LETTER IV.
The Fairy Superstition is derived from different sources — The
Classical Worship of the Silvans, or Rural Deities, proved by Roman Altars
discovered — The Gothic Duergar, or Dwarfs — Supposed to be derived from
the Northern Laps, or Fins — “The Niebelungen-Lied” — King Laurin's
Adventure — Celtic Fairies of a gayer character, yet their pleasures empty
and illusory — Addicted to carry off Human Beings, both Infants and Adults
— Adventures of a Butler in Ireland — The Elves supposed to pay a Tax to
Hell — The Irish, Welsh, Highlanders, and Manxmen held the same belief —
It was rather rendered more gloomy by the Northern Traditions — Merlin and
Arthur carried off by the Fairies — Also Thomas of Erceldoune — His Amour
with the Queen of Elfland — His re-appearance in latter times — Another
account from Reginald Scot — Conjectures on the derivation of the word
Fairy.
WE may premise by observing, that the classics had not forgotten to
enrol in their mythology a certain species of subordinate deities,
resembling the modern elves in their habits. Good old Mr. Gibb, of the
Advocates' Library (whom all lawyers whose youth he assisted in their
studies, by his knowledge of that noble collection, are bound to name with
gratitude), used to point out, amongst the ancient altars under his
charge, one which is consecrated, Diis campestribus, and usually
added, with a wink, “The fairies, ye ken.”*
This relic of antiquity was discovered near Roxburgh Castle, and a
vicinity more delightfully appropriate to the abode of the silvan deities
can hardly be found.
Two rivers of considerable size, made yet more remarkable by the fame
which has rendered them in some sort classical, unite their streams
beneath the vestiges of an extensive castle, renowned in the wars with
England, and for the valiant, noble, and even royal blood, which has been
shed around and before it — a landscape ornamented with the distant
village and huge abbey tower of Kelso, arising out of groves of aged trees
— the modern mansion of Fleurs, with its terrace, its woods, and its
extensive lawn — form altogether a kingdom for Oberon and Titania to reign
in, or any spirit who, before their time, might love scenery, of which the
majesty, and even the beauty, impress the mind with a sense of awe mingled
with pleasure. These silvans, satyrs, and fauns with whom superstition
peopled the lofty banks and tangled copses of this romantic country, were
obliged to give place to deities very nearly resembling themselves in
character, who probably derive some of their attributes from their classic
predecessors, although more immediately allied to the barbarian
conquerors. We allude to the fairies, which, as received into the popular
creed, and as described by the poets who have made use of them as
machinery, are certainly among the most pleasing legacies of fancy.
Dr. Leyden, who exhausted on this subject, as upon most others, a
profusion of learning, found the first idea of the elfin people in the
Northern opinions concerning the duergar, or dwarfs.*
These were, however, it must be owned, spirits of a coarser sort, more
laborious vocation, and more malignant temper, and in all respects less
propitious to humanity, than the fairies (properly so called), which were
the invention of the Celtic people, and displayed that superiority of
taste and fancy which, with the love of music and poetry, has been
generally ascribed to their race, through its various classes and
modifications. In fact, there seems reason to conclude that these duergar
were originally nothing else than the diminutive natives of the Lappish,
Lettish, and Finnish nations, who, flying before the conquering weapons of
the Asæ, sought the most retired regions of the North, and there
endeavoured to hide themselves from their Eastern invaders, They were a
little, diminutive race, but possessed of some skill probably in mining or
smelting minerals, with which the country abounds. Perhaps also they
might, from their acquaintance with the changes of the clouds, or
meteorological phenomena, be judges of weather, and so enjoy another title
to supernatural skill. At any rate, it has been plausibly supposed that
these poor people, who sought caverns and hiding-places from the
persecution of the Asæ, were in some respects compensated for inferiority
in strength and stature by the art and power with which the superstition
of the enemy invested them. These oppressed yet dreaded fugitives
obtained, naturally enough, the character of the German spirits called
Kobold, from which the English goblin and the Scottish bogle, by some
inversion and alteration of pronunciation, are evidently derived.
The Kobolds were a species of gnomes, who haunted the dark and solitary
places, and were often seen in the mines, where they seemed to imitate the
labours of the miners, and sometimes took pleasure in frustrating their
objects and rendering their toil unfruitful. Sometimes they were
malignant, especially if neglected or insulted; but sometimes also they
were indulgent to individuals whom they took under their protection. When
a miner, therefore, hit upon a rich vein of ore, the inference commonly
was, not that he possessed more skill, industry, or even luck, than his
fellow-workmen, but that the spirits of the mine had directed him to the
treasure. The employment and apparent occupation of these subterranean
gnomes or fiends, led very naturally to identify the Fin, or Laplander,
with the Kobold; but it was a bolder stretch of the imagination which
confounded this reserved and sullen race with the livelier and gayer
spirit which bears correspondence with the British fairy. Neither can we
be surprised that the duergar, ascribed by many persons to this source,
should exhibit a darker and more malignant character than the elves that
revel by moonlight in more southern climates.
According to the old Norse belief, these dwarfs form the current
machinery of the Northern Sagas, and their inferiority in size is
represented as compensated by skill and wisdom superior to those of
ordinary mortals. In the “Niebelungen-Lied,” one of the oldest romances of
Germany, and compiled, it would seem, not long after the time of Attila,
Theodorick of Bern, or of Verona, figures among a cycle of champions over
whom he presides, like the Charlemagne of France or Arthur of England.
Among others vanquished by him is the Elf King, or Dwarf Laurin, whose
dwelling was in an enchanted garden of roses, and who had a body-guard of
giants, a sort of persons seldom supposed to be themselves conjurers. He
becomes a formidable opponent to Theodorick and his chivalry; but as he
attempted by treachery to attain the victory, he is, when overcome,
condemned to fill the dishonourable yet appropriate office of buffoon and
juggler at the Court of Verona.
*
Such possession of supernatural wisdom is still imputed by the natives
of the Orkney and Zetland Islands to the people called Drows ,
being a corruption of duergar or dwarfs , and who may, in most
other respects, be identified with the Caledonian fairies. Lucas Jacobson
Debes, who dates his description of Ferro from his Pathos, in Thorshaven,
March 12, 1670, dedicates a long chapter to the spectres who disturbed his
congregation, and sometimes carried off his hearers. The actors in these
disturbances he states to be the Skow , or Biergen-Trold — i.e.,
the spirits
of the woods and mountains, sometimes called subterranean people, and
adds, they appeared in deep caverns and among horrid rocks; as also, that
they haunted the places where murders or other deeds of mortal sin had
been acted. They appear to have been the genuine northern dwarfs, or
Trows, another pronunciation of Trollds, and are considered by the
reverend author as something very little better than actual fiends.
But it is not only, or even chiefly, to the Gothic race that we must
trace the opinions concerning the elves of the middle ages; these, as
already hinted, were deeply blended with the attributes which the Celtic
tribes had, from the remotest ages, ascribed to their deities of rocks,
valleys, and forests. We have already observed, what indeed makes a great
feature of their national character, that the power of the imagination is
peculiarly active among the Celts, and leads to an, enthusiasm concerning
national music and dancing, national poetry and song, the departments in
which fancy most readily indulges herself. The Irish, the Welsh, the Gael,
or Scottish Highlander, all tribes of Celtic descent, assigned to the Men
of Peace, Good Neighbours, or by whatever other names they called these
sylvan pigmies, more social habits, and a course of existence far more
gay, than the sullen and heavy toils of the more saturnine Duergar. Their
elves did not avoid the society of men, though they behaved to those who
associated with them with caprice, which rendered it dangerous to
displease them; and although their gifts were sometimes valuable, they
were usually wantonly given and unexpectedly resumed.
The employment, the benefits, the amusements of the Fairy court,
resembled the aerial people themselves. Their government was always
represented as monarchical. A King, more frequently a Queen of Fairies,
was acknowledged; and sometimes both held their court together. Their
pageants and court entertainments comprehended all that the imagination
could conceive of what was, by that age, accounted gallant and splendid.
At their processions they paraded more beautiful steeds than those of mere
earthly parentage — the hawks and hounds which they employed in their
chase were of the first race. At their daily banquets, the board was set
forth with a splendour which the proudest kings of the earth dared not
aspire to; and the hall of their dancers echoed to the most exquisite
music. But when viewed by the eye of a seer the illusion vanished. The
young knights and beautiful ladies showed themselves as wrinkled carles
and odious hags-their wealth turned into slate-stones — their splendid
plate into pieces of clay fantastically twisted — and their victuals,
unsavoured by salt (prohibited to them, we are told, because an emblem of
eternity), became tasteless and insipid — the stately halls were turned
into miserable damp caverns — all the delights of the Elfin Elysium
vanished at once. In a word, their pleasures were showy, but totally
unsubstantial — their activity unceasing, but fruitless and unavailing —
and their condemnation appears to have consisted in the necessity of
maintaining the appearance of constant industry or enjoyment, though their
toil was fruitless and their pleasures shadowy and unsubstantial.
Hence poets have designed them as “the crew that never rest.”
Besides the unceasing and useless bustle in which these spirits seemed to
live, they had propensities unfavourable and distressing to mortals.
One injury of a very serious nature was supposed to be constantly
practised by the fairies against “the human mortals,” that of carrying off
their children, and breeding them as beings of their race. Unchristened
infants were chiefly exposed to this calamity; but adults were also liable
to be abstracted from earthly commerce, notwithstanding it was their
natural sphere. With respect to the first, it may be easily conceived that
the want of the sacred ceremony of introduction into the Christian church
rendered them the more obnoxious to the power of those creatures, who, if
not to be in all respects considered as fiends, had nevertheless,
considering their constant round of idle occupation, little right. to rank
themselves among good spirits, and were accounted by most divines as
belonging to a very different class. An adult, on the other hand, must
have been engaged in some action which exposed him to the power of the
spirits, and so, as the legal phrase went, “taken in the manner.” Sleeping
on a fairy mount, within which the Fairy court happened to be held for the
time, was a very ready mode of obtaining a pass for Elfland. It was well
for the individual if the irate elves were contented, on such occasions,
with transporting him through the air to a city at some forty miles'
distance, and leaving, perhaps, his hat or bonnet on some steeple between,
to mark the direct line of his course. Others, when engaged in some
unlawful action, or in the act of giving way to some headlong and sinful
passion, exposed themselves also to become inmates of Fairyland.
The same belief on these points obtained in Ireland. Glanville, in his
“Eighteenth Relation,” tells us of the butler of a gentleman, a neighbour
of the Earl of Orrery, who was sent to purchase cards. In crossing the
fields, he saw a table surrounded by people apparently feasting and making
merry. They rose to salute him, and invited him to join in their revel;
but a friendly voice from the party whispered in his ear, “Do nothing
which this company invite you to.” Accordingly, when he refused to join in
feasting, the table vanished, and the company began to dance and play on
musical instruments; but the butler would not take part in these
recreations. They then left off dancing, and betook themselves to work;
but neither in this would the mortal join them. He was then left alone for
the present; but in spite of the exertions of my Lord Ornery, in spite of
two bishops who were his guests at the time, in spite of the celebrated
Mr. Greatrix, it was all they could do to prevent the butler from being
carried off bodily from amongst them by the fairies, who considered him as
their lawful prey. They raised him in the air above the heads of the
mortals, who could only run beneath, to break his fall when they pleased
to let him go. The spectre which formerly advised the poor man continued
to haunt him, and at length discovered himself to be the ghost of an
acquaintance who had been dead for seven years. “You know,” added he, “I
lived a loose life, and ever since have I been hurried up and down in a
restless condition, with the company you saw, and shall be till the day of
judgment.” He added, “that if the butler had acknowledged God in all his
ways, be had not suffered so much by their means; he reminded him that he
had not prayed to God in the morning before be met with this company in
the field, and, moreover, that he was then going on an unlawful business.
It is pretended that Lord Orrery confirmed the whole of this story,
even to having seen the butler raised into the air by the invisible beings
who strove to carry him off. Only he did not bear witness to the passage
which seems to call the purchase of cards an unlawful errand.
*
Individuals, whose lives had been engaged in intrigues of politics or
stratagems of war, were sometimes surreptitiously carried off to
Fairyland; as Alison Pearson, the sorceress who cured Archbishop Adamson,
averred that she had recognised in the Fairy court the celebrated
Secretary Lethington and the old Knight of Buccleuch, the one of whom had
been the most busy politician, the other one of the most unwearied
partisans of Queen Mary, during the reign of that unfortunate queen. Upon
the whole, persons carried off by sudden death were usually suspected of
having fallen into the hands of the fairies, and unless redeemed from
their power, which it was not always safe to attempt, were doomed to
conclude their lives with them. We must not omit to state that those who
had an intimate
communication with these spirits, while they were yet inhabitants of
middle earth, were most apt to be seized upon and carried off to Elfland
before their death.
The reason assigned for this kidnapping of the human race, so peculiar
to the elfin people, is said to be that they were under a necessity of
paying to the infernal regions a yearly tribute out of their population,
which they were willing to defray by delivering up to the prince of these
regions the children of the human race, rather than their own. From this
it must be inferred, that they have off-spring among themselves, as it is
said by some authorities, and particularly by Mr. Kirke, the minister of
Aberfoyle. He indeed adds that, after a certain length of life, these
spirits are subject to the universal lot of mortality — a position,
however, which has been controverted, and is scarcely reconcilable to that
which holds them amenable to pay a tax to hell, which infers existence as
eternal as the fire which is not quenched. The opinions on the subject of
the fairy people here expressed, are such as are entertained in the
Highlands and some remote quarters of the Lowlands of Scotland. We know,
from the lively and entertaining legends published by Mr. Crofton Croker —
which, though in most cases told with the wit of the editor and the humour
of his country, contain points of curious antiquarian information — that
the opinions of the Irish are conformable to the account we have given of
the general creed of the Celtic nations respecting elves. If the Irish
elves are anywise distinguished from those of Britain, it seems to be by
their disposition to divide into factions and fight among themselves — a
pugnacity characteristic of the Green Isle. The Welsh fairies, according
to John Lewis, barrister-at-law, agree in the same general attributes with
those of Ireland and Britain. We must not omit the creed of the Manxmen,
since we find, from the ingenious researches of Mr. Waldron, that the Isle
of Man, beyond other places in Britain, was a peculiar depository of the
fairy traditions, which, on the island being conquered by the Norse,
became, in all probability, chequered with those of Scandinavia from a
source peculiar and more direct than that by which they reached Scotland
or Ireland.
Such as it was, the popular system of the Celts easily received the
northern admixture of Drows and Duergar, which gave the belief, perhaps, a
darker colouring than originally belonged to the British fairyland. It was
from the same source also, in all probability, that additional legends
were obtained of a gigantic and malignant female, the Hecate of this
mythology, who rode on the storm and marshalled the rambling host of
wanderers under her grim banner. This bag (in all respects the reverse of
the Mab or Titania of the Celtic creed) was called Nicneven in that later
system which blended the faith of the Celts and of the Goths on this
subject. The great Scottish poet Dunbar has made a spirited description of
this Hecate riding at the head of witches and good neighbours (fairies,
namely), sorceresses and elves, indifferently, upon the ghostly eve of
All-Hallow Mass.*
In Italy we hear of the hags arraying themselves under the orders of Diana
(in her triple character of Hecate, doubtless) and Herodias, who were the
joint leaders of their choir, But we return to the more simple fairy
belief, as entertained by the Celts before they were conquered by the
Saxons.
Of these early times we can know little; but it is singular to remark
what light the traditions of Scotland throw upon the poetry of the Britons
of Cumberland, then called Reged. Merlin Wyllt, or the wild, is mentioned
by both; and that renowned wizard, the son of an elf or fairy, with King
Arthur, the dubious champion of Britain at that early period, were both
said by tradition to have been abstracted by the fairies, and to have
vanished without having suffered death, just at the time when it was
supposed that the magic of the wizard and the celebrated sword of the
monarch, which had
done so much to preserve British independence, could no longer avert
the impending ruin. It may be conjectured that there was a desire on the
part of Arthur or his surviving champions to conceal his having received a
mortal wound in the fatal battle of Camlan; and to that we owe the wild
and beautiful incident so finely versified by Bishop Percy, in which, in
token of his renouncing in future the use of arms, the monarch sends his
attendant, sole survivor of the field, to throw his sword Excalibar into
the lake hard by. Twice eluding the request, the esquire at last complied,
and threw the far-famed weapon into the lonely mere. A hand and arm arose
from the water and caught Excalibar by the hilt, flourished it thrice, and
then sank into the lake.
* The astonished messenger returned to his master to tell him the
marvels he had seen, but he only saw a boat at a distance push from the
land, and heard shrieks of females in agony: —
“And whether the king was
there or not He never knew, he never colde For never since that doleful
day Was British Arthur seen on molde.”
The circumstances attending the disappearance of Merlin would probably
be found as imaginative as those of Arthur's removal, but they cannot be
recovered; and what is singular enough, circumstances which originally
belonged to the history of this famous bard, said to be the son of the
Demon himself, have been transferred to a later poet, and surely one of
scarce inferior name, Thomas of Erceldoune. The legend was supposed to be
only preserved among the inhabitants of his native valleys, but a copy as
old as the reign of Henry VII, has been recovered. The story is
interesting and beautifully told, and, as one of the oldest fairy legends,
may well be quoted in this place.
Thomas of Erceldoune, in Lauderdale, called the Rhymer, on account of
his producing a poetical romance on the
subject of Tristrem and Yseult, which is curious as the earliest
specimen of English verse known to exist, flourished in the reign of
Alexander III. of Scotland. Like other men of talent of the period, Thomas
was suspected of magic. He was said also to have the gift of prophecy,
which was accounted for in the following peculiar manner, referring
entirely to the elfin superstition: — As True Thomas (we give him the
epithet by anticipation) lay on Huntly Bank, a place on the descent of the
Eildon Hills, which raise their triple crest above the celebrated
Monastery of Melrose, he saw a lady so extremely beautiful that he
imagined it must be the Virgin Mary herself. Her appointments, however,
were rather those of an Amazon or goddess of the woods. Her steed was of
the highest beauty and spirit, and at his mane hung thirty silver bells
and nine, which made music to the wind as she paced along. Her saddle was
of royal bone (ivory), laid over with orfeverie — i.e.,
goldsmith's work. Her stirrups, her dress, all corresponded with her
extreme beauty and the magnificence of her array. The fair huntress had
her bow in her hand, and her arrows at her belt. She led three greyhounds
in a leash, and three raches, or hounds of scent, followed her closely.
She rejected and disclaimed the homage which Thomas desired to pay to her;
so that, passing from one extremity to the other, Thomas became as bold as
he had at first been humble. The lady warns him that he must become her
slave if he should prosecute his suit towards her in the manner he
proposes. Before their interview terminates, the appearance of the
beautiful lady is changed into that of the most hideous hag in existence.
One side is blighted and wasted, as if by palsy; one eye drops from her
head; her colour, as clear as the virgin silver, is now of a dun leaden
hue. A witch from the spital or almshouse would have been a goddess in
comparison to the late beautiful huntress. Hideous as she was, Thomas's
irregular desires had placed him under the control of this hag, and when
she bade him take leave of sun, and of the leaf that grew on tree, he felt
himself under the necessity of obeying her. A cavern received them, in
which, following his frightful guide, he for three days travelled in
darkness, sometimes hearing the booming of a distant ocean, sometimes
walking through rivers of blood, which crossed their subterranean path. At
length they emerged into daylight, in a most beautiful orchard. Thomas,
almost fainting for want of food, stretches out his hand towards the
goodly fruit which hangs around him, but is forbidden by his conductress,
who informs him these are the fatal apples which were the cause of the
fall of man. He perceives also that his guide had no sooner entered this
mysterious ground, and breathed its magic air, than she was revived in
beauty, equipage, and splendour, as fair, or fairer, than he had first
seen her on the mountain. She then commands him to lay his head upon her
knee, and proceeds to explain to him the character of the country. “Yonder
right-hand path,” she says, “conveys the spirits of the blessed to
Paradise; yon downward and well-worn way leads sinful souls to the place
of everlasting punishment; the third road, by yonder dark brake, conducts
to the milder place of pain from which prayer and mass may release
offenders. But see you yet a fourth road, sweeping along the plain to
yonder splendid castle ? Yonder is the road to Elfland, to which we are
now bound. The lord of the castle is king of the country, and I am his
queen. But, Thomas, I would rather be drawn with wild horses, than he
should know what hath passed between you and me. Therefore, when we enter
yonder castle, observe strict silence, and answer no question that is
asked at you, and I will account for your silence by saying I took your
speech when I brought you from middle earth.”
Having thus instructed her lover, they journeyed on to the castle, and
entering by the kitchen, found themselves in the midst of such a festive
scene as might become the mansion of a great feudal lord or prince. Thirty
carcases of deer were lying on the massive kitchen board, under the hands
of numerous cooks, who tolled to cut them up and dress them, while the
gigantic greyhounds which had taken the spoil lay lapping the blood, and
enjoying the sight of the slain game. They came next to the royal hall,
where the king received his loving consort without censure or suspicion.
Knights and ladies, dancing by threes (reels perhaps), occupied the floor
of the hall, and Thomas, the fatigues of his journey from the Eildon hills
forgotten, went forward and joined in the revelry. After a period,
however, which seemed to him a very short one, the queen spoke with him
apart, and bade him prepare to return to his own country. “Now,” said the
queen, “how long think you that you have been here ? “Certes, fair lady,”
answered Thomas, “not above these seven days.” “You are deceived,”
answered the queen, “you have been seven years in this castle; and
it is full time you were gone. Know, Thomas, that the fiend of hell will
come to this castle to-morrow to demand his tribute, and so handsome a man
as you will attract his eye. For all the world would I not suffer you to
be betrayed to such a fate; therefore up, and let us be going.” These
terrible news reconciled Thomas to his departure from Elfin land, and the
queen was not long in placing him upon Huntly bank, where the birds were
singing. She took a tender leave of him, and to ensure his reputation,
bestowed on him the tongue which could not lie . Thomas in vain
objected to this inconvenient and involuntary adhesion to veracity, which
would make him, as lie thought, unfit for church or for market, for kings
court or for lady's bower. But all his remonstrances were disregarded by
the lady, and Thomas the Rhymer, whenever the discourse turned on the
future, gained the credit of a prophet whether he would or not; for be
could say nothing but what was sure to come to pass. It is plain that had
Thomas been a legislator instead or a poet, we have here the story of Numa
and Egeria. Thomas remained several years in his own tower near
Erceldoune, and enjoyed the fame of his predictions, several of which are
current among the country people to this day. At length, as the prophet
was entertaining the Earl of March in his dwelling, a cry of astonishment
arose in the village, on the appearance of a hart and hind,*
which left the forest and, contrary to their shy nature, came quietly
onward, traversing the village towards the dwelling of Thomas. The prophet
instantly rose from the board; and, acknowledging the prodigy as the
summons of his fate, he accompanied the hart and hind into the forest, and
though occasionally seen by individuals to whom he has chosen to show
himself, has never again mixed familiarly with mankind.
Thomas of Erceldoune, during his retirement, has been supposed, from
time to time, to be levying forces to take the field in some crisis of his
country's fate. The story has often been told of a daring horse-jockey
having sold a black horse to a man of venerable and antique appearance,
who appointed the remarkable hillock upon Eildon hills, called the
Lucken-hare, as the place where, at twelve o'clock at night, he should
receive the price. He came, his money was paid in ancient coin, and he was
invited by his customer to view his residence. The trader in horses
followed his guide in the deepest astonishment through several long ranges
of stalls, in each of which a horse stood motionless, while an armed
warrior lay equally still at the charger's feet. “All these men,” said the
wizard in a whisper, “will awaken at the battle of Sheriffmoor.” At the
extremity of this extraordinary depôt hung a sword and a born, which the
prophet pointed out to the horse-dealer as containing the means of
dissolving the spell. The man in confusion took the horn, and attempted to
wind it. The horses
instantly started in their stalls, stamped, and shook their bridles,
the men arose and clashed their armour, and the mortal, terrified at the
tumult he had excited, dropped the horn from his hand. A voice like that
of a giant, louder even than the tumult around, pronounced these words: —
“Woe to the coward that
ever he was born, That did not draw the sword before he blew the horn !”
A whirlwind expelled the horse-dealer from the cavern, the entrance to
which he could never again find. A moral might be perhaps extracted from
the legend — namely, that it is best to be armed against danger before
bidding it defiance. But it is a circumstance worth notice, that although
this edition of the tale is limited to the year 1715, by the very mention
of the Sheriffmoor, yet a similar story appears to have been current
during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, which is given by Reginald Scot. The
narrative is edifying as peculiarly illustrative of the mode of marring a
curious tale in telling it, which was one of the virtues professed by
Caius when he hired himself to King Lear. Reginald Scot, incredulous on
the subject of witchcraft, seems to have given some weight to the belief
of those who thought that the spirits of famous men do, after death, take
up some particular habitations near cities, towns, and countries, and act
as tutelary and guardian spirits to the places which they loved while in
the flesh.
“But more particularly to illustrate this conjecture,” says he, “I
could name a person who hath lately appeared thrice since his decease, at
least some ghostly being or other that calls itself by the name of such a
person who was dead above a hundred years ago, and was in his lifetime
accounted as a prophet or predicter by the assistance of sublunary
spirits; and now, at his appearance, did also give strange predictions
respecting famine and plenty, war and bloodshed, and the end of the world.
By the information of the person that had communication with him, the last
of his appearances was in the following manner: — “I had been,” said he,
“to sell a horse at the next market own, but not attaining my price, as I
returned home by the I met this man, who began to be familiar with me,
asking what news, and how affairs moved through the country. I answered as
I thought fit; withal, I told him of my horse, whom he began to cheapen,
and proceeded with me so far that the price was agreed upon. So he turned
back with me, and told me that if I would go along with him I should
receive my money. On our way we went, I upon my horse, and he on another
milk-white east. After much travel I asked him where he dwelt and what his
name was. He told me that his dwelling was a mile off, at a place called
Farran , of which place I had never heard, though I knew all the
country round about.
* He also told me that he himself was that person of the family of
Learmonths so much spoken of as a prophet. At which I began to be somewhat
fearful, perceiving we were on a road which I never had been on before,
which increased my fear and amazement more. Well, on we went till he
brought me under ground, I knew not how, into the presence of a beautiful
woman, who paid the money without a word speaking. He conducted me out
again through a large and long entry, where I saw above six hundred men in
armour laid prostrate on the ground as if asleep. At last I found myself
in the open field by the help of the moonlight, in the very place where I
first met him, and made a shift to get home by three in the morning. But
the money I had received was just double of what I esteemed it when the
woman paid me, of which at this instant I have several pieces to show,
consisting of ninepennies, thirteen pence-halfpennies,” &c.
It is a great pity that this horse-dealer, having specimens of the
fairy coin, of a quality more permanent than usual had not favoured us
with an account of an impress s valuable to medalists. It is not the less
edifying, as we are deprived of the more picturesque parts of the story,
to learn that Thomas's payment was as faithful as his prophecies. The
beautiful lady who bore the purse must have been undoubtedly the Fairy
Queen, whose affection, though, like that of his own heroine Yseult, we
cannot term it altogether laudable, seems yet to have borne a faithful and
firm character.
I have dwelt at some length on the story of Thomas the Rhymer, as the
oldest tradition of the kind which has reached us in detail, and as
pretending to show the fate of the first Scottish poet, whose existence,
and its date, are established both by history and records; and who, if we
consider him as writing in the Anglo-Norman language, was certainly one
among the earliest of its versifiers. But the legend is still more
curious, from its being the first and most distinguished instance of a man
alleged to have obtained supernatural knowledge by means of the fairies.
Whence or how this singular community derived their more common popular
name, we may say has not as yet been very clearly established. It is the
opinion of the learned that the Persian word Peri, expressing an unearthly
being, of a species very similar, will afford the best derivation, if we
suppose it to have reached Europe through the medium of the Arabians, in
whose alphabet the letter P does not exist, so that they pronounce the
word Feri instead of Peri. Still there is something uncertain in this
etymology. We hesitate to ascribe either to the Persians or the Arabians
the distinguishing name of an ideal commonwealth, the notion of which they
certainly did not contribute to US. Some are, therefore, tempted to
suppose that the elves may have obtained their most frequent name from
their being par excellence a fair or comely people, a
quality which they affected on all occasions; while the superstition of
the Scottish was likely enough to give them a name which might propitiate
the vanity for which they deemed the race remarkable; just as, in other
instances, they called the fays “men of peace,” “good neighbours,” and by
other titles of the like import. It must be owned, at the same time, that
the words fay and fairy may have been mere adoptions of the
French fee and feerie, though these terms, on the other side
of the Channel, have reference to a class of spirits corresponding, not to
our fairies, but with the far different Fata of the Italians. But this is
a question which we willingly leave for the decision of better
etymologists than ourselves.
* Another
altar of elegant form and perfectly preserved, was, within these few
weeks, dug up near the junction of the Leader and the Tweed, in the
neighbourhood of the village of Newstead, to the east of Melrose. It was
inscribed by Carrius Domitianus, the prefect of the twentieth legion, to
the god Sylvanus, forming another instance how much the wild and silvan
character of the country disposed the feelings of the Romans to
acknowledge the presence of the rural deities. The altar is preserved of
Drygrange, the seat of Mr. Tod.
* See the essay on the Fairy Superstition, in the “Minstrelsy of the
Scottish Border,” of which many of the materials were contributed by Dr.
Leyden, and the whole brought into its present form by the author. * See
an abstract, by the late learned Henry Weber, of “A Lay on this subject of
King Laurin,” complied by Henry of Osterdingen. “Northern Antiquities,”
Edinburgh, 1814. * “Sadducismus Triumphatus,” by Joseph Glanville, p. 131.
Edinburgh, 1790. * See “Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy.” * See “Percy's
Reliques of Ancient English Poetry.” * This last circumstance seems
imitated from a passage in the “Life of Merlin” by Jeffrey of Monmouth.
See Ellis's “Ancient Romances,” Vol. i. p. 73. * In this the author is in
the same ignorance as his namesake Reginald, though having at least as
many opportunities of information. In popular tradition, the name of
Thomas the Rhymer was always averred to be Learmonth, though he neither
uses it himself, nor is described by his son other than Le Rymour. The
Learmonths of Dairsie, in Fife, claimed descent from the prophet.
“Discourse of Devils and Spirits appended to the Discovery of Witchcraft,”
by Reginald Scot, Esq., book ii. chap. 3, sec. 19. |