’Oh see ye not that
bonnie road
That winds about
yon fernie brae?
Oh that ’s the road
to fair Elfland
Where you and
I this day maun gae.’
Thomas
the Rhymer.
No scheme of ballad classification
can be at all points complete and satisfactory.
We have seen that it is impossible to classify the
Scottish ballads according to authorship, since authors,
known and proved, there are none. Scarce more
practicable is it to arrange them in any regular order
of chronology or locality; and even when we seek to
group them with regard to type and subject, difficulties
start up at every step. A convenient and intelligible
division would seem to be one that recognised the
ballads as Mythological, Romantic, or Historical,
this last class including the lays of the foray and
the chase, that cannot be assigned to any particular
date that cannot, indeed, be proved to
have any historical basis at all but can
yet, with more or less of probability, be assigned
to some historical or quasi-historical character.
Besides these, there are groups of ballads that cannot
be wholly overlooked ballads in which,
contrary to the prevailing spirit of this kind of
poetry, Humour asserts itself as an essential element;
ballads of the Sea; and Peasant ballads, of which,
perhaps, England yields happier examples than Scotland simple
rustic ditties, hawked about in broad-sheets, and
dating, many of them, no earlier than the present
century, that seldom rise much above the doggerel and
commonplace, and do not, as a rule, concern themselves
with the high personages and high-strung passions
of the ballad of Old Romance.
No well-defined frontier can be laid
down between the three chief departments of ballad
minstrelsy. The pieces in which fairy-lore and
ancient superstition have a prominent place the
ballads of Myth and Marvel have all of
them a strong romantic colouring; and the like may
be said of the traditional songs of war and of raiding
and hunting, as well as of those whose theme is the
passion and tragedy of love. Romance, indeed,
is the animating soul of the body of Scottish ballad
poetry; the note that gives it unity and distinguishes
it from mere versified history and folklore.
There are few ballads on which some shadow out of
the World Invisible is not cast; few where ill-happed
love is not a master-string of the minstrel’s
harp; few into which there does not come strife and
the flash of cold steel. Natheless, a broad division
into ballads Supernatural, Romantic, and Martial has
reason as well as convenience to recommend it; and
in a loose and general way such an arrangement should
also indicate the comparative age, not indeed of the
ballad versions as we know them, but of the ideas and
materials of which they are composed.
First, then, of the ballads that are
steeped in the element of the supernatural, let it
be remembered that it is well-nigh impossible for
us in these days, when we have cleared about us a little
island of light in the darkness, to understand the
atmosphere of mystery that pressed close around the
life of man in the age when the ballad had its birth.
The Unknown and the Unseen surrounded him on every
side. He could scarcely put forth a hand without
touching things that were not of this world; and in
proportion to the ignorance was the fear. Through
the long twilight in which the primaeval beliefs and
superstitions grew up and became embodied in legend
and custom, in maerchen and ballad, and all
through the Middle Ages, man’s pilgrimage on
earth was indeed through a Valley of the Shadow.
It was a narrow way, between ’the Ditch and the
Quag, and past the very mouth of the Pit,’ full
of frightful sights and dreadful noises, of hobgoblins,
and dragons, and chimeras dire. Tales that have
ceased to frighten the nursery, that we listen to with
a smile or at most with a pleasant stirring of the
blood and titillation of the nerves, once on a time
were the terror of grown men. The ogres and
dragons of old are dead, and the Folklorist and the
Comparative Mythologist make free of their caves,
and are busy setting up, comparing, classifying, and
labelling their skeletons for the instruction of an
age of science. But there was a time when the
wisest believed in their existence as an article of
faith, and when the boldest shuddered to hear them
named. What are now idle fancies were once the
most portentous of realities; and in this lies the
secret of the almost universal diffusion of certain
typical tales, beliefs, and observances, and of the
fascination which they have not ceased to exercise
over the imagination of mankind.
Into the subject of the origins, the
relationships, and the signification of these venerable
traditions and superstitions of the race and of all
races, there is neither time nor occasion for entering.
This oldest and yet last found of the realms of science
is as yet only in course of being surveyed, and from
day to day fresh discoveries are announced by the
eager explorers of the darkling provinces of myth and
folktale. But this at least may be said, that
not in the wide domain of popular saga and poetry
can there be reaped a richer or more varied harvest
of weird and wild and beautiful fancies, touched by
the light that ‘never was on sea or land,’
than is to be found in the Scottish ballads.
From among them one could gather out
a whole menagerie of the ‘selcouth’ beasts
and birds and creeping things that have been banished
from solid earth into the limbo of Faery and Romance.
They furnish examples of nearly all the root-ideas
and typical tales which folklorists have discovered
in the vast jungle of popular legends and superstitions the
Supernatural Birth, the Life and Faith Tokens, the
Dragon Slayer, the Mermaid and the Despised Sister,
Bluebeard of the Many Wives, the Well of Healing,
the Magic Mirror, the Enchanted Horn, the Singing Bone,
the Babes in the Wood, the Blabbing Popinjay, the
Counterpart, the Transformation, the Spell, the Prophecy,
the Riddle, the Return from the Grave, the Dead Ride,
the Demon Lover, the Captivity in Faeryland, the Seven
Years’ Kain to Hell, and a host of others.
Certain of them, like Thomas the
Rhymer and Young Tamlane, are ‘fulfilled
all of Faery.’ One can read in them how
deeply the old superstition, which some would attribute
to a traditional memory of the pre-Aryan inhabitants
of Western Europe to the ‘barrow-wights,’
pigmies, or Pechts who dwelt in or were driven for
shelter to caves and other underground dwellings of
the land had struck its roots in the popular
fancy. Probably Mr. Andrew Lang carries us as
far as we can go at present in the search for origins
and affinities, when he says that the belief in fairies,
and in their relatives, the gnomes and brownies, is
’a complex matter, from which tradition, with
its memory of earth-dwellers, is not wholly absent,
while more is due to a survival of the pre-Christian
Hades, and to the belief in local spirits the
Vius of Melanesia, the Nereids of ancient and modern
Greece, the Lares of Rome, the fateful Maerae and
Hathors old imaginings of a world not yet
dispeopled of its dreams.’ The elfin-folk
of the Scottish ballads have some few traits that
are local and national; but, on the whole, they conform
pretty closely to a type that has now become well marked
in the literature as well as in the popular beliefs
of European countries. The fairies have been,
among the orders of supernatural beings, the pets and
favourites of the poets, who have heaped their flowers
of fancy above the graves of the departed Little Folk.
We suspect that the more graceful and gracious touches
in the Fairy Ballad are the renovating work of later
hands than the elder balladist; and in the two typical
Scottish examples that have been mentioned, it is not
difficult to find the mark of Sir Walter.
In the time when fairies still tripped
the moonlit sward, they received praise and compliment
indeed from the mouths of their human kin, but it
was more out of fear than out of love. They were
the ‘Men of Peace’ and the ‘Good
Neighbours’ for a reason not much different from
that which caused the Devil’s share in the churchyard
to be known as the ’Guid Man’s Croft,’
lest by speaking more frankly of those having power,
evil might befall. The tenancy of brake and woodland
in the ‘witching hours’ by this uncanny
people was a formidable addition to the terrors of
the night:
’Up the craggy mountain
And down the rushy
glen,
We dare not go a-hunting
For fear of Little
Men.
Wee folk, good folk,
Trooping altogether,
Green jerkin, red cap,
And white owl’s
feather.’
They were tricksy, capricious, peevish,
easily offended, malicious if not wholly malevolent,
and dangerous alike to trust and to thwart. All
this, together with their habit of trooping in procession
and dancing under the moon; their practice of snatching
away to their underground abodes those who, by kiss
or other spell, fall into their hands; and the penance
or sacrifice which at every seven years’ term
they pay to powers still more dread, comes out in
the tale of True Thomas’s adventure with the
Queen of Faery, and in Fair Janet’s ordeal to
win back Young Tamlane to earth. Their prodigious
strength, so strangely disproportioned to their size,
is celebrated in the quaint lines of The Wee Wee
Man; while from The Elfin Knight we learn
that woman’s wit as well as woman’s faith
can, on occasion, prove a match for all the spells
and riddles of fairyland. The enchanted horn
is heard blowing
’A knight stands on
yon high, high hill,
Blaw, blaw, ye
cauld winds blaw!
He blaws a blast baith loud
and shrill,
The cauld wind
‘s blawn my plaid awa,’
and, at the spoken wish, the Elfin
Knight is at the maiden’s side. But the
spell the tongue has woven, the tongue can unloose;
and the lady brings her unearthly lover first into
captivity by setting him a preliminary task to perform,
more baffling than that ’sewing a sark without
a seam.’
It is otherwise with True Thomas,
as it was with Merlin before him, and with all the
men, wise and foolish, who have once yielded to the
glamourie of the Elfin Queen and others of her type
and sex. The Rhymer of Ercildoune was probably
only a man more learned and far-seeing than others
of his time. His reputation for Second Sight may
rest upon a basis similar to that which led the mediaeval
mind to dub Virgil a magician, and to recognise the
wizard in Sir Michael Scott, the grave ambassador
and counsellor of kings, and, at a later date, enabled
the profane vulgar to discover a baronet of Gordonstoun
to be a warlock, for no better reason than because,
with the encouragement of that most indefatigable
of ballad collectors, Samuel Pepys, he gave his attention
to the perfecting of sea-pumps for the royal navy.
Whether the Rhymer’s expedition to Fairyland
was feigned by the balladist to explain his soothsaying;
or whether, rather, his prophecies were invented as
evidence of the perilous gift he brought back with
him from Elfland, research will never be able to tell
us. But the journey True Thomas made on the fateful
day when, lying on Huntlie bank,
‘A ferlie he spied wi’
his e’e;
And there he saw
a ladye bright
Come riding down by the Eildon
Tree,’
was one that many heroes of adventure,
before him and after him, have made in fairy lands
forlorn. The scenery and incidents of that strange
ride are also among the common possessions of fairy
romance. One dimly discerns in them the glimmer
of an ancient allegory, of an old cosmogony, that
may possibly be derived from the very infancy of the
world, when human thought began to brood over the mysteries
of life and time. There are the Broad Path of
Wickedness and the Narrow Way of Right, and between
them that ‘bonnie road’ of Fantasy, winding
and fern-sown, that leads to ‘fair Elfland.’
There is a glimpse of the Garden of the Hesperides
and its fruits; and a lurid peep into Hades:
’It was mirk, mirk nicht
and nae starlicht,
And they waded
through red bluid to the knee;
For a’ the bluid that
’s shed on earth
Rins through the
springs o’ that countrie.’
The Palace of Truth as well as of
Error is built on fairy ground; and there is a foretaste
of Gilbertian humour in the dismay with which the
Rhymer hears that he is to be endowed with ’the
tongue that can never lie.’
’"My tongue is mine
ain,” True Thomas said;
“A goodlie
gift you would give me;
I neither dought to buy or
sell
At fair or tryst
where I may be;
I dought neither speak to
prince or peer
Nor ask of grace
from fair ladye."’
But from his seven years’ wanderings
in fairyland, that speed like a day upon earth, he
wakens up as from a dream, and again he is laid on
Huntlie bank, in sight of the cleft Eildon.
Is it not significant that Melrose
and Abbotsford, where a later and greater wizard wrought
his spells over the valley of the Tweed and Ettrick
Forest, should be half-way between the chief scenes
of our Fairy Ballads between the Rhymer’s
Tower and Carterhaugh? Fair Janet’s conduct,
when forbidden to come or go by Carterhaugh, where
Yarrow holds tryst with Ettrick, lest she might encounter
the Young Tamlane, may be traced back to the Garden
of Eden, and is of a piece with that of Mother Eve:
’Janet has kilted her
green kirtle
A little abune
her knee;
And she has braided her yellow
hair
A little abune
her bree;
And she ‘s awa’
to Carterhaugh
As fast as she
could gae.’
There she falls in with the ‘elfin
grey’ who might have been an ’earthly
knight’; and he tells her how, as a youth, he
had been reft away to fairyland:
‘There cam’ a
wind out o’ the north,
A sharp wind and
a snell;
A deep sleep cam’ over
me
And from my horse
I fell’;
as happened to ‘Held Harald’
and his men in the German legend. But he also
tells her how, by waiting at the cross road at midnight
on Halloweve, ‘when fairy folk do ride,’
she may win back the father of her child to mortal
shape. That waiting on the dreary heath while
’a north wind tore the bent,’ and what
followed, become the ordeal of Janet’s love:
‘Aboot the dead hour
o’ the night
She heard the
bridles ring;
And Janet was as glad o’
that
As any earthly
thing.
And first gaed by the black,
black steed,
And then gaed
by the brown,
But fast she gripped the milk-white
steed
And pu’ed
the rider down’;
and holding her lover fast, through
all his gruesome changes of form, she ‘borrowed’
him from the ‘seely court,’ and saved him
from becoming the tribute paid every seven years to
the powers that held fairydom in vassalage.
Another series of transmutations,
familiar in ballad and folklore, is that in which
the powers of White and Black Magic strive for the
mastery, generally to the discomfiture of the latter,
after the manner of the Hunting of Paupukewis in Hiawatha.
The baffled magician or witch often the
mother-in-law or stepmother, the stock villain of the
piece in these old tales alters her shape
rapidly to living creature or inanimate thing; but
fast as she changes the avenger also changes, pursues,
and at length destroys. In the ballad of The
Twa Magicians, given in Buchan’s collection,
it is virtue that flees, and wrong, in the shape of
a Smith, of Weyland’s mystic kin, that follows
and overcomes.
But, as a rule, the transformations
that are made the subject of the Scottish ballads
are of a more lasting kind; the prince or princess,
tempted by a kiss, or at the touch of enchanted wand
or ring, is doomed for a time to crawl in the loathly
shape of snake or dragon about a tree, or swim the
waters as mermaid or other monstrous brood of the seas
of romance, until the appointed time when the deliverer
comes, and by like magic art, or by the pure force
of courage and love, looses the spell. Kempion
is a type of a class of story that runs, in many variations,
through the romances of chivalry, and from these may
have been passed down to the ballad-singer, although
ruder forms of it are common to nearly all folk-mythology.
The hero is one of those kings’ sons, who, along
with kings’ daughters, people the literature
of ballad and maerchen; and he has heard of
the ‘heavy weird’ that has been laid upon
a lady to haunt the flood around the Estmere Crags
as a ’fiery beast.’ He is dared to
lean over the cliff and kiss this hideous creature;
and at the third kiss she turns into
‘The loveliest ladye
e’er could be.’
The rescuer asks
’O, was it wehrwolf
in the wood,
Or was it mermaid
in the sea?
Or was it man, or vile woman,
My ain true love,
that misshaped thee?’
Nor do we wonder to hear that it was
the doing of the wicked and envious stepmother, on
whom there straight falls a worse and a well-deserved
weird. In King Henrie, too, it is the stepdame
that has wrought the mischief. He is lying ‘burd
alane’ in his hunting hall in the forest, when
his grey dogs cringe and whine; the door is burst in,
and
’A
grisly ghost
Stands stamping on the floor.’
The manners of this Poltergeist
are in keeping with her rough entrance on the scene;
her ogreish appetite is not satisfied even when she
had devoured his hounds, his hawks, and his steed.
As in the Wife of Bath’s Tale, and the
Marriage of Sir Gawain and other legends of
the same type, the knight’s courtesy withstands
every test, and he is rewarded for having given the
lady her will:
’When day was come and
night was gane
And the sun shone
through the ha’,
The fairest ladye that e’er
was seen
Lay between him
and the wa’.’
In most cases it is not wise or safe
to give entertainment to these wanderers of the night,
whether they come in fair shape or in foul. They
are apt to prove to be of the race of the succubi,
from whom a kiss means death or worse. More than
one of our Scottish ballads are reminiscent of the
beautiful old Breton lay, The Lord Nann, so
admirably translated by Tom Taylor, wherein the young
husband, stricken to the heart by the baleful kiss
given to him against his will by a wood-nymph, goes
home to die, and his fair young wife follows him fast
to the grave. Alison Gross is another of those
Circes who, by incantation of horn and wand,
seek to lower the shape and nature of her lovers to
those of the beasts that crawl on their bellies.
Sometimes the tempter is of the other sex. Thus
The Demon Lover is a tale known in several
versions in Scotland, and lately brought under notice
by Mr. Hall Caine in its Manx form. The frail
lady is enticed from her home, and induced to put
foot on board the mysterious ship by an appeal, a
pathetic echo of which has lingered on in later poetry,
and has been quoted as the very dirge of the Lost
Cause:
’He turned him right
and round about,
And the tear blindit
his e’e;
“I would never have
trodden on Irish ground
If it hadna been
for thee."’
They have not sailed far, when his
countenance changes, and he grows to a monstrous stature;
the foul fiend is revealed. They are bound on
a drearier voyage than that of True Thomas to
a Hades of ice and isolation that bespeaks the northern
origin of the tale:
’"O whaten a mountain
’s yon,” she said,
“So dreary
wi’ frost and snow?”
“O yon ’s the
mountain of hell,” he cried,
“Where you
and I must go.”
He strack the tapmast wi’
his hand,
The foremast wi’
his knee;
And he brake the gallant ship
in twain
And sank her in
the sea.’
Other spells and charms not a few,
for the winning of love and the slaking of revenge,
are known to the old balladists. We hear of the
compelling or sundering power of the bright red gold
and the cold steel. Lovers at parting exchange
rings, as in Hynd Horn, gifted with the property
of revealing death or faithlessness:
’When your ring turns
pale and wan,
Then I ‘m in love wi’
another man.’
Or, as in Rose the Red and Lily
Flower, it is a magic horn, to be blown when in
danger, and whose notes can be heard at any distance.
These are examples of the ‘Life Token’
and the ‘Faith Token,’ known to the folklore
of nearly all peoples who have preserved fragments
of their primitive beliefs. The prophetic power
of dreams is revealed in The Drowned Lovers,
in Child Rowland, in Annie of Lochryan,
and in a host of others. The spells used by witchcraft
to arrest birth do not differ greatly in Willie’s
Lady the ‘nine witch-knots,’
the ’bush of woodbine,’ the ‘kaims
o’ care,’ and the ’master goat’ from
those mentioned in its prototypes in Scandinavian,
Greek, and Eastern ballads and stories; and in more
than one it is the sage counsels of ’Billy Blin’’ the
Brownie that give the cue by which the evil
charm is unwound. The Brownie the
Lubber Fiend owns a department of legend
and ballad scarcely less important than that possessed
by his relatives, the Elfin folk and the Trolds; a
shy and clumsy monster, but harmless and good-natured,
and with a turn for hard manual labour that can be
turned to useful account. Good and ill fortune,
in the ballads, comes often by lot:
’We were sisters, sisters
seven,
Bowing down, bowing
down;
The fairest maidens under
heaven;
And aye the birks
a’ bowing.
And we keest kevils us amang,
Bowing down, bowing
down;
To see who would to greenwood
gang,
And aye the birks
a’ bowing.’
The birk held a high place in the
secret rites and customs of the Ballad Age. It
was with ‘a wand o’ the bonnie birk’
that May Margaret went through the mysterious process
of restoring her plighted troth to Clerk Saunders;
in other ballads it is done by passes of the hand,
or of a crystal rod. When the ‘Clerk’s
Twa Sons o’ Owsenford’ were brought back
to earth by their mother’s bitter grief and longing,
they wore ’hats made o’ the birk’:
’It neither grew in
syke or ditch,
Nor yet in ony
sheugh;
But at the gate of Paradise
That birk grew
green eneuch.’
Birds of the air carry a secret; there
are tongues in trees that syllable men’s names;
and even inanimate things cry aloud with the voice
of Remorse or of Doom. When the knight wishes
to send a message, he speaks in the ear of his ‘gay
goshawk that can baith speak and flee.’
When May Colvin returns home after the fatal meeting
at the well, where her seven predecessors in the love
of the ‘Fause Sir John’ had been drowned,
the ‘wylie parrot’ speaks the words that
were no doubt ringing in her brain:
‘What hae ye made o’
the fause Sir John
That ye gaed wi’
yestreen?’
And in Earl Richard and other
ballads, it is the ‘popinjay’ that proclaims
guilt or fear from turret or tree. One remembers
also ’Proud Maisie’ walking early in the
wood, and Sweet Robin piping her doom among the green
summer leaves:
’"Tell me, my bonnie
bird,
When shall I marry
me?”
“When six braw gentlemen
Kirkward shall
carry thee"’;
and the ‘Three Corbies’
croaking the most grim and dismal notes in all the
wide, wild range of ballad poetry, as they feast on
the new-slain knight:
’Ye ’ll sit on
his white hause bane,
And I ’ll pike oot his
bonnie blue een;
Wi’ ae lock o’
his yellow hair
We ’ll theak our nest
when it is bare.
O mony a ane for him maks
mane,
But nae ane kens whaur he
is gane,
O’er his white banes
when they are bare
The wind shall sigh for evermair.’
But things that have neither sense
nor life utter aloud words of menace and accusation.
Lord Barnard’s horn makes the forest echo with
the warning notes, ‘Away, Musgrave, away!’
Binnorie embalms the tradition of the ‘singing
bone’ which pervades the folklore of the Aryan
peoples, and is found also in China and among the
negro tribes of West Africa. A harper finds the
body of the drowned sister, and out of her ‘breast-bane’
he forms a harp which he strings with her yellow hair.
According to a northern version of the ballad, he makes
a plectrum from ‘a lith of her finger bane.’
On this strange instrument the minstrel plays before
king and court, and the strings sigh forth:
‘Wae to my sister, fair
Helen!’
In other ballads, the yearning or
remorse of the living draw the dead from their graves.
In the tale of The Cruel Mother, we seem to
see the workings of the guilty conscience, which at
length ‘visualised’ the victims of unnatural
murder. The bride goes alone to the bonnie greenwood,
to bear and to slay her twin children:
’She ’s wrapped
her mantle about her head,
All alone, and
alonie O!
She ’s gone to do a
fearful deed
Down by the greenwood
bonnie O!’
The crime and shame are hid; but peace
does not come to her:
‘The lady looked o’er
her high castle wa’,
All alone and
alonie O!
She saw twa bonnie bairnies
play at the ba’
Down by yon greenwood
bonnie O!
The mother’s yearning awakens
within her, and she promises them all manner of gifts
if they will only be hers. But the voices of the
ghost-children rise and pronounce judgment on her:
’O cruel mither, when
we were thine,
All alone and
alonie O!
From us ye did our young lives
twine,
Doon by yon greenwood
bonnie O.’
Elsewhere in these old rhymes may
be traced a superstitious belief, which was put in
practice as a means of discovering guilt, at least
as late as the middle of the seventeenth century that
of the Ordeal by Touch. In Young Benjie
another test is applied to find the murderer; and
at midnight the door of the death-chamber is set ajar,
so that the wandering spirit may enter and reanimate
for an hour the ’streikit corpse’:
’About the middle of
the night
The cocks began
to craw;
And at the dead hour o’
the night,
The corpse began
to thraw.’
It sat up; and with its dead lips
told the waiting brethren on whose head justice, tempered
with a strange streak of mercy, should fall for the
foul slaughter of their ‘ae sister’:
’Ye maunna Benjie head,
brothers,
Ye maunna Benjie
hang,
But ye maun pyke oot his twa
grey een
Before ye let
him gang.’
In Proud Lady Margaret, again,
we have a form of the legend, told in many lands,
and made familiar, in a milder form, by the classical
German ballad of The Lady of the Kynast, of
a haughty and cruel dame whose riddles are answered
and whose heart is at length won by a stranger knight.
She would fain ride home with him, but he answers her
that he is her brother Willie, come from the other
side of death to ’humble her haughty heart has
gart sae mony dee’:
’The wee worms are my
bedfellows
And cauld clay is my sheets’;
and there is no room in his narrow
house for other company. Out of the Dark Country,
too, on a similar errand, on Hallowe’en night,
rides the betrayed and slain knight in Child Rowland,
the first line of which, preserved in King Lear
as it was known in Shakespeare’s day, seems to
strike a keynote of ballad romance:
‘Child Rowland to the
dark tower came,’
mumbles the feigned madman in the
ear of the poor wronged king as they tread the waste
heath. And the sequel, as it has come down to
us, sustains and strengthens the spell of the opening:
’And he
tirled at the pin;
And wha sae ready as his fause
love,
To rise and let
him in.’
The passages that describe the haunted
ride in the moonlight, when the lady has fled from
the scene of her treachery and guilt, are not surpassed
in weird imaginative power, if they are equalled, by
anything in ballad or other literature:
’She hadna ridden a
mile, a mile,
Never a mile but
ane,
When she was ‘ware o’
a tall young man
Riding slowly
o’er the plain.
She turned her to the right
about,
And to the left
turned she;
But aye ’tween her and
the wan moonlight
That tall knight
did she see.’
She set whip and spur to her steed,
but ‘nae nearer could she get’; she appealed
to him, as from a ‘saikless,’ or guiltless,
maid to ’a leal true knight,’ to draw
his bridle-rein until she can come up with him:
’But nothing did that
tall knight say,
And nothing did
he blin;
Still slowly rade he
on before,
And fast she rade
behind,’
until he drew rein at a broad river-side. Then
he spoke:
’"This water it is deep,”
he said,
“As it is
wondrous dun;
But it is sic as a saikless
maid,
And a leal true
knight can swim."’
They plunged in together, and the flood bore them
down:
’"The water is waxing deeper
still,
Sae does it wax mair wide;
And aye the farther we ride on,
Farther off is the other side.”
. . .
. .
The knight turned slowly round
about
All in the middle stream,
He stretched out his hand to that lady,
And loudly she did scream.
“O, this is Hallow-morn,”
he said,
“And it is your bridal day;
But sad would be that gay wedding
Were bridegroom and bride away.
But ride on, ride on, proud Margaret,
Till the water comes o’er your bree;
For the bride maun ride deep and deeper yet
Who rides this ford wi’ me."’
But the perturbed spirit does not
always thus revisit the glimpses of the moon to awaken
conscience, to humble pride, or to wreak vengeance.
More often it is the repinings and longings of passionate
love that keep it from its rest. In maerchen
and ballad the ghost of the lover comes to complain
that the tears which his betrothed sheds nightly fill
his shroud with blood; when she smiles, it is filled
with rose leaves. The mother steals from the
grave to hap and comfort her orphan children; their
harsh stepmother neglects and ill-treats them, and
their exceeding bitter and desolate cry has penetrated
beneath the sod, and reached the dead ear. In
The Clerk’s Sons o’ Owsenford, and
in that singular fragment of the same creepy theme,
recovered by Scott, The Wife of Usher’s Well,
it is the yearning of the living mother that brings
the dead sons back to their home:
’"Blaw up the fire,
my maidens,
Bring water from
the well!
For a’ my house shall
feast this nicht,
Since my three
sons are well."’
The revenants, silent guests
with staring eyes, wait and warm themselves by the
fireside, while the ‘carline wife’ ministers
to their wants, and spreads her ‘gay mantle’
over them to keep them from the cold, until their
time comes:
’"The cock doth craw,
the day doth daw,
The channerin’
worm doth chide;
Gin we be missed out o’
our place
A sair pain we
must bide.”
“Lie still, be still
a little wee while,
Lie still but
if we may;
Gin my mother should miss
us when she wakes,
She ’ll
gae mad, ere it be day.”
O it ’s they ’ve
taen up their mother’s mantle,
And they ’ve
hung it on a pin;
“O lang may ye
hing, my mother’s mantle,
Ere ye hap us
again."’
A chill air as from the charnel-house
seems to breathe upon us while reading the lines;
the coldness, the darkness, and the horror of death
have never been painted for us with more terrible power
than in the ‘Wiertz Gallery’ of the old
balladists.
We feel this also in the ballads of
the type of Sweet William and May Margaret,
quoted in Beaumont and Fletcher’s Knight of
the Burning Pestle, where the dead returns to
claim back a plighted word; and at the same time we
feel the strength of the perfect love that triumphs
over death and casts out fear:
’"Is there any room
at your head, Willie,
Or any room at
your feet,
Or any room at your side,
Willie,
Wherein that I
may creep?"’
How miserably the poetical taste of
the early part of last century misappreciated the
spirit of the ancient ballad, preferring the dross
to the fine gold, and tricking out the ‘terrific
old Scottish tale,’ as Sir Walter Scott calls
it, in meretricious ornament, may be seen by comparing
the original copies with that ‘elegant’
composition of David Mallet, William and Margaret,
so praised and popular in its day, in which every
change made is a disfigurement of the nature of an
outrage. Read the summons of the ghost, still
‘naked of ornament and simple’:
’"O sweet Marg’ret,
O dear Marg’ret!
I pray thee speak
to me;
Gie me my faith and troth,
Marg’ret,
As I gae it to
thee,"’
along with the ‘improved’ version:
’"Awake!” she
cried, “thy true love calls,
Come from her
midnight grave;
Now let thy pity hear the
maid
Thy love refused
to save."’
Of a long antiquity most of these
Mythological Ballads must be, if not in their actual
phraseology, in the dark superstitions they embody
and in the pathetic glimpses they afford us of the
thoughts and fears and hopes of the men and women
of the days of long ago the days before
feudalism; the days, as some inquisitors of the ballad
assure us, when religion was a kind of fetichism or
ancestor worship, when the laws were the laws of the
tribe or family, and when the cannibal feast may have
been among the customs of the race. We cannot
find a time when this inheritance of legend was not
old; when it was not sung, and committed to memory,
and handed down to later generations in some rude rhyme.
The leading ‘types’ were in the wallet
of Autolycus; and he describes certain of them with
a seasoning of his grotesque humour, to his simple
country audience. There were the well-attested
tale of the Usurer’s Wife, a ballad sung,
as ballads are wont, ’to a very doleful tune’ obviously
a form of the Supernatural Birth; and the story, true
as it is pitiful, of the fish that turned to woman,
and then back again to fish, in which he that runs
may read an example from the Mermaid Cycle. They
are to be found to-day, often in debased and barely
recognisable guise, in the hands of the peripatetic
ballad-mongers who still haunt fairs and sing in the
streets, and in the memories of multitudes of country
folks who know scarce any other literature bearing
the magic trademark of Old Romance.