Elves and Heroes
Donald Alexander Mackenzie




Donald A. Mackenzie

Elves and Heroes





PREFACE



THE ELVES

The immemorial folk-beliefs of our native land are passing away, but they still retain for us a poetic appeal, not only on account of the glamour of early associations, but also because they afford us inviting glimpses of the mental habits and inherent characteristics of the men and women of past generations. When we re-tell the old tales of our ancestors, we sit beside them over the peat-fire; and, as we glory with them in their strong heroes, and share their elemental joys and fears, we breathe the palpitating air of that old mysterious world of theirs, peopled by spirits beautiful, and strange, and awe-inspiring.

The attitude of the Gael towards the supernatural, and his general outlook upon life in times gone by, was not associated with unbroken gloom; nor was he always an ineffectual dreamer and melancholy fatalist. These attributes belong chiefly to the Literary Celt of latter-day conception—the Celt of Arnold and Renan, and other writers following in their wake, who have woven misty impressions of a people whom they have met as strangers, and never really understood. Celtic literature is not a morbid literature. In Highland poetry there is more light than shadow, much symbolism, but no vagueness; pictures are presented in minute detail; stanzas are cunningly wrought in a spirit of keen artistry; and the literary style is direct and clear and comprehensible. In Highland folklore we find associated with the haunting "fear of things invisible," common to all peoples in early stages of development, a confident feeling of security inspired by the minute observances of ceremonial practices. We also note a distinct tendency to discriminate between spirits, some of which are invariably friendly, some merely picturesque, and perhaps fearsome, and others constantly harbouring a desire to work evil upon mankind. Associated with belief in the efficacy of propitiatory offerings and "ceremonies of riddance," is the ethical suggestion that good wishes and good deeds influence spirits to perform acts of kindly intent.

Of fairies the Highlanders spoke, as they are still prone to do in these districts where belief in them is not yet extinct, with no small degree of regard and affection. It may be that "the good folk" and the "peace-people" (sitchean) were so called that good intention might be compelled by the conjuring influence of a name, as well as to avoid giving offence by uttering real names, as if it were desired to exercise a magical influence by their use. Be that as it may, it is evident from Highland folk-tales that the fairies were oftener the friends than the foes of mankind. When men and women were lured to their dwellings they rarely suffered injury; indeed, the fairies appeared to have taken pleasure in their company. To such as they favoured they imparted the secrets of their skill in the arts of piping, of sword-making, etc. At sowing time or harvest they were at the service of human friends. On the needy they took pity. They never failed in a promise; they never forgot an act of kindness, which they invariably rewarded seven-fold. Against those who wronged them they took speedy vengeance. It would appear that on these humanised spirits of his conception the Highlander left, as one would expect him to do, the impress of his own character—his shrewdness and high sense of honour, his love of music and gaiety, his warmth of heart and love of comrades, and his indelible hatred of tyranny and wrong.

The Highland "wee folk" are not so diminutive as the fairies of England—at least that type of fairy, beloved of the poet, which hovers bee-like over flowers and feeds on honey-dew. Power they had to shrink in stature and to render themselves invisible, but they are invariably "little people," from three to four feet high. It may be that the Gael's conception of humanised spirits may not have been uninfluenced by the traditions of that earlier diminutive race whose arrow-heads of flint were so long regarded as "elf-bolts." The fairies dwelt only in grassy knolls, on the summits of high hills, and inside cliffs. Although capable of living for several centuries, they were not immortal. They required food, and borrowed meal and cooking utensils from human beings, and always returned what they received on loan. They could be heard within the knolls grinding corn and working at their anvils, and they were adepts at spinning and weaving and harvesting. When they went on long journeys they became invisible, and were carried through the air on eddies of western wind.

At the seasonal changes of the year, "the wee folk" were for several days on end inspired, like all other supernatural furies, with enmity against mankind. Their evil influences were negatived by spells and charms. We who still hang on our walls at Christmas the mystic holly, are unconsciously perpetuating an old-world custom connected with belief in the efficacy of the magical circle to protect us against evil spirits. And in our concern about luck, our proneness to believe in omens, the influence of colours and numbers, in dreams and in prophetic warnings, we retain as much of the spirit as the poetry of the religion of our remote ancestors.


THE HEROES

The heroes, with the exception of Cuchullin, who appear in this volume, figure in the tales and poems of the Ossianic or Fian Cycle, which is common to Ireland and to Scotland. They have been neglected by our Scottish poets since Gavin Douglas and Barbour. In Ireland the Fians are a band of militia—the original Fenians. In Scotland the tales vary considerably, and belong to the hunting period before the introduction of agriculture. But in this country, as well as in Ireland, they are evidently influenced by historic happenings. There are tales of Norse conflicts, as well as tales of adventure among giants and spirits.

The cycle had evidently remote beginnings. When we find Diarmid and Grainnč, like Paris and Helen, the cause of conflict and disaster; and Diarmid, like Achilles, charmed of body, and vulnerable only on his heel-spot, we incline to the theory that from a mid-European centre migrating "waves" swept over prehistoric Greece, and left traces of their mythology and folk-lore in Homer, while other "waves," sweeping northward, bequeathed to us as a literary inheritance the Celtic folk-tales, in which the deeds and magical attributes of remote tribal heroes and humanised deities are co-mingled and perpetuated.

On fragments of these folk-tales the poet Macpherson reared his Ossianic epic, in imitation of the Iliad and Paradise Lost.

The "Death of Cuchullin" is a rendering in verse of an Irish prose translation of a fragment of the Cuchullin Cycle, which moves in the Bronze Age period. Cuchullin, with "the light of heroes" on his forehead, is also reminiscent of Achilles. One of the few Cuchullin tales found in Scotland is that which relates his conflict with his son, and bears a striking similarity to the legend of Sohrab and Rustum. Macpherson also drew from this Cycle in composing his Ossian, and mingled it with the other, with which it has no connection.

The third great Celtic Cycle—the Arthurian—bears close resemblances, as Campbell, of "The West Highland Tales," has shown, to the Fian Cycle, and had evidently a common origin. Its value as a source of literary inspiration has been fully appreciated, but the Fian and Cuchullin cycles still await, like virgin soil, to yield an abundant harvest for the poets of the future.

Notes on the folk-beliefs and tales will be found at the end of this volume.

Some of the short poems have appeared in the "Glasgow Herald" and

"Inverness Courier"; the three tales appeared in the "Celtic Review."




THE WEE FOLK


		In the knoll that is the greenest,
		And the grey cliff side,
		And on the lonely ben-top
		The wee folk bide;
		They'll flit among the heather,
		And trip upon the brae—
		The wee folk, the green folk, the red folk and grey.

		As o'er the moor at midnight
		The wee folk pass,
		They whisper 'mong the rushes
		And o'er the green grass;
		All through the marshy places
		They glint and pass away—
		The light folk, the lone folk, the folk that will not stay.

		O many a fairy milkmaid
		With the one eye blind,
		Is 'mid the lonely mountains
		By the red deer hind;
		Not one will wait to greet me,
		For they have naught to say—
		The hill folk, the still folk, the folk that flit away.

		When the golden moon is glinting
		In the deep, dim wood,
		There's a fairy piper playing
		To the elfin brood;
		They dance and shout and turn about,
		And laugh and swing and sway—
		The droll folk, the knoll folk, the folk that dance alway.

		O we that bless the wee folk
		Have naught to fear,
		And ne'er an elfin arrow
		Will come us near;
		For they'll give skill in music,
		And every wish obey—
		The wise folk, the peace folk, the folk that work and play.

		They'll hasten here at harvest,
		They will shear and bind;
		They'll come with elfin music
		On a western wind;
		All night they'll sit among the sheaves,
		Or herd the kine that stray—
		The quick folk, the fine folk, the folk that ask no pay.

		Betimes they will be spinning
		The while we sleep,
		They'll clamber down the chimney,
		Or through keyholes creep;
		And when they come to borrow meal
		We'll ne'er them send away—
		The good folk, the honest folk, the folk that work alway.

		O never wrong the wee folk—
		The red folk and green,
		Nor name them on the Fridays,
		Or at Hallowe'en;
		The helpless and unwary then
		And bairns they lure away—
		The fierce folk, the angry folk, the folk that steal and slay.




BONNACH FALLAIDH



(THE REMNANT BANNOCK.)

		O, the good-wife will be singing
		When her meal is all but done—
		Now all my bannocks have I baked,
		I've baked them all but one;
		And I'll dust the board to bake it,
		I'll bake it with a spell—
		O, it's Finlay's little bannock
		For going to the well.

		The bannock on the brander
		Smells sweet for your desire—
		O my crisp ones I will count not
		On two sides of the fire;
		And not a farl has fallen
		Some evil to foretell!—
		O it's Finlay's little bannock
		For going to the well.

		The bread would not be lasting,
		'Twould crumble in your hand;
		When fairies would be coming here
		To turn the meal to sand—
		But what will keep them dancing
		In their own green dell?
		O it's Finlay's little bannock
		For going to the well.

		Now, not a fairy finger
		Will do my baking harm—
		The little bannock with the hole,
		O it will be the charm.
		I knead it, I knead it, 'twixt my palms,
		And all the bairns I tell—
		O it's Finlay's little bannock
		For going to the well.




THE BANSHEE


		Knee-deep she waded in the pool—
		The Banshee robed in green—
		She sang yon song the whole night long,
		And washed the linen clean;
		The linen that would wrap the dead
		She beetled on a stone,
		She stood with dripping hands, blood-red,
		Low singing all alone—

His linen robes are pure and white, For Fergus More must die to-night!

		'Twas Fergus More rode o'er the hill,
		Come back from foreign wars,
		His horse's feet were clattering sweet
		Below the pitiless stars;
		And in his heart he would repeat—
		"O never again I'll roam;
		All weary is the going forth,
		But sweet the coming home!"

His linen robes are pure and white, For Fergus More must die to-night!

		He saw the blaze upon his hearth
		Come gleaming down the glen;
		For he was fain for home again,
		And rode before his men—
		"'Tis many a weary day," he'd sigh,
		"Since I would leave her side;
		I'll never more leave Scotland's shore
		And yon, my dark-eyed bride."

His linen robes are pure and white, For Fergus More must die to-night!

		So dreaming of her tender love,
		Soft tears his eyes would blind—
		When up there crept and swiftly leapt
		A man who stabbed behind—
		"'Tis you," he cried, "who stole my bride,
		This night shall be your last!" …
		When Fergus fell, the warm, red tide
		Of life came ebbing fast …

His linen robes are pure and white, For Fergus More must die to-night!




CONN, SON OF THE RED



		The Fians sojourned by the shore
		Of comely Cromarty, and o'er
		The wooded hill pursued the chase
		With ardour. 'Twas a full moon's space
		Ere Beltane[1 - May Day.] rites would be begun
		With homage to the rising sun—
		Ere to the spirits of the dead
		Would sacrificial blood be shed
		In yon green grove of Navity—[2 - Traditional Holy Hill]
		When Conn came over the Eastern Sea,
		His heart aflame with vengeful ire,
		To seek for Goll, who slew his sire
		When he was seven years old.

		Finn saw
		In dreams, ere yet he came, with awe
		The Red One's son, so fierce and bold,
		In combat with his hero old—
		The king-like Goll of valorous might—
		A stormy billow in the fight
		No foe could ere withstand.

		He knew
		The strange ship bore brave Conn, and blew
		Clear on his horn the Warning Call;
		And round him thronged the Fians all
		With wond'ring gaze.

		The sun drew nigh
		The bale-fires of the western sky,
		And faggot clouds with blood-red glare,
		Caught flame, and in the radiant air
		Lone Wyvis like a jewel shone—
		The Fians, as they stared at Conn,
		Were stooping on the high Look-Out.
		They watched the ship that tacked about,
		Now slant across the firth, and now
		Laid bare below the cliff's broad brow,
		And heaving on a billowy steep,
		Like to a monster of the deep
		That wallowed, labouring in pain—
		And Conn stared back with cold disdain.

		Pondering, he sat alone behind
		The broad sail swallowing the wind,
		As over the hollowing waves that leapt
		And snarled with foaming lips, and swept
		Around the bows in querulous fray,
		And tossed in curves of drenching spray,
		The belching ship with ardour drove;
		Then like a lordly elk that strove
		Amid the hounds and, charging, rent
		The pack asunder as it went,
		It bore round and in beauty sprang—
		The sea-wind through the cordage sang
		With high and wintry merriment
		That stirred the heart of Conn, intent
		On vengeance, and for battle keen—
		So hard, so steadfast, and serene.

		Then Ossian, sweet of speech, spake low,
		With musing eyes upon the foe,
		"Is Conn more noble than The Red,
		Whom Goll in battle vanquished?"
		"The Red was fiercer," Conan cried—
		"Nay, Conn is nobler," Finn replied,
		"More comely, stalwart, mightier far—
		What sayest thou, Goll, my man of war?"
		Then Goll made answer on the steep,
		Nor ceased to gaze on Conn full deep—
		"His equal never came before
		Across the seas to Alban shore,
		Nor ever have I peered upon
		A nobler, mightier man than Conn"

		The ship flew seaward, tacking wide,
		Contending with the wind and tide,
		And when upon the broad stream's track
		It baffled hung, or drifted back,
		With grunt and shriek, like battling boars,
		The shock and swing of bladed oars
		Came sounding o'er the sea

		The dusk
		Grew round the twilight, like a husk
		That holds a kernel choice, and keen,
		Cold stars impaled the sky serene,
		When Conn's ship through the slackening tide
		Drew round the wistful bay and wide,
		Behind the headlands high that snout
		The seas like giant whales, and spout
		The salt foam high and loud

		Then sighed
		The gasping men who all day plied
		Their oars in plunging seas, with hands
		Grown stiff, and arms, like twisted bands
		Drawn numbly, as they rose outspent,
		And staggering from their benches went
		The sail napped quarrelling, and drank
		The wind in broken gasps, and sank
		With sullen pride upon the boards,
		And smote the mast and shook the cords

		Darkly loomed that alien land,
		And darkly lowered the Fian band,
		For hovering on the shoreland grey
		The ship they followed round the bay
		Nor sought the sheltering woods until
		The shadows folded o'er the hill
		Full heavily, and night fell blind,
		And laid its spell upon the wind

		The swelling waters sank with sip
		And hollow gurgle round the ship,
		The long mast rocked against the dim,
		Soft heaven above the headland's rim

		But while the seamen crouched to sleep,
		Conn sat alone in reverie deep,
		And saw before him in a maze
		The mute procession of his days,
		In gloom and glamour wending fast—
		His heart a-hungering for the past—
		Again he leapt, a tender boy,
		To greet his sire with eager joy,
		When he came over the wide North Sea,
		Enriched with spoils of victory—
		Then heavily loomed that fateful morn
		When tidings of his fall were borne
		From Alban shore … Again he saw
		The youth who went alone with awe
		To swear the avenging oath before
		The smoking altar red with gore.

		Ah! strange to him it seemed to be
		That hour was drawing nigh when he
		Would vengeance take … And still more strange,
		O sorrow! it would bring no change
		Though blood for blood be spilled, and life
		For life be taken in fierce strife;
		'Twill ne'er recall the life long sped,
		Or break the silence of the dead.

		But when he heard his mother's wail,
		Once more uplifted on the gale,
		Moaning The Red who ne'er returned—
		His cheeks with sudden passion burned;
		And darkly frowned that valiant man,
		As through his quivering body ran
		The lightnings of impelling ire
		And impulses of fierce desire,
		That surged, with a consuming hate
		Against a world made desolate,
		Unceasing and unreconciled,
		And ever clamouring … like wild,
		Dark-deeded waves that stun the shore,
		And through the anguished twilight roar
		The hungry passions of the wide
		And gluttonous deep unsatisfied.




II


		The shredding dawn in beauty spread
		Its shafts of splendour, golden-red,
		High over the eastern heaven, and broke
		Through flaking clouds in silvern smoke
		That burst aflame, and fold o'er fold,
		Let loose their oozing floods of gold,
		Splashed over the foamless deep that lay
		Tremulous and clear. In fiery play
		The rippling beams that swept between
		The sea-cleft Sutor crags serene,
		Broke quivering where the waters bore
		The soft reflection of the shore.

		The pipes of morn were sounding shrill
		Through budding woods on plain and hill,
		And stirred the air with song to wake
		The sweet-toned birds within the brake.

		The Fians from their sheilings came,
		With offerings to the god a-flame,
		And round them thrice they sun-wise went;
		Then naked-kneed in silence bent
		Beside the pillar stones …

		But now
		Brave Conn upon the ship's high prow
		Hath raised his burnished blade on high,
		And calls on Woden and on Tigh
		With boldness, to avenge the death
		Of his great sire … In one deep breath
		He drains the hero's draught that burns
		With valour of the gods; then turns
		His long-sought foe to meet … Great Conn
		Sweeps, stooping in a boat, alone.
		Shoreward, with rapid blades and bright,
		That shower the foam-rain pearly white,
		And rip the waters, bending lithe,
		In hollowing swirls that hiss and writhe
		Like adders, ere they dart away
		Bright-spotted with the flakes of spray.

		When, furrowing the sand, he drew
		His boat the shallowing water through,
		A giant he in stature rose
		Straight as a mast before his foes,
		With head thrown high, and shoulders wide
		And level, and set back with pride;
		His bared and supple arms were long
		As shapely oars: firm as a thong
		His right hand grasped his gleaming blade,
		Gold-hilted, and of keen bronze made
		In leafen shape.

		With stately stride
		He crossed the level sands and wide,
		Then on his shield the challenge gave—
		His broad sword thund'ring like a wave—
		For single combat.

		Red as gold
		His locks upon his shoulders rolled;
		A brazen helmet on his head
		Flashed fire; his cheeks were white and red;
		And all the Fians watched with awe
		That hero young with knotted jaw,
		Whose eyes, set deep, and blue and hard,
		Surveyed their ranks with cold regard;
		While his broad forehead, seamed with care,
		Drooped shadowily: his eyebrows fair
		Were sloping sideways o'er his eyes
		With pondering o'er the mysteries.

		The eyes of all the Fians sought
		Heroic Groll, whose face was wrought
		With lines of deep, perplexing thought—
		For gazing on the valiant Conn,
		He mourned that his own youth was gone,
		When, strong and fierce and bold, he shed
		The life-blood of the boastful Red,
		Whom none save he would meet. He heard
		The challenge, and nor spake, nor stirred,
		Nor feared; but now grown old, when hate
		And lust of glory satiate—
		His heart took pride in Conn, and shared
		The kinship of the brave.

		Who dared
		To meet the Viking bold, if he
		The succour of the band, should be
		Found faltering or in despair?
		Until that day the Fians ne'er
		Of one man had such fear.

		Old Goll
		Sat musing on a grassy knoll,
		They deemed he shared their dread … Not so
		Wise Finn, who spake forth firm and slow—
		"Goll, son of Morna, peerless man,
		The keen desire of every clan,
		Far-famed for many a valiant deed,
		Strong hero in the time of need.
		I vaunt not Conn … nor deem that thou
		Dost falter, save with meekness, now—
		But why shouldst thou not take the head
		Of this bold youth, as of The Red,
		His sire, in other days?"

		Goll spake—
		"O noble Finn, for thy sweet sake
		Mine arms I'd seize with ready hand,
		Although to answer thy command
		My blood to its last drop were spilled—
		By Crom! were all the Fians killed,
		My sword would never fail to be
		A strong defence to succour thee."

		Upon his hard right arm with haste
		His crooked and pointed shield he braced,
		He clutched his sword in his left hand—
		While round that hero of the band
		The Fian warriors pressed, and praised
		His valour … Mute was Goll … They raised,
		Smiting their hands, the battle-cry,
		To urge him on to victory.

		The one-eyed Goll went forth alone,
		His face was like a mountain stone,—
		Cold, hard, and grey; his deep-drawn breath
		Came heavily, like a man nigh death—
		But his firm mouth, with lips drawn thin,
		Deep sunken in his wrinkled skin,
		Was cunningly crooked; his hair was white,
		On his bald forehead gleamed a bright
		And livid scar that Conn's great sire
		Had cloven when their swords struck fire—
		Burly and dauntless, full of might,
		Old Goll went humbly forth to fight
		With arrogant Conn … It seemed The Red
		In greater might was from the dead,
		Restored in his fierce son …

		A deep
		Swift silence fell, like sudden sleep,
		On all the Fians waiting there
		In sharp suspense and half despair …
		The morn was still. A skylark hung
		In mid-air flutt'ring, and sung
		A lullaby that grew more sweet
		Amid the stillness, in the heat
		And splendour of the sun: the lisp
		Of faint wind in the herbage crisp
		Went past them; and around the bare
		And foam-striped sand-banks gleaming fair,
		The faintly-panting waves were cast
		By the wan deep fatigued and vast.

		O great was Conn in that dread hour,
		And all the Fians feared his power,
		And watched, as in a darksome dream,
		The warriors meet … They saw the gleam




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notes



1


May Day.




2


Traditional Holy Hill


