Introduction
The myths and legends of Scotland are full of
what is called "local colour". They afford us not only glimpses of
ancient times and of old habits of thought and life, but also of
the country itself at different times of the year. In the winter
season the great mountain ranges are white with snow and many
inland lochs are frozen over, but along the west coast, which is
washed by the warm surface waters of the Atlantic and bathed in
mild moist breezes from the south-west, there may be found
sheltered and sunny spots where wild flowers continue to bloom. The
old people believed that somewhere in the west the spirit of Spring
had its hiding-place, and they imagined this hiding-place to be a
green floating island on which the sun always shone and flowers
were always blooming. During the reign of Beira 1, Queen of Winter,
the spirit of Spring, they thought, was always trying to visit
Scotland, and they imagined that Beira raised the storms of January
and February to prolong her reign by keeping the grass from
growing. Beira was regarded as a hard and cruel old woman, and the
story of her exploits is the story of the weather conditions in
winter and early spring. She rouses the dangerous whirlpool of
Corryvreckan, she brings the snow, she unlooses the torrents that
cause rivers to overflow. According to folk belief, it was she who
formed the lochs and the mountains. In the days when the people had
no calendar, the various periods of good and bad weather were named
after the battles of Beira and the victories of the spirits of
sunshine and growth. Gaelic-speaking people still refer to certain
gales in February and March by their ancient names--the "whistling
wind ", the "sweeper", and so on, as set forth in the second
chapter. On the northeast coast even those fisher folks, who are
not Gaelic speakers, still tell that the fierce southwesterly gales
of early spring are caused by the storm-wife whom they call "Gentle
Annie". This Annie may be the same old deity as Black Annis of
Leicestershire and Anu of Ireland, whose name lingers in the place
name, the "Paps of Anu", a mountain group in County Kerry. In
Scotland the story of the winter goddess, Beira, has a strictly
local setting. She is, in consequence, a local deity. Bride, the
lady of summer growth, is still remembered also, and there are
beautiful Gaelic songs about her.
Other stories have likewise a local character. Those who know
the west coast will be familiar with the glorious transparency of
the hill-surrounded lochs in calm weather. When the old people saw
the waters reflecting the mountains and forests, the bare cliffs
and the bright girths of green verdure, they imagined a
"Land-under-Waves" about which they, of course, made stories. The
"Northern Lights" (aurora borealis), which are a feature of
northern winters, also stirred their imaginations. They called
these vivid and beautiful streamers "Nimble Men" and "Merry
Dancers", and believed they sometimes danced and sometimes waged
war. In the red-spotted green stones called "blood stones" they saw
the blood-drops of the wounded. When the streamers are particularly
bright a red cloud often appears below them; this the old people
called "the pool of fairy blood".
In like manner they accounted for the restlessness of the
waters of a strait between the island of Lewis and the Shant
islands by imagining that Blue Men were always swimming up and down
this haunt of theirs, trying to sink boats and ships. As the Gaelic
people have ever been great lovers of poetry, they made the Blue
Men poets, and told that they spared those seafarers who were able
to complete the half verses they shouted to them, by way of
challenge, for trial of skill. The "Blue Men" are peculiar to
Scotland, and especially to the north-western area.
In other stories we find female water spirits who wait at
fords, threatening travellers with disaster. They also could be
thwarted by those who had the necessary knowledge which made it
possible for them to secure protection.
Almost all the rivers of Scotland were abodes of goddesses,
but about many of them there are no surviving stories. The
character of a goddess was suggested by that of a river. The
goddess of the river Forth, for instance, was "the deaf or
soundless one", because the Forth is a comparatively silent river;
the goddess of the Clyde, on the other hand, was "the purifying
one", because the old people knew it: as a river which scoured the
country it passed through, and carried much mud and clay seaward
when in flood. 1
Many old stories have been lost, of course, and those which
remain are mere fragments of an ancient mythology. In different
parts of Scotland there are variations of legends, because the
local conditions are of varying character.
Readers may ask how the stories of ancient beliefs happen to
be preserved in Christian times. One reason is because they are
connected with place names; another because certain of them were
recorded centuries ago by early writers. One of the early Scottish
collectors of old legends and poems was Sir James MacGregor, Dean
of Lismore, who lived in the sixteenth century. His manuscript
volume is still in existence, and the most of it can be read
without difficulty. It is called "The Dean of Lismore's Book".
The greater number of collected legends, however, have been
taken down from reciters in recent times. In the days when there
were no books, poets and story-tellers committed their compositions
to memory. These they repeated to their students, who in turn
repeated them to others. In this way poems and stories were handed
down from generation to generation. Even in our own day it is
possible to find not a few Gaelic-speaking men and women who can
repeat compositions many thousands of words in length which they
have learned by rote. The writer knew an old woman whose stories
would have filled a volume quite as large as this one. Some of the
poems collected by the Dean of Lismore in the sixteenth century
were still repeated about a generation ago, almost word for word,
by old reciters in the Highlands, certain of whom could neither
read nor write.
Men and women able to repeat popular poems and stories have
always been greatly thought of in the Gaelic-speaking parts of
Scotland. On long, dark winter nights it is still the custom in
small villages for friends to collect in a house and hold what they
call a "ceilidh" (pronounced kay'lee). Young and old are
entertained by the reciters of old poems and legendary stories
which deal with ancient beliefs, the doings of traditional heroes
and heroines, and so on. Some sing old and new songs set to old
music or new music composed in the manner of the old. In this way
some of the ancient poems, stories, and music of the early
inhabitants of Scotland have been preserved till our own times.
The wonder tales of Scotland do not afford a very clear
indication of the attitude of worshippers towards their deities. So
far as can be gathered, they loved and admired some deities,
especially those that brought them good luck and plenty, and they
hated and feared those deities who were supposed to cause suffering
and disaster. At the same time they believed that there were
mysterious Powers, or a Power, greater than the gods and goddesses.
Beira, the winter queen, might raise storms and bring snow
and frost, but when the spring season came on she could not prevent
the grass growing or the trees budding. The Powers which caused the
seasons to change were never named; they were not even given human
attributes. When we study the customs and search through the
stories for traces of religious beliefs and practices, we find that
there were many ceremonies, some of which still survive. The old
people appear to have been greatly concerned about the earth, the
water supply, and the weather. When they took oaths they swore by
the earth. In one old story, for instance, a hero is insulted and
badly treated by his enemies. He complains to his companions.
"When", this story runs, "he rehearsed to them the tale of his
wanderings, and told of the insults and of the bad treatment he had
received, and the hardships he had endured since they had
separated, they lifted a little piece of earth and they shouted
'Vengeance'." That is, they swore by what was holiest to them. In
various parts of Scotland there are earth mounds which used to be
sacred to the old people. They held regular assemblies upon them,
at which new laws were made and law-breakers were judged. Religious
ceremonies were also performed. When Christianity was introduced,
the sacred mounds and the lands surrounding them were, in many
cases, taken over as church-lands. The Gaelic name for
"church-lands" is derived from the name of an earth goddess, and
rendered in English as "Navity" or "Navie". No doubt Beira, who was
a goddess of the mountains, lochs, and rivers, as well as of the
weather, had some connection with the earth spirit. She kept herds
of wild animals, like the Greek Artemis. At the same time she found
the "Powers", which caused the grass to grow, were opposed to her
when spring came on. The period of her reign was limited to winter,
and during winter the "Powers" favoured her.
The earth Power, or Powers, may also have had control over
the fairies who were usually clad in green, which was a
supernatural colour. It is still regarded unlucky for ladies to
wear green dresses. An old Scottish saying is:
A Graham in green
Should never be seen.
In Wales one of the names of the fairies is Y Mamau, which
means "The Mothers". It may be the fairies represent the ancient
group of "Earth Mothers" who caused the grass to grow, the corn
seeds to sprout in the earth, the trees to bud, blossom, and bear
fruit. The fairies are always represented as busy workers; they
teach human beings how to compose music and make musical
instruments, how to make implements and weapons, and so on; and
they sometimes. assist them to spin and weave, to sow seeds, to.
plough and to reap. The people made food offerings to the fairies,
who were very fond of meal. Mothers used to put meal in children's
pockets. to protect them against the fairies.
Certain animals were connected with the earth spirit or
spirits. One was the boar, and there are references in Gaelic
stories to a "green boar"' and a fierce "black boar". In the
northern and southern Highlands there long existed a prejudice
against pork, because pigs were, it seems, sacred animals. The
devil is sometimes called the "Black Pig", because the early
Christians regarded the Pagan gods as demons. Another sacred animal
was the serpent. All winter long it slept secure from storms. and
cold. When, however, Beira, the winter goddess, was overthrown, and
Bride, the goddess of growth, began her reign, the serpent came
forth from its winter abode. The people then chanted a hymn, of
which the following is a verse:--
To-day is the Day of Bride,
The serpent shall come from his hole,
I will not molest the serpent,
And the serpent will not molest me.
The serpent was sometimes called "Daughter of Ivor", and Mac
Ivors were supposed to be safe from attack by her and all other
serpents. She was also referred to as "noble queen". It is possible
she was a form of the Earth spirit in spring-time. Another verse of
a Bride's Day hymn is:--
The serpent will come from the hole
On the brown day of Bride,
Though there should be three feet of snow
On the flat surface of the ground. 1
A white serpent was supposed to give skill to physicians. A
part of the body was cooked, and he who first tasted the juice of
the serpent obtained power to cure diseases. This belief will be
found in the story about Michael Scott.
The salmon was a sacred fish, and he who likewise first
tasted the juice of a certain salmon obtained the power to foretell
events. When the first salmon grilse of the season is caught,
salmon fishers on the east coast make merry and celebrate the
event, as probably did their pagan ancestors in ancient times. On
several of the old standing stones of Scotland there are drawings
of salmon. Serpents are also depicted.
How did the old people worship the earth and other spirits?
The answer is that they made offerings to them, and performed
ceremonies to secure luck and protect themselves against attack.
Instead of prayers they used magical verses. Various charms were
repeated to cure diseases and ward off trouble. Here is an extract
from a charm against the "evil eye":--
The eye that went over,
And came back,
That reached the bone,
And reached the marrow,
I will lift from off thee--
And the King of the Elements will aid me.
The person who repeated the charm believed that the injurious
influence of the "evil eye" would be "lifted off" with the aid of
the "King of the Elements". We do not have any stories about this
god. He is often referred to, and is one of the vague Powers
without a personal name.
On "Bride's Day", the first day of the Gaelic Spring,
offerings were made to earth and sea. Milk was poured on the
ground, and the fisher people made porridge and threw it into the
sea so that the sea might yield what was sought from it--lots of
fish, and also seaweed for fertilizing the soil. In some parts of
the Hebrides the sea deity to whom the food offerings were made was
called "Shony".
It will thus be seen that the old stories are not only
interesting as stories, but are worthy of study as helping us to
know something about the beliefs of the people of olden time.
Certain stories appear to be very ancient. It is possible
that one or two have come down from the Late Stone Age, which, in
these islands, closed probably about 3000 years ago. There are
hints of very ancient beliefs, for instance, in the story about
"Finlay and the Giants". The hero obtains a magic wand which
transforms stone pillars into human beings. It was believed by the
old people that the spirit of the dead entered the stone erected
over a grave. Another story of special interest is the one about
"Heroes on the Green Isle". A princess is confined in a tower,
waiting for a hero to win her as his bride by taking her down. A
similar story is found in an ancient Egyptian papyrus. It may be
that the Scottish and Egyptian versions of this legend came from
the same source in remote times. A string of Egyptian beads has
been found in a grave near Stonehenge. It came from Egypt about
3000 years ago, along the old trade routes. If far-travelled
wanderers, or traders, brought beads, they may also have brought
some stories. The ancient Egyptians had, like the ancient folk of
Scotland, a wonder tale about a floating island which vanished
beneath the waves.
Another interesting Scottish story is "The Vision of the
Dead". The woman who acts as a nurse to a fairy child sees the
spirits of the dead cutting corn. In Egypt it was believed that the
dead were thus employed in the Paradise of Osiris, who was, among
other things, a corn god.
The gods and goddesses of Scotland were never depicted by
sculptors like the gods and goddesses of ancient Greece. They are
not therefore so well known. They would have been entirely
forgotten long ago had not the old bards sung songs about them, and
the old story-tellers composed "wonder tales", such as are retold
in this volume from fragments that survive.
Of special interest at the present time are the references in
some stories to "red moss"; that is, the red "sphagnum" which was
used to dress wounds. Apparently the ancient people knew from
experience that it had cleansing and healing properties, and
esteemed the red as superior to green sphagnum. They also used tar
water for skin troubles, and to cure diseases they used certain
herbs from which some modern-day medicines are manufactured.
Footnotes10:1 Pronounced Bee'ra.
12:1 Professor W. J. Watson's Rhind lectures, 1916.
18:1 Dr. A. Carmichael's Carmina Gadelica, Vol. I, p.
169.