“Strange marble stones,
here larger and there less,
And of full various forms,
which still increase
In height and bulk by a continual
drop.
Which upon each distilling
from the top,
And falling still exactly
on the crown.
There break themselves to
mists, which, trickling down.
Crust into stone, and (but
with leisure) swell
The sides, and still advance
the miracle.” CHARLES COTTON.
It is low water in the Firth of Cromarty
during stream tides, between six and seven o’clock
in the evening; and my uncle Sandy, in returning from
his work at the close of the day, used not unfrequently,
when, according to the phrase of the place, “there
was a tide in the water,” to strike down the
hillside, and spend a quiet hour in the ebb. I
delighted to accompany him on these occasions.
There are professors of Natural History that know
less of living nature than was known by Uncle Sandy;
and I deemed it no small matter to have all the various
productions of the sea with which he was acquainted
pointed out to me in these walks, and to be in possession
of his many curious anecdotes regarding them.
He was a skilful crab and lobster
fisher, and knew every hole and cranny, along several
miles of rocky shore, in which the creatures were
accustomed to shelter, with not a few of their own
peculiarities of character. Contrary to the view
taken by some of our naturalists, such as Agassiz,
who hold that the crab a genus comparatively
recent in its appearance in creation is
less embryotic in its character, and higher in its
standing, than the more ancient lobster, my uncle regarded
the lobster as a more highly developed and more intelligent
animal than the crab. The hole in which the lobster
lodges has almost always two openings, he has said,
through one of which it sometimes contrives to escape
when the other is stormed by the fisher; whereas the
crab is usually content, like the “rat devoid
of soul,” with a hole of only one opening; and,
besides, gets so angry in most cases with his assailant,
as to become more bent on assault than escape, and
so loses himself through sheer loss of temper.
And yet the crab has, he used to add, some points
of intelligence about him too. When, as sometimes
happened, he got hold, in his dark narrow recess in
the rock, of some luckless digit, my uncle showed
me how that, after the first tremendous squeeze, he
began always to experiment upon what he had got, by
alternately slackening and straitening his grasp,
as if to ascertain whether it had life in it, or was
merely a piece of dead matter; and that the only way
to escape him, on these trying occasions, was to let
the finger lie passively between his nippers, as if
it were a bit of stick or tangle; when, apparently
deeming it such, he would be sure to let it go; whereas,
on the least attempt to withdraw it, he would at once
straiten his gripe, and not again relax it for mayhap
half an hour. In dealing with the lobster, on
the other hand, the fisher had to beware that he did
not depend too much on the hold he had got of the creature,
if it was merely a hold of one of the great claws.
For a moment it would remain passive in his grasp;
he would then be sensible of a slight tremor in the
captured limb, and mayhap hear a slight crackle; and,
presto, the captive would straightway be off
like a dart through the deep-water hole, and only
the limb remain in the fisher’s hand. My
uncle has, however, told me that lobsters do not always
lose their limbs with the necessary judgment.
They throw them off when suddenly frightened, without
first waiting to consider whether the sacrifice of
a pair of legs is the best mode of obviating the danger.
On firing a musket immediately over a lobster just
captured, he has seen it throw off both its great
claws in the sudden extremity of its terror, just as
a panic-struck soldier sometimes throws away his weapons.
Such, in kind, were the anecdotes of Uncle Sandy.
He instructed me, too, how to find, amid thickets
of laminaria and fuci, the nest of the lump-fish,
and taught me to look well in its immediate neighbourhood
for the male and female fish, especially for the male;
and showed me further, that the hard-shelled spawn
of this creature may, when well washed, be eaten raw,
and forms at least as palatable a viand in that state
as the imported caviare of Russia and the Caspian.
There were instances in which the common crow acted
as a sort of jackal to us in our lump-fish explorations.
We would see him busied at the side of some fuci-covered
pool, screaming and cawing as if engaged in combating
an enemy; and, on going up to the place, we used to
find the lump-fish he had killed fresh and entire,
but divested of the eyes, which we found, as a matter
of course, that the assailant, in order to make sure
of victory, had taken the precaution of picking out
at an early stage of the contest.
Nor was it with merely the edible
that we busied ourselves on these journeys. The
brilliant metallic plumage of the sea mouse
(Aphrodita), steeped as in the dyes of the rainbow,
excited our admiration time after time; and still
higher wonder used to be awakened by a much rarer
annelid, brown, and slender as a piece of rope-yarn,
and from thirty to forty feet in length, which no
one save my uncle had ever found along the Cromarty
shores, and which, when broken in two, as sometimes
happened in the measuring, divided its vitality so
equally between the pieces, that each was fitted,
we could not doubt, though unable to repeat in the
case the experiment of Spallanzani, to set up as an
independent existence, and carry on business for itself.
The annelids, too, that form for themselves tubular
dwellings built up of large grains of sand (amphitrites),
always excited our interest. Two hand-shaped
tufts of golden-hued setae furnished, however,
with greatly more than the typical number of fingers rise
from the shoulders of these creatures, and must, I
suspect, be used as hands in the process of building;
at least the hands of the most practised builder could
not set stones with nicer skill than is exhibited
by these worms in the setting of the grains which
compose their cylindrical dwellings dwellings
that, from their form and structure, seem suited to
remind the antiquary of the round towers of Ireland,
and, from the style of their masonry, of old Cyclopean
walls. Even the mason-wasps and bees are greatly
inferior workmen to these mason amphitrites.
I was introduced also, in our ebb excursions, to the
cuttle-fish and the sea-hare, and shown how the one,
when pursued by an enemy, discharges a cloud of ink
to conceal its retreat, and that the other darkens
the water around it with a lovely purple pigment,
which my uncle was pretty sure would make a rich dye,
like that extracted of old by the Tyrians from a whelk
which he had often seen on the beach near Alexandria.
I learned, too, to cultivate an acquaintance with
some two or three species of doris, that carry
their arboraceous, tree-like lungs on their backs,
as Macduff’s soldiers carried the boughs of
Birnam wood to the Hill of Dunsinane; and I soon acquired
a sort of affection for certain shells, which bore,
as I supposed, a more exotic aspect than their neighbours.
Among these were, Trochus Zizyphinus, with
its flame-like markings of crimson, on a ground of
paley-brown; Patella pellucida, with its lustrous
rays of vivid blue on its dark epidermis, that resemble
the sparks of a firework breaking against a cloud;
and, above all, Cypraea Europea, a not rare
shell further to the north, but so little abundant
in the Firth of Cromarty, as to render the live animal,
when once or twice in a season I used to find it creeping
on the laminaria at the extreme outer edge of the
tide-line, with its wide orange mantle flowing liberally
around it, somewhat of a prize. In short, the
tract of sea-bottom laid dry by the ebb formed an
admirable school, and Uncle Sandy an excellent teacher,
under whom I was not in the least disposed to trifle;
and when, long after, I learned to detect old-marine
bottoms far out of sight of the sea now
amid the ancient forest-covered Silurians of central
England, and anon opening to the light on some hillside
among the Mountain Limestones of our own country I
have felt how very much I owed to his instructions.
His facts wanted a vocabulary adequately
fitted to represent them; but though they “lacked
a commodity of good names,” they were all founded
on careful observation, and possessed that first element
of respectability perfect originality:
they were all acquired by himself. I owed more,
however, to the habit of observation which he assisted
me in forming, than even to his facts; and yet some
of these were of high value. He has shown me,
for instance, that an immense granitic boulder in
the neighbourhood of the town, known for ages as the
Clach Malloch, or Cursed Stone, stands so exactly
in the line of low water, that the larger stream-tides
of March and September lay dry its inner side, but
never its outer one; round the outer side
there are always from two to four inches of water;
and such had been the case for at least a hundred
years before, in his father’s and grandfather’s
days evidence enough of itself, I have
heard him say, that the relative levels of sea and
land were not altering; though during the lapsed century
the waves had so largely encroached on the low flat
shores, that elderly men of his acquaintance, long
since passed away, had actually held the plough when
young where they had held the rudder when old.
He used, too, to point out to me the effect of certain
winds upon the tides. A strong hasty gale from
the east, if coincident with a spring-tide, sent up
the waves high upon the beach, and cut away whole
roods of the soil; but the gales that usually kept
larger tides from falling during ebb were prolonged
gales from the west. A series of these, even when
not very high, left not unfrequently from one to two
feet water round the Clach Malloch, during stream-tides,
that would otherwise have laid its bottom bare a
proof, he used to say, that the German Ocean, from
its want of breadth, could not be heaped up against
our coasts to the same extent, by the violence of
a very powerful east wind, as the Atlantic by the force
of a comparatively moderate westerly one. It
is not improbable that the philosophy of the Drift
Current, and of the apparently reactionary Gulf Stream,
may be embodied in this simple remark.
The woods on the lower slopes of the
hill, when there was no access to the zones covered
save at low ebb by the sea, furnished me with employment
of another kind. I learned to look with interest
on the workings of certain insects, and to understand
some of at least their simpler instincts. The
large Diadem Spider, which spins so strong a web,
that, in pressing my way through the furze thickets,
I could hear its white silken cords crack as they
yielded before me, and which I found skilled, like
an ancient magician, in the strange art of rendering
itself invisible in the clearest light, was an especial
favourite; though its great size, and the wild stories
I had read about the bite of its cogener the tarantula,
made me cultivate its acquaintance somewhat at a distance.
Often, however, have I stood beside its large web,
when the creature occupied its place in the centre,
and, touching it with a withered grass stalk, I have
seen it sullenly swing on the lines “with its
hands,” and then shake them with a motion so
rapid, that like Carathis, the mother of
the Caliph Vathek, who, when her hour of doom had
come, “glanced off in a rapid whirl, which rendered
her invisible” the eye failed to
see either web or insect for minutes together.
Nothing appeals more powerfully to the youthful fancy
than those coats, rings, and amulets of eastern lore,
that conferred on their possessors the gift of invisibility.
I learned, too, to take an especial interest in what,
though they belong to a different family, are known
as the Water Spiders; and have watched them
speeding by fits and starts, like skaters on the ice,
across the surface of some woodland spring or streamlet fearless
walkers on the waters, that, with true faith in the
integrity of the implanted instinct, never made shipwreck
in the eddy or sank in the pool. It is to these
little creatures that Wordsworth refers in one of
his sonnets on sleep:
“O
sleep, thou art to me
A fly that up and down himself
doth shove
Upon a fretful rivulet; now
above,
Now on the water, vexed
with mockery.”
As shown, however, to the poet himself
on one occasion, somewhat to his discomfort, by assuredly
no mean authority Mr. James Wilson the
“vexed” “fly,” though one of
the hemipterous insects, never uses its wings, and
so never gets “above” the water.
Among my other favourites were the splendid dragon-flies,
the crimson-speckled Burnet moths, and the small azure
butterflies, that, when fluttering among delicate
harebells and crimson-tipped daisies, used to suggest
to me, long ere I became acquainted with the pretty
figure of Moore, or even ere the figure had been
produced, the idea of flowers that had taken to flying.
The wild honey bees, too, in their several species,
had peculiar charms for me. There were the buff-coloured
carders, that erected over their honey-jars domes
of moss; the lapidary red-tipped bees, that built amid
the recesses of ancient cairns, and in old dry stone
walls, and were so invincibly brave in defending their
homesteads, that they never gave up the quarrel till
they died; and, above all, the yellow-zoned humble-bees,
that lodged deep in the ground along the dry sides
of grassy banks, and were usually wealthier in honey
than any of their cogeners, and existed in larger
communities. But the herd-boys of the parish,
and the foxes of its woods and brakes, shared in my
interest in the wild honey bees, and, in the pursuit
of something else than knowledge, were ruthless robbers
of their nests. I often observed, that the fox,
with all his reputed shrewdness, is not particularly
knowing on the subject of bees. He makes as dead
a set on a wasp’s nest as on that of the carder
or humble-bee, and gets, I doubt not, heartily stung
for his pains; for though, as shown by the marks of
his teeth, left on fragments of the paper combs scattered
about, he attempts eating the young wasps in the chrysalis
state, the undevoured remains seem to argue that he
is but little pleased with them as food. There
were occasions, however, in which even the herd-boys
met with only disappointment in their bee-hunting
excursions; and in one notable instance, the result
of the adventure used to be spoken of in school and
elsewhere, under our breath and in secret, as something
very horrible. A party of boys had stormed a
humble-bees’ nest on the side of the old chapel-brae,
and, digging inwards along the narrow winding earth
passage, they at length came to a grinning human skull,
and saw the bees issuing thick from out a round hole
at its base the foramen magnum.
The wise little workers had actually formed their
nest within the hollow of the head, once occupied
by the busy brain; and their spoilers, more scrupulous
than Samson of old, who seems to have enjoyed the
meat brought forth out of the eater, and the sweetness
extracted from the strong, left in very great consternation
their honey all to themselves.
One of my discoveries of this early
period would have been deemed a not unimportant one
by the geologist. Among the woods of the hill,
a short half-mile from the town, there is a morass
of comparatively small extent, but considerable depth,
which had been laid open by the bursting of a waterspout
on the uplands, and in which the dark peaty chasm
remained unclosed, though the event had happened ere
my birth, until I had become old and curious enough
thoroughly to explore it. It was a black miry
ravine, some ten or twelve feet in depth. The
bogs around waved thick with silvery willows of small
size; but sticking out from the black sides of the
ravine itself, and in some instances stretched across
it from side to side, lay the decayed remains of huge
giants of the vegetable world, that had flourished
and died long ages ere, in at least our northern part
of the island, the course of history had begun.
There were oaks of enormous girth, into whose coal-black
substance one could dig as easily with a pickaxe as
one digs into a bank of clay; and at least one noble
elm, which ran across the little stream that trickled,
rather than flowed, along the bottom of the hollow,
and which was in such a state of keeping, that I have
scooped out of its trunk, with the unassisted hand,
a way for the water. I have found in the ravine which
I learned very much to like as a scene of exploration,
though I never failed to quit it sadly bemired handfuls
of hazel-nuts, of the ordinary size, but black as
jet, with the cups of acorns, and with twigs of birch
that still retained almost unchanged their silvery
outer crust of bark, but whose ligneous interior existed
as a mere pulp. I have even laid open, in layers
of a sort of unctuous clay, resembling fuller’s
earth, leaves of oak, birch, and hazel, that had fluttered
in the wind thousands of years before; and there was
one happy day in which I succeeded in digging from
out the very bottom of the excavation a huge fragment
of an extraordinary-looking deer’s horn.
It was a broad, massive, strange-looking piece of
bone, evidently old-fashioned in its type; and so
I brought it home in triumph to Uncle James, as the
antiquary of the family, assured that he could tell
me all about it. Uncle James paused in the middle
of his work; and, taking the horn in his hand, surveyed
it leisurely on every side. “That is the
horn, boy,” he at length said, “of no
deer that now lives in this country. We have
the red deer, and the fallow deer, and the roe; and
none of them have horns at all like that. I never
saw an elk; but I am pretty sure this broad, plank-like
horn can be none other than the horn of an elk.”
My uncle set aside his work; and, taking the horn
in his hand, went out to the shop of a cabinet-maker
in the neighbourhood, where there used to work from
five to six journeymen. They all gathered round
him to examine it, and agreed in the decision that
it was an entirely different sort of horn from any
borne by the existing deer of Scotland, and that this
surmise regarding it was probably just. And, apparently
to enhance the marvel, a neighbour, who was lounging
in the shop at the time, remarked, in a tone of sober
gravity, that it had lain in the Moss of the Willows
“for perhaps half a century.” There
was positive anger in the tone of my uncle’s
reply. “Half a century, Sir!!” he
exclaimed; “was the elk a native of Scotland
half a century ago? There is no notice of the
elk, Sir, in British history. That horn must
have lain in the Moss of the Willows for thousands
of years!” “Ah, ha, James, ah, ha,”
ejaculated the neighbour, with a sceptical shake of
the head; but as neither he nor any one else dared
meet my uncle on historical ground, the controversy
took end with the ejaculation. I soon added to
the horn of the elk that of a roe, and part of that
of a red deer, found in the same ravine; and the neighbours,
impressed by Uncle James’s view, used to bring
strangers to look at them. At length, unhappily,
a relation settled in the south, who had shown me
kindness, took a fancy to them; and, smit by the charms
of a gorgeous paint-box which he had just sent me,
I made them over to him entire. They found their
way to London, and were ultimately lodged in the collection
of some obscure virtuoso, whose locality or name I
have been unable to trace.
The Cromarty Sutors have their two
lines of caves an ancient line hollowed
by the waves many centuries ago, when the sea stood,
in relation to the land, from fifteen to thirty feet
higher along our shores than it does now; and a modern
line, which the surf is still engaged in scooping
out. Many of the older caves are lined with stalactites,
deposited by springs that, filtering through the cracks
and fissures of the gneiss, find lime enough in their
passage to acquire what is known as a petrifying,
though, in reality, only an incrusting quality.
And these stalactites, under the name of “white
stones made by the water,” formed of old as
in that Cave of Slains specially mentioned by Buchanan
and the Chroniclers, and in those caverns of the Peak
so quaintly described by Cotton one of
the grand marvels of the place. Almost all the
old gazetteers sufficiently copious in their details
to mention Cromarty at all, refer to its “Dropping
Cave” as a marvellous marble-producing cavern;
and this “Dropping Cave” is but one of
many that look out upon the sea from the precipices
of the southern Sutor, in whose dark recesses the
drops ever tinkle, and the stony ceilings ever grow.
The wonder could not have been deemed a great or very
rare one by a man like the late Sir George Mackenzie
of Coul, well known from his travels in Iceland, and
his experiments on the inflammability of the diamond;
but it so happened, that Sir George, curious to see
the sort of stones to which the old gazetteers referred,
made application to the minister of the parish for
a set of specimens; and the minister straightway deputed
the commission, which he believed to be not a difficult
one, to one of his poorer parishioners, an old nailer,
as a means of putting a few shillings in his way.
It so happened, however, that the
nailer had lost his wife by a sad accident, only a
few weeks before; and the story went abroad that the
poor woman was, as the townspeople expressed it, “coming
back.” She had been very suddenly hurried
out of the world. When going down the quay after
nightfall one evening, with a parcel of clean linen
for a sailor, her relative, she had missed footing
on the pier edge, and, half-brained, half-drowned,
had been found in the morning, stone dead, at the
bottom of the harbour. And now, as if pressed
by some unsettled business, she used to be seen, it
was said, hovering after nightfall about her old dwelling,
or sauntering along the neighbouring street; nay,
there were occasions, according to the general report,
in which she had even exchanged words with some of
the neighbours, little to their satisfaction.
The words, however, seemed in every instance to have
wonderfully little to do with the affairs of another
world. I remember seeing the wife of a neighbour
rush into my mother’s one evening about this
time, speechless with terror, and declare, after an
awful pause, during which she had lain half-fainting
in a chair, that she had just seen Christy. She
had been engaged, as the night was falling, but ere
darkness had quite set in, in piling up a load of brushwood
for fuel outside the door, when up started the spectre
on the other side of the heap, attired in the ordinary
work-day garb of the deceased, and, in a light and
hurried tone, asked, as Christy might have done ere
the fatal accident, for a share of the brushwood.
“Give me some of that hag,” said
the ghost; “you have plenty I have
none.” It was not known whether or no the
nailer had seen the apparition; but it was pretty certain
he believed in it; and as the “Dropping Cave”
is both dark and solitary, and had forty years ago
a bad name to boot for the mermaid had been
observed disporting in front of it even at mid-day,
and lights and screams heard from it at nights it
must have been a rather formidable place to a man
living in the momentary expectation of a visit from
a dead wife. So far as could be ascertained for
the nailer himself was rather close in the matter he
had not entered the cave at all. He seemed, judging
from the marks of scraping left along the sides for
about two or three feet from the narrow opening, to
have taken his stand outside, where the light was
good, and the way of retreat clear, and to have raked
outwards to him, as far as he could reach, all that
stuck to the walls, including ropy slime and mouldy
damp, but not one particle of stalactite. It
was, of course, seen that his specimens would not suit
Sir George; and the minister, in the extremity of the
case, applied to my uncles, though with some little
unwillingness, as it was known that no remuneration
for their trouble could be offered to them. My
uncles were, however, delighted with the commission it
was all for the benefit of science; and, providing
themselves with torches and a hammer, they set out
for the caves. And I, of course, accompanied them a
very happy boy armed, like themselves,
with hammer and torch, and prepared devotedly to labour
in behalf of science and Sir George.
I had never before seen the caves
by torch-light; and though what I now witnessed did
not quite come up to what I had read regarding the
Grotto of Antiparos, or even the wonders of the Peak,
it was unquestionably both strange and fine.
The celebrated Dropping Cave proved inferior as
is not unfrequently the case with the celebrated to
a cave almost entirely unknown, which opened among
the rocks a little further to the east; and yet even
it had its interest. It widened, as one
entered, into a twilight chamber, green with velvety
mosses, that love the damp and the shade; and terminated
in a range of crystalline wells, fed by the perpetual
dropping, and hollowed in what seemed an altar-piece
of the deposited marble. And above, and along
the sides, there depended many a draped fold, and
hung many a translucent icicle. The other cave,
however, we found to be of much greater extent, and
of more varied character. It is one of three
caves of the old coast line, known as the Doocot or
Pigeon Caves, which open upon a piece of rocky beach,
overhung by a rudely semicircular range of gloomy
precipices. The points of the semicircle project
on either side into deep water into at least
water so much deeper than the fall of ordinary neaps,
that it is only during the ebb of stream tides that
the place is accessible by land; and in each of these
bold promontories the terminal horns of
the crescent there is a cave of the present
coast-line, deeply hollowed, in which the sea stands
from ten to twelve feet in depth when the tide is
at full, and in which the surf thunders, when gales
blow hard from the stormy north-east, with the roar
of whole parks of artillery. The cave in the
western promontory, which bears among the townsfolk
the name of the “Puir Wife’s Meal Kist,”
has its roof drilled by two small perforations the
largest of them not a great deal wider than the blow-hole
of a porpoise that open externally among
the cliffs above; and when, during storms from the
sea, the huge waves come rolling ashore like green
moving walls, there are certain times of the tide in
which they shut up the mouth of the cave, and so compress
the air within, that it rushes upwards through the
openings, roaring in its escape as if ten whales were
blowing at once, and rises from amid the crags overhead
in two white jets of vapour, distinctly visible, to
the height of from sixty to eighty feet. If there
be critics who have deemed it one of the extravagances
of Goethe that he should have given life and motion,
as in his famous witch-scene in “Faust,”
to the Hartz crags, they would do well to visit this
bold headland during some winter tempest from the
east, and find his description perfectly sober and
true:
“See the giant crags,
oh ho!
How they snort and how they
blow!”
Within, at the bottom of the crescent,
and where the tide never reaches when at the fullest,
we found the large pigeon cave which we had come to
explore, hollowed for about a hundred and fifty feet
in the line of a fault. There runs across the
opening the broken remains of a wall erected by some
monopolizing proprietor of the neighbouring lands,
with the intention of appropriating to himself the
pigeons of the cavern; but his day, even at this time,
had been long gone by, and the wall had sunk into
a ruin. As we advanced, the cave caught the echoes
of our footsteps, and a flock of pigeons, startled
from their nests, came whizzing out, almost brushing
us with their wings. The damp floor sounded hollow
to the tread; we saw the green mossy sides, which close
in the uncertain light, more than twenty feet overhead,
furrowed by ridges of stalactites, that became whiter
and purer as they retired from the vegetative influences;
and marked that the last plant which appeared as we
wended our way inwards was a minute green moss, about
half an inch in length, which slanted outwards on
the prominence of the sides, and overlay myriads of
similar sprigs of moss, long before converted into
stone, but which, faithful in death to the ruling law
of their lives, still pointed, like the others, to
the free air and the light. And then, in the
deeper recesses of the cave, where the floor becomes
covered with uneven sheets of stalagmite, and where
long spear-like icicles and drapery-like foldings,
pure as the marble of the sculptor, descend from above,
or hang pendent over the sides, we found in abundance
magnificent specimens for Sir George. The entire
expedition was one of wondrous interest; and I returned
next day to school, big with description and narrative,
to excite, by truths more marvellous than fiction,
the curiosity of my class-fellows.
I had previously introduced them to
the marvels of the hill; and during our Saturday half-holidays,
some of them had accompanied me in my excursions to
it. But it had failed, somehow, to catch their
fancy. It was too solitary, and too far from
home, and, as a scene of amusement, not at all equal
to the town-links, where they could play at “shinty”
and “French and English,” almost within
hail of their parents’ homesteads.
The very tract along its flat, moory summit, over which,
according to tradition, Wallace had once driven before
him in headlong rout a strong body of English, and
which was actually mottled with sepulchral tumuli,
still visible amid the heath, failed in any marked
degree to engage them; and though they liked well enough
to hear about the caves, they seemed to have no very
great desire to see them. There was, however,
one little fellow, who sat in the Latin form the
member of a class lower and brighter than the heavy
one, though it was not particularly bright either who
differed in this respect from all the others.
Though he was my junior by about a twelvemonth, and
shorter by about half a head, he was a diligent boy
in even the Grammar School, in which boys were so
rarely diligent, and, for his years, a thoroughly
sensible one, without a grain of the dreamer in his
composition. I succeeded, however, notwithstanding
his sobriety, in infecting him thoroughly with my
peculiar tastes, and learned to love him very much,
partly because he doubled my amusements by sharing
in them, and partly, I daresay on the principle
on which Mahomet preferred his old wife to his young
one because “he believed in me.”
Devoted to him as Caliban in the Tempest to
his friend Trinculo
“I showed him the best
springs, I plucked him berries.
And I with my long nails did
dig him pig-nuts.”
His curiosity on this occasion was
largely excited by my description of the Doocot Cave;
and, setting out one morning to explore its wonders,
armed with John Feddes’s hammer, in the benefits
of which my friend was permitted liberally to share,
we failed, for that day at least, in finding our way
back.
It was on a pleasant spring morning
that, with my little curious friend beside me, I stood
on the beach opposite the eastern promontory, that,
with its stern granitic wall, bars access for ten days
out of every fourteen to the wonders of the Doocot;
and saw it stretching provokingly out into the green
water. It was hard to be disappointed, and the
caves so near. The tide was a low neap, and if
we wanted a passage dry-shod, it behoved us to wait
for at least a week; but neither of us understood
the philosophy of neap-tides at the period. I
was quite sure I had got round at low water with my
uncles not a great many days before, and we both inferred,
that if we but succeeded in getting round now, it would
be quite a pleasure to wait among the caves inside
until such time as the fall of the tide should lay
bare a passage for our return. A narrow and broken
shelf runs along the promontory, on which, by the assistance
of the naked toe and the toe-nail, it is just possible
to creep. We succeeded in scrambling up to it;
and then, crawling outwards on all fours the
precipice, as we proceeded, beetling more and more
formidable from above, and the water becoming greener
and deeper below we reached the outer point
of the promontory; and then doubling the cape on a
still narrowing margin the water, by a
reverse process, becoming shallower and less green
as we advanced inwards we found the ledge
terminating just where, after clearing the sea, it
overhung the gravelly beach at an elevation of nearly
ten feet. Adown we both dropped, proud of our
success; up splashed the rattling gravel as we fell;
and for at least the whole coming week though
we were unaware of the extent of our good luck at
the time the marvels of the Doocot Cave
might be regarded as solely and exclusively our own.
For one short seven days to borrow emphasis
from the phraseology of Carlyle “they
were our own, and no other man’s.”
The first few hours were hours of
sheer enjoyment The larger cave proved a mine of marvels;
and we found a great deal additional to wonder at on
the slopes beneath the precipices, and along the piece
of rocky sea-beach in front. We succeeded in
discovering for ourselves, in creeping, dwarf bushes,
that told of the blighting influences of the sea-spray;
the pale yellow honeysuckle, that we had never seen
before, save in gardens and shrubberies; and on a
deeply-shaded slope that leaned against one of the
steeper precipices, we detected the sweet-scented
woodroof of the flower-plot and parterre, with its
pretty verticillate leaves, that become the more odoriferous
the more they are crushed, and its white delicate
flowers. There, too, immediately in the opening
of the deeper cave, where a small stream came pattering
in detached drops from the over-beetling precipice
above, like the first drops of a heavy thunder-shower,
we found the hot, bitter scurvy grass, with its minute
cruciform flowers, which the great Captain Cook had
used in his voyages; above all, there were the
caves with their pigeons white, variegated,
and blue and their mysterious and gloomy
depths, in which plants hardened into stone, and water
became marble. In a short time we had broken
off with our hammers whole pocketfuls of stalactites
and petrified moss. There were little pools at
the side of the cave, where we could see the work
of congelation going on, as at the commencement of
an October frost, when the cold north wind ruffles,
and but barely ruffles, the surface of some mountain
lochan or sluggish moorland stream, and shows the
newly-formed needles of ice projecting mole-like from
the shores into the water. So rapid was the course
of deposition, that there were cases in which the
sides of the hollows seemed growing almost in proportion
as the water rose in them; the springs, lipping over,
deposited their minute crystals on the edges; and
the reservoirs deepened and became more capacious as
their mounds were built up by this curious masonry.
The long telescopic prospect of the sparkling sea,
as viewed from the inner extremity of the cavern, while
all around was dark as midnight the sudden
gleam of the sea-gull, seen for a moment from the
recess, as it flitted past in the sunshine the
black heaving bulk of the grampus, as it threw up its
slender jets of spray, and then, turning downwards,
displayed its glossy back and vast angular fin even
the pigeons, as they shot whizzing by, one moment
scarce visible in the gloom, the next radiant in the
light all acquired a new interest, from
the peculiarity of the setting in which we saw
them. They formed a series of sun-gilt vignettes,
framed in jet; and it was long ere we tired of seeing
and admiring in them much of the strange and the beautiful.
It did seem rather ominous, however, and perhaps somewhat
supernatural to boot, that about an hour after noon,
the tide, while there was yet a full fathom of water
beneath the brow of the promontory, ceased to fall,
and then, after A quarter of an hour’s space,
began actually to creep upwards on the beach.
But just hoping that there might be some mistake in
the matter, which the evening tide would scarce fail
to rectify, we continued to amuse ourselves, and to
hope on. Hour after hour passed, lengthening as
the shadows lengthened, and yet the tide still rose.
The sun had sunk behind the precipices, and all was
gloom along their bases, and double gloom in their
caves; but their rugged brows still caught the red
glare of evening. The flush rose higher and higher,
chased by the shadows; and then, after lingering for
a moment on their crests of honeysuckle and juniper,
passed away, and the whole became sombre and grey.
The sea-gull sprang upwards from where he had floated
on the ripple, and hied him slowly away to his lodge
in his deep-sea stack; the dusky cormorant flitted
past, with heavier and more frequent stroke, to his
whitened shelf high on the precipice; the pigeons
came whizzing downwards from the uplands and the opposite
land, and disappeared amid the gloom of their caves;
every creature that had wings made use of them in
speeding homewards; but neither my companion nor myself
had any; and there was no possibility of getting home
without them. We made desperate efforts to scale
the precipices, and on two several occasions succeeded
in reaching mid-way shelves among the crags, where
the sparrowhawk and the raven build; but though we
had climbed well enough to render our return a matter
of bare possibility, there was no possibility whatever
of getting farther up: the cliffs had never been
scaled before, and they were not destined to be scaled
now. And so, as the twilight deepened, and the
precarious footing became every moment more doubtful
and precarious still, we had just to give up in despair.
“Wouldn’t care for myself,” said
the poor little fellow, my companion, bursting into
tears, “if it were not for my mother; but what
will my mother say?” “Wouldn’t care
neither,” said I, with a heavy heart; “but
it’s just back water, and we’ll get out
at twall.” We retreated together into one
of the shallower and drier caves, and, clearing a little
spot of its rough stones, and then groping along the
rocks for the dry grass that in the spring season
hangs from them in withered tufts, we formed for ourselves
a most uncomfortable bed, and lay down in one another’s
arms. For the last few hours mountainous piles
of clouds had been rising dark and stormy in the sea-mouth:
they had flared portentously in the setting sun, and
had worn, with the decline of evening, almost every
meteoric tint of anger, from fiery red to a sombre
thundrous brown, and from sombre brown to doleful
black. And we could now at least hear what they
portended, though we could no longer see. The
rising wind began to howl mournfully amid the cliffs,
and the sea, hitherto so silent, to beat heavily against
the shore, and to boom, like distress-guns, from the
recesses of the two deep-sea caves. We could hear,
too, the beating rain, now heavier, now lighter, as
the gusts swelled or sank; and the intermittent patter
of the streamlet over the deeper cave, now driving
against the precipices, now descending heavily on the
stones.
My companion had only the real evils
of the case to deal with, and so, the hardness of
our bed and the coldness of the night considered, he
slept tolerably well; but I was unlucky enough to have
evils greatly worse than the real ones to annoy me.
The corpse of a drowned seaman had been found on the
beach about a month previous, some forty yards firm
where we lay. The hands and feet, miserably contracted,
and corrugated into deep folds at every joint, yet
swollen to twice their proper size, had been bleached
as white as pieces of alumed sheep-skin; and where
the head should have been, there existed only a sad
mass of rubbish. I had examined the body, as
young people are apt to do, a great deal too curiously
for my peace; and, though I had never done the poor
nameless seaman any harm, I could not have suffered
more from him during that melancholy night, had I
been his murderer. Sleeping or waking, he was
continually before me. Every time I dropped into
a doze, he would come stalking up the beach from the
spot where he had lain, with his stiff white fingers,
that stuck out like eagle’s toes, and his pale,
broken pulp of a head, and attempt striking me; and
then I would awaken with a start, cling to my companion,
and remember that the drowned sailor had lain festering
among the identical bunches of sea-weed that still
rotted on the beach not a stone-cast away. The
near neighbourhood of a score of living bandits would
have inspired less horror than the recollection of
that one dead seaman.
Towards midnight the sky cleared and
the wind fell, and the moon, in her last quarter,
rose red as a mass of heated iron out of the sea.
We crept down, in the uncertain light, over the rough
slippery crags, to ascertain whether the tide had
not fallen sufficiently far to yield us a passage;
but we found the waves chafing among the rocks just
where the tide-line had rested twelve hours before,
and a full fathom of sea enclasping the base of the
promontory. A glimmering idea of the real nature
of our situation at length crossed my mind. It
was not imprisonment for a tide to which we had consigned
ourselves, it was imprisonment for a week. There
was little comfort in the thought, arising, as it
did, amid the chills and terrors of a dreary midnight;
and I looked wistfully on the sea as our only path
of escape. There was a vessel crossing the wake
of the moon at the time, scarce half a mile from the
shore; and, assisted by my companion, I began to shout
at the top of my lungs, in the hope of being heard
by the sailors. We saw her dim bulk falling slowly
athwart the red glittering belt of light that had
rendered her visible, and then disappearing in the
murky blackness, and just as we lost sight of her
for ever, we could hear an indistinct sound mingling
with the dash of the waves the shout, in
reply, of the startled helmsman. The vessel,
as we afterwards learned, was a large stone-lighter,
deeply laden, and unfurnished with a boat; nor were
her crew at all sure that it would have been safe
to attend to the midnight voice from amid the rocks,
even had they had the means of communication with
the shore. We waited on and on, however, now shouting
by turns, and now shouting together; but there was
no second reply; and at length, losing hope, we groped
our way back to our comfortless bed, just as the tide
had again turned on the beach, and the waves began
to roll upwards higher and higher at every dash.
As the moon rose and brightened, the
dead seaman became less troublesome; and I had succeeded
in dropping as soundly asleep as my companion, when
we were both aroused by a loud shout. We started
up and again crept downwards among the crags to the
shore; and as we reached the sea the shout was repeated.
It was that of at least a dozen harsh voices united.
There was a brief pause, followed by another shout;
and then two boats, strongly manned, shot round the
western promontory, and the men, resting on their
oars, turned towards the rock, and shouted yet again.
The whole town had been alarmed by the intelligence
that two little boys had straggled away in the morning
to the rocks of the southern Sutor, and had not found
their way back. The precipices had been a scene
of frightful accidents from time immemorial, and it
was at once inferred that one other sad accident had
been added to the number. True, there were cases
remembered of people having been tide-bound in the
Doocot Caves, and not much the worse in consequence;
but as the caves were inaccessible during neaps, we
could not, it was said, possibly be in them; and the
sole remaining ground of hope was, that, as had happened
once before, only one of the two had been killed, and
that the survivor was lingering among the rocks, afraid
to come home. And in this belief, when the moon
rose and the surf fell, the two boats had been fitted
out. It was late in the morning ere we reached
Cromarty, but a crowd on the beach awaited our arrival;
and there were anxious-looking lights glancing in
the windows, thick and manifold; nay, such was the
interest elicited, that some enormously bad verses,
in which the writer described the incident a few days
after, became popular enough to be handed about in
manuscript, and read at tea-parties by the elite
of the town. Poor old Miss Bond, who kept the
town boarding-school, got the piece nicely dressed
up, somewhat on the principle upon which Macpherson
translated Ossian; and at our first school-examination proud
and happy day for the author! it was recited
with vast applause, by one of her prettiest young
ladies, before the assembled taste and fashion of
Cromarty.