Introduction
In considering the hero-myths of Scotland
we are at once confronted with two difficulties.
The first, and perhaps the greater, is this, that
the only national heroes of Lowland Scotland are actual
historical persons, with very little of the mythical
character about them. The mention of Scottish
heroes at once suggests Sir William Wallace, Robert
Bruce, the Black Douglas, Sir Andrew Barton, and many
more, whose exploits are matter of serious chronicle
and sober record rather than subject of tradition
and myth. These warriors are too much in reach
of the fierce white searchlight of historic inquiry
to be invested with mythical interest or to show any
developments of ancient legend.
The second difficulty is of a different
nature, and yet almost equally perplexing. In
the old ballads and poems of the Gaelic Highlands there
are mythical heroes in abundance, such as Fingal and
Ossian, Comala, and a host of shadowy chieftains and
warriors, but they are not distinctively Scotch.
They are only Highland Gaelic versions of the Irish
Gaelic hero-legends, Scotch embodiments of Finn and
Oisin, whose real home was in Ireland, and whose legends
were carried to the Western Isles and the Highlands
by conquering tribes of Scots from Erin. These
heroes are at bottom Irish, the champions of the Fenians
and of the Red Branch, and in the Scotch legends they
have lost much of their original beauty and chivalry.
The Highland Clans
It is rather in the private history
of the country, as it were, than in its national records
that we are likely to find a hero who will have something
of the mythical in his story, something of the romance
of the Middle Ages. The wars and jealousies of
the clans, the adventures of a chief among hostile
tribesmen, the raids and forays, the loves and hatreds
of rival families, form a good background for a romantic
legend; and such a legend occurs in the story of Black
Colin of Loch Awe, a warrior of the great Campbell
clan in the fourteenth century. The tale is common
in one form or another to all European lands where
the call of the Crusades was heard, and the romantic
Crusading element has to a certain extent softened
the occasionally ferocious nature of Highland stories
in general, so that there is no bloodthirsty vengeance,
no long blood-feud, to be recorded of Black Colin
Campbell.
The Knight of Loch Awe
During the wars between England and
Scotland in the reigns of Edward I. and Edward II.
one of the chief leaders in the cause of Scottish
independence was Sir Nigel Campbell. The Knight
of Loch Awe, as he was generally called, was a schoolfellow
and comrade of Sir William Wallace, and a loyal and
devoted adherent of Robert Bruce. In return for
his services in the war of independence Bruce rewarded
him with lands belonging to the rebellious MacGregors,
including Glenurchy, the great glen at the head of
Loch Awe through which flows the river Orchy.
It was a wild and lonely district, and Sir Nigel Campbell
had much conflict before he finally expelled the MacGregors
and settled down peaceably in Glenurchy. There
his son was born, and named Colin, and as years passed
he won the nickname of Black Colin, from his swarthy
complexion, or possibly from his character, which showed
tokens of unusual fierceness and determination.
Black Colin’s Youth
Sir Nigel Campbell, as all Highland
chiefs did, sent his son to a farmer’s family
for fosterage. The boy became a child of his
foster-family in every way; he lived on the plain food
of the clansmen, oatmeal porridge and oatcake, milk
from the cows, and beef from the herds; he ran and
wrestled and hunted with his foster-brothers, and
learnt woodcraft and warlike skill, broadsword play
and the use of dirk and buckler, from his foster-father.
More than all, he won a devoted following in the clan,
for a man’s foster-parents were almost dearer
to him than his own father and mother, and his foster-brethren
were bound to fight and die for him, and to regard
him more than their own blood-relations. The
foster-parents of Black Colin were a farmer and his
wife, Patterson by name, living at Socach, in Glenurchy,
and well and truly they fulfilled their trust.
He Goes on Crusade
In course of time Sir Nigel Campbell
died, and Black Colin, his son, became Knight of Loch
Awe, and lord of all Glenurchy and the country round.
He was already noted for his strength and his dark
complexion, which added to his beauty in the eyes
of the maidens, and he soon found a lovely and loving
bride. They dwelt on the Islet in Loch Awe, and
were very happy for a short time, but Colin was always
restless, because he would fain do great deeds of
arms, and there was peace just then in the land.
At last one day a messenger arrived
at the castle on the Islet bearing tidings that another
crusade was on foot. This messenger was a palmer
who had been in the Holy Land, and had seen all the
holy places in Jerusalem. He told Black Colin
how the Saracens ruled the country, and hindered men
from worshipping at the sacred shrines; and he told
how he had come home by Rome, where the Pope had just
proclaimed another Holy War. The Pope had declared
that his blessing would rest on the man who should
leave wife and home and kinsfolk, and go forth to
fight for the Lord against the infidel. As the
palmer spoke Black Colin became greatly moved by his
words, and when the old man had made an end he raised
the hilt of his dirk and swore by the cross thereon
that he would obey the summons and go on crusade.
The Lady of Loch Awe
Now Black Colin’s wife was greatly
grieved, and wept sorely, for she was but young, and
had been wedded no more than a year, and it seemed
to her hard that she must be left alone. She asked
her husband: “How far will you go on this
errand?” “I will go as far as Jerusalem,
if the Pope bids me, when I have come to Rome,”
said he. “Alas! and how long will you be
away from me?” “That I know not, but it
may be for years if the heathen Saracens will not
surrender the Holy Land to the warriors of the Cross.”
“What shall I do during those long, weary years?”
asked she. “Dear love, you shall dwell here
on the Islet and be Lady of Glenurchy till I return
again. The vassals and clansmen shall obey you
in my stead, and the tenants shall pay you their rents
and their dues, and in all things you shall hold my
land for me.”
The Token
The Lady of Loch Awe sighed as she
asked: “But if you die away in that distant
land how shall I know? What will become of me
if at last such woeful tidings should be brought?”
“Wait for me seven years, dear
wife,” said Colin, “and if I do not return
before the end of that time you may marry again and
take a brave husband to guard your rights and rule
the glen, for I shall be dead in the Holy Land.”
“That I will never do.
I will be the Lady of Glenurchy till I die, or I will
become the bride of Heaven and find peace for my sorrowing
soul in a nunnery. No second husband shall wed
me and hold your land. But give me now some token
that we may share it between us; and you shall swear
that on your deathbed you will send it to me; so shall
I know indeed that you are no longer alive.”
“It shall be as you say,”
answered Black Colin, and he went to the smith of
the clan and bade him make a massive gold ring, on
which Colin’s name was engraved, as well as
that of the Lady of Loch Awe. Then, breaking
the ring in two, Colin gave to his wife the piece with
his name and kept the other piece, vowing to wear it
near his heart and only to part with it when he should
be dying. In like manner she with bitter weeping
swore to keep her half of the ring, and hung it on
a chain round her neck; and so, with much grief and
great mourning from the whole clan, Black Colin and
his sturdy following of Campbell clansmen set out
for the Holy Land.
The Journey
Sadly at first the little band marched
away from all their friends and their homes; bagpipes
played their loudest marching tunes, and plaids fluttered
in the breeze, and the men marched gallantly, but with
heavy hearts, for they knew not when they would return,
and they feared to find supplanters in their homes
when they came back after many years. Their courage
rose, however, as the miles lengthened behind them,
and by the time they had reached Edinburgh and had
taken ship at Leith all was forgotten but the joy
of fighting and the eager desire to see Rome and the
Pope, the Holy Land and the Holy Sepulchre. Journeying
up the Rhine, the Highland clansmen made their way
through Switzerland and over the passes of the Alps
down into the pleasant land of Italy, where the splendour
of the cities surpassed their wildest imaginations;
and so they came at last, with many other bands of
Crusaders, to Rome.
The Crusade
At Rome the Knight of Loch Awe was
so fortunate as to have an audience of the Pope himself,
who was touched by the devotion which brought these
stern warriors so far from their home. Black Colin
knelt in reverence before the aged pontiff, whom he
held in truth to be the Vicar of Christ on earth,
and received his blessing, and commands to continue
his journey to Rhodes, where the Knights of St. John
would give him opportunity to fight for the faith.
The small band of Campbells went on to Rhodes, and
there took service with the Knights, and won great
praise from the Grand Master; but, though they fought
the infidel, and exalted the standard of the Cross
above the Crescent, Colin was still not at all satisfied.
He left Rhodes after some years with a much-diminished
band, and made his way as a pilgrim to Jerusalem.
There he stayed until he had visited all the shrines
in the Holy Land and prayed at every sacred spot.
By this time the seven years of his proposed absence
were ended, and he was still far from his home and
the dear glen by Loch Awe.
The Lady’s Suitor
While the seven years slowly passed
away his sad and lonely wife dwelt in the castle on
the Islet, ruling her lord’s clan in all gentle
ways, but fighting boldly when raiders came to plunder
her clansmen. Yearly she claimed her husband’s
dues and watched that he was not defrauded of his
rights. But though thus firm, she was the best
help in trouble that her clan ever had, and all blessed
the name of the Lady of Loch Awe.
So fair and gentle a lady, so beloved
by her clan, was certain to have suitors if she were
a widow, and even before the seven years had passed
away there were men who would gladly have persuaded
her that her husband was dead and that she was free.
She, however, steadfastly refused to hear a word of
another marriage, saying: “When Colin parted
from me he gave me two promises, one to return, if
possible, within seven years, and the other to send
me, on his deathbed, if he died away from me, a sure
token of his death. I have not yet waited seven
years, nor have I had the token of his death.
I am still the wife of Black Colin of Loch Awe.”
This steadfastness gradually daunted
her suitors and they left her alone, until but one
remained, the Baron Niel MacCorquodale, whose lands
bordered on Glenurchy, and who had long cast covetous
eyes on the glen and its fair lady, and longed no
less for the wealth she was reputed to possess than
for the power this marriage would give him.
The Baron’s Plot
When the seven years were over the
Baron MacCorquodale sought the Lady of Loch Awe again,
wooing her for his wife. Again she refused, saying,
“Until I have the token of my husband’s
death I will be wife to no other man.”
“And what is this token, lady?” asked the
Baron, for he thought he could send a false one.
“I will never tell that,” replied the
lady. “Do you dare to ask the most sacred
secret between husband and wife? I shall know
the token when it comes.” The Baron was
not a little enraged that he could not discover the
secret, but he determined to wed the lady and her
wealth notwithstanding; accordingly he wrote by a
sure and secret messenger to a friend in Rome, bidding
him send a letter with news that Black Colin was assuredly
dead, and that certain words (which the Baron dictated)
had come from him.
A Forged Letter
One day the Lady of Loch Awe, looking
out from her castle, saw the Baron coming, and with
him a palmer whose face was bronzed by Eastern suns.
She felt that the palmer would bring tidings, and welcomed
the Baron with his companion. “Lady, this
palmer brings you sad news,” quoth the Baron.
“Let him tell it, then,” replied she, sick
with fear. “Alas! fair dame, if you were
the wife of that gallant knight Colin of Loch Awe,
you are now his widow,” said the palmer sadly,
as he handed her a letter. “What proof
have you?” asked Black Colin’s wife before
she read the letter. “Lady, I talked with
the soldier who brought the tidings,” replied
the stranger.
The letter was written from Rome to
“The Right Noble Dame the Lady of Loch Awe,”
and told how news had come from Rhodes, brought by
a man of Black Colin’s band, that the Knight
of Loch Awe had been mortally wounded in a fight against
the Saracens. Dying, he had bidden his clansmen
return to their lady, but they had all perished but
one, fighting for vengeance against the infidels.
This man, who had held the dying Knight tenderly upon
his knee, said that Colin bade his wife farewell,
bade her remember his injunction to wed again and find
a protector, gasped out, “Take her the token
I promised; it is here,” and died; but the Saracens
attacked the Christians again, drove them back, and
plundered the bodies of the slain, and when the one
survivor returned to search for the precious token
there was none! The body was stripped of everything
of value, and the clansman wound it in the plaid and
buried it on the battlefield.
The Lady’s Stratagem
There seemed no reason for the lady
to doubt this news, and her grief was very real and
sincere. She clad herself in mourning robes and
bewailed her lost husband, but yet she was not entirely
satisfied, for she still wore the broken half of the
engraved ring on the chain round her neck, and still
the promised death-token had not come. The Baron
now pressed his suit with greater ardour than before,
and the Lady of Loch Awe was hard put to it to find
reasons for refusing him. It was necessary to
keep him on good terms with the clan, for his lands
bordered on those of Glenurchy, and he could have made
war on the people in the glen quite easily, while
the knowledge that their chief was dead would have
made them a broken clan. So the lady turned to
guile, as did Penelope of old in similar distress.
“I will wed you, now that my Colin is dead,”
she replied at last, “but it cannot be immediately;
I must first build a castle that will command the head
of Glenurchy and of Loch Awe. The MacGregors
knew the best place for a house, there on Innis Eoalan;
there, where the ruins of MacGregor’s White
House now stand, will I build my castle. When
it is finished the time of my mourning will be over,
and I will fix the bridal day.” With this
promise the Baron had perforce to be contented, and
the castle began to rise slowly at the head of Loch
Awe; but its progress was not rapid, because the lady
secretly bade her men build feebly, and often the
walls fell down, so that the new castle was very long
in coming to completion.
Black Colin Hears the News
In the meantime all who loved Black
Colin grieved to know that the Lady of Loch Awe would
wed again, and his foster-mother sorrowed most of
all, for she felt sure that her beloved Colin was not
dead. The death-token had not been sent, and
she sorely mistrusted the Baron MacCorquodale and
doubted the truth of the palmer’s message.
At last, when the new castle was nearly finished and
shone white in the rays of the sun, she called one
of her sons and bade him journey to Rome to find the
Knight of Loch Awe, if he were yet alive, and to bring
sure tidings of his death if he were no longer living.
The young Patterson set off secretly, and reached
Rome in due course, and there he met Black Colin,
just returned from Jerusalem. The Knight had at
last realized that he had spent seven years away from
his home, and that now, in spite of all his haste,
he might reach Glenurchy too late to save his wife
from a second marriage. He comforted himself,
however, with the thought that the token was still
safe with him, and that his wife would be loyal; great,
therefore, was his horror when he met his foster-brother
and heard how the news of his death had been brought
to the glen. He heard also how his wife had reluctantly
promised to marry the Baron MacCorquodale, and had
delayed her wedding by stratagem, and he vowed that
he would return to Glenurchy in time to spoil the
plans of the wicked baron.
Black Colin’s Return
Travelling day and night, Black Colin,
with his faithful clansman, came near to Glenurchy,
and sent his follower on in advance to bring back
news. The youth returned with tidings that the
wedding had been fixed for the next day, since the
castle was finished and no further excuse for delay
could be made. Then Colin’s anger was greatly
roused, and he vowed that the Baron MacCorquodale,
who had stooped to deceit and forgery to gain his
ends, should pay dearly for his baseness. Bidding
his young clansman show no sign of recognition when
he appeared, the Knight of Loch Awe sent him to the
farm in the glen, where the anxious foster-mother
eagerly awaited the return of the wanderer. When
she saw her son appear alone she was plunged into
despair, for she concluded, not that Black Colin was
dead, but that he would return too late. When
he, in the beggar’s disguise which he assumed,
came down the Glen he saw the smoke from the castle
on the Islet, and said: “I see smoke from
my house, and it is the smoke of a wedding feast in
preparation, but I pray God who sent us light and
love that I may reap the fruit of the love that is
there.”
The Foster-Mother’s Recognition
The Knight then went to his foster-mother’s
house, knocked at the door, and humbly craved food
and shelter, as a beggar. “Come in, good
man,” quoth the mistress of the house; “sit
down in the chimney-corner, and you shall have your
fill of oatcake and milk.” Colin sat down
heavily, as if he were overwearied, and the farmer’s
wife moved about slowly, putting before him what she
had; and the Knight saw that she did not recognise
him, and that she had been weeping quite recently.
“You are sad, I can see,” he said.
“What is the cause of your grief?” “I
am not minded to tell that to a wandering stranger,”
she replied. “Perhaps I can guess what it
is,” he continued; “you have lost some
dear friend, I think.” “My loss is
great enough to give me grief,” she answered,
weeping. “I had a dear foster-son, who
went oversea to fight the heathen. He was dearer
to me than my own sons, and now news has come that
he is dead in that foreign land. And the Lady
of Loch Awe, who was his wife, is to wed another husband
to-morrow. Long she waited for him, past the seven
years he was to be away, and now she would not marry
again, but that a letter has come to assure her of
his death. Even yet she is fretting because she
has not had the token he promised to send her; and
she will only marry because she dare no longer delay.”
“What is this token?”
asked Colin. “That I know not: she
has never told,” replied the foster-mother;
“but oh! if he were now here Glenurchy would
never fall under the power of Baron MacCorquodale.”
“Would you know Black Colin if you were to see
him?” the beggar asked meaningly; and she replied:
“I think I should, for though he has been away
for years, I nursed him, and he is my own dear fosterling.”
“Look well at me, then, good mother of mine,
for I am Colin of Loch Awe.”
The mistress of the farm seized the
beggar-man by the arm, drew him out into the light,
and looked earnestly into his face; then, with a scream
of joy, she flung her arms around him, and cried:
“O Colin! Colin! my dear son, home again
at last! Glad and glad I am to see you here in
time! Weary have the years been since my nursling
went away, but now you are home all will be well.”
And she embraced him and kissed him and stroked his
hair, and exclaimed at his bronzed hue and his ragged
attire.
The Foster-Mother’s Plan
At last Colin stopped her raptures.
“Tell me, mother, does my wife seem to wish
for this marriage?” he asked; and his foster-mother
answered: “Nay, my son, she would not wed
now but that, thinking you are dead, she fears the
Baron’s anger if she continues to refuse him.
But if you doubt her heart, follow my counsel, and
you shall be assured of her will in this matter.”
“What do you advise?” asked he. She
answered: “Stay this night with me here,
and to-morrow go in your beggar’s dress to the
castle on the Islet. Stand with other beggars
at the door, and refuse to go until the bride herself
shall bring you food and drink. Then you can
put your token in the cup the Lady of Loch Awe will
hand you, and by her behaviour you shall learn if her
heart is in this marriage or not.” “Dear
mother, your plan is good, and I will follow it,”
quoth Colin. “This night I will rest here,
and on the morrow I will seek my wife.”
The Beggar at the Wedding
Early next day Colin arose, clad himself
in the disguise of a sturdy beggar, took a kindly
farewell of his foster-mother, and made his way to
the castle. Early as it was, all the servants
were astir, and the whole place was in a bustle of
preparation, while vagabonds of every description
hung round the doors, begging for food and money in
honour of the day. The new-comer acted much more
boldly: he planted himself right in the open
doorway and begged for food and drink in such a lordly
tone that the servants were impressed by it, and one
of them brought him what he asked oatcake
and buttermilk and gave it to him, saying,
“Take this and begone.” Colin took
the alms and drank the buttermilk, but put the cake
into his wallet, and stood sturdily right in the doorway,
so that the servants found it difficult to enter.
Another servant came to him with more food and a horn
of ale, saying, “Now take this second gift of
food and begone, for you are in our way here, and
hinder us in our work.”
The Beggar’s Demand
But he stood more firmly still, with
his stout travelling-staff planted on the threshold,
and said: “I will not go.” Then
a third servant approached, who said: “Go
at once, or it will be the worse for you. We
have given you quite enough for one beggar. Leave
quickly now, or you will get us and yourself into
trouble.” The disguised Knight only replied:
“I will not go until the bride herself comes
out to give me a drink of wine,” and he would
not move, for all they could say. The servants
at last grew so perplexed that they went to tell their
mistress about this importunate beggar. She laughed
as she said: “It is not much for me to
do on my last day in the old house,” and she
bade a servant attend her to the door, bringing a large
jug full of wine.
The Token
As the unhappy bride came out to the
beggar-man he bent his head in greeting, and she noticed
his travel-stained dress and said: “You
have come from far, good man”; and he replied:
“Yes, lady, I have seen many distant lands.”
“Alas! others have gone to see distant lands
and have not returned,” said she. “If
you would have a drink from the hands of the bride
herself, I am she, and you may take your wine now”;
and, holding a bowl in her hands, she bade the servant
fill it with wine, and then gave it to Colin.
“I drink to your happiness,” said he, and
drained the bowl. As he gave it back to the lady
he placed within it the token, the half of the engraved
ring. “I return it richer than I took it,
lady,” said he, and his wife looked within and
saw the token.
The Recognition
Trembling violently, she snatched
the tiny bit of gold from the bottom of the bowl,
which fell to the ground and broke at her feet, and
then she saw her own name engraved upon it. She
looked long and long at the token, and then, pulling
a chain at her neck, drew out her half of the ring
with Colin’s name engraved on it. “O
stranger, tell me, is my husband dead?” she
asked, grasping the beggar’s arm. “Dead?”
he questioned, gazing tenderly at her; and at his
tone she looked straight into his eyes and knew him.
“My husband!” was all that she could say,
but she flung her arms around his neck and was clasped
close to his heart. The servants stood bewildered,
but in a moment their mistress had turned to them,
saying, “Run, summon all the household, bring
them all, for this is my husband, Black Colin of Loch
Awe, come home to me again.” When all in
the castle knew it there was great excitement and
rejoicing, and they feasted bountifully, for the wedding
banquet had been prepared.
The Baron’s Flight
While the feast was in progress, and
the happy wife sat by her long-lost husband and held
his hand, as though she feared to let him leave her,
a distant sound of bagpipes was heard, and the lady
remembered that the Baron MacCorquodale would be coming
for his wedding, which she had entirely forgotten
in her joy. She laughed lightly to herself, and,
beckoning a clansman, bade him go and tell the Baron
that she would take no new husband, since her old one
had come back to her, and that there would be questions
to be answered when time served. The Baron MacCorquodale,
in his wedding finery, with a great party of henchmen
and vassals and pipers blowing a wedding march, had
reached the mouth of the river which enters the side
of Loch Awe; the party had crossed the river, and
were ready to take boat across to the Islet, when
they saw a solitary man rowing towards them with all
speed. “It is some messenger from my lady,”
said the Baron, and he waited eagerly to hear the
message. With dreadful consternation he listened
to the unexpected words as the clansman delivered them,
and then bade the pipers cease their music. “We
must return; there will be no wedding to-day, since
Black Colin is home again,” quoth he; and the
crestfallen party retraced their steps, quickening
them more and more as they thought of the vengeance
of the long-lost chieftain; but they reached their
home in safety.
Castle Kilchurn
In the meantime Colin had much to
tell his wife of his adventures, and to ask her of
her life all these years. They told each other
all, and Colin saw the false letter that had been
sent to the Lady of Loch Awe, and guessed who had
plotted this deceit. His anger grew against the
bad man who had wrought this wrong and had so nearly
gained his end, and he vowed that he would make the
Baron dearly abide it. His wife calmed his fury
somewhat by telling him how she had waited even beyond
the seven years, and what stratagem she had used, and
at last he promised not to make war on the Baron,
but to punish him in other ways.
“Tell me what you have done
with the rents of Glenurchy these seven years,”
said he. Then the happy wife replied: “With
part I have lived, with part I have guarded the glen,
and with part have I made a cairn of stones at the
head of Loch Awe. Will you come with me and see
it?” And Colin went, deeply puzzled. When
they came to the head of Loch Awe, there stood the
new castle, on the site of the old house of the MacGregors;
and the proud wife laughed as she said: “Do
you like my cairn of stones? It has taken long
to build.” Black Colin was much pleased
with the beautiful castle she had raised for him, and
renamed it Kilchurn Castle, which title it still keeps.
True to his vow, he took no bloody vengeance on the
Baron MacCorquodale, but when a few years after he
fell into his power the Knight of Loch Awe forced him
to resign a great part of his lands to be united with
those of Glenurchy.