TALES AND LEGENDS.
Northumberland, as might be guessed
from its wild history, is rich in tales of daring
and stories of gallant deeds; there are true tales,
as well as legendary ones, which latter, after all,
may be true in substance though not in detail, in
spirit and possibility though not in a certain sequence
of facts. Now-a-days we look upon dragons as fabulous
animals, and stories of the destruction they wrought,
their fierceness and their might are dismissed with
a smile, and mentally relegated to a place amongst
the fairy tales that delighted our childhood’s
days, when the idea of belief or disbelief simply
did not enter the question. Yet what are the
dragon stories but faint memories of those gigantic
and fearsome beasts which roamed the earth in the
“dim, red dawn of man” their
names, as we read the labels on their skeletons in
our museums, being now the most fearsome things about
them! No one can deny that the ichthyosaurus,
plesiosaurus, and all the rest of their tribe did
exist; and were they to be encountered in these days
would spread the same terror around, and find man
almost as helpless before them as did any fierce dragon
of the fairy tales. That part of the legends,
therefore, has its foundation in fact; though from
the nature of the case, we certainly do not possess
an authenticated account of any particular contest
between primitive man and one of these gigantic creatures.
That oldest Northumbrian poem, however, the “Beowulf,”
chants the praises of its hero’s prowess in encounters
of the kind; and the north-country still has its legends
of the Sockburn Worm, the Lambton Worm, and the “Laidly”
Worm of Spindleston Heugh, the two first having their
venue in Durham, and the last in Northumberland.
The Spindlestone, a high crag not far from Bamburgh,
and Bamburgh Castle itself, form the scene of this
well-known legend. The fair Princess Margaret,
daughter of the King of Bamburgh was turned into a
“laidly worm” (loathly or loathsome serpent)
by her wicked stepmother, who was jealous of the lovely
maid. The whole district was in terror of this
dreadful monster, which desolated the country-side
in its search for food.
“For seven miles east and seven
miles west
And seven miles north and south,
No blade of grass or corn would grow,
So deadly was her mouth.
The milk of seven streakit cows
It was her cost to kepe,
They brought her dayly, whyche she drank
Before she wente to slepe.”
This offering proved successful in
pacifying the creature, and it remained in the cave
at Spindleston, coming out daily to drink its fill
from the trough prepared for it. But the fear
of it in no wise diminished, and
“Word went east, and word went west,
And word is gone over the sea,
That a laidly worm in Spindleston Heugh
Would ruin the North Countree.”
The news in due course comes to the
ears of Princess Margaret’s only brother, the
Childe Wynde, who is away seeking fame and fortune
abroad. In fear for his lovely sister, he calls
together his “merry men all,” and they
set to work to build a ship
“With masts of the rowan-tree,”
a sure defence against the spells
of witchcraft; and hoisting their silken sails they
hasten homeward.
“... ... The wind with speed
Blew them along the deep. The sea was calm,
the weather clear, When they approached nigher;
King Ida’s castle well they knew, And the
banks of Bamburghshire.”
The wicked queen saw the little bark
coming near, and knew that her guilt was about to
meet its reward. In haste she tried to wreck the
vessel, but the rowan-tree masts made her spells of
no avail. Then she bade her servants go to the
beach and oppose the landing of the Childe and his
crew; but the servants were beaten back, and the young
knight and his men landed in Budle Bay. The worm
came fiercely to the attack, as the Childe Wynde advanced
against it; but on meeting him, and feeling the touch
of his “berry-brown sword,” it besought
him to do it no harm.
“’O quit thy sword, unbend
thy brow,
And give me kisses three;
For though I be a laidly worm
No harm I’ll do to thee.
O quit thy sword, unbend thy brow,
And give me kisses three;
If I’m not won ere the sun goes
down
Won shall I never be.’
He quitted his sword, and smoothed his
brow,
And gave her kisses three;
She crept intill the hole a worm,
And came out a fayre ladie.”
The knight clasped his lovely sister
in his arms, and, casting around her his crimson cloak,
led her back to her home, where the trembling queen
awaited them. Her doom was spoken by the Childe
Wynde
“Woe be to thee, thou wicked witch;
An ill death mayst thou dee!
As thou hast likened my sister dear,
So likened shalt thou be”
and he turned her into the likeness
of an ugly toad, in which hateful shape she remained
to her dying day, wandering around the castle and the
green fields, an object of hatred to all who saw her.
The “Spindlestone,” a tall crag on which
the young knight hung his bridle, when he went further
on to seek the worm in the “heugh,” is
still to be seen, but the huge trough from which the
worm was said to drink has been destroyed.
There are two legends somewhat similar
to each other which are told of a company held in
the spell of a magic sleep, to be awakened by certain
devices, in which the blowing of a horn and the drawing
of a sword are prominent. One is the story of
“Sir Guy the Seeker,” and is told of Dunstanborough
Castle. Sir Guy sought refuge in the Castle from
a storm; and while within the walls a spectre form
with flaming hair addressed him,
“Sir knight, Sir knight, if your
heart be right,
And your nerves be firm and true,”
(fancy “nerves” in a ballad!)
“Sir knight, Sir knight, a beauty
bright
In durance waits for you.”
The ballad, written by M.G. Lewis,
now describes in a painfully commonplace manner the
knight’s further adventures. He and his
guide wandered round and round and high and low in
the maze of chambers within the castle, until at last
a door of brass, whose bolt was a venomous snake,
gave them entrance to a gloomy hall, draped in black,
which the “hundred lights” failed to brighten.
In the hall a hundred knights of “marble white”
lay sleeping by their steeds of “marble black
as the raven’s back.” At the end
of the hall, guarded by two huge skeleton forms, the
imprisoned lady was seen in tears within a crystal
tomb. One skeleton held in his bony fingers a
horn, the other a “falchion bright,” and
the knight was told to choose between them, and the
fate of himself and the lady would depend upon his
choice. Sir Guy, after long hesitation, blew
a shrill blast upon the horn; at the sound the hundred
steeds stamped their hoofs, the hundred knights sprang
up, and the unlucky knight fell down senseless, with
his ghastly guide’s words ringing in his ears
“Shame on the coward who sounded
a horn
When he might have unsheathed a sword!”
In the morning, the unfortunate Sir
Guy awoke to find himself lying amongst the ruins,
and forthwith began his ceaseless and unavailing search
for the lady he had failed to rescue.
The legend similar to this in many
respects is that of King Arthur and his court at Sewingshields,
to which allusion has already been made in the chapter
on the Roman Wall. I cannot do better than give
this in the words of Mr. Hodgson, who tells the story
in his History of Northumberland. “Immemorial
tradition has asserted that King Arthur, his queen
Guenever, his court of lords and ladies, and his hounds
were enchanted in some cave of the crags, or in a
hall below the castle of Sewingshields, and would
continue entranced there until someone should first
blow a bugle-horn that lay on a table near the entrance
of the hall, and then with the ‘sword of the
stone’ (was this Excalibur?) cut a garter, also
placed there beside it. But none had ever heard
where the entrance to this enchanted hall was, till
the farmer at Sewingshields, about fifty years since,
was sitting knitting on the ruins of the castle, and
his clew fell, and ran downwards through a rush of
briars and nettles, as he supposed, into a subterraneous
passage. Full in the faith that the entrance
to King Arthur’s hall had now been discovered,
he cleared the briary portal of its weeds and rubbish,
and entering a vaulted passage, followed in his darkling
way the thread of his clew. The floor was infested
with toads and lizards; and the dark wings of bats,
disturbed by his unhallowed intrusion, flitted fearfully
around him. At length his sinking courage was
strengthened by a dim, distant light, which as he
advanced grew gradually brighter, till all at once
he entered a vast and vaulted hall, in the centre
of which a fire without fuel, from a broad crevice
in the floor blazed with a high and lambent flame,
that showed all the carved walls and fretted roof,
and the monarch and his queen and court reposing around,
in a theatre of thrones and costly couches. On
the floor beyond the fire lay the faithful and deep-toned
pack of thirty couple of hounds; and on a table before
it the spell-dissolving horn, sword, and garter.
The shepherd reverently, but firmly, grasped the sword,
and as he drew it leisurely from its rusty scabbard,
the eyes of the monarch and his courtiers began to
open, and they rose till they sat upright. He
cut the garter; and as the sword was being slowly
sheathed the spell assumed its ancient power, and they
all gradually sank to rest; but not before the monarch
had lifted up his eyes and hands, and exclaimed
“O woe betide that evil day
On which this witless wight was born,
Who drew the sword, the garter cut.
But never blew the bugle horn!”
Terror brought on loss of memory,
and the shepherd was unable to give any correct account
of his adventure, or to find again the entrance to
the enchanted hall.
Another legend is connected with Tynemouth.
Just above the short sands was a cave known as Jingling
Geordie’s Hole; the “Geordie” is
evidently a late interpolation, for earlier mention
of the cave gives it as the Jingling Man’s Hole.
No one knows how it came by its name; tradition says
that it was the entrance to a subterranean passage
leading from the Priory beneath the Tyne to Jarrow.
In this cave it was said that a treasure of a fabulous
amount was concealed, and the tale of this hoard fired
a boy named Walter to seek it out, when he heard the
tale from his mother. On his attaining to knighthood,
he resolved to make the finding of the treasure his
particular “quest,” and arming himself,
he adventured forth on the Eve of St. John. Making
his way fearlessly down into the cave, undaunted by
spectre or dragon, as they attempted to dispute his
passage, he arrived at a gloomy gateway, where hung
a bugle, fastened by a golden cord. Boldly he
placed the bugle to his lips, and blew three loud
blasts. To his amazement, at the sound the doors
rolled back, displaying a vast and brightly-lit hall,
whose roof was supported on pillars of jasper and
crystal; the glow from lamps of gold shone softly
down on gold and gems, which were heaped upon the floor
of this magic chamber, and the treasure became the
rich reward of the dauntless youth.
“Gold heaped upon gold, and emeralds
green,
And diamonds and rubies, and sapphires
untold,
Rewarded the courage of Walter the Bold.”
The fortunate youth became a very
great personage, indeed, as by means of his great
riches he was “lord of a hundred castles”
and wide domains.
Of a very different character is the
story of the Hermit of Warkworth. It is unfortunate
that this, the most tragic and moving of all Northumbrian
tales, should be most widely known by means of the
prosy imitation ballad by Dr. Percy, whose ability
as a poet did by no means equal his zeal as a collector
of ballads. The hero of the sorrowful tale is
said to have been a Bertram of Bothal, who loved fair
Isabel, daughter of the lord of Widdrington.
Bertram was a knight in Percy’s train, and at
a great feast made by the lord of Alnwick the fair
maiden and her father were amongst the guests.
As the minstrels chanted the praises of their lord,
and sang of the valiant deeds by which his noble house
had won renown, the heart of Isabel thrilled at the
thought of her true knight rivalling those deeds of
fame. Summoning one of her attendant maidens,
she sent her to Bertram, bearing a helmet of steel
with crest of gold. With the helmet the maiden
gave her mistress’ message, that she would yield
to her knight’s pleadings and become his bride,
as soon as he had proved himself a valiant and worthy
wearer of the golden-crested helm. Reverently
Bertram accepted the commands of his lady, and vowed
to prove his devotion wherever hard blows were to be
given and danger to be found. The lord of Alnwick
straightway arranged for an expedition on to Scottish
land, in requital of old scores, and assembled together
a goodly company to ride against the Scots. Earl
Douglas and his men opposed them, and blows were dealt
thick and fast on both sides. Bertram was sorely
wounded, after showing wondrous prowess in the fight;
but being rescued by Percy, was borne to the castle
of Wark upon the Tweed, to recover from his wounds
in safety. Isabel’s aged father had seen
the young knight’s valour, and promised that
the maiden herself should tend his hurts and care
for him until he recovered. Day after day passed,
however, and still she came not. At last the knight,
scarcely able to take the saddle, rode back to Widdrington,
tended by his gallant young brother, to satisfy himself
of what had become of his lady. They reached
Widdrington tower to find it all in darkness; and
after repeated knockings the aged nurse came to the
gateway and demanded the name of those who so insistently
clamoured at the door. Bertram enquired for the
lady Isabel; and then, indeed, all was dismay.
The nurse, trembling with fear, told the two youths
that her mistress had set out immediately on hearing
of her lover’s plight, reproaching herself for
having led him to adventure his life so rashly, and
it was now six days since she had gone. Weary
and weak, Bertram rested the night at the castle,
and then set out on his search for his lost lady.
That they might the sooner search the country round,
he and his brother, who loved him dearly, took different
directions, one going eastward, and the other north.
They put on various disguises as they went, Bertram
appearing now in the guise of a holy Palmer, now as
a wandering minstrel As he was sitting, despondent
and well-nigh despairing, beneath a hawthorn tree,
an aged monk came by, and on seeing the supposed minstrel’s
face of sorrow, said to him,
“All minstrels yet that e’er
I saw
Are full of game and glee,
But thou art sad and woe-begone;
I marvel whence it be.”
Bertram replied that he served an
aged lord whose only child had been stolen away, and
that he would know no happiness until he had found
her. The pilgrim comforted him and bade him hope,
telling him that
“Behind yon hills so steep and high,
Down in a lonely glen,
There stands a castle fair and strong,
Far from the abode of men.”
Saying that he had heard a lady’s
voice lamenting in this lonely tower, he passed on,
giving Bertram the hope that now at last his quest
was ended. He made his way to that strong castle,
and with his music prevailed upon the porter to let
him stay near at hand in a cavern; for the porter
refused to admit him to the castle in the absence of
his lord, though at the same time giving him food
and directing him to the cave. He piped all day
and watched all night, and was rewarded by hearing
his lady’s voice lamenting within the walls of
her prison. On the second night he caught a glimpse
of her beauteous form, fair as the moonbeams that
shone around the tower. On the third night, worn
with watching, he slept, and only awakened as dawn
drew nigh. Grasping his weapon, he stole near
to the castle walls, when to his amazement, he saw
his lady descend from her window by a ladder of rope,
held for her by a youth in Highland dress. Stunned
at the sight, he could not move to follow them, till
they had left behind them the castle where the lady
had been held captive, and were about to disappear
over the hill. Silently and swiftly then he drew
near, and crying furiously, “Vile traitor! yield
that lady up!” fell upon the youth who accompanied
her, who in his turn fought as furiously as he.
In a few moments Bertram’s antagonist lay stretched
on the ground; and as he gave him the fatal thrust
he cried, “Die, traitor, die!” The lady
recognised his voice, and rushing forward, shrieked,
“Stay! stay! it is thy brother.” But
the sword of Bertram, already descending with the
force of rage and fury in the blow, could not be stayed
until too late. The fair maid’s breast was
pierced by the sword of the knight who loved her, and
she sank down by the side of the youth who had delivered
her. It was indeed Bertram’s brother, who
had succeeded in his search; and the dying maiden found
time to tell of his devotion, in rescuing her from
this castle of the son of a Scottish lord who fain
would have made her his bride, before she, too, lay
lifeless by the side of her brave rescuer, leaving
her lover too despairing and desolate to seek safety
in flight, so that the band of searchers from the
castle, seeking their prisoner on the hills, and dreading
their lord’s wrath on his return, bore him back
with them to the dungeon. Their lord, however,
had meantime been taken captive by Percy (Hotspur),
who, as soon as he heard of Bertram’s capture,
quickly exchanged the Scottish chief for his friend.
Bertram’s sorrow lasted for the rest of his
days; he gave away his lands and possessions to the
poor, and retiring to a lovely spot on the banks of
the Coquet, where rocky cliffs overhung the river,
he carved out in the living stone a little cell, dormitory,
and chapel, and dwelt there, passing his days in mourning,
meditation, and prayer. In the chapel, with its
gracefully arched roof, he fashioned on an altar-tomb
the image of a lady, and at her feet the figure of
a hermit, in the attitude of grief, one hand supporting
his head and the other pressed against his breast,
leaning over and gazing at the lady for ever.
The poignant sentence “My tears have been my
meat day and night,” is carved over the entrance
to the little chapel. Here, in this beautiful
spot, almost under the shadow of the castle walls
belonging to his noble friend, the sorrowing knight,
now a holy hermit, spent the remainder of his life
in the little dwelling he had wrought in the living
rock. It remains to-day more beautiful, if possible,
than ever, overhung by a canopy of waving greenery,
and draped with ferns and mosses, their graceful fronds
laved by the rippling Coquet whose gentle murmurings
fill the still air with music.
The next tale takes us to the neighbourhood
of Belford, and out upon the old post road from London
to Edinburgh. In the unsettled times of James
the Second’s reign, one Sir John Cochrane of
Ochiltree was condemned to death for his part in the
rising which was led by the Duke of Argyle. Powerful
friends, heavily bribed by Sir John’s father,
the Earl of Dundonald, were working in Sir John’s
favour, and they had strong hopes of obtaining a pardon.
But meanwhile, Sir John lay in the Tolbooth at Edinburgh,
and the warrant for his execution was already on its
way northward, in the post-bag carried forward by
horseman after horseman throughout the length of the
way. Could the arrival of the warrant only be
delayed by some means, his life might be saved.
In this strait, his daughter Grizzel, a girl of eighteen,
conceived the desperate idea of preventing the warrant’s
reaching its destination. Saying nothing to anyone
of her intentions, she stole away from home, and rode
swiftly to the Border. Following the road for
about four miles on the English side, she arrived
at the house of her old nurse; and here she changed
her clothes, persuading the old dame to lend her a
suit belonging to her foster-brother. Making
her way southward, she went to the inn at Belford
where the riders carrying the mail usually put up for
the night. Here, the same night, came the postman,
and the seeming youth watched nervously, but determinedly,
for an opportunity of finding out whether the fateful
paper was in his bag or not. No slightest chance
presented itself, however, and an attempt to obtain
the mail-bag during the night failed by reason of
the fact that the man slept upon it. One thing
she did accomplish, which gave her hope that the encounter
for which she was nerving herself might end successfully
for her; she managed, unseen, to draw the charges
from his pistols. Then the courageous girl rode
off through the dark night to select a favourable
spot in which to await his coming. For two or
three lonely hours she waited, the thought that she
was fighting for her father’s life giving her
courage. In the dim light of the early dawn she
heard the sound of his horse’s hoofs from where
she stood in the shadow of a clump of trees; and steeling
herself for the part she was to play, and in ignorance
of whether he might have found out that the charges
had been withdrawn from his pistols and might have
re-loaded them, she waited until he was almost abreast
of her, and fired at his horse, bringing it down.
Before he could extricate himself she was upon him
with drawn sword; but promising to spare his life if
he would let her have the mail-bag, she seized it
and darted away. He attempted to follow to recover
his charge, but she reached her horse, and rode off
like the wind. When she reached a place of safety
and examined the contents of the bag, what was her
joy to find that the warrant was there. It was
speedily destroyed; and during the time that elapsed
before the news of the loss could be sent to London
and another one made out, the friends of Sir John
succeeded in obtaining his pardon. “Cochrane’s
bonny Grizzy” lived to a good old age; and “Grizzy’s
clump” on the north road near the little village
of Buckton keeps green the memory of her daring exploit.
“Bonny Grizzy” was a Scottish
maid, though her gallant if lawless deed was performed
on Northumbrian soil; but there is one Northumbrian
maiden whose fame will live as long as the sea-waves
beat on the wild north-east coast, and as long as
men’s hearts thrill to a tale of courage and
high resolve. Grace Darling’s name still
awakens in every bosom a response to all that is compassionate,
courageous, and unselfish; and the thoughts of all
north-country folk bold that admiration for the gentle
girl which has been voiced as no other could voice
it, in the magical words of Swinburne
“Take, O star of all our seas, from
not an alien hand,
Homage paid of song bowed down before
thy glory’s face,
Thou the living light of all our lovely
stormy strand,
Thou the brave north-country’s very
glory of glories, Grace.”
The story of her gallantry has been
many times re-told, but never grows wearisome.
The memory of that stormy voyage of the Forfarshire,
which ended in disaster on the Harcar rocks in the
Farne group, remains in men’s minds as
the dark and tragic setting which throws into bright
relief the gallant action of the father and daughter
who dared almost certain death to rescue their fellow-creatures
in peril. It was in September, 1838, that the
ill-fated vessel left Hull for Dundee; but a leak
in the boilers caused the fires to be nearly extinguished
in the storm the vessel encountered. It reached
St. Abb’s Head by the aid of the sails, but
then drifted southward, driven by the storm, and struck
in the early morning, in a dense fog, on the Harcar
rocks. Nine of the people on board managed to
escape in a small boat, which was driven in a miraculous
manner through the only safe outlet between the rocks.
They were picked up by a passing boat and taken to
Shields. Meanwhile a heavy sea had crashed down
upon the Forfarshire, and broken it in half,
one portion, with the greater number of crew and passengers,
being swept away immediately. The remaining portion,
the fore part of the vessel, was firmly fixed upon
the rock. Here the shivering survivors clung all
that stormy day, the waves dashing over them continually.
The captain and his wife were washed overboard, clasped
in each others’ arms; and two little children,
a boy of eight and a girl of eleven years of age,
died from exposure and the relentless buffeting of
the waves, their distracted mother clasping them by
the hand long after life was extinct. To a terrible
day succeeded a yet more terrible night.
“Scarce the cliffs of the islets,
scarce the walls of Joyous Gard
Flash to sight between the deadlier lightnings
of the sea;
Storm is lord and master of a midnight
evil-starred,
Nor may sight nor fear discern what evil
stars may be.”
Until the morning they endured; and
in the stormy dawn the keeper of the Longstone lighthouse,
William Darling, and his daughter Grace saw them huddled
in a shivering heap upon the wave-swept fragments of
the wreck. The girl begged her father to try
to save them, and to allow her to help in the task,
and after some natural hesitation he consented.
The brave-hearted mother helped them to launch the
boat, and they set forth.
“Sire and daughter, hand on oar
and face against the night. Maid and man whose
names are beacons ever to the north. ...... all
the madness of the stormy surf Hounds and roars
them back, but roars and hounds them back in vain.
Not our mother, not Northumberland, brought
ever forth.
Though no southern shore may match the
sons that kiss her mouth,
Children worthier all the birthright given
of the ardent north,
Where the fire of hearts outburns the
suns that fire the south.”
They reached the rock, where nine persons
were still
clinging to the wreck, and
“Life by life the man redeems them,
head by storm-worn head,
While the girl’s hand stays the
boat whereof the waves are fain.”
With five of the exhausted survivors
the boat returned to the Longstone; and two of the
men went back with William Darling for the other four.
All were safely housed in the lighthouse and tended
by the noble family of the Darlings; but the storm
raged for several days longer, and made it impossible
for them to be put ashore. When at length they
returned to their homes, and the story of the rescue
was made known, the whole country was moved by it;
and presents of all kinds, money, and offers of marriage
poured in upon Grace, who remained quite unmoved by
it all, and was still the gentle unassuming girl that
she had always been. She refused to leave her
home, though she was offered twenty pounds a night
at the Adelphi if she would consent merely to sit in
a boat for London audiences to gaze upon her.
Sad to say, she died of consumption about two years
afterwards, after having tried in vain to arrest the
course of her sickness by change of air at Wooler
and Alnwick; and she sleeps in Bamburgh churchyard,
within sound of the sea by which she had spent her
short life.
“East and west and south acclaim
her queen of England’s maids.
Star more sweet than all their stars,
and flower than all their flowers.”
The actual boat in which the gallant
deed was performed was long preserved at Newton Hall,
Stocksfield; but the owners have lately presented
it to the Marine Laboratory at Cullercoats.