<h2>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class="f8">LAMMAS FLOODS</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">When</span> I got to Cruden it was quite dark. I
had lingered by the way thinking of Gormala
MacNiel and all the queer kind of mystery
in which she seemed to be enmeshing me. The more I
thought, the more I was puzzled; for the strangest thing
of all to me was that I understood part of what seemed
to be a mystery. For instance I was but imperfectly
acquainted with the Seer-woman’s view of what was
to be the result of her watching of Lauchlane Macleod.
I knew of course from her words at our first conversation
that in him she recognised a man doomed to
near death according to the manifestation of her own
power of Second Sight; but I knew what she did not
seem to, that this was indeed a golden man. From the
momentary glimpse which I had had in that queer spell
of trance, or whatever it was which had come to me on
the pier head, I had seemed to <em>know</em> him as a man of
gold, sterling throughout. It was not merely that his
hair was red gold and that his eyes might fairly be called
golden, but his whole being could only be expressed in
that way; so that when Gormala spoke, the old rhyme
seemed at once a prime factor in the group of three
powers which had to be united before the fathoming of
the Mystery of the Sea. I accordingly made up my
mind to speak with the Seer-woman and to ask her to
explain. My own intellectual attitude to the matter interested<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
me. I was not sceptical, I did not believe; but I
think my mind hung in poise. Certainly my sympathies
tended towards the mysterious side, backed up by some
kind of understanding of the inner nature of things
which was emotional or unintentional rather than
fixed.</p>
<p>All that night I seemed to dream, my mind working
eternally round the data of the day; hundreds of different
relationships between Gormala, Lauchlane Macleod,
Lammas-tide, the moon and the secrets of the sea revolved
before me. It was grey morning before I fell
asleep to the occasional chirping of the earliest birds.</p>
<p>As sometimes happens after a night of uneasy dreaming
of some disturbing topic, the reaction of the morning
carried oblivion with it. It was well into the afternoon
when all at once I remembered the existence of the
witch-woman—for as such I was beginning to think of
Gormala. The thought came accompanied by a sense of
oppression which was not of fear, but which was certainly
of uneasiness. Was it possible that the woman
had in some way, or to some degree, hypnotised me. I
remembered with a slightly nervous feeling how the
evening before I had stopped on the roadway obedient
to her will, and how I had lost the identity of my surroundings
in her presence. A sudden idea struck me;
I went to the window and looked out. For an instant
my heart seemed to be still.</p>
<p>Just opposite the house stood Gormala, motionless. I
went out at once and joined her, and instinctively we
turned our steps toward the sand-hills. As we walked
along I said to her:</p>
<p>“Where did you disappear to last night?”</p>
<p>“About that which is to be done!” Her lips and her
face were set; I knew it was no use following up that
branch of the subject, so I asked again:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“What did you mean by those verses which you told
me?” Her answer was given in a solemn tone:</p>
<p>“Them that made them alone can tell; until the time
shall come!”</p>
<p>“Who made them?”</p>
<p>“Nane can now tell. They are as aud as the rocky
foundations o’ the isles themselves.”</p>
<p>“Then how did you come to know them?” There
was a distinct note of pride in her answer. Such a
note as might be expected from a prince speaking of
his ancestry:</p>
<p>“They hae come doon to me through centuries. Frae
mither to dochter, and from mither to dochter again,
wi’ never a break in the lang line o’ the tellin’. Know
ye, young master, that I am o’ a race o’ Seers. I take
my name from that Gormala o’ Uist who through long
years foresaw the passing o’ mony a one. That Gormala
who throughout the islands of the west was known and
feared o’ all men; that Gormala whose mither’s mither,
and mither’s mither again, away back into the darkness
o’ time when coracles crept towards the sunset ower the
sea and returned not, held the fates o’ men and women in
their han’s and ruled the Mysteries o’ the Sea.” As it
was evident that Gormala must have in her own mind
some kind of meaning of the prophecy, or spell, or whatever
it was, I asked her again:</p>
<p>“But you must understand something of the meaning,
or you would not attach so much importance to it?”</p>
<p>“I ken naught but what is seen to ma een, and to that
inner e’e which telleth tae the soul that which it seeth!”</p>
<p>“Then why did you warn me that Lammas-tide was
near at hand?” The grim woman actually smiled as she
replied:</p>
<p>“Did ye no hearken to the words spoken of the Lammas
floods, which be of the Powers that rule the Spell?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, the fact is that I don’t know anything of
‘Lammas-tide!’ We do not keep it in the Church of
England,” I added as an afterthought, explanatory of
my ignorance. Gormala was clever enough to take advantage
of having caught me in a weak place; so she took
advantage of it to turn the conversation into the way she
wished herself:</p>
<p>“What saw ye, when Lauchlane Macleod grew sma’
in yer een, and girt again?”</p>
<p>“Simply, that he seemed to be all at once a tiny image
of himself, seen against a waste of ripe corn.” Then it
struck me that I had not as yet told her or any one else
of what I had seen. How then did she know it? I
was annoyed and asked her. She answered scornfully:</p>
<p>“How kent I it, an’ me a Seer o’ a race o’ Seers! Are
ma wakin’ een then so dim or so sma’ that I canna read
the thochts o’ men in the glances o’ their een. Did I no
see yer een look near an’ far as quick as thocht? But
what saw ye after, when ye looked rapt and yer een
peered side to side, as though at one lyin’ prone?” I
was more annoyed than ever and answered her in a sort of
stupor:</p>
<p>“I saw him lying dead on a rock, with a swift tide
running by; and over the waters the broken track of a
golden moon.” She made a sound which was almost a
cry, and which recalled me to myself as I looked at her.
She was ablaze. She towered to her full height with an
imperious, exultant mien; the light in her eyes was more
than human as she said:</p>
<p>“Dead, as I masel’ saw him an’ ’mid the foam o’ the
tide race! An’ gowd, always gowd ahint him in the een
of this greater Seer. Gowden corn, and gowden moon,
and gowden sea! Aye! an’ I see it now, backie-bird
that I hae been; the gowden mon indeed, wi’ his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
gowden een an’ his gowden hair and all the truth o’ his
gowden life!” Then turning to me she said fiercely:</p>
<p>“Why did I warn ye that Lammas-tide was near?
Go ask those that value the months and days thereof,
when be Lammas and what it means to them that hae
faith. See what they are; learn o’ the comin’ o’ the
moon and o’ the flowin’ o’ the tides that follow!”</p>
<p>Without another word she turned and left me.</p>
<p>I went back to the hotel at once, determined to post
myself as to Lammas-tide; its facts and constitutions,
and the beliefs and traditions that hung around it. Also
to learn the hours of the tides, and the age of the moon
about the time of Lammas-tide. Doubtless I could have
found out all I wanted from some of the ministers of the
various houses of religion which hold in Cruden; but I
was not wishful to make public, even so far, the mystery
which was closing around me. My feeling was partly
a saving sense of humour, or the fear of ridicule, and
partly a genuine repugnance to enter upon the subject
with any one who might not take it as seriously as I could
wish. From which latter I gather that the whole affair
was becoming woven into the structure of my life.</p>
<p>Possibly it was, that some trait, or tendency, or power
which was individual to me was beginning to manifest
itself and to find its means of expression. In my secret
heart I not only believed but knew that some instinct
within me was guiding my thoughts in some strange way.
The sense of occult power which is so vital a part of
divination was growing within me and asserting its
masterdom, and with it came an equally forceful desire of
secrecy. The Seer in me, latent so long, was becoming
conscious of his strength, and jealous of it.</p>
<p>At this time, as the feeling of strength and consciousness
grew, it seemed to lose something of its power from
this very cause. Gradually it was forced upon me that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
for the full manifestation of such faculty as I might
possess, some kind of abstraction or surrender of self
was necessary. Even a few hours of experience had
taught me much; for now that my mind was bent on the
phenomena of Second Sight the whole living and moving
world around me became a veritable diorama of possibilities.
Within two days from the episode at the Pier
head I had had behind me a larger experience of effort
of occult force than generally comes to a man in a lifetime.
When I look back, it seems to me that all the
forces of life and nature became exposed to my view. A
thousand things which hitherto I had accepted in simple
faith as facts, were pregnant with new meanings. I
began to understand that the whole earth and sea, and air—all
that of which human beings generally ordinarily take
cognisance, is but a film or crust which hides the deeper
moving powers or forces. With this insight I began to
understand the grand guesses of the Pantheists, pagan
and christian alike, who out of their spiritual and nervous
and intellectual sensitiveness began to realise that
there was somewhere a purposeful cause of universal
action. An action which in its special or concrete working
appeared like the sentience of nature in general, and
of the myriad items of its cosmogony.</p>
<p>I soon learned that Lammas day is the first of August
and is so often accompanied by heavy weather that Lammas
floods are almost annually recurrent. The eve of the
day is more or less connected with various superstitions.</p>
<p>This made me more eager for further information, and
by the aid of a chance friend, I unearthed at Aberdeen
a learned professor who gave me offhand all the information
which I desired. In fact he was so full of astronomical
learning that I had to stop him now and again
in order to elucidate some point easily explainable to those<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
who understood his terminology, but which wrapped my
swaddling knowledge in a mystery all its own. I have
a sneaking friendliness even now for anyone to whom
the word ‘syzygy’ carries no special meaning.</p>
<p>I got at the bases of facts, however, and understood
that on the night of July 31, which was the eve of Lammas-tide,
the moon would be full at midnight. I learned
also that from certain astronomical reasons the tide which
would ostensibly begin its flow a little after midnight
would in reality commence just on the stroke. As these
were the points which concerned me I came away with a
new feeling of awe upon me. It seemed as though the
heavens as well as the earth were bending towards the
realisation or fulfillment of the old prophecy. At this time
my own connection with the mystery, or how it might
affect me personally, did not even enter my head. I was
content to be an obedient item in the general scheme of
things.</p>
<p>It was now the 28th July so, if it were to take place
at the Lammas-tide of the current year, we should know
soon the full measure of the denouêment. There was
but one thing wanting to complete the conditions of the
prophecy. The weather had been abnormally dry, and
there might after all be no Lammas floods. To-day,
however, the sky had been heavily overcast. Great black
clouds which seemed to roll along tumbling over and
over, as the sail of a foundered boat does in a current,
loomed up from the west. The air grew closer, and to
breathe was an effort. A sort of shiver came over the
wide stretch of open country. Darker and darker grew
the sky, till it seemed so like night that the birds in the
few low-lying coppices and the scanty hedgerows ceased
to sing. The bleat of sheep and the low of cattle seemed
to boom through the still air with a hollow sound, as if
coming from a distance. The intolerable stillness which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
precedes the storm became so oppressive that I, who am
abnormally susceptible to the moods of nature, could
almost have screamed out.</p>
<p>Then all at once the storm broke. There was a flash
of lightning so vivid that it lit up the whole country
away to the mountains which encircle Braemar. The
fierce crash and wide roll of the thunder followed with
incredible quickness. And then the hot, heavy-dropped
summer rain fell in torrents.</p>
<p>All that afternoon the rain fell, with only a few brief
intervals of glowing sunshine. All night, too, it seemed to
fall without ceasing, for whenever I woke—which I did
frequently with a sense over me of something impending—I
could hear the quick, heavy patter on the roof, and
the rush and gurgle of the overcharged gutters.</p>
<p>The next day was one of unmitigated gloom. The
rain poured down ceaselessly. There was little wind, just
sufficient to roll north-eastwards the great masses of
rain-laden clouds piled up by the Gulf Stream against the
rugged mountains of the western coast and its rocky
islands. Two whole days there were of such rain, and
then there was no doubt as to the strength of the Lammas
floods this year. All the wide uplands of Buchan were
glistening with runnels of water whenever the occasional
glimpses of sunshine struck them. Both the Water
of Cruden and the Back Burn were running bank high.
On all sides it was reported that the Lammas floods were
the greatest that had been known in memory.</p>
<p>All this time my own spiritual and intellectual uneasiness
was perpetually growing. The data for the working
of the prophecy were all fixed with remarkable
exactness. In theatrical parlance ‘the stage was set’ and
all ready for the action which was to come. As the
hours wore on, my uneasiness changed somewhat and
apprehension became merged in a curious mixture of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
superstition and exaltation. I was growing eager to the
coming time.</p>
<p>The afternoon of July 31 was fine. The sun shone
brightly; the air was dry and, for the time of year, cool.
It seemed as though the spell of wet weather was over
and that fiery August was coming to its own again. The
effects of the rainstorm were, however, manifest. Not
only was every rill and stream and river in the North in
spate but the bogs of the mountains were so saturated
with wet that many days must elapse before they could
cease to send their quota to swell the streams. The
mountain valleys were generally lakes in miniature. As
one went through the country the murmur or rush of
falling water was forever in the ears. I suppose it was
in my own case partly because I was concerned in the
mere existence of Lammas floods that the whole of nature
seemed so insistent on the subject. The sound of moving
water in its myriad gamut was so perpetually in my ears
that I could never get my mind away from it. I had a
long walk that afternoon through roads still too wet and
heavy for bicycling. I came back to dinner thoroughly
tired out, and went to bed early.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span></p>
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