Dudley; significant Marks of the Mining Town. — Kindly Scotch
Landlady. — Temperance Coffee-house. — Little Samuel the Teetotaller. —
Curious Incident. — Anecdote. — The Resuscitated Spinet. — Forbearance of
little Samuel. — Dudley Museum ; singularly rich in Silurian Fossils. — Mcgalichthys
Hibberti. — Fossils from Mount Lebanon; very modern compared with those of
the Hill of Dudley. — Geology peculiarly fitted to revolutionize one’s Ideas
of Modern and Ancient. — Fossils of extreme Antiquity furnished by a
Canadian Township that had no name twenty years ago. — Fossils from the Old
Egyptian Desert found to be comparatively of Yesterday.—Dudley Castle and
Castle-hill.— Cromwell’s Mission. — Castle finds a faithful Chronicler in an
old Serving-maid. — Her Narrative. — Caves and Fossils of the Castle-hill. —
Extensive Excavations. — Superiority of the Natural to the Artificial
Cavern. — Fossils of the Scottish Grauwacke. — Analogy between the Female
Lobster and the Trilobite.
The town of Dudley has been built half on the Silurian
deposit, half on, the coal-field, and is flanked on the one side by pleasant
fields, traversed by quiet green lanes, and on the other by ruinous
coal-workings and heaps of rubbish. But as the townspeople are not
“lie-wasters,” we find, in at least the neighborhood of the houses, the
rubbish heaps intersected with innumerable rude fences, and covered by a
rank vegetation. The mechanics of the place have cultivated without
levelling them, so that for acres together they present the phenomenon of a
cockling sea of gardens, — a rural Bay of Biscay agitated by the
ground-swell,—with rows of cabbages and beds of carrots riding on the tops
of huge waves, and gooseberry and currant bushes sheltering in deep troughs
and hollows. I marked, as I passed through the streets, several significant
traits of the mining town: one of the signboards, bearing the figure of a
brawny half-naked man, armed with a short pick, and coiled up like an Andre
Ferrara broadsword in a peck basket, indicates the inn of the “Jolly Miner;”
the hardware shops exhibit in their windows rows of Davy’s safety lamps, and
vast piles of mining tools; and the footways show their sprinkling of
rugged-looking men, attired in short jackets and trousers of undyed plaiding,
sorely besmutted by the soil of an underground occupation. In some
instances, the lamp still sticking in the cap, and the dazzled expression of
countenance, as if the eye had not yet accommodated itself to the light,
indicate the close proximity of the subterranean workings. I dropped into a
respectable-looking tavern to order a chop and a glass of ale, and mark,
meanwhile, whether it was such a place as I might convert into a home for a
few days with any reasonable prospect of comfort. But I found it by much too
favorite a resort of the miners, and that, whether they agreed or disputed,
they were a noisy generation over their ale. The landlady, a kindly, portly
dame, considerably turned of fifty, was a Scotchwoman, a native of Airdrie,
who had long ago married an Englishman in her own country, and had now been
settled in Dudley for more than thirty years. My northern accent seemed to
bespeak her favor; and taking it for granted that I had come into England in
quest of employment, but had not yet been successful in procuring any, she
began to speak comfort to my dejection, by assuring me that our country folk
in that part of the world were much respected, and rose always, if they had
but char acter, into places of trust. I had borne with me, on my homely suit
of russet, palpable marks of my labors at Sedgley and the Wren’s Nest, and
looked, I daresay, rather geological than genteel. Character and
scholarship, said the landlady, drawing her inference, were just everything
in that neighborhood. Most of the Scotch people who came the way, however
poor, had both; and so, while the Irish always remained drudges, and were
regarded with great jealousy by the laboring English, the Scotch became
overseers and book-keepers, sometimes even partners in lucrative works, and
were usually well liked and looked up to. I could fain have taken up my
abode at the friendly Scotchwoman’s; but the miners in
a neighboring apartment were becoming every moment more noisy; and when they
began to strike the table with their fists till the glasses danced and rung,
I got up, and, taking leave of my countrywoman, sallied into the street.
After sauntering about the town for half an hour, I found in
one of the lanes a small temperance coffee-house, with an air of quiet
sobriety about it that at once recommended it to my favor. Finding that most
of the customers of the place went into the kitchen to luxuriate over their
coffee in front of the fire, I too went into the kitchen, and took my seat
on a long wooden settle, with tall upright back and arms, that stretched
along the side of the apartment, on the clean red tiles. The English are by
much a franker people than the Scotch, — less curious to know who the
stranger may be who addresses them, and more ready to tell what they
themselves are, and what they are doing and thinking; and I soon found I
could get as much conversation as I wished. The landlady’s youngest son, a
smart little fellow in his ninth year, was, I discovered, a stem teetotaller.
He had been shortly before at a temperance meeting, and had been set up to
make a speech, in which he had acquitted himself to the admiration of all.
He had been a teetotaller for about nine years, he said, and his father was
a teetotaller too, and his mother, and brother and sisters, were all
teetotallers; and he knew men, he added, who, before taking the pledge, had
worn ragged clothes, and shoes without soles, who, on becoming teetotallers,
had improved into gentlemen. He was now engaged in making a second speech,
which was, however, like a good many other second speeches produced in such
circumstances, very much an echo of the first; and every one who dropped in
this evening, whether to visit the landlady and her daughters, or to drink
coffee, was sure to question little Samuel regarding the progress of his
speech. To some of the querists Samuel replied with great deference and
respect; to some with no deference or respect at all. Condition or
appearance seemed to exert as little influence over the mind of the
magnanimous speech-maker as over that of the eccentric clergyman in Mr.
Fitzadam’s, who paid to robust health the honor so usually paid to rank and
title, and looked down as contemptuously on a broken constitution as most
other people do on dilapidated means. But Samuel had quite a different
standard of excellence from that of the eccentric clergyman. He had, I
found, no respect save for pledged teetotalism; and no words to bestow on
drinkers of strong drink, however moderate in their potations. All mankind
consisted, with Samuel, of but two classes, — drunkards and teetotallers.
Two young ladies, daughters of the supervisor of the district, came in, and
asked him how he was getting on with his speech; but Samuel deigned them no
reply. “You were rude to the young ladies, Samuel,” said his mother when
they had quitted the room; “why did you not give them an answer to their
question?” — “They drink,” replied the laconic Samuel.— “Drink!” exclaimed
his mother, — “Drink! — the young ladies!”—“Yes, drink,” reiterated Samuel;
“they have not taken the pledge.”
I found a curious incident which had just occurred in the
neighborhood forming the main topic of conversation,—exactly such a story as
Crabbe would have chosen for the basis of a descriptive poem. A leaden pipe
had been stolen a few evenings before from one of the town churches: it was
a long, ponderous piece of metal; and the thieves, instead of carrying, had
dragged it along, leaving behind them, as they went, a significant trail on
grass and gravel, which had been traced on the morrow by the sexton to the
house of an elderly couple, in what, for their condition, were deemed snug
circumstances, and who for full thirty years had borne a fair character in
the place. There lived with them two grown-up sons, and they also bore fair
characters. A brief search, however, revealed part of the missing lead; a
still further search laid open a vast mine of purloined movables of every
description. Every tile in the back court, every square yard in the garden,
every board in the house-floor, covered its stolen article; — kitchen
utensils and fire-irons, smiths’ and miners’ tools, sets of weights from the
market-place, pieces of hardware goods from the shops, garden railings,
sewerage grates, house-spouts, — all sorts of things useful and useless to
the purloiners,—some of them missed but yesterday, some of them abstracted
years before,—were found heaped up together, in this strange jay’s nest.
Two-thirds of the people of Dudley had gone out to mark the progress of
discovery; and as the police furrowed the garden, or trenched up the floor,
there were few among the numerous spectators who were not able to detect in
the mass some piece of their own property. I saw the seventh cart-load
brought this evening to the police-office; and every fresh visiter to the
coffeehouse carried with him the intelligence of further discoveries. The
unhappy old man, who had become so sudden a bankrupt in reputation when no
one had doubted his solvency, and the two sons whom he had trained so ill,
had been sent off to Gloucester jail the evening before, to abide their
trial at the ensuing assizes. I was reminded, by the incident, of an
occurrence which took place some time in the last age in a rural district in
the far north. A parish smith had lived and died with an unsuspected
character, and the population of half the country-side gathered to his
funeral. There had been, however, a vast deal of petty pilfering in his
time. Plough and harrow irons were continually disappearing from the fields
and steadings of the farmers, his nearer neighbors; not a piece of
hem-mounting or trace-chain, not a cart-axle or wheel-rim, was secure; but
no one had ever thought of implicating the smith. Directly opposite his door
there stood a wall of loose, uncemented stones, against which a party of the
farmers who had come to the burial were leaning, until the corpse should be
brought out. The coffin was already in the passage; the farmers were raising
their shoulders from the wail, to take their places beside it; in ten
minutes more the smith would have been put under the ground with a fair
character; when, io! the frail masonry behind suddenly gave way; the clank
of metal was heard to mingle with the dull rumble of the stones; and there,
amid the rubbish, palpable as the coffin'on the opposite side of the road,
lay, in a scattered heap, the stolen implements so mysteriously abstracted
from the farmers. The awestruck men must have buried the poor smith with
feelings which bore reference to both worlds, and which a poet such as
Wordsworth would perhaps know how to describe.
My landlady’s eldest son, a lad of nineteen, indulged a
strong predilection for music, which, shortly prior to the date of my visit,
had received some encouragement, in his appointment as organist in one of
the town churches. At a considerable expense of patient ingenuity, he had
fitted up an old spinet, until it awoke into life, in these latter days of
Collards and Broadwoods, the identical instrument it had been a century
before, He had succeeded, too, in acquiring no imperfect mastery over it;
and so, by a series of chances all very much out of the reach of
calculation, I, who till now had never seen but dead spinets, — rickety
things of chopped wainscot, lying in waste garrets from the days of the
grandmothers and great-grandmothers of genteel families, — was enabled to
cultivate acquaintance with the capabilities of a resuscitated spinet, vocal
and all alive. It gave me the idea, when at its best, of a box full of Jew’s
harps, all twanging away at the full extent of their compass, and to the
best of their ability. The spirit of the musician, however, made such amends
for the defects of his instrument, that his evening performances, carried on
when his labors for the day had closed, were exceedingly popular in the
neighborhood: the rude miner paused under the windows to listen; and groups
of visitors, mostly young girls, came dropping in every night to enjoy the
nice fresh melodies brought out of the old musty spinet. Lovers of the fine
arts draw naturally together; and one of the most frequent guests of the
coffee-house was an intelligent country artist, with whom I had scraped
acquaintance, and had some amusing conversation. With little Samuel the
speech-maker I succeeded in forming a friendship of the superlative type;
though, strange to relate, it must be to this day a profound mystery to
Samuel whether his fidus Achates the Scotchman be a drinker of strong drink
or a teetotaller. Alas for even teetotalised human nature, when placed in
trying circumstances! Samuel and I had a good many cups of coffee together,
and several glasses of — a palatable Dudley beverage, compounded of eggs,
milk, arid spicery; and as on these occasions a few well-directed coppers
enabled him to drive hard bargains with his mother for his share of the
tipple, he was content to convert in my behalf the all-important question of
the pledge into a moot-point of np particular concernment. I unfortunately
left Dudley ere he had an opportunity presented him of delivering his second
speech. But he entertained, he assured me, no fears for the result. It was
well known in the place, he said, that he was to speak at the first
temperance meeting; there were large expectations formed, so the audience
could not be other than very numerous and attentive; and he was quite
satisfied he had something worth while to give them. My friend Samuel bore a
good deal of healthy precocity about him. It would be, of course,
consummately absurd to found aught on a single instance ; but it has been so
often remarked that English children of the lively type develop into
cleverness earlier than the Scotch, that the observation has, in all
likelihood, some foundation in reality. I find, too, from the experiments of
Professor Forbes, of Edinburgh, that the English lad in his sixteenth,
seventeenth, and eighteenth years, possesses more bodily strength than the
Scot of the same years and standing, and that it is not until their
nineteenth year that the young men of both countries meet on a footing of
equality. And it seems not irrational to infer, that the earlier development
of body in the case of the embryo Englishman should be accompanied by a
corresponding development of mind also, — that his school exercises should
be better than those of the contemporary Scot, and his amateur verses rather
more charged with meaning, and more smoothly rounded.
Dudley has its Geological Museum, — small, but very valuable
in some departments, and well arranged generally. Its Silurian organisms are
by far the finest I ever saw. No sum of money would enable the fossil
collector to complete such a set. It contains original specimens of the
trilobite family, of which, in other museums, even the British, one finds
but the casts. Nor can anything be more beautiful than its groups of
delicately relieved crinoidea of all the different Silurian genera, — some
of them in scarce less perfect keeping than when they spread out their
many-jointed arms in quest of prey amid the ancient seas. It contains,
however, none of the vertebral remains furnished by the celebrated bone-bed
of the Upper Ludlow rocks, nor any of the ichthyolitic fragments found still
lower down; though, of course, one misses them all the more from the
completeness of the collection in contemporary organisms; and its group of
Old Red Sandstone fossils serves but to contrast the organic poverty of this
system in its development in England, with the vast fossil riches which it
exhibits in our northern division of the island. The neighboring coal-field
I found well represented by a series of plants and ichthyolites; and I had
much pleasure in examining, among the latter, one of the best preserved
specimens of Mega-lichthys yet found, —a specimen disinterred some years ago
from out an ironstone bed near Walsall, known to the miners as the “gubbin
iron.” The head is in a remarkably fine state of keeping: the strong
enamelled plates, resembling pieces of japanned mail, occupy their original
places; they close round the snout as if tightly riveted down, and lie
nicely inlaid in patterns of great regularity on the broad forehead; the
surface of each is finely punctulated, as if by an exceedingly minute
needle; most of them bear, amid the smaller markings, eyeletlike
indentations of larger size, ranged in lines, as if they had been
half-perforated for ornament by a tin-worker’s punch; and the tout
ensemble is that of the head of - some formidable reptile encased in armor
of proof: though, from the brightly burnished surface of the plates, the
armature resembles rather that of some of the more brilliant insects, than
that common to fishes or reptiles. The occipital covering of the crocodile
is perhaps more than equally strong, but it lacks the glossy japan, and the
tilt-yard cast, if I may so speak, of the many-jointed head-piece of the Megalichtkys. The
occipital plates descend no lower than the nape, where they join on to
thickly-set ranges of glittering quadrangular scales of considerable size
and great thickness, that gradually diminish, and become more angular as
they approach the tail. The fins are unluckily not indicated in the
specimen. In all fossil fish, of at least the Secondary and Palaeozoic
formations, the coloring depends on the character of the deposits in which
they have lain entombed. 1 have seen scales and plates of the in some
instances of a sienna yellow, in some of a warm chestnut brown; but the
finer specimens are invariably of a glossy black. The Dudley Megalichtkys,
and a Megalichtkys in the possession of Dr. John Fleming, which, though
greatly less entire, is valuable, from exhibiting the vertebral column of
the animal, are both knights in black armor.
This ancient fish was at one time confounded with its
contemporary, the Holoptychius Hibberti. A jaw of the latter animal, with
its slim ichthyolite teeth bristling around its huge reptile tusks, may be
seen figured as that of Megalichtkys, in the singularly interesting Memoir
of Dr. Hibbert on the Limestone of Burdie House; and we find single teeth
similarly misassigned in some other geological works of credit. But no two
ichthyolites in the geologic scale in reality less resemble each other than
these two fish of the Coal Measures. The Megalichtkys, from head to tail,
was splendent with polished enamel; the Holoptychius was, on the contrary, a
dull-coated fish. The Megalichtkys rarely exceeded four feet in length, and
commonly fell short of three; the Holoptychius was one of the most gigantic
of the ganoids : some individuals, judging from the fragments, must, like
the great basking shark of the northern seas, have exceeded thirty feet in
length. The scales of the Megalichtkys are smooth, quadrangular, and of
great thickness, but rarely exceed an inch, or three quarters of an inch,
across; those of the Holoptychius are thin, nearly circular in form, thickly
ridged on the upper surface, and vary from an inch to more than five inches
in diameter. The head of the Megalichtkys was covered, as has been shown,
with brightly-japanned plates ; that of the Holoptychius, with plates
thickly fretted on the surface, like pieces of shagreen, only the tubercles
are more confluent, and Among the donations to the Dudley Museum,
illustrative of the geology of foreign parts, I saw an interesting group of
finely-preserved fossil fish from Mount Lebanon, — a very ancient mountain,
in its relation to human history, compared with the Castle-hill of Dudley
(which, however, begins to loom darkly through the haze of the monkish
annalists as early as the year 700, when Dud the Saxon built a stronghold on
its summit), but an exceedingly recent hill in its relation to the geologic
eras. The geologist, in estimating the respective ages of the two eminences,
places the hill with the modem history immensely in advance of the hill with
the ancient one. The fish dug out of the sides of Lebanon, some five or six
thousand feet over the level of the sea, are all fish of the modem type,
with horny scales and bony skeletons; and they cannot belong lie ranged in
irregular ridges. It may be mentioned in the passing, that the Holoptychius of
the Coal Measures, if there be value in the distinguishing characteristics
of Owen, — and great value there certainly is, — was not even generically
related to the Holoptychius of the Old Red Sandstone. The reptile teeth of
the Old Red Holoptychius are of bone, marked by the true dendrodic character
of the genus, and so thickly cancellated towards the base, as to resemble,
in the cross section, pieces of open lace-work. The reptile teeth of the Holoptychius
Hibberti, on the contrary, are of ivory, presenting towards the point, where
the surface is smooth and unfurrowed, the common tubular, radiating
character of that substance, and exhibiting towards the base, where the
Gothic-like rodding is displayed, a strange intricacy of pattern, that
becomes more involved as we cut lower down, till what in the middle section
resembles the plaiting of a ruff seen in profile, is found to resemble,
immediately over the line where the base rests on the jaw, the labyrinthine
complexity of a Runic knot. The scales of the creatures, too, are very
dissimilar in their microscopic structure, though both possess in common
ridged surfaces, — the only point of resemblance from which their generic
identity has been inferred. Even the internal structure of their occipital
plates is wholly different. So far'as is yet known, the Coal Measures
contain no Holoptychius akin to the dendrodic genus of that name so abundant
in the Old Red Sandstone.
In a remoter period, Agassiz tells us, than the times of the
Chalk. Fish were an ancient well-established order in these comparatively
recent days of the Cretaceous system; whereas their old Placoid
predecessors, contemporary with the crusfacea brachipoda of the Hill of
Dudley, seem but to have just started into being at the earlier time, as the
first-born of their race, and must have been regarded as mere upstart
novelties among the old plebeian crustaceans and molluscs they had come to
govern. The trilobites of Dudley are some four or five creations deeper in
the bygone eternity, if I may so speak, than the cycloids.and ctenoids of
Lebanon. I was a good deal struck, shortly before leaving home, by this
curious transposition of idea which Geology in such cases is suited to
accomplish. I found waiting my inspection, one morning in the house-lobby, a
box and basket, both filled with fossils. Those in the basket, which had
been kindly sent me by Dr. John Wilson, of Bombay, consisted of ichthyolites
and shells from the Holy Land, and fossil wood from the old Egyptian desert;
while those in the box, which had been obligingly transmitted me by Dr.
James Wilson, of Upper Canada, — a gentleman who, amid the wild backwoods,
with none to assist and few to sympathize, has cultivated a close
acquaintance with science for its own sake, — had been collected in the
modern township of Paken-ham, not far from the banks of the Ottawa. The
fossil wood of the old desert—unequivocally dicotyledonous, of the oak or
mahogany structure — could not, I found, be older than the Tertiary period:
the fish and shells of Palestine, like those of the Dudley Museum, belong
apparently to the times of the Chalk; but the organisms of the modern
township, that had no name twenty years ago, boasted an incomparably higher
antiquity: they consisted of corals, Crustacea, and cephalopoda, from the
Lower Silurians.
No one who visits Dudley should omit seeing its castle and
castle-hill. The castle, a fine old ruin of the true English type, with
moat, court and keep, dungeon and treble gateway, chapel, guard-room and
hall, resembles in extent rather a ruinous village than a single building;
while the hill on which it stands forms, we find, a picturesquely wooded
eminence, seamed with rough, bosky ravines, and bored deep with gloomy
chasms, that were excavated centuries ago as limestone quarries. But their
lime has been long since exhausted, and the miner now plies his labors
unseen, though not unheard, deep amid the bowels of the mountain. The
visiter may hear, in recesses the most recluse and solitary, the frequent
rumble of his subterraneous thunder, and see the aspen trembling in the
calm, under the influence of the earthquake-like tremor communicated to it
from beneath.
The old keep, by much the strongest and most ancient portion
of the building, rises on the highest part of the eminence, and commands the
town below, part of which lies grouped around the hill-foot, almost within
pistol-shot of the walls. In the olden time, this fortress occupied the
centre of an extensive woodland district, and was known as the “Castle of
the Woods.” It had some rather high-handed masters in its day, — among the
rest, the stern Leofric, husband of the Lady Godiva, so celebrated in
chronicle and song for her ride through Coventry. Even as late as the close
of the reign of Elizabeth, a lord of Dudley, at feud with a neighboring
proprietor, ancestor of the well-known Lord Lyttleton, issued from the
triple gateway, “having,” says a local historian of the time, “one hundred
and forty persons with him, weaponed, some with bows and sheffes of arrows,
some with forest-bills and stavea, and came to Mr. Lyttleton’s lands at
Prestwood and Ash wood; and out of Ashwood he took three hundred and
forty-one sheep, and caused some of his company drive them towards Dudley;
and therewith not satisfied, he entered also into the enclosed grounds at
Prestwood, and there, with great violence, chased fourteen kyne, one bull,
and eight fat oxen, and brought them to Dudley Castle, and kept them within
the walls of the castle; and part of the said cattle and sheep he did*kill
and eat, and part he sent to Coventry, guarded by sixty men strongly armed
with bows and arrows, calyvers, and forest-bills, there to be sold.”
Somewhat rough doings these, and rather of a Scotch than an English type:
they remind one of a Highland creach of the days of Rob Roy. England,
however, had a boy born to it twenty years after the event, who put an
effectual stop to all such acts of lordly aggression for the future; and the
keep of Dudley Castle shows how. Two of its rock-like towers, with their
connecting curtain, remain scarce less entire than in the days of Dud or of
Leofric; but the other two have disappeared, all save their foundations, and
there have been thirty-two-pound shot dug out from among the ruins, that in
some sort apologize for their absence. The iron hand of Cromwell fell heavy
on the Castle of the Woods, — a hand, of which it may be said, as Barbour
says of the gaunt-leted hand of the Bruce, that
“Where it strook with even stroke,
Nothing mocht against it stand
and sheep and cattle have been tolerably safe in the
neighborhood ever since. It was a breezy, sunshiny day on which I climbed
the hill to the old keep, along a steep paved roadway o’ershaded by wood. In
the court behind, — a level space some two or three acres in extent, flanked
on the one side by the castle buildings, and on the other by a gray
battlemented wall, — I found a company of the embodied pensioners going
through their exercises, in their uniforms of red and blue. Most of them —
old, gray-headed veterans, with medals dangling at their breasts, and
considerably stiffened by years — seemed to perform their work with the
leisurely air of men quite aware that it was not of the greatest possible
importance. The broken ruins lay around them, rough with the scars of
conflict and conflagration; and the old time-worn fortress harmonized well
with the old time-worn soldiery.
It must be a dull imagination that a scene so imposing as
that presented by the old castle does not set in motion: its gloomy vaults
and vast halls, — its huge kitchen and roomy chapel, — its deep fosse and
tall rampart, — its strong portcul-lised gateway and battered keep, — are
all suggestive of the past, — of many a picturesque group of human
creatures, impressed, like the building in which they fed and fought,
worshipped and made merry, with the character of a bygone age. The deserted
apartments, as one saunters through them, become crowded with life; the
gray, cold, evanished centuries assume warmth and color. In Dudley, however,
the imagination receives more help in its restorations than in most other
ruins in a state of equal dilapidation. The building owes much to a
garrulous serving-maid, that followed her mistress, about a hundred and
twenty years ago, to one of its high festivals, — a vast deal more, at
least, than to all the great lords and ladies that ever shared in its
hospitality. The grandmother of that Mrs. Sherwood of whom, I daresay, most
of my readers retain some recollection since their good-boy or good-girl
days, as a pleasing writer for the young, was a ladies' maid, some time
early in the last century, in a family of distinction that used to visit at
the castle; and the authoress has embodied in her writings one of her
grandmother’s descriptions of its vanished glories, as communicated to her
by the old woman many years after. I must give, by way of specimen, a few
characteristic snatches of her story, — a story which will scarce fail to
recall to the learned in romance the picturesque narratives of Mrs.
Ratcliffe’s garrulous housekeepers, or the lengthened anecdotes of the
communicative Annette.
“I was delighted,” says the old serving-maid, “when it was
told me that I was to accompany my lady and a friend of hers to the castle,
in order that I might be at hand to wait on them next morning; for they were
to stay at the castle all night. So we set out in the coach, the two ladies
being seated in front, and myself with my back to the horses; and it was
quite dark when we arrived at the foot of the castle-hill, for it was the
dead of winter, and the snow lay on the ground. However, there were lamps
fixed upon the trees, all along the private road up to the castle; and there
were lights upon the towers, which shone as beacons far and near; for it was
a great day at the castle. The horses, though we had four, had hard work to
drag us up the snowy path. However, we got up in time; and, passing under
the gateway, we found ourselves in the court-yard. But oh, how different did
it then show to what it does now, being littered with splendid equipages,
and sounding with the rattling of wheels and the voices of coachmen and
grooms calling to each other, and blazing with lights from almost every
window! and the sound of merry voices, and of harps and viols, issued from
every doorway. At length, having drawn up to the steps of the portico, my
ladies were handed out by a young gentleman wearing an embroidered waistcoat
with deep pockets, and a bag-wig and sword; and I was driven to another
door, where I was helped out by a foot-boy, who showed me the way to the
housekeeper’s room.” The serving-maid then goes on to describe the interior.
She saw on the dark wainscoting hard, stiff paintings, in faded colors, of
antiquely-dressed dames, and knights in armor; but the housemaid, she said,
could tell her nothing of their history. Some of the rooms were hung with
tapestry; some with tarnished paper that looked like cut velvet. The
housekeeper was an old, bustling dame, “with a huge bunch of keys hanging to
her girdle by a strong chain of steel.” “ There was not a window which was
sashed, but all were casemented in stone frames, many of the panes being of
colored glass; and there was scarce one chamber on the same level with
another, but there was a step to go up or a step to go down to each: the
chimney-pieces of carved wood or stone were so high, that I could hardly
reach to the mantel-shelves when standing on tiptoe; and instead of grates,
such as we have now, there were mostly dogs upon the hearths. The chairs
were of such a size, that two of the present sort would stand in the room of
one; and the doors, though very thick and substantial, were each an inch or
two from the floor, so that the wind whistled all along the passages,
rattling and shaking the casements, and often making a sort of wild and
mournful melody.”
The great hall which constituted the grand centre of the
festivities of this evening now forms one of the most dilapidated portions
of the ruin. The front walls have fallen so low that we can barely trace
their foundations, and a rank vegetation waves over the floor. I think it is
Macculloch who says, that full one-half the ancient strongholds of our
Scotch Highlands thrown together into a heap would be found scarce equal in
the aggregate to a single English castle of the more magnificent type; and
certainly enough remains of the great hall here* broken as it is, to
illustrate, and in some degree corroborate the remark, disparaging to the
Highlands as it may seem. We can still ascertain that this single roorp
ipaeasured seventy-five feet in length by fifty-six feet jp breadth, — a
space considerably more than equal in area to most of our north-country
fortalices. It was remarkable at one time for containing, says Dr. Plott, an
oak table, composed of a single plank, three feet in breadth, that extended
from end to end of the apartment. The great hall must have presented a gay
scene when seen by the grandmother of Mrs. Sherwood. “Three doors opened
into it from the gallery above. At one of these,” says the garrulous old
woman, “ all the servant-maids were standing, and I took my place among
them. I can hardly tell how to describe this hall to you, unless by saying
that the roof was arched or groined, not unlike that of some ancient church
which you may have seen; and it had large and lofty windows, painted and
carved in the fashion called Gothic. It was illuminated with many candles,
in sconces of brass hanging from the ceiling; and every corner of it, wide
as it was, was bright as the day. There was a gallery at the further end of
it, filled with musicians; and the first and foremost among them was an old
harper from Wales, who used, in those days, to travel the country with his
harp on his back, ever presenting himself at the doors of the houses whefe
feasts and merrymakings might be expected. The dresses of the time were very
splendid; the ladies shone with glossy silks and jewels, and the gentlemen
with embroidery and gold and silver lace; and I have still before me the
figures of that gay and distinguished company, for it consisted of the noble
of the land, with their families. It may be fancy; but I do not think I ever
in these days see faces so fair as some of those which shone that night in
the old castle-hall.” Such were some of the reminiscences of the ancient
serving-maid. A few years after the merrymaking which she records, the
castle was deserted by the inmates for a more modern building; and in 1750
it was reduced by fire to a blackened group of skeleton walls. A gang of
coiners were suspected at the time of harboring among its concealments; and
the conflagration is said to have been the work of an incendiary connected
with the gang. An unfinished stanza, spelt amiss, and carved rudely on one
of the soft sandstone lintels, used to be pointed out as the work of the
felon; but, though distinctly legible till within the last few years, it can
now be pointed out no longer: —
“Water went round it, to garde it from the Fooe:
The fire shall burn it ”
Can the reader complete the couplet ? If not, he may be
perhaps apt to suspect the man who first filled up the gap with sense and
rhyme as the original author, and, of course, the incendiary. But though
every boy and girl in Dudley has learned to add the missing portion, no one
seems to know who the individual was who supplied it first.
“Water went round it, to garde it from the Fooe :
The fire shall burn it, a lay its towers low.”
Some of the dells and caverns of the castle-hill I found
exceedingly picturesque. Its limestone is extensively employed in the
smelting furnaces as a flux. Every ton of clay ironstone must be mixed up
with half a ton of lime, to facilitate the separation of the metal from the
argillaceous dross; and so, from the earliest beginnings of the iron-trade,
the work of excavation has been going on in the Hill of Dudley. The first
smelter who dug up a barrowful of ironstone to make a sword must have come
to the hill for half a barrowful of lime, to mix up with the brown mass, ere
he committed it to the fire. And so some of the caverns are very vast, and,
for caverns of man’s making, very old; and some of the open dells, deserted
by the quarrier for centuries, bear amid their precipices trees of large
size, and have long since lost every mark of the tool. The recesses of the
hill, like those of the Wren’s Nest, are threaded by a subterranean canal,
which, in passing under the excavation of an ancient quarry, opens to the
light; and so in a thickly-wooded walk, profoundly solitary, when one is
least thinking of the possibility of such a thing, one comes full upon a
wide and very deep chasm overhung by trees, the bottom of which is occupied
by a dark basin, crowded with boats. We may mark the boatmen emerging from
out the darkness by one cavern, and reentering it by another. They see the
sun, and the sky, and the green trees, far above, but nothing within reach
save rough rocks and muddy water; and if they do not think, as they pass, of
human life, bounded by the darkness of the two eternities, with no lack of
the gloomy and the turbid in closest contact, but with what the heart most
desires hung too high for the hand to grasp, it is not because there are no
such analogies furnished by the brief passage through, but merely because
they have failed to discover them. ,
A little further on there may be found a grand though
somewhat sombre cavern, which, had it come direct from the hand of nature, I
would have perhaps deemed one of the most remarkable I ever explored. We
enter a long narrow dell, wooded atop, like all the others, with an
overhanging precipice rising tall on the one side, and the strata sloping
off on the other in a continuous plane, like the face of a rampart. Nor is
this sloping wall devoid of its characteristic sculpturings. We find it
fretted with shells and corals, and well-marked heads and joints of the Calymene,
so abundant an organism in these rocks as to be familiarly known as the
Dudley trilobite. I scarce know on what principle it should have occurred;
but certainly never before, even when considerably less familiar with the
wonders of Geology, was I so impressed by the appearance of marine fossils
in an inland district, as among these wooded solitudes. Perhaps the
peculiarity of their setting, if I may so- speak, by heightening the
contrast between their present circumstances and their original habitat,
gave increased effect to their appeals to the imagination. The green ocean
depths in which they must have lived and died associate strangely in the
mind with the forest retreats, a full hundred miles from the sea-shore, in
which their remains now lie deposited. Taken with their accompaniments, they
serve to remind one of that style of artificial grotto-work in which corals
and shells are made to mingle with flowers and mosses. The massy
cyathophyllum sticks out of the sides of gray lichened rocks, enclasped by
sprigs of ivy, or overhung by twigs of thorn and hazel; deep-sea
terebratulse project in bold relief from amid patches of the delicate wood
sorel; here a macerated oak-leaf, with all its skeleton fibres open as a
iiet, lies glued by the damps beside some still more delicately reticulated
festinella; there a tuft of graceful harebells projects over some prostrate
orthoceratite; yonder there peeps out from amid a drapery of green liver-wort,
like a heraldic helmet from the mantling, the armed head of some mailed
trilobite: the deep-sea productions of the most ancient of creations lie
grouped, as with an eye to artistic effect, amid the floral productions of
our own times. At the further end of this retired dell, so full of interest
to the geologist, we see, where the rock closes, two dark openings separated
by a rude limestone column. One of these forms a sort of window to the
cavern within, so exceedingly lofty in the sill as to be inaccessible to the
explorer; through the other we descend along a damp, mouldy path, and reach
the twilight bank of a canal, which stretches away into the darkness between
two gloomy walls of rock of vast height, connected half-way up, — as
flooring-beams connect the walls of a skeleton building, — by a range of
what seems rafters of rock. The cavern had once an upper story, — a working
separated from the working below by a thin sloping floor; and these stone
rafters are remains of the floor, left as a sort of reclining buttresses, to
support the walls. They form one of the most picturesque features of the
cavern, straddling overhead from side to side, and receding in the more than
twilight gloom of the place, each, succeeding rafter dimmer and more dim, in
proportion to its distance from the two openings, till the last becomes so
indistinctly visible, that if but a cloud pass over the sun, it disappears.
A rustic bridge leads across the canal; but we can see only the one end of
it, — the other .is lost in the blackness; the walls and floor are green
with mould; the dark water seems a sullen river of pitch: we may
occasionally mark the surface dimpled by the track of a newt, or a toad
pufling itself up, as if it fed on vapor, on the damp earthy edge; but other
inhabitants the cavern has none. I bethought me of the wild description of
Kirke White: —
“And as she entered the cavern wide,
The moonbeam gleamed pale,
And she saw a snake on the craggy rock, —
It clung by its slimy tail.
Her foot it slipped, and she stood aghast,
For she trod on a bloated toad.”
Solitary as the place usually is, it presented a singularly
animated appearance six years ago, when it was visited by the members of the
British Association, and converted by Sir Roderick Murchison into a
geological lecture-room. He discoursed of rocks and fossils in the bowels of
the hill, with the ponderous strata piled high on every side, like courses
of Cyclopean masonry, and the stony forms of the dead existing by millions
around him.
But, after all, there are no caverns like those of nature’s
making: they speak to the imagination in a bolder and freer style than any
mere excavation of the quarrier, however huge ; and we find, in consequence,
that they have almost always engaged tradition in their behalf. There hangs
about them some old legend of spectral shapes seen flitting across the
twilight vestibule; or of ancient bearded men, not of this world, standing,
porter-like, beside the door; or of somnolent giants reposing moodily in the
interior; or of over-bold explorers, who wandered so deep into their
recesses that they never again returned to the light of day. I bethought me,
when in Sir Roderick’s lecture-room, of one of the favorite haunts of my
boyhood, — a solitary cave, ever resounding to the dash of the billows, —
and felt its superiority. Hollowed of old by the waves of an unfrequented
shore, just above the reach of the existing tide-line, — its gray roof
bristling with stalactites, its gray floor knobbed with stalagmite, — full
of all manner of fantastic dependencies from the top and sides, — with here
little dark openings branching off into the living rock, and there
unfinished columns standing out from it, roughened with fretted
irregularities, and beaded with dew,—with a dim twilight resting even at
noonday within its further recesses, and steeped in an atmosphere of
unbreathing silence, rarely broken save by the dash of the wave or the
shriek of the sea-fowl, — it is at all times a place where the poetry of
deep seclusion may be felt, — the true hermit-feeling, in which self is
absorbed and forgotten amid the silent sublimities of nature. The unfrequent
visitor scares the seal from the mid-tide rock in the opening, or encounters
the startled otter in its headlong retreat to the sea. But it seemed
redolent, when I last saw it, of a still higher poetry. Night had well-nigh
fallen, though the nearly vanquished daylight still struggled with the
darkness. The moon at full rose slowly over the sea,
“All pale and dim, as if from rest
The ghost of the late buried sun
And crept into the skies.”
The level beam fell along a lonely coast, on brown precipice
and gray pebbly shore, here throwing into darker shade some wooded recess,
there soliciting into prominence some tall cliff whitened by the cormorant.
The dark-browed precipice, in which the cavern is hollowed, stood out in
doubtful relief; while the cavern itself—bristling gray with icicles, that
showed like the tags of a dead dress — seemed tenanted, in the exaggerative
gloom, with all manner of suggestive shapes. Here a sheeted uncertainty sat
beside the wall, or looked out from one of the darker openings upon the sea;
there a broken skeleton seemed grovelling upon the floor. There was a wild
luxury in calling to mind, as one gazed from the melancholy interior on the
pale wake of the moon, that for miles on either hand there was not a human
dwelling, save the deserted hut of a fisherman who perished in a storm. The
reader may perhaps remember, that in exactly such a scene does the poet
Collins find a home for his sublime personification of Fear.
“Say, wilt thou shroud in haunted cell,
Or in some hollowed seat,
’Gainst which the big waves beat,
With shuddering, meek, submitted thought,
Hear drowning seamen’s cries in tempests brought?”
I spent the greater part of a week among the fossiliferous
deposits of Dudley, and succeeded in procuring a tolerably fair set of
fossils, and in cultivating a tolerably competent acquaintance with the
appearances which they exhibit in their various states of keeping. It is an
important matter to educate the eye. Should there be days of health and the
exploration of the Scottish Grauwaeke in store for me, I may find my brief
sojourn among the English Silurians of some little advantage. Fossils in our
ancient southern deposits are exceedingly rare ; and there is, in
consequence, a lack of data by which to ascertain the age of the formations
in which they occur, and which they fail sufficiently to mark. The tablets
are devoid of inscriptions, save that we here and there find a half-effaced
character, or the outline of some sorely worn hieroglyphic. And yet, had the
few fossils hitherto discovered been preserved and brought together, their
joint testimony might be found to amount to something. The Graptolites of
Peebles-shire and Galloway are tolerably well known as identical with
English species, — the Graptolithus Ludensis and— which possess, however, a
wide range in the more ancient rocks, passing downwards from beds of the
Upper Silurian, to deposits that lie deep in what was once termed the
Cambrian series. In Peebles-shire, at Wrae-hill, says Mr. Nicol, shells have
been detected in a Grauwacke limestone, now unluckily no longer accessible.
It is stated by Mr. Maclaren, in his elaborate and singularly satisfactory
Treatise on the Geology of Fife and the Lothians, that he succeeded in
disinterring two organisms, — a small orthoceratite, and what seemed to he a
confused accumulation of the shattered fragments of minute trilobites, —
from out of one of the Grauwacke patches which occur among the Pentlands. I
have been informed by the late Mr. William Laid law, the trusted friend of
Sir Walter Scott, that he once disinterred a large bivalve from amid the
Grauwackes of Selkirkshire. The apparent remains of broken tere-bratulas
have been found in various localities in the Grauwacke of Galloway, and
atrypae and tentaculites in a rather equivocal deposit at Girvan, deemed
Silurian. Were the various scattered fragments of the fossiliferous record
to be brought carefully together, they might be found sufficiently complete
to give one at least a few definite ideas regarding the times which preceded
in Scotland the age of the Coccosteus and Pterickthys.
There was a barber in Dudley, who holds a sort of fossil
agency between the quarrier and the public, of whom I purchased several fine
trilobites, — one of them, at least, in the most perfect state of keeping I
have yet seen: the living creature could not have been more complete in
every plate and joint of the head and back; but, as in all the other
specimens of trilobite known to the geologist, it presents no trace of the
abdominal portion. I procured another specimen rolled up in the peculiar
ball-form so often figured, with the tail in contact with the head. It seems
not unworthy of remark, that the female lobster, when her spawn is ripening
in an external patch on her abdomen, affects for its protection the same
rolled form. Her dorsal plates curve round from the joint at the carpace,
till the tail-flap rests on her breast; and the multitudinous dark-colored
eggs, which, having no hard shell of their own to protect them, would be
otherwise exposed to every hungry marauder of the deep, are thus covered up
by the strong mail with which the animal is herself protected. When we take
the fact into account, that in no specimen of trilobite, however well
preserved, do we find abdominal plates, and that the balllike form is so
exceedingly common, may we not infer that this ancient crustacean was
shelled on but the back and head, and that it coiled itself round, to
protect a defenceless abdomen, in the manner the female lobster coils itself
round to protect its defenceless spawn? In yet another specimen which I
purchased from the barber, there is an eye of theAsaphus Caudatus, which
presents, in a state of tolerable keeping, its numerous rows of facets. So
far as is yet known, the eye which first saw the light on this ancient earth
of ours gave access to it through four hundred and fifty distinct spherical
lenses. The barber had been in the way of selling Dudley fossils, he told
me, for a good many years; and his father had been in the way of selling
them for a good many more; but neither he nor his father had ever seen among
them any portion of an ichthyolite. The crustaceans, with their many-jointed
plates and many-windowed eyes, are, so far as is yet known, the highest
organisms of the deposit. |