence for these stones, might henceforth pay them a sort
of justifiable adoration, as Christian memorials! Doubtless the same history
belongs to those tall monoliths, surmounted by a roughly hewn Cross and
Circle, which stand by themselves, on the barren heaths of Cornwall, with no
trace of human work near, except the ancient Celtic barrows, and grey
weather-beaten Druidic stones.
So also, in Scotland, we still find great menhirs, such as those at Meigle
and Aberlemnie, where the Cross appears in combination with many Pagan
emblems; serpents, large fish, centaur, mirror and comb, and sun-circles;—or
that at Deir in Aberdeenshire, engraven on one side with a rude Cross, but
on the other with the circle, crescent, or double-wheel, crossed by a royal
sceptre, emblematic of the worship of sun, moon, and planets. Even on the
more advanced round-headed Cross we find the same strange mixture of
Christian and Pagan emblems, commemorating both faiths, and blending them in
the minds of the worshippers in a manner as intricate as is the intertwining
of the Runic knots, which so mysteriously interlace the whole.
To judge of the full 8ignificance of the number of the
360 atone crosses of Iona, it is necessary to compare them with the traces
of ancient worship of the same character in other lands, so, without pausing
at Stonehenge or Carnac, or other noted spots in Britain or Brittany, we may
glance at Northern Africa, where, near Carthage, the circle and crescent are
found carved as emblems of sun and moon, just as on the British monuments.
Algeria has been discovered to abound in every known
form of rude stone monument. At Roknia three thousand monoliths are grouped
together, as if in a vast city of the dead, while near Constantine, and in
the district around Sétif, their number has been calculated at ten thousand,
including some stones so gigantic, that one is described as fifty-two feet
high and twenty- six in diameter at the base; while we hear of a dolmen near
Tiaret, the cap-stone of which is sixty-five feet long, by twenty-six feet
broad, and upwards of nine feet thick—a rock-mass, which is poised on
boulders of thirty to forty feet high.
Tripoli likewise possesses many of these mysterious
remains; more especially certain groups of three great stones, so placed as
to form high, narrow doorways; so narrow, however, is the space between the
upright stones, that a man of average size can hardly squeeze his way
through between them;—truly "8trait and narrow gateways."
The discovery of these African monuments is the more
curious, as suggesting that some forgotten tradition may have inspired old
Geoffrey of Monmouth's assertion, that "giants in old days brought from
Africa the stones which the magic art of Merlin afterwards removed from
Kildare, and set up at Stonehenge." The latter, you will remember, is the
only place in Britain where these trilithon exist, though the ordinary
dolmen is so common in Cornwall and elsewhere. They have, however, been
discovered in various countries, and I have myself seen in one of the
Friendly Isles, a very remarkable cyclopean trilithon, concerning which the
present race have no tradition. It differs from all others, in that the
great stones are hewn, and the cap-stone is let into the two uprights, and
this in a country to whose people no metal is known, and whose only
buildings are of reeds and timber.' In fact the huge stones must have been
quarried, and carried from afar.
To pass onward to Hindostan. In Malabar we find dolmens
consisting of one huge stone poised on two upright ones, differing only in
size from one which Bishop Pocock saw in Iona. There is not one form of
cyclopean monument known in the British Isles, or in France, which does not
also exist both in Northern and Southern India, either for worship or for
sepulture; oblongs, circles, parallel lines, and many little circles within
one large circle.
In Northern
India, the place accounted most holy by the sun- worshipping Santhals (the
noblest of the primitive races), is at Byjnatb in Bengal, near three huge
monoliths of gneiss rock. Two of these are vertical. The third lies
horizontally across the uprights.
In the Kassia hills near Assam, monuments of this
class, sometimes accompanied by gigantic monoliths, are erected in the
present day, by one at least of the wild aboriginal tribes, as places of
sepulture. In this case the monoliths are erected in honour of the dead
whose spirits are invoked in cases of sickness or trouble.
The close analogy between these modern dolmens and
monoliths of the East, with ancient remains elsewhere, has led to the
somewhat rash conclusion, that all our so-called Druidic temples were, like
the tumuli, simply places of sepulture, or commemorative of the dead, or of
some great event. Considering the well-known tendency to ancestor-worship
which from all ages has pervaded all nations, no inference can be more
natural than that the places of sepulture should become places of worship.
Moreover, why a similar analogy in favour of the temple theory, may not be
drawn from the circles of Bombay, which are undoubtedly places of worship,
it is hard to say.
The circles
to which I allude are to be found at various villages in the Presidency of
Bombay, notably near Poonab, where the people continue to erect great stone
circles near the Brahmin temples, and there offer sacrifice, every, man for
himself in defiance of the Hindoo priests, who vainly strive to put down a
form of superstition which requires no priestly intervention.
The worshippers at these shrines arl descendants of the
primitive inhabitants of India, who held the land long before the Aryan
conquerors had found their way, either to Britain or to Hindostan. Just as
in Scotland the people continued obstinately for many centuries to sacrifice
red cocks, and occasionally goats, to demons, in defiance of all the threats
and persuasions of Christian teachers, so do these Indian tribes persist in
the sacrifice of red cocks and goats to Beta!, whose worship has for
centuries been condemned by the Brabmins as being devil-worship, but which
has still been kept up sub rosa, and now that religious toleration has been
secured, the people are returning to their first love, and demon-worship is
regaining the ascendancy.
The
worship of Betal is wide-spread, extending to Guzerat and Cutch. (Fanciful
as must be such a connection of ideas, his name is certainly suggestive of
that temple of Botallick in Cornwall, where a stone circle still exists,
precisely like these at Poonah, having three principal stones placed facing
the east, and one placed quite outside the circle.) Those at Poonah are
painted white, having a great daub of red paint, with a darker spot in the
middle, dashed on the upper end of each stone, to represent the blood of the
sacrifices. This red spot invariably faces the rising sun.
Passing from Hindostan to Persia, the chosen home of
the symbolic worship of Sun and Fire, we there find many circles of great
stones, some of which must have been carried from long distances. There are
also tall monoliths which the people reverence as having been the sacred
stones of ancient Fire Temples.
Crossing the Persian Gulf, we enter Arabia. There
Paigrave discovered tall trilithons in connection with circles of great
monoliths, and placed, as at Stonehenge, facing the north-east.
I have thus glanced at the rude stone monuments of so
many countries in which planetary worship has held sway, in order to show
that there is nothing very improbable in tracing a startling resemblance
between objects of veneration in the Holy Isle of the Hebrides and those
which were held in deepest reverence in Arabia for countless generations
before Mahomet arose to overthrow idolatry and divert the worship of the
people into a new channel.
The
Kaaba at Mecca (which to all good Mahomedans is as sacred as was the Holy of
Holies to the Israelite) had, from time immemorial, been accounted by all
the people of Arabia, to be the very portal of Heaven. Until the time of
Mahomet, it was surrounded by 360 rude unscuiptured monoliths, which, to the
degenerate Arabs, had become objects of actual worship, and in presence of
which, they were wont to sacrifice red cocks to the sun (just as the people
in these Western Isles have continued to do, almost to the present day,
though of course in ignorance of the original meaning of this ancestral
custom).
More unflinching than
the Christian reformers of Iona, Mahomet would admit of no compromise. Like
the Synod of Argyle, he resolved on the destruction of these "monuments of
idolatrie," and so his iconoclastio followers did his bidding, and destroyed
them utterly.
Nevertheless, he
still allowed his converts to retain their custom of walking seven times in
proce.s8ion, Delaul, i.e. Sunwise, round the Kaaba itself, in reverence for
Abraham and Ishmael, who had rebuilt it after the deluge.
Like all the most sacred shrines of primitive worship,
it is a tiny sanctum, measuring only eighteen paces in length, by fourteen
in width; and though the faithful have overlaid its doors with silver, and
year by year cover it with new silken hangings, its very essence lies in its
simplicity.
For the original
Kaaba was a tabernacle of radiant clouds, which came down from heaven in
answer to the prayer of Adam, who besought the restoration of that shrine
where he had been wont to worship in Paradise, and around which he had so
often seen the angels move in adoring procession. When, therefore, the cloud
temple was restored to him, he daily walked round it seven times sun?ozse,
in imitation of the angels.
On
the death of Adam, this tabernacle returned to heaven, but one resembling
its tent-like form, was built by Seth: being destroyed by the Deluge, it was
subsequently rebuilt by Abraham, to whom the Angel Gabriel brought a
precious black stone from Paradise, to be inserted in a corner of the outer
wall, and adored and reverently kissed by the faithful This stone is a
meteoric stone of oval form, and is described as a fragment of reddish black
volcanic basalt sprinkled with coloured crystals. Its dimensions are six by
eight inches. it is encircled by a silver band, and is built into the wall
at about four feet from the ground, and has attained a high polish from the
lips and impressive kisses of ten thousand times ten thousand worshippers.
Strange to say, long before Mahomet's public career had
corninenced, he was chosen by the people as the most fit person to lift this
sacred atone into its place as Chief Corner Stone of the outer wall, when
the Kaaba had undergone some necessary repairs. Being thus a standing proof
of the honour in which he himself had been held, Mahomet could not find it
in his heart to destroy this Heaven-given aerolite (probably even he, would
not have dared to do so), and as be could not possibly induce the Arabs to
abstain from worshipping it, he permitted them still to do it homage, and
so, to the present day, the vast throngs of reverent pilgrims kiss it
reverently each time they pass it, as they make their seven sunwise circuits
round the shrine.
Strange to
say, this black stone also had its counterpart in Iona. It was preserved in
the cathedral, till the year 1830, when it mysteriously disappeared, having
probably been stolen by some sacrilegious relic-collector. In such reverence
was it held, that on it solemn oaths were sworn and agreements ratified. A
similar black stone, lying close to the sea, also received worship in the
Hebrides till a comparatively recent date. Sir Walter Scott says it was
supposed to be oracular, and to answer whatever questions might be asked, by
means of the secret influence it exercised on the mind of theinquirer. It
lay on the sea-shore, and the people never approached it without certain
solemnities.
(Several such
unhewn Black Stones are objects of reverence to millions of our Indian
fellow-subjects. In the Rajmahal hills, such an one represents their chief
deity, and receives sacrifices of goats and of fowls in all 'times of
sickness or other affliction. Moreover, one of the most sacred forms under
which Juggernaut is worshipped is that of a shapeless black stone, unhewn,
with diamonds let in, as eyes. It must be remembered that Juggernaut, with
his many- wheeled cars, rolling in solemn sunwise procession, is held to be
symbolic of the sun. In one of the great courts of his principal temple in
Southern India is another most sacred black stone, brought by his
worshippers from the old temple at Kanarak. This is a monolith 150 feet
high, sculptured to the form of a stately pillar. Such pillars, we are told,
were common in Southern India even half a century ago, but most of them have
been destroyed by the ruthless ravages of Mahomedans and other zealots.)
Apart from such exceptionally sacred stones, as that
black stone of Iona, whose fame attracted worshippers from afar, each
village in the Highlands is said to have had its rough unhewn stone, called
the Gruagach stone, where, till very recent times, the villagers poured out
libations of milk on every day consecrated to Graine or Grian, the golden-baired
Celtic Sun-goddess (just as we now see the Hindoos pour their daily
offerings of milk, flowers, and water, on a similar rough unhewn stone,
wherein their god is supposed to be present, and which invariably occupies a
place of honour in every village). I do not know whether any of these stones
still remain in The Isles, but we are told, that not many years ago, there
was scarcely a village in the Hebrides where the Gruagach stone was not
still held in some sort of reverence. Even in the last century, libations of
milk were poured on these stones at dawn every Sunday as a preliminary to
Christian worship!
Now look to
Japan, where the National Religion (Shinto) is the simplest form of
Nature-worship, and where a mirror of highly polished metal, and a globe of
polished crystal, both symbols of the Sun-goddess, are the sole objects of
veneration to be seen in every Shinto temple—being reproductions of the
Heaven-bestowed Mirror and Crystal Globe so devoutly adored by thousands of
pilgrims, who, year by year, visit the sacred Shrines of 1s4—the Mecca of
the Shinto faith. These venerated shrines are the plainest possible little
tent-shaped buildings of unpainted wood, even more unpretentious than the
Kaaba. They, too, are enclosed by an outer wall, at one corner of which,
three feet from the ground, a large dark stone holds a conspicuous place. It
is perfectly polished by the constant friction of reverent hands. For he who
suffers from any manner of pain, needs only to rub this healing stone, and
then rub his own body, and his cure is certain.
(I have not been told by any eye-witness whether the
seven sunwise turns round these shrines, form part of the accustomed ritual,
but there is every probability they do so, as I have seen the Deisul thus
performed round many Japanese shrines of far less note.)
It would be strange indeed if the coincidence in the
number of these 360 monoliths at Iona, and at Mecca, had been the result of
mere accident, when we remember that these were both the shrines of races
who worshipped the heavenly bodies, and who divided the zodiac into 360
degrees;—that the Arabs, as well as the ancient Hindoos, and their Western
Druidic brethren, reckoned a lunar year of 360 days, believing the sun's
revolution to be completed in the same period.
Among the stones of Iona, destroyed by order of the
ruthless Synod, were three noble globes of white marble, which lay in three
hollows worn on a large stone slab. Every person visiting the island was
expected to turn each of these thrice round, following the course of the
sun, according to the custom of Deisul, of which we find so many traces in
these Isles. The action of course represented the motion and form of the
earth or the apparent motion of the sun.
The stone on which they rested was called Clach-bratha,
because it was supposed that when they had, by constant friction, worn a
hole right through the stone, ,then the brath or burning of the world would
come. The stone still lies beside the door of St. Oran's Chapel, though,
unfortunately, it has been broken across the middle. In size and shape it
resembles a fiat tombstone, and might be passed by as such, were it not for
a row of cup-like hollows worn at one end of it.
These were pointed out to me by an old man, as having
been, in his youth, occupied by stone balls, about the size of a child's
head —balls which doubtless had replaced the original marbles destroyed by
that iconoclastic Synod. He told me, that in his younger days, he, like all
his neighbours, had never passed that place without stopping to turn each of
these balls thrice sunwise for luck. How and when these also disappeared, he
could not tell. Probably, like their predecessors, they had fallen victims
to some ruthless and senseless hater of ancient superstition, himself too
ignorant to perceive the bearing of such trivial matters on divers vexed
questions of the day—faint whispers from the speechless past, they make one
long the more to unravel its mysteries.
For instance, how curious is the coincidence between
this custom of the old Druids of Iona and that of the modern so-called Fire
Worshippers. Rabbi Benjamin in his account of the Ghebers at Onlam, says:
"Early in the morning, they go in crowds, to pay their devotions to the
8Ufl, to whom upon all the altars are consecrated p1ieres, resembling the
circles of the sun, and when he rises, the orbs seem to be inflamed, and
turn round with a great noise, while the worshippers, having every man a
censer in his hand, offer incense to the Sun." The crystal globe seems also
to have been reverenced as a sacred symbol by the Babylonians; at least we
hear of such a one being suspended on high in the camp of the great king,
that it might catch and reflect the first rays of the rising sun.
The three mystic globes of Iona were by no means the
only sacred stones of the Druids, who indeed possessed many such, mostly
crystals reputed to possess magic powers, and many wonders were said to have
been wrought by these, some of which indeed retained their miraculous powers
till recent days; and water into which such an one has been dipped has ever
been accounted a certain cure for all manner of diseases, of men, of cattle,
and of horses.
One such magic
crystal, the size of a hen's egg, is still preserved by the Stewarts of
Ardvoirlich in Perthshire, and it is believed that water into which it has
been dipped, cures cattle of distemper. Even now, graziers sometimes come
from long distances—perhaps more than forty miles—to obtain this precious
medicine, and are greatly disgusted at finding that the far-famed Clach
Dearg has been deposited at the bank, with other family treasures, and can
by no means be borrowed.
A
stone of the same sort is the hereditary property of the Robertsons of
Struan. it is called the Clach-na-Bratach or Stone of the Standard, and
since the days of Bannockburn the clan has never gone to battle without
carrying this stone, whose varying colour boded good or evil. On the Eve of
Sheriff-muir a large flaw was detected in it, and all present knew that evil
would befall them on the morrow. No medical stores are needed by those
within hail of this precious charm, inasmuch as the water in which it has
been thrice dipped (having first been carried round it thrice sunwise), will
assuredly cure all manner of diseases of men, of cattle, and of horses. The
Campbells of Glen-Lyon have a similar magical curing-stone.
A list of many such magical stones was compiled two
hundred years ago, by a Welshman, curious in these matters, in which he
mentions upwards of fifty varieties in common use among his countrymen and
the Scottish Highlanders; some round, some oval, some hollow rings, some of
crystal, some of glass, but all alike were used medicinally, especially on
May Day at the feast of Beltane (Beilteine, "the fire of Baal "), when they
were dipped in water, with which the cattle were sprinkled to save them from
the power of witches and elves.
One of these precious crystal balls remains to this day
in the family of Willox, the hereditary cattle-curers at Nairn, and is
reported to have worked wondrous cures in the present generation. The
crystal is dipped in a bucket of water, which thereupon becomes a magic
mirror, reflecting the face of the bad neighbour who has bewitched the
cattle, and thus breaking his spell.
I have been told that somewhere in Northumberland,
certain sacred Irish pebbles are still reverenced, and are carefully kept in
a basket, and never allowed to touch English ground, lest they should lose
the power which they have retained from time immemorial, of healing any sore
limb to which they are applied.
But in Ross-shire, a whole lake has been endowed with
healing properties, from the lucky accident that a woman who possessed
certain curative pebbles, flung them into Lake Monar, rather than allow
herself to be robbed of them by an envious man. So to this day, in the
months of May and August, many persons make pilgrimage thither from all
parts of Rose, Sutherland, Caithness, Inverness, and even from the Orkneys.
They must stand by the loch at midnight,—plunge in thrice,—make three turns
sunwise,—drink a little,—throw a coin into the loch, and take care to be out
of sight of the loch before daybreak.
If all tales be true, the Celtic Fathers were by no
means averse to enlisting such magic in the advancement of the Christian
cause. It was in consequence of a miracle thus wrought, that St. Columba was
enabled to obtain possession of The Isle. For although his kinsman Conal,
the Christian King of the Northern Scots, is said to have bestowed it upon
him—a gift confirmed by Brude, King of the Picts, when he too was
converted—it is not to be supposed that so powerful a body as were the
Druids, would have suffered themselves to be driven out without a struggle,
had not some supernatural influence been brought to bear upon them.
Accordingly we learn that the Arch-Druid Broichan,
having refused to release a certain captive Irish-woman at the request of
St. Columba, the latter, proceeding to the river Ness, took thence a white
pebble, and, showing it to his companions, told them that the Angel of God
had stricken the Arch-Druid with a sudden stroke, so that he lay nigh unto
death, but that should he repent, he had only to drink a cup of water in
which that pebble had been dipped, and he would assuredly recover. While he
yet spake, two horsemen galloped up, bearing tidings from the king, that all
had befallen even as Columba had predicted. The holy man straightway sent
messengers to the palace; they received the captive from the hand of the
repentant Broichan, while he himself, having drunk of that mystic cup
(whereon the pebble floated as though it had been a nut), was immediately
made whole. That little pebble was afterwards preserved among the treasures
of King Brude, and retaining its miraculous power of floating on water (in
common with other magical stones), it wrought divers wondrous cures.
Thus it was, that when the king proposed to bestow on
St. Columba the Innis-nan-Druidanach, the Holy Isle of the Druids, he was
suffered to hold it in peace and without great opposition, and by degrees
the name of the Isle was changed to I-Cohn-kill, The Isle of the Cell of
Calum or Malcolm."
Whether
fairly or otherwise, St. Columba is credited with having taken considerable
advantage of the popular superstitions of his day. For instance, when first
he sought admission to the presence of the heathen King Brude, the latter
refused to give him audience, and bade his followers bar the door of his
rude palace. Then St. Columba deliberately walked round the king's house
widder 8hins, i. a. in the direction contrary to the course of the sun (an
action which was equivalent to a most solemn curse). Thereupon the door fell
open of its own accord, and the saint entered the royal presence. St.
Adamnan, however, affirms that the cross signed on the palace gate was the
sole talisman used on that occasion, and that immediately the gates burst
open. He says too, that as St. Columba approached the Pictish fort, chanting
the 45th Psalm, his voice was so miraculously strengthened, as to be heard
like a thunder- peal above the clamour, whereby the Pictish magicians strove
to silence his evening prayer.
When St. Columba took up his abode on The Isle, his first care was to build
a chapel and "an hospice" beside the 370 grey monoliths. He accordingly sent
forth his monks to gather "bundles of twigs" for this purpose; the
architecture of those days (A.D. 563), being exceedingly primitive, wattle
and daub' formed the materials of these early thatched churches. Where the
brethren found the twigs I am at a loss to imagine, as there certainly are
none on Ions now; (at least I failed to find any vegetation of taller growth
than beautiful hart's-tongue ferns in some ravines on the further shore). It
may, however, have been otherwise thirteen hundred years ago, or else the
brethren must certainly have gone across to Mull, in search of sticks. But I
should think that the stones and rubble and turf which lay ready to their
hand, were turned to very good account by these rough and ready builders.
Looking at this little lonely isle as we see it to-day,
where there remain only the grey ruins of the comparatively recent
cathedral, and all is silent and desolate, it is strange indeed to think of
all the countless memories which cluster round that hallowed ground, even
dating only from the Christian era, when the fame of St. Columba attracted
thither men of all races of Northern Europe —some seeking the learning of
the Fathers; wise men coming from afar, to consult those deemed wiser still,
on affairs of Church and State; chieftains and Vikings coming to seek
blessings; penitents to confess their crimes (murder and sacrilege and cruel
forays), that they might do penance meet, and open a fresh account with
heaven. Here kings came, seeking consecration, and their fleets of strange
quaint galleys, with curious sails and multitudinous oars, were anchored in
these quiet harbours; such vessels as that in which King Haco came from
Norway—a great ship built wholly of oak, having twenty-seven banks of oars,
and adorned with curiously-wrought gilded dragons.
Oftener than all came sad funeral processions, galleys
freighted with the dead, coming to claim a last resting-place in this
hallowed isle of graves. Chiefs and kings, ecclesiastics and warriors, were
thus brought from afar across the stormy seas, that their dust might not be
disturbed by the terrible flood, announced in an ancient prophecy, which
foretold, that seven years before the end of the world, Ireland and The
Isles should all be overwhelmed, and Iona alone should rise above the
waters.
Strange, is it not to
think of all the interests that gather round one little rocky isle, lying so
far away in the midst of this Hebridean sea, and to think how from its
wave-beaten shores the great pure light arose, which, radiating thence on
every side, never waned till the whole land was Christianized, and churches
and chapels were established in every corner. Then the noble Mother Church,
having done her great work, seems to have (lied an unnatural death, and been
suffered to fall into such a state of ruin and decay as is hard to account
for, unless the solution lie in that old proverb which tells how, "when the
croziers became golden, the bishops became wooden," and so perhaps the old
fire and vigour died out, and the Churchmen preferred more secure dwellings
on the mainland, to the dangers and perils that surrounded them on Columba's
Isle.
On every side Columba's
resistless energies spread themselves forth, as he sailed from isle to isle,
from shore to shore—the busiest Bishop that ever ruled and comforted a flock
of his own gathering. Though we associate his name so wholly with Iona, we
know that the greater part of his time was spent in constant visitation of
the neighbouring isles and mainland, where he founded upwards of fifty
churches, while in latter life he so far retracted his vow of eternal
separation from the Emerald Isle as to return thither several times to
strengthen the hands of his brethren. He had founded Derry in A.D. 546, when
he was only twenty-five years of ago, and Durrow, the greatest of his Irish
monasteries, a few years later. First and last it is said that at least
thirty abbeys and churches in Ireland owe their origin and celebrity to him.
It must be remembered that he was forty-two years of age ere he left his
native land, so that Ireland received a full share of his seventy-six years
of life. His own county of Donegal is especially rich in memorials of St.
Columba.
Besides the work he
did in person, he sent forth his brethren in all directions to teach and to
preach, so that ere long there was scarcely an island or a quiet bay along
the seaboard where one or other of the Celtic Fathers had not built his
little lonely chapel, to shed its ray of light on the Pagan people.
A little green hillock overlooking the old monastery,
still bears the name of Tor Ab, the Abbot's Hill; because here, it was said,
he was wont to sit and meditate while scanning the blue waters, to catch the
first glimpse of galleys that might be approaching his Isle, bearing saints
or sinners—perplexed brethren, or warriors red-handed from foray or
murder—coming to seek his counsel in their difficulties, or absolution from
their crimes. Once the little hill was crowned with one of those tall Ionic
crosses, the site of which, however, is now marked only by a fragment of the
base.
Thence he could look
across the narrow straits which separate Iona from the great hills of Mull,
and with keen eye discern the approach of pilgrims who chose to shorten
their long sea-voyage by traversing Mull's savage mountain glens, and who,
on reaching the opposite shore, had only to cry aloud to attract the
attention of the brethren of the monastery, who were ever ready to ferry all
corners across the Straits, and give them hearty welcome to a shelter and a
share of such rude fare as they themselves possessed.
Remote, indeed, must have seemed that island home, when
frail sailing-boats were the sole means of access to the great world; and a
difficult and dangerous journey this was too, for the pilgrims who crowded
thither; though now made so simple and comfortable for the bands of tourists
who, availing themselves of swift steamboats, look upon a day's run to Iona
and back again, as an easy pleasure trip.
Very different too, from the cruciform Cathedral of
massive red granite (the ruins of which we now see on the Isle) was the
humble chapel, surrounded by a group of rude monastic cells, which were the
only "visible Church" and monastery of those days; but little did the
pilgrims reek of outward things, while the very presence of St. Columba
diffused such life and energy to all around him.
One of his distinguishing features was that
marvellously clear and musical voice, so powerful that, according to his
biographers, he could be distinctly heard a mile off, so, from his lowly
chapel, wherever he might be, on island or on mainland, Christian hymns were
wont to rise in tones so sweet and clear, that the heathen could not choose
but listen, and be attracted.
His disciples were not allowed to eat the bread of idleness. He taught them
to be diligent in agricultural work, and the natural fertility of Iona was
of course, attributed to a miraculous blessing.
Knowing the necessity for good roads across the
sometimes swampy moorland, St. Columba had a substantial causeway laid right
across the Isle, from the monastery to the western shore, where lies the
only arable land.. The length of the Isle from shore to shore measures about
three miles—its average width being one mile. Along that road he was carried
shortly before his death, in a car drawn by oxen, that he might once more
behold his brethren working in their fields, and looking down on that
peaceful scene, the grand old saint, whose busy, useful life on earth was so
nearly ended, announced to his faithful co-workers that the hour of his
departure was now at hand, and standing upon the waggon, he lifted his hands
heavenward and blessed them, and likewise blessed the happy isle which he
was so soon to leave.
A week
later, on the last day of his life, he once more ascended his favourite
green hillock, and looking down on his loved monastery, he blessed the land,
the granaries, and the people; then he pronounced his farewell benediction
on the Isle, in words that proved prophetic, for he foretold how "this
little spot, so small and low, should, nevertheless, be greatly honoured,
not only by Scots, kings, and peoples, but by foreign chiefs and barbarous
nations, and saints of other Churches.
Truly has his prophecy been fulfilled.
Returning to his cells after vespers, he continued his
work of transcribing the Psalter, and ending at the 34th Psalm, told his
brethren that Baithen I must finish it. When the midnight bell had rung to
herald the dawn of the Sunday festival, and call the brethren to matins, he
rose quickly, and hurrying forth with feeble steps, hastened towards the
church, not waiting to trim his lamp, but finding light enough in the summer
night to guide him along the oft.-trodden path.
The first to follow him was the faithful Diarmid, who
on approaching the church beheld a radiant light beaming forth from the
windows, and entering quickly beheld a glorious vision of angels, who
vanished as he drew near. He called his master aloud, but no voice answered.
Other brethren now hurried in, bearing lanterns, and beheld their loved
abbot lying prone before the altar, unable to speak, but his face radiant
with joy. He strove once more to raise his hand to bless his weeping
children, and as the hand fell back powerless, the master spirit passed
away.
Thus in the seventy-sixth
year of his age died this kingly priest. A man of fiery energy, bold,
impetuous, passionate (anything but dove-like), earnest alike in teaching,
counselling, reproving; unsparing of himself, and continually braving peril
by sea and by land, "in journeyings often, in perils of robbers (or
pirates), in perils by the heathen, in perils in the wilderness and in the
sea, in weariness and painfulness, in watchings and fastings, in hunger, and
thirst, and cold." St. Paul himself can scarcely have borne a harder life
than did our Celtic apostle.
In
personal appearance he was tall and commanding, with regular features, and
long hair falling on either shoulder, but only from the temple, as the form
of tonsure which was deemed essential by these early Celtic priests both of
Ireland and Scotland involved shaving the entire front of the head,
producing a most venerable appearance. This custom they believed to be
derived from apostolic times. When, therefore, in later days the Roman
Church introduced the form of merely shaving a circular ring on the crown
and on the back of the head, which was called the tonsure of St. Peter, this
weighty distinction was treated as a matter of such vital importance as very
nearly to result in a schism.
Another point of difference, hotly contested, was the question on which day
Easter should be observed--a burning question which had long divided the
Eastern and Western Churches, and which, in Britain, was not finally decided
till A.D. 716.
In so saintly a
life as that of St. Columba, miracles seem to come in quite naturally. Such
was the halo of glorious light which shone around him, and illumined the
little cell where he was wont to pray; such too the legend which tells how
angels came and talked to him on the hill, which in memory of those
celestial visitors is still called by the people Croc-an-Aingel- "the
Angel's Hill."
Supernatural
light of a visible kind had been vouchsafed to him in his youth, when as a
student (always of a devout tuna, and so greatly addicted to sacred studies
that his companions bestowed on him the name of Colin-Kille, 1. e., Malcolm
of the Church) he had been struck with special admiration of a Book of
Psalms belonging to St. Finian. The latter, saint though he was, must have
been a noted churl, for Columba dared not ask leave to copy the manuscript,
but determined to do so in secret (on the excellent principle, of doing what
you wish first, and asking leave afterwards! a system which if it has
occasional drawbacks, has also undoubted advantages). For this purpose the
young student remained in the church every night after vespers. He had no
candle, but a miraculous light shone from his hand and illuminated the page
while he wrote. After a while, this mysterious light attracted attention and
led to his discovery. St. Finian, however, feigned ignorance till the work
was completed, and then he claimed it for his own—a claim which the vexed
scribe resisted. The matter was referred to King Diarniid, who decided that
"To every cow belongs her own calf," hence, to every book its copy, a
judgment the injustice of which Columba resented so hotly, that this,
coupled at a later period with the treacherous murder of his friend, the
young Prince of Connaught, led to his taking so violent a part in what we
may call the Civil Wars, that he was eventually recommended to carry his
fiery energies across the sea, which he accordingly did, greatly to the
benefit of Scotland.
This Psalm
Book was afterwards known as the Catach or Book of Battles, by reason of the
great battles and bloodshed to which it gave rise. Soon it came to be used
as a charm, which secured victory to any army which possessed it, provided
it was carried thrice 8unwise round the host on the morning of battle. This
most precious relic is still preserved in the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin;
it is a Psalter encased in a highly ornamental silver shrine.
It is somewhat remarkable that St. Cuthbert, patron
saint of Northumbria's Holy Isle, should likewise be so intimately connected
with battles. A banner, made from a cloth which he had used in celebrating
Mass, possessed such magic virtue, that its presence ensured victory to
whosoever carried it. The defeat of the Scottish army at Flodden was
attributed to its influence. Righteous therefore was the retribution when
this far-famed banner was taken down from its place of honour beside St.
Cuthbert's shrine in Durham Cathedral, and ignominiously burnt, by the
sister of Calvin, whose husband had been appointed the first Protestant Dean
of the Cathedral.
Curiously
enough, the spot pointed out as having been St. Columba's place of burial,
is not within the precincts of St. Oran's Chapel, the site always occupied
by the church of the Culdees, but on the further aide of the Cathedral,
which, six hundred years later, was built by the Church of Rome. His saintly
remains, however, did not long find rest upon Iona, for when, again and
again, his followers were driven forth from their homes by ruthless
invaders, they carried his bones with them, both as precious relics, and to
save them from molestation. Kells in Ireland, and the Cathedral of I)unkeld
in Scotland, henceforth divided the honour of possessing them, and thus it
was that, for several centuries, Iona came to he included in the diocese of
Dunkeld.
Here I cannot but
allude to that fascinating old legend, confirmed by divers chronicles, which
tells how Jacob's -Pillow,—the Stone of Luz,—chanced to become the chosen
pillow of St. Columba, and to this day commands the reverent homage of every
loyal subject, as the mystic Coronation Stone whereon from time immemorial
all Scottish Sovereigns, including Her Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria,
have of necessity been seated when assuming the Royal Crown.
This stone is described in the ancient chronicles of
the Picts and Scots as "Pharaoh's stone from Egypt;" and they further state
that its earliest resting-place in Scotland was at Beregoniutn—a famous
settlement of the Dairiad Scots, on Loch Etive, whence it was next removed
to the strong tower of Dunstaffnage.
The mention of these names suggests so strong a local
interest that I must give you a general summary of the legend, which tr3ces
back the history of this venerated atone through all its wanderings,
starting from the plains of Luz, where, on one memorable night some four
thousand years ago, it served as the pillow whereon Jacob rested his weary
head while beholding the vision of angels.
Thence it was carried into Egypt by the Israelites, as
a precious memorial, and there it was left by them, on the night of their
hurried departure from the land of their captivity, but continued to be held
in reverence by the Egyptians. Now there was a certain Prince of Athens
named Gayelgias, who arrived in Egypt jest at the time of the Exodus, to
help Pharaoh against the Ethiopians. As the reward of victory, he claimed
the hand of Scota, the beautiful daughter of Pharaoh.
The young couple seem to have had a wholesome terror of
the plagues wherewith Egypt had been scourged, and determined to seek a new
home; so, taking with them a handful of the Egyptian army which had escaped
from the destruction of the Red Sea, and a company of Greek "heroes of dark
blue weapons," they made their way to Spain, carrying with them the
Israelite stone of good omen.' They founded a kingdom at Brigantium, where,
according to one account, they lived and died, and their descendants for
many generations were crowned on the mystic stone.
At length, about the year B.C. 580, Simon Breck, a
younger son of one of these kings of Spain, determined to found a new
kingdom for himself, and having carried off the precious regal stone, he
made his way to the shores of Ireland, "ane rude island opposite to Spaine,
in the north, inhabited by ane rude people, having neither laws nor
manners." He called this people Scoti, after the name of his Egyptian
ancestress, and the land Hibernia, after his favourite general Hiber.
Another version of the story tells how Scota herself came in person to the
Emerald Isle, and so captivated the eons of Erin by her beauty and her
grace, that in her honour they henceforth adopted the name of Scoti, and
called their land Ibernia, after her son Iber.
Thus the Stone of Luz was brought to figure in the
story of the Irish Kings. Time wore on, and we next hear of it, when a later
descendant of Scota, Fergus I., son of Ferchard, sailed across the stormy
seas, and established a new colony of Scots in Argyleshire, where he built
the town called Beregonium. Of course, he did not fail to bring with him the
mysterious stone, which his ancestors had held in such honour from
generation to generation.
Here,
however, it found but a temporary resting-place, for already the fame of
Ions, the Druids' Holy Isle, made Fergus decide on going thither for his
coronation. Once more, therefore, this migratory stone was embarked, that
its presence might sanction the ceremony. Thus it reached Iona about A.D.
530.
We next hear of it in A.D.
597, when Columba—like Jacob of old—adopted it as his stony pillow, and
thereon rested his sacred head when he slept the sleep of death. Then, for
the second time, this wondrous stone became associated with angelic visions;
for as the dark shades of death were closing round him, St Columba beheld
bright angels coming down from heaven, and their presence filled the little
church with unearthly light—a light whose splendour illuminated the whole
sky, while the angelic guard wafted the saintly soul from the Holy Isle to
the place prepared for it in Heaven.
Soon after St. Columba's death, the venerated treasure
was removed to Evonium (now called Dunstaffnage) by Evenus, one of the
shadowy Dalriadie kings, who built his tower on the same site as the mighty
ruined fortress of later days now stands. A hollow niche in one of the
vaults is pointed out as the resting-place of this well-guarded treasure.
At Dunstaffnage the wandering stone seems to have
remained undisturbed till the year A.D. 834, when its travels recommenced,
and it was removed to Scone by Kenneth II. to commemorate his having there
obtained his chief victory over the Picts. At Scone, as we all know, it was
suffered to remain till 1296, when Edward I. transported it to London, and
deposited it in its present honourable position in the grand old Abbey of
Westminster, where to this day it still retains its old king-making
prerogative, and lies in a hollow space beneath the seat of King Edward's
wooden coronation chair, whence it continues to impart its mystic virtue to
every British sovereign.
Even
Cromwell, grim destroyer of all monuments of superstition, did not disdain
to borrow a legalizing virtue from the old stone, for we are told that "when
he was installed as Lord Protector in Westminster Hail, he was placed in the
chair of Scotland, brought out of Westminster Abbey for that singular and
special occasion."
To the
outward eye it appears only to be a rough block of red sandstone rudely
squared, and measuring 26 inches in length, 16 inches in breadth, and 1O½
inches in depth. Its cracked and battered appearance tells of many a chance
blow received in the course of its wanderings, while the rusty iron rings
attached on either side to facilitate its transport, are also suggestive of
its many migrations from kingdom to kingdom.
A strangely-suggestive link, in truth, is this time-honoured
symbol of royalty, connecting ages far apart by one curious bond, namely,
the utterly unaccountable reverence for a poor battered old stone, the
history and origin of which are alike matter of vaguest tradition, and
which, nevertheless, retains its position, deeply-rooted in the very heart
of our monarchic constitution, connecting the stateliest ceremony of modern
England with the earliest trace of superstitious homage paid to the rude
warrior chiefs of the Dairiad Scots, or our still more shadowy ancestral
princes of Ireland; a stone, in short, which has been the silent witness, as
well as the authority for, the coronation of each successive generation in
these was for upwards of 2400 years.
The Dean of Westminster, speaking of its present
position in his grand old abbey, compares it to "Araunah's rocky threshing-
floor in the midst of the Temple of Solomon, carrying back our thoughts to
races and customs now almost extinct; an element of poetic, patriarchal,
heathen times; a link which unites the throne of England with the traditions
of Tara and Iona, and connects the charm of our complex civilization with
the forces of Mother Earth, the stocks and stones of savage Nature."
Of the actual buildings of St. Columba, all trace has,
of course, long since passed away, as we may well believe, from their frail
nature. Consequently, by far the oldest Christian building on the isle is
that which bears the name of St. Oran's Chapel, which was built in the
eleventh century (that is, five hundred years after St. Columba's death), by
the saintly Queen Margaret, wife of Malcolm Caenmore, on the very site of
the original chapel, built by the great Abbot himself, and called by the
name of his friend and co-worker.
Around it lies the sacred enclosure known as the Rdiig
0mmthe far-famed place of burial to which, from time immemorial, kings,
saints, and warriors have been brought from so many lands, to rest on this
favoured isle. The place is called in Gaelic, "the ridge of kings," and
formerly three separate covered chapels, inscribed in Latin as" Tumulus
Regum Scotim," "Tumulus Regum Hybernim," and "Tumulus Regum Norwegim," were
set apart to receive the royal dead of those nations. For so it was, that on
this bleak isle,
"Beneath the
showery west, The mighty kings of three fair realms were laid."
Here forty-eight crowned kings of Scotland sleep their
last sleep; a long list of royal names, ending with those of the murdered
Duncan and Macbeth, both of whom were, as Shakespeare says of Duncan
"Carried to Cohn's-kill, The sacred store-house of
his predecessors, And guardian of their bones."
Macbeth was the last Scottish king who was buried here.
After - his death, Dunfermline was appointed to be the place of kingly
sepulture, and there Malcolm Caenmore was buried.
Four kings of Ireland were also buried in the Reilig
Orain, and even from "Noroway over the foam" were royal dead carried hither.
Eight Danish and Norwegian sea-kings were brought in solemn state, that they
might sleep the more peacefully near Columba's sainted dust. Of great lords,
temporal and ecclesiastical, the multitude is without number, and includes
at least one Bishop of Canterbury, Turnbull by name. In short the island has
been described 58" the Jerusalem of the various Celtic tribes, who sought
safety in the eternal world by laying their bones in Iona."
That this feeling of veneration for the Isle existed
long before the arrival of St. Columba is evident, were it only from the
fact of King Fergus having sailed to Iona for his coronation, though the
mainland would surely have been more convenient for that ceremony, and we
afterwards hear of his body being carried thither for burial, many years
before the fiery priest had been exiled from his loved home in the Emerald
Isle.'
This unique
burial-ground has been so ruthlessly despoiled of its monuments and crosses,
that imagination is sorely taxed to picture it as it was in its palmy days,
or even as described by Munro, Dean of the Isles in A.D. 1594, that is to
say, upwards of thirty years after the destruction of the 360 great grey
Crosses, so that even then, the scene had lost its most striking
characteristic. He says: "Within this isle of Kilm kill (I-Colm-kill) there
is a kirkyaird, callit in Eriche, Reiig Onrain, quhilk is a very fair
kirkzaird, and weill biggit about with staine and lynie. Into this sanctuary
there are three tombes of staine, formit like little chapels, with ane
braide grey marble, or quhin staine, in the gavil of ilk of the tombes.
"In the staine of the ane tombe there is written in
Latin letters, Tumulus Regum sotir,—that is, the tombe ore grave of the
Scottis Kings. Within this tombe, according to our Scottes and Eriache
cronikles, thor laye fortey-eight crowned &otts Kings, through the quihilic
this ile hea been richly dotat be the Scotts Kinges, as we have said.
"The tombe on the South side aforesaid, has this
inscription, Tumulue Regurn Hibernüe, that is, the tombe of the Irland
Kingis; for we have in our auld Erische cronikells, that ther were four
It-land Kingis erdit in the same tombe.
"Upon the north syde of our Scottea tombe, the
inscription bears, Tumulus Regurn Norweqiis,—that is, the tombs of the Kings
of Norroway. And ala' we find in our Erische cronikells, that Cadus, King of
Norroway, commaudit his nobils to take his bodey and burey it in Coim Kill,
if it chancit him to die in the iles; bot he was so discomfitit, that. ther
remained not so maney of his army as wald burey him ther, therefor he was
eirdet in Kyles, after he stroke ane field against the Scotts, and was
vanquisht be them.
"Within this
sanctuary also lye the maist pairt of the Lords of the Iles, with their
lynage, twa clan Leans, with their lynage, Mac Ky-nnon and Mac Quarrie, with
their lynage, with sundrie uthers inhabitants of the haffi isles, because
this Sanctuary was wont to be the sepulture of the best men of all the ilea,
and ala' of our Kinges, as we have said, because it was the maist honourable
and ancient place that was in Scotland."
Now all trace of the chapels has vanished, and the
kingly dust has mixed itself with common clay, without even the distinction
of such beautifully carved stones as mark the graves of abbots and
warriors—stones inscribed with figures of the chase or emblems of life on
land and sea—knights in full armour with long two-banded swords, or
ecclesiastics in their robes and mitres. One stone is shown (of red
unpolished granite, marked only with a rudely cut cross), beneath which
sleeps a nameless King of France, of whom tradition avers that he was
compelled to abdicate the crown, and then retreated to this isle to find a
last resting-place among Macleods and Macleans, Mackinnons, Macquarries, and
Macdonalds.
Of the 360 Crosses,
only two now, remain quite intact, namely, one dedicated to St. Martin,
which stands near the entrance of the Cathedral enclosure. it is a
round-headed cross of grey stone, covered with Runic knotting, and some
saintly figures. It stands fourteen feet high, and has been raised on a
pedestal of red granite three feet in height.
The other is a beautifully carved old cross, known as
"Maclean's." It stands beside the ruined causeway which bears the name of
Martyr Street, and leads from the sea to the Cathedral—a paved way along
which many a sad procession has passed, bearing the dead to their last
resting-place.
When the dead
were carried ashore in the Martyrs' Bay, they were laid on the green hillock
of Bala, the Mound of the Burden, round which the funeral company thrice
marched sunwse in solemn procession, as they had been wont to do from time
immemorial, in common with many races, both ancient and modern, in all parts
of the world. I do not suppose this custom is even now wholly extinct, for
even on the more advanced mainland, the path to a churchyard is often led
circuitously, so as to ensure the corpse being carried in the orthodox
sunwise course, and the people strongly oppose any short cut, which would
interfere with this beneficial circuit.
At the green mound, the dead were sometimes waked for
three days and nights, with singing of psalms and wild wailing coronacha,
era they were borne, slowly and sadly, with bitter lamentation, along the"
Street of the Dead" and through "the narrow way" to the place prepared for
them in Reilig 0mm, there to be laid mid kindred dust. But only the lords of
the creation were allowed a place of rest on the Holy Isle, for I grieve to
say that Columba was a very unchivalrous saint, who guarded the strict and
severe sanctity of his isle so jealously that he would not suffer womankind
to set foot thereon; nay, forbade even cattle on their account, because, he
said, "Where there is a cow there must be a woman, and where there is a
woman there must be mischief !" So such tradesmen and labourers as were
indispensable to the monastic community, and so had to live on the isle, and
yet insisted on having wives, were obliged to keep them on a neighbouring
islet, called the Woman's Isle.
Even in death Columba would not suffer feminine dust to
rest on this holy ground; nor could even the Lords of the Isles obtain a
little space where they might lay their wives and their little ones.
Consequently while they themselves were buried in Iona with all due
ceremony, these lesser creatures were always taken to the Isle of Finlagan.
After a while, however, the women carried the day. They
approached the sacred ground with caution. First a little company of
religious women established themselves on an islet in the neighbourhood,
called "The Isle of Nuns." Thence, after awhile, mustering courage, they
passed on to Iona itself, where the Canoness of St. Augustine established a
nunnery, or rather a priory of Austin nuns, in which, doubtless, the fair
daughters of the land lived lives to the full as holy as the holy brethren.
Their dress was a white robe, over which they wore a rochet of fine linen.
Within their chapel is the tomb of Anna, the last
Prioress, dated A.D. 1511, and bearing an inscription in Saxon character.
The ruins of this nunnery are our first object of
attraction on landing. Its very plain rounded arches indicate its date as
being of about the 12th century, which is also the date of the oldest part
of the present Cathedral, or Abbey Church of St. Mary, which, however, was
not finished till later. It is a cruciform building, having a square tower
about seventy feet high, rising from the point where the transept intersects
the nave. From north to south, the transepts measure about seventy feet,
while the whole length of the building is about a hundred and fifty feet,
but a partition wall, dividing the chancel, destroys any effect of size.
The present roofless ruin is all that remains of the
monastic establishment, here planted by the Irish Bishops, who, in the year
A.D. 1203, placed Iona under the rile of the Abbot of Derry. Till this date,
it was retained by the Fathers of the Culdee Church, who although burnt out
and pillaged, over and over again (their monastery being finally destroyed
in 1059) yet clung to the possession of the Isle till the Roman Church was
built. Then the Culdees finally abandoned the Isle, and the Clugniac monks
held it in undisputed possession. It was at this time that thenunnery was
here established. About the end of the 15th century, Iona became the seat of
the Bishop of the Isles, and the Abbey Church became his centre for
ecclesiastical work.
Stormy and
troublous times indeed were those during which his predecessors so
perseveringly held their ground. Again and again were their homes laid
waste, and their lives jeopardized by the incursions of savage Danes and
Norsemen. Four times between the years A.D. 795 and 825 was the Isle ravaged
and the Monastery burnt by the fierce Norsemen who, in 806, barbarously
massacred sixty-eight members of the brotherhood, "The family of Iona."
Their martyrdom is commemorated by the name of the peaceful little Bay of
Martyrs, and the street leading thence. Only think what a life of continual
anxiety was that of the brethren, never knowing whether the strange galleys
that approached their shores were those of reverent pilgrims or ruthless
pirates. We do not however hear of further massacres, till A.D. 986, when,
on Christmas Eve, the savage Norsemen made another descent, murdering the
Abbot and fifteen of his monks.
It was after this that Queen Margaret rebuilt the
Chapel of St. Oran—a tiny and insignificant-looking place it seems to us,
but one to which assuredly some unwonted influence was attached, for we hear
how, when a few years later, Magnus Barefoot landed here with his wild
hordes, he was the first to enter the chapel, but, awestricken, he started
back, and closing the door, commanded that the place and the people should
be left undisturbed.
Sad to
say, the sacred ground which even barbarians thus reverenced, has been
ruthlessly pillaged by modern Goths. Half the houses in the "Baile Mor," the
"great town" of Ions, are said to have been built of materials quarried from
the ecclesiastical ruins, and many of the beautiful sculptured gravestones,
which marked the tombs of abbots and of kings, were plundered and carded off
to many a graveyard on other isles, or on the mainland, there to do honour
to some humble mortal, unknown to fame. Ere they were scattered, a Mr.
Frazier, who visited Ions in A.D. 1688, collected three hundred
inscriptions, which he presented to the Earl of Argyle, but these have
unfortunately been lost.
Even
the altar, which was of white marble, veined with grey, has been carried
off, though it was still in its place in 1772, at which period there were
also some remains of the Bishop's Palace, which Sacheverell, writing in
1688, describes as "a large hail, open to the roof of a chamber," into which
he supposes it must have been necessary to ascend by a ladder. Under this
chamber was a buttery, the offices being probably outside, as was customary.
The Abbot's house stood to the westward.
According to the custom of the Culdee Church, both in
Scotland and Ireland, Iona was ruled by a Presbyter-Abbot, to whom was
committed the entire jurisdiction in the province; the Bishop himself being
subject to the Abbot, and retaining little distinctive precedence, except in
the celebration of Divine service, and in the exercise of such
unquestionably episcopal functions as ordination. In the case of Iona, this
system was attributed by Bede to "the example of that first teacher of
theirs, who was no Bishop, but a Presbyter and Monk".
The inmates of the monastery were inferior orders of
presbyters and deacons, all the monks being ordained clergy, to whom the
monastery was but a central clergy-house, whence they went forth, as
occasion offered, to preach in the semi-pagan regions round about.
The "Baile Mor" to which I referred just now, consists
of a row of about forty-six cottages, forming the "Straide," i.e. the
Street, and containing a population of two hundred and forty persons—a
little flock, which here, as everywhere in Scotland in these modem days, is
divided into the adherents of the Free and the Established Church, each of
which is represented by a Church and a pastor. The Free Church minister now
lives across the Straits, on the Isle of Mull, having given up his manse to
be converted into a simple but cosy little inn, where a true pilgrim (not
content to "do" lone and Staffa as hurried incidents in the course of one
long day's excursion from Oban) can halt, and spend days of delight in the
reverent and leisurely study of its hallowed ground, much of which he would
fain traverse on his knees—at least figuratively.
Mere tourists who do the round trip in a day, of course
only get about one hour on each isle—just time to run round helter-skelter
from point to point, rushing with breathless speed in pursuit of a guide,
who rapidly pours forth his concentrated history of each spot eve he hurries
on to the next point—a history which they may digest at leisure, when they
once more rush on board, feeling surely very much like over-fed turkeys on
escaping from the clutches of a merciless crammer.
The velocity of their meal, however, depends a good
deal on the season of the year; in other words, on the number of sheep which
the steamer may have to carry from isle to isle, to or from their winter
pastures; so that perhaps in the height of summer the halt may be somewhat
more leisurely. And indeed, I am bound to confess that I felt I had wasted a
good deal of compassion on the unhappy tourist flock when I noticed how many
of them found time to spend fully half their allotted hour on the Holy Isle
in eating and drinking, which they might as well have done on board!
But in any case, such visitors can by no possibility
explore anything beyond the actual monastery, whereas to all lovers of old
lore, there are places of very great interest in various parts of the
island. I earnestly recommend all such, to allow themselves a few days on
the Isle, days of such unbroken peace as can rarely be obtained at kindred
sites. There is a charm even in the name of the little inn. Fancy being
welcomed to St. Columba's Arms! To such as can appreciate the excellence and
abundance of dairy produce, the bowls of creamy milk and snowy curds are an
attraction in themselves. Such fresh floury scones too, baked by the most
motherly of ugh-. land landladies! Who would not be a pilgrim to Ions to
share such fare. Nevertheless neither fish, flesh, nor fowl are lacking for
such as prefer more varied diet.
The little inn stands within a stone's-throw of the
ruins—those once hospitable walls to which all corners were welcomed, but
where now only a few sheep browse peacefully, while a colony of jackdaws
find shelter in the crannies of the great Cathedral Tower. The Islanders
have divers superstitions about these birds, which they would on no account
molest. They maintain that since the days of Columba they have claimed a
home in his monastery, and that their numbers have never either increased or
decreased, but that they are uncanny birds, and know many things.
I confess I was sometimes tempted myself to agree with
the latter clause, for there was something strangely weird in the way they
guarded the old place, and resented the approach of human footsteps. Again
and again I tried the experiment of whether I could not enter the sacred
precincts under cover of night without arousing these vigilant birds, but
invariably failed. I might wander wherever I pleased outside their domain,
though within an easy stone's-throw, bid the moment I stepped within the
gate, how noiselessly so ever I entered, the watchful sentinel sounded the
alarm.
As I stood motionless in
the deep shadow of the tower I could see him going his rounds, to waken the
colony, who seemed to be sleepily remonstrating at being thus disturbed, and
very much disposed to return to their slumbers, but the instant I ventured
to move so much as a hand, the whole body started up with angry, querulous
cawing, and after an instant of noisy confusion formed themselves into a
close phalanx, a corps of observation, intent on watching every movement of
the invader. Thenceforth not a cry was uttered, but in total silence this
black cloud of witnesses swept backwards and forwards athwart the dark sky;
no sound save that of multitudinous rushing of wings, which, like a blast of
wind, one moment came sweeping close above my head, the next seemed to
vanish into space, losing itself in the darkness, and anon returning,—at
intervals of a couple of minutes —most eerie and ghostlike!
Often I tried to deceive them by
moving rapidly along under cover of some dark wall or row of tall columns,
but it was quite useless; the dark cloud returned, straight as the flight of
an arrow, not to the place where they had left the foe, but direct to the
spot where I then stood. This invariably went on as long as I stood within
the Cathedral walk The very moment I stepped beyond it, the cawing
recommenced, and continued while the black, living cloud, once more settled
down on the ruined tower, and composed itself to sleep, not caring how long
I might linger in the Reilig Orain, the sacred enclosure round St. Oran's
Chapel, where sleep the kings, and saints, and warriors of old.
Very cold and still lay those sculptured effigies,
showing as clear in the bright moonlight as at midday, nevertheless gaining
from that soft reflected light, something of the mystery and peaceful calm,
which is ever lacking in the glare of noon.
One lovely walk in the early summer morning, is up the
green hill of Dunii, which though little more than 300 feet in height, is
nevertheless the highest point of the island, which thence appears
outspread, map-like, before us, while on every side, as far as eye can
reach, the sea is dotted with countless islands, changing colour with the
varying play of light, as showery cloud or glittering rainbow float over
them, transforming cool pearly greys into living opal.
"Dark Ulva's Isle," the distant peaks of Jura, and Inch
Kenneth claim our glance by turns, the latter—the Innis-Kenneth—having a
special interest, on account of its ecclesiastical ruins: here for many
centuries stood a college, dependent on Iona. Beside the altar in its little
ruined chapel is a sculptured bas-relief of the Blessed Virgin, and all
around are scattered a multitude of graves, on which are carved effigies of
knights and ladies.
Facing us,
across the narrow strait, rise the great hills of Mull, which, piled up in
grand mountain masses, rise from behind the Rosa of Mull—a huge rampart of
red granite, contrasting strongly in colour with the clear aquamarine tints
of the sea, toned here and there to richest purple by the great beds of
brown sea-ware, which lie hidden beneath the water, themselves unseen, yet
none the less doing their part in that beautiful picture, and whispering a
nature. parable on hidden influences.
A little further, the same sea is blue as the sky which
it reflects —nay, bluer by some tones—a fair setting for the Holy Isle, with
its long reaches of pure white shell sand, which gleam dazzlingly in the
sunlight; and the eye hails the rich green grass and banks of delicious
white clover and wild thyme which grows so luxuriantly wherever this white
lime sand can find its way, and indeed all over the Machare (as these sandy
reaches are called). Looking down from our green hill-top, on this scene of
so many historic associations, it needed but a little play of fancy to pass
over the intervening twelve centuries and call up visions of that old life,
when in place of the solidly-built Cathedral, the ruins of which lie before
us, there existed but a few humble cells, clustering round a lowly chapel—a
chapel, however, which exerted a mightier and more extended influence than
fails to the lot of many of the world's stateliest churches.
As a matter of course, to any one versed in the lore of
the past, every corner of this Isle seems haunted bythe spirits of Druids
and Cuidees, and the points of special attraction are those to which
attaches some dream of olden days.
My favourite evening stroll was a solitary expedition
across the moor towards the western side of the Isle, to the wildest rocky
valley, where a small circle of stones is still dear to the islanders, as
the Cappan Cuildich, or Tabernacle of the Culdees, for here, they say, it
was, that the Standard of the Cross was first planted, and that the little
band of Christians were wont to assemble in secret, to worship after the new
fashion taught them by these strange Missionaries.
The circle was, however, probably of older date still;
its avenue of carefully-placed stones seems rather to belong to the
buildings we call Druidic, and whether as temple or tomb, was probably
associated with the earlier form of worship. The mysterious gloom of this
lonely glen seemed well in keeping with both traditions. I generally found
my way there just as the closing day left the valley in deep shadow, often
made darker still by heavy clouds overhead, which, closing in, carried the
eye onward, to where the sea and far away isles lay bathed in lurid sunset
light Not a sound was there to break the deep stillness of the hour, save
when the shrill cry of the curlew, or the wail of some lonely sea-bird, woke
the echoes for one little moment, only to be succeeded by silence more
intense.
Returning thence in
the deepening twilight, I loved to rest awhile on the green hillock
overlooking the old monastery—the Tor Ab, St. Columba's favourite
seat,—there to dream awhile of all the changing scenes that have been, as it
were, dissolving views, successively taking form for a little season, during
the course of ages unnumbered. Soon a golden glow in the eastern sky told
that the great yellow moon was about to rise behind the hills of Mull;
another moment, and the old Cathedral stood out in deepened shadow against
the rippling silver of the intervening straits—those narrow straits, across
which the brethren of the monastery used to ferry such pilgrims as had
performed the weary journey on foot, across the rugged mountains.
One more point of great interest on the Isle is the
Port-naChurraich, or Harbour of the Boat, the spot were St Columba and his
brethren are said to have buried the frail corracle of wicker covered with
hides, in which they sailed hither,—lest they should ever be tempted to
return to their beloved Ireland. Ere taking this final step they climbed the
neighbouring hill to ascertain that the Emerald Isle was no longer even in
sight; hence the name of that hill is to this day the Cairn-cul-n'-Erin,
denoting that henceforth they had turned their backs for ever on Erin's
shore.
Wishing to visit this
point by water, so as to miss none of the beauty of the many-coloured rocks
which lie on the south side of the isle, I chartered a boat intending to row
thither, close along the coast The weather hitherto had been so faultless
that any immediate change seemed impossible, and the dull grey clouds on the
horizon spoke their warning so vainly, that I made no objection when the
boatmen proceeded to hoist a sail. Clumsily in truth they did it, yet it was
not till we were fairly under way that I realized that their unsteadiness
was due to having been over well treated by their friends on board the
steamboat, which had called that morning, and in fact that the barley bree
had done its work pretty effectually, as was proven by the volubility with
which they argued and wrangled in Gaelic—an altercation, in an unknown
tongue, being at all times particularly unpleasant to the unwilling ears
that have to endure it.
Meanwhile the wind was,,rpidly freshening, and a heavy swell setting in, so
that, insteaf of keeping sufficiently near the shore to distinguish its
peculiarities, we spent the afternoon in making long and wearisome track8,
and by the time we reached our destination the waves had grown so angry that
landing at all was a matter of considerable difficulty.
Once ashore, I deemed it more prudent and pleasant to
find my way home alone, across the moor, greatly to the dismay of my
boatmen, whose chivalry was not so clouded by their potations as to let them
be willing to desert their charge in so wild a place. I am sure their minds
were greatly relieved when, in the evening, on returning to the Baile Mor
(the great town) they found me safe in my usual comfortable quarters, and it
certainly was a relief to me to know that they had arrived in safety, which,
when I left them, seemed highly problematic.
The spot on which we, like the Celtic fathers, landed,
is a small bay, closed in by great rocks of gneiss—certainly not much of a
harbour, to judge from the violence with which the great waves sweep in and
dash themselves upon the beach—a beach composed wholly of hillocks of
shingle, consisting chiefly of green quartz and serpentine, and red felspar,
all glittering like jewels when wet with mist and spray; very pretty too
look at, but most unpleasant to acramble over.
These pebbles have ever been valued by pilgrims as
charms, or at any rate as portable and interesting relics, so the children
make occasional expeditions across the Isle, and collect stores of the
brightest, which they offer for sale to the steamboat passengers, as
memorials of their short hour on Iona. Sometimes large glossy seeds, brought
by the Gulf Stream from their birthplace in the tropics, are here washed
ashore, and great is the luck that awaits the finder of one of these
precious Iona beans.
In the middle of this stony expanse
lies one small grassy hillock, just the shape of a boat lying keel
uppermost; and, curiously enough, corresponding in size to the measurements
of St. Columba's Curragh. This is the place where it is supposed to be
buried, and the only spot where (doubtless out of compliment to the Emerald
Isle) the grass contrives to grow.
A little further, and far above reach of the highest
tide, the shingle is heaped up into innumerable great cairns, said to have
been piled, stone by stone, by penitents working on their knees, in
expiation of divers crimes. A more painful and wearisome form of treadmill
could hardly be devised than that of which these heaps are still the tokens.
Turning away from this dreary scene, for once
sympathizing with Montalembert's colourless description of the grey and
misty Hebridean sea, and cold inhospitable shores, I made the best of my way
across the hills towards the cathedral, guided by the position of the
neighbouring islands, the near green hills being nowhere so high as to
conceal the sea for long.
The
storm was gathering fast, and a cold chilling blast would scarcely suffer me
to linger a moment at the Pit-an-druidh, the cairn which marks the
burial-place of Columba's predecessors. An old man who "had the English" in
addition to his Gaelic mother tongue, told me that he had seen this grave
opened by men who doubted the tradition, and that sure enough they had found
a great heap of human bones, all of which were reverently replaced. It was
well, however, to have found this tangible proof of the actual presence of
men, whose shadowy memory has been almost wholly lost in the dim mist of
ages. I felt, while standing beside those lonely graves, that there was
something strangely in keeping with their desolation, in the wild wailing of
the sobbing wind, which seemed to echo the dirge-like moaning of the sullen
waves, as if murmuring a solemn requiem for the forgotten dead.
Near this place stands the only cottage still remaining
on the Isle, with the old-fashioned fire-place hollowed in the centre of the
earthen floor, and with no chimney except a hole in the middle of the roof.
Its inmates gave me cordial welcome, my old friend who "had the English"
being the gude-man of the house, so be heaped on fresh peat8, and invited me
to sit awhile and chat beside the cheery blaze. He pointed out the manifold
advantages of a fireplace that allowed of no monopoly, but round which the
whole family could always gather, and as to the idea of any extra danger
being involved, he could only say he had reared as promising a brood as any
father could desire, and no accident had ever befallen his hearth. As to the
smoke, they were used to it, and really had little more than their
neighbours, whose wide chimneys let in as much cold air as they let out
smoke. So you see a central fire has its advantages even in domestic life.
In former days it was convenient in some other
respects, to which the good old man did not care to allude Id pagan customs
which were faithfully observed for many a century by those who were very
good Christians in the main; such as walking solemnly round the fire, or
leaping across its flames. One of the most remarkable customs of this class,
which was kept up in parts of the Highlands till certainly the beginning of
this century, was that of taking a newly baptized child, and handing it
across the fire to some person opposite; or else, its father would take the
child in his arms and leap across the hearth. This was done thrice, the
child being thus made to pass through the flames, in truly Moloch-ian or
Baal-istic form. After the ceremony each person present took three spoonfuls
of meal and water, or something stronger.
Sometimes the child was placed in a basket, covered
with a white cloth, and cheese and oat-cake being placed beside it, the
basket was suspended from the crook in the fire-place, which was moved round
thrice sun-wise. Moreover, every person entering the house, was required to
take up a burning fire-brand from the hearth, and therewith cross himself,
before he ventured to approach a new-born child or its mother. It was also
customary to carry a burning peat sun-wise round an unbaptized infant and
its mother, to protect them from evil spirits.
These customs seem to have formed part of the ceremony
to which Pope Gregory alluded, when speaking of Pagan baptism—a ceremony in
which both fire and water were employed by the Druids in honour of Neith,
their goddess of waters.
When I
left the cottage, the darkness was falling fast, but I soon struck a
familiar track, and was not sorry once more to find myself safe in the cosy
little inn. That night there was no moonlight visit to the jackdaws or to
the ghostly kings. Such boats as had put out to sea were hurrying home, and
the fishers were preparing for foul weather. All night long the waves
roared, and the winds raved and shook the shutterless windows till we were
fain to own that the name of Ithona, the Isle of Waves, was as just a
description as Ishona, the Blessed Isle, which hitherto we had believed to
be the name most suitable to so cairn and peaceful a retreat.
But with the dawn the angry waves were hushed, and the
sea that had been churned like yeast gradually subsided, only heaving as
though still sullen, till at length, as if exhausted with its own passion,
it once more lay still, and calm, and smiling, breaking in tiny ripples on
the white sands of the Martyrs' Bay, once reddened with the life-blood of
"the family" of Iona. |