A LEGEND OF THE WEST HIGHLANDS
   TICONDEROGA
   This is the tale of the man
   Who heard a word in the night
   In the land of the heathery hills,
   In the days of the feud and the fight.
   By the sides of the rainy sea,
   Where never a stranger came,
   On the awful lips of the dead,
   He heard the outlandish name.
   It sang in his sleeping ears,
   It hummed in his waking head:
   The name — Ticonderoga,
   The utterance of the dead.
   I
   THE SAYING OF THE NAME
   On the loch-sides of Appin,
   When the mist blew from the sea,
   A Stewart stood with a Cameron:
   An angry man was he.
   The blood beat in his ears,
   The blood ran hot to his head,
   The mist blew from the sea,
   And there was the Cameron dead.
   “O, what have I done to my friend,
   O, what have I done to mysel’,
   That he should be cold and dead,
   And I in the danger of all?
   “Nothing but danger about me,
   Danger behind and before,
   Death at wait in the heather
   In Appin and Mamore,
   Hate at all of the ferries,
   And death at each of the fords,
   Camerons priming gun-locks
   And Camerons sharpening swords.”
   But this was a man of counsel,
   This was a man of a score,
   There dwelt no pawkier Stewart
   In Appin or Mamore.
   He looked on the blowing mist,
   He looked on the awful dead,
   And there came a smile on his face
   And there slipped a thought in his head.
   Out over cairn and moss,
   Out over scrog and scaur,
   He ran as runs the clansman
   That bears the cross of war.
   His heart beat in his body,
   His hair clove to his face,
   When he came at last in the gloaming
   To the dead man’s brother’s place.
   The east was white with the moon,
   The west with the sun was red,
   And there, in the house-doorway,
   Stood the brother of the dead.
   “I have slain a man to my danger,
   I have slain a man to my death.
   I put my soul in your hands,”
   The panting Stewart saith.
   “I lay it bare in your hands,
   For I know your hands are leal;
   And be you my targe and bulwark
   From the bullet and the steel.”
   Then up and spoke the Cameron,
   And gave him his hand again:
   “There shall never a man in Scotland
   Set faith in me in vain;
   And whatever man you have slaughtered,
   Of whatever name or line,
   By my sword and yonder mountain,
   I make your quarrel mine.
   I bid you in to my fireside,
   I share with you house and hall;
   It stands upon my honour
   To see you safe from all.”
   It fell in the time of midnight,
   When the fox barked in the den,
   And the plaids were over the faces
   In all the houses of men,
   That as the living Cameron
   Lay sleepless on his bed,
   Out of the night and the other world,
   Came in to him the dead.
   “My blood is on the heather,
   My bones are on the hill;
   There is joy in the home of ravens
   That the young shall eat their fill.
   My blood is poured in the dust,
   My soul is spilled in the air;
   And the man that has undone me
   Sleeps in my brother’s care.”
   “I’m wae for your death, my brother,
   But if all of my house were dead,
   I couldna withdraw the plighted hand,
   Nor break the word once said.”
   “O, what shall I say to our father,
   In the place to which I fare?
   O, what shall I say to our mother,
   Who greets to see me there?
   And to all the kindly Camerons
   That have lived and died long-syne —
   Is this the word you send them,
   Fause-hearted brother mine?”
   “It’s neither fear nor duty,
   It’s neither quick nor dead,
   Shall gar me withdraw the plighted hand,
   Or break the word once said.”
   Thrice in the time of midnight,
   When the fox barked in the den,
   And the plaids were over the faces
   In all the houses of men,
   Thrice as the living Cameron
   Lay sleepless on his bed,
   Out of the night and the other world
   Came in to him the dead,
   And cried to him for vengeance
   On the man that laid him low;
   And thrice the living Cameron
   Told the dead Cameron, no.
   “Thrice have you seen me, brother,
   But now shall see me no more,
   Till you meet your angry fathers
   Upon the farther shore.
   Thrice have I spoken, and now,
   Before the cock be heard,
   I take my leave for ever
   With the naming of a word.
   It shall sing in your sleeping ears,
   It shall hum in your waking head,
   The name — Ticonderoga,
   And the warning of the dead.”
   Now when the night was over
   And the time of people’s fears,
   The Cameron walked abroad,
   And the word was in his ears.
   “Many a name I know,
   But never a name like this;
   O, where shall I find a skilly man
   Shall tell me what it is?”
   With many a man he counselled
   Of high and low degree,
   With the herdsman on the mountains
   And the fishers of the sea.
   And he came and went unweary,
   And read the books of yore,
   And the runes that were written of old
   On stones upon the moor.
   And many a name he was told,
   But never the name of his fears —
   Never, in east or west,
   The name that rang in his ears:
   Names of men and of clans;
   Names for the grass and the tree,
   For the smallest tarn in the mountains,
   The smallest reef in the sea:
   Names for the high and low,
   The names of the craig and the flat;
   But in all the land of Scotland,
   Never a name like that.
   II
   THE SEEKING OF THE NAME
   And now there was speech in the south,
   And a man of the south that was wise,
   A periwig’d lord of London,
   Called on the clans to rise.
   And the riders rode, and the summons
   Came to the western shore,
   To the land of the sea and the heather,
   To Appin and Mamore.
   It called on all to gather
   From every scrog and scaur,
   That loved their fathers’ tartan
   And the ancient game of war.
   And down the watery valley
   And up the windy hill,
   Once more, as in the olden,
   The pipes were sounding shrill;
   Again in Highland sunshine
   The naked steel was bright;
   And the lads, once more in tartan,
   Went forth again to fight.
   “O, why 
should I dwell here
   With a weird upon my life,
   When the clansmen shout for battle
   And the war-swords clash in strife?
   I canna joy at feast,
   I canna sleep in bed,
   For the wonder of the word
   And the warning of the dead.
   It sings in my sleeping ears,
   It hums in my waking head,
   The name — Ticonderoga,
   The utterance of the dead.
   Then up, and with the fighting men
   To march away from here,
   Till the cry of the great war-pipe
   Shall drown it in my ear!”
   Where flew King George’s ensign
   The plaided soldiers went:
   They drew the sword in Germany,
   In Flanders pitched the tent.
   The bells of foreign cities
   Rang far across the plain:
   They passed the happy Rhine,
   They drank the rapid Main.
   Through Asiatic jungles
   The Tartans filed their way,
   And the neighing of the war-pipes
   Struck terror in Cathay.
   “Many a name have I heard,” he thought,
   “In all the tongues of men,
   Full many a name both here and there,
   Full many both now and then.
   When I was at home in my father’s house,
   In the land of the naked knee,
   Between the eagles that fly in the lift
   And the herrings that swim in the sea,
   And now that I am a captain-man
   With a braw cockade in my hat —
   Many a name have I heard,” he thought,
   “But never a name like that.”
   III
   THE PLACE OF THE NAME
   There fell a war in a woody place,
   Lay far across the sea,
   A war of the march in the mirk midnight
   And the shot from behind the tree,
   The shaven head and the painted face,
   The silent foot in the wood,
   In the land of a strange, outlandish tongue
   That was hard to be understood.
   It fell about the gloaming,
   The general stood with his staff,
   He stood and he looked east and west
   With little mind to laugh.
   “Far have I been, and much have I seen,
   And kennt both gain and loss,
   But here we have woods on every hand
   And a kittle water to cross.
   Far have I been, and much have I seen,
   But never the beat of this;
   And there’s one must go down to that water-side
   To see how deep it is.”
   It fell in the dusk of the night
   When unco things betide,
   The skilly captain, the Cameron,
   Went down to that waterside.
   Canny and soft the captain went;
   And a man of the woody land,
   With the shaven head and the painted face,
   Went down at his right hand.
   It fell in the quiet night,
   There was never a sound to ken;
   But all of the woods to the right and the left
   Lay filled with the painted men.
   “Far have I been, and much have I seen,
   Both as a man and boy,
   But never have I set forth a foot,
   On so perilous an employ.”
   It fell in the dusk of the night
   When unco things betide,
   That he was aware of a captain-man
   Drew near to the water-side.
   He was aware of his coming
   Down in the gloaming alone;
   And he looked in the face of the man,
   And lo! the face was his own.
   “This is my weird,” he said,
   “And now I ken the worst;
   For many shall fall the morn,
   But I shall fall with the first.
   O, you of the outland tongue,
   You of the painted face,
   This is the place of my death;
   Can you tell me the name of the place?”
   “Since the Frenchmen have been here
   They have called it Sault-Marie;
   But that is a name for priests,
   And not for you and me.
   It went by another word,”
   Quoth he of the shaven head:
   “It was called Ticonderoga
   In the days of the great dead.”
   And it fell on the morrow’s morning,
   In the fiercest of the fight,
   That the Cameron bit the dust
   As he foretold at night;
   And far from the hills of heather,
   Far from the isles of the sea,
   He sleeps in the place of the name
   As it was doomed to be.
   HEATHER ALE
   A GALLOWAY LEGEND
   From the bonny bells of heather
   They brewed a drink long-syne,
   Was sweeter far than honey,
   Was stronger far than wine.
   They brewed it and they drank it,
   And lay in a blessed swound
   For days and days together
   In their dwellings underground.
   There rose a king in Scotland,
   A fell man to his foes,
   He smote the Picts in battle,
   He hunted them like roes.
   Over miles of the red mountain
   He hunted as they fled,
   And strewed the dwarfish bodies
   Of the dying and the dead.
   Summer came in the country,
   Red was the heather bell;
   But the manner of the brewing
   Was none alive to tell.
   In the graves that were like children’s
   On many a mountain head,
   The Brewsters of the Heather
   Lay numbered with the dead.
   The king in the red moorland
   Rode on a summer’s day;
   And the bees hummed, and the curlews
   Cried beside the way.
   The king rode, and was angry,
   Black was his brow and pale,
   To rule in a land of heather
   And lack the Heather Ale.
   It fortuned that his vassals,
   Riding free on the heath,
   Came on a stone that was fallen
   And vermin hid beneath.
   Rudely plucked from their hiding,
   Never a word they spoke:
   A son and his aged father —
   Last of the dwarfish folk.
   The king sat high on his charger,
   He looked on the little men;
   And the dwarfish and swarthy couple
   Looked at the king again.
   Down by the shore he had them;
   And there on the giddy brink —
   “I will give you life, ye vermin,
   For the secret of the drink.”
   There stood the son and father;
   And they looked high and low;
   The heather was red around them,
   The sea rumbled below.
   And up and spoke the father,
   Shrill was his voice to hear:
   “I have a word in private,
   A word for the royal ear.
   “Life is dear to the aged,
   And honour a little thing;
   I would gladly sell the secret,”
   Quoth the Pict to the king.
   His voice was small as a sparrow’s,
   And shrill and wonderful clear;
   “I would gladly sell my secret,
   Only my son I fear.
   “For life is a little matter,
   And death is nought to the young;
   And I dare not sell my honour
   Under the eye of my son.
   Take him, O king, and bind him,
   And cast him far in the deep:
>
   And it’s I will tell the secret,
   That I have sworn to keep.”
   They took the son and bound him,
   Neck and heels in a thong,
   And a lad took him and swung him,
   And flung him far and strong,
   And the sea swallowed his body,
   Like that of a child of ten; —
   And there on the cliff stood the father,
   Last of the dwarfish men.
   “True was the word I told you:
   Only my son I feared;
   For I doubt the sapling courage
   That goes without the beard.
   But now in vain is the torture,
   Fire shall never avail;
   Here dies in my bosom
   The secret of Heather Ale.”
   CHRISTMAS AT SEA
   The sheets were frozen hard, and they cut the naked hand;
   The decks were like a slide, where a seaman scarce could stand;
   The wind was a nor’-wester, blowing squally off the sea;
   And cliffs and spouting breakers were the only things a-lee.
   They heard the surf a-roaring before the break of day;
   But ‘twas only with the peep of light we saw how ill we lay.
   We tumbled every hand on deck instanter, with a shout,
   And we gave her the maintops’l, and stood by to go about.
   All day we tacked and tacked between the South Head and the North;
   All day we hauled the frozen sheets, and got no further forth;
   All day as cold as charity, in bitter pain and dread,
   For very life and nature we tacked from head to head.
   We gave the South a wider berth, for there the tide-race roared;
   But every tack we made we brought the North Head close aboard:
   So’s we saw the cliffs and houses, and the breakers running high,
   And the coastguard in his garden, with his glass against his eye.
   The frost was on the village roofs as white as ocean foam;
   The good red fires were burning bright in every ‘long-shore home;
   The windows sparkled clear, and the chimneys volleyed out;
   And I vow we sniffed the victuals as the vessel went about.
   The bells upon the church were rung with a mighty jovial cheer;
   For it’s just that I should tell you how (of all days in the year)
   This day of our adversity was blessèd Christmas morn,
   And the house above the coastguard’s was the house where I was born.
   O well I saw the pleasant room, the pleasant faces there,
   My mother’s silver spectacles, my father’s silver hair;
   And well I saw the firelight, like a flight of homely elves,
   Go dancing round the china-plates that stand upon the shelves.
   
 
 Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated) Page 391