Irish Ghost Tales

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Irish Ghost Tales Page 8

by Tony Locke


  It is said that Margorie went on to remarry and to have a number of children. Some even believe she was pregnant when she rose from the grave. She is still seen wandering the cemetery at night, although you would think she had had enough of that place. If you visit the graveyard you will see her gravestone, upon which is written, ‘Here Lies Margorie McCall, Lived Once, Buried Twice’.

  23

  THE UNDEAD PRIEST

  NATIONWIDE

  The ancient Celts believed that when they died their spirits travelled to the other world, a place where the supernatural reigned, home of the dead and kingdom of the fairies. This was a place of beauty or dread, hope or despair, depending on how you had lived your life and even how you had died. At certain times the dead could return to the world of the living in order to influence decision-making and even interact with the living. They did not, however, return in spirit form but in a solid form; in fact, they could look the same as when they had been alive. They would eat, drink, make merry and take part in activities they had enjoyed in life. Here in Ireland, it was customary to set an extra place at the table for the returning entity at certain times of the year, such as Bealtaine or Samhain. It was at these times that the veil separating the two worlds was at its thinnest, the barriers were down and the dead could cross over. The dead didn’t just come back to enjoy earthly pleasures though; they could return in order to warn you of some impending disaster, to offer advice, to complete some unfinished business or to take revenge on those still living.

  The coming of Christianity to Ireland changed the way death was viewed. The pagan belief in the other world did not marry well with heaven and hell, so a clever compromise was reached: purgatory, a place where the soul could wait before it received its final reward or punishment. It proved to be a lucrative compromise. The soul’s wait in purgatory could be shortened or ended so the soul could carry on to heaven and its final reward. However, there was a catch: in order to gain freedom from purgatory, the soul needed prayers to be said and a mass celebrated in its name. The only one who could perform this function was the priest, who had to be paid for his service. The Church decided to set up a special day for the purpose of saying mass for the souls of the departed. This day was called All Souls’ Day and it fell on with the Celtic festival of Samhain, perhaps not coincidentally. The Church even taught the people that the dead could return for one night only. This was to remind the living of their obligation to them. And woe betide those who failed to pay, for the dead would have their revenge. The clergy also told their parishioners that this obligation to the dead included making sure they had a proper Christian burial, which also necessitated paying the Church.

  This notion of the vengeful dead soon caught on, and people began to fear returning spirits. They even thought the dead could punish them by harming their livestock or making them weak by drinking the blood of their farm animals. It was just a small step from domestic beast of the field to their own families; if the animals could be attacked then why not the members of the family? The myth of the vampire was born. Years later Irish vampire stories were written by Carmilla, Sheridan Le Fanu and of course, the most famous of all, Bram Stoker.

  In Irish folklore you will find many stories about vampire-like creatures. One tale, from the Dublin Mountains, is about a priest who returns from the grave to drink his mother’s blood …

  Once upon a time, long, long ago, there was an old widow who lived in a remote mountainous area just outside Dublin with her son. The community she lived in was scattered over a large area and although she felt lonely at times, at least she had her young son to keep her company. As he grew up her son spent most of his time walking the hills and valleys, either reading books given to him by some of their neighbours or just communing with nature. She noticed that as time went by her son seemed to become more withdrawn. He spent less time at home and avoided contact with any visitors to their little cottage. The widow decided that she would speak to the priest who came to their community every Sunday to say Mass. He was from the town and she believed he would know what to do.

  After Mass on the following Sunday she approached the priest, who listened to her and said he would speak to her son. After speaking to her son the priest told the old woman that her son was a very intelligent young man who felt trapped living in the mountains. The priest advised her that he would make a good candidate for the priesthood and said that, with her permission, he would arrange for her son to be given a place at the seminary in Maynooth.

  The son duly left and never once did he write to her or come back to visit her. When he had been gone a number of years he became sick. No one knew what was wrong with him. He developed a deathly pallor, didn’t eat and slept all day and his doctor suggested that maybe a stay in the countryside, breathing in the fresh mountain air, would help him to recover. He returned home to his mother, who by this stage was very advanced in age. He planned on staying there until he recovered.

  Of course she was delighted to see him and made him very welcome. Her neighbours, hearing that he had returned, called into the cottage from time to time but he had been away for such a long time that he no longer had anything in common with them. The neighbours who believed he was a little stand-offish before he had left to become a priest now found him to be very strange as he didn’t seem to want to talk to any of them. It was said that he no longer believed he was a local man, was sharp with his remarks and aloof, considering himself to be better than those he had grown up with. As he was a priest, the local people would ask his advice on matters of faith but they didn’t socialise with him and that was just as he liked it.

  He began to shut himself away behind the locked door of his bedroom, covering the window to keep out the light. His mother believed that he just wanted to read his books and to be alone with his thoughts. He didn’t eat or drink anything she left outside his door. At night she would hear him going out and in the morning he would be back in his room. She never knew where he went and he never told her. She assumed that he had reverted to his old ways of talking to nature and that this might be a good sign.

  He died suddenly just before his fiftieth birthday. The doctor could not determine the cause but he said that his illness was a mystery and that at least now he was at peace. The old widow woman and a couple of her neighbours laid her son’s body on the kitchen table and everyone in the locality called to the cottage to pay their respects and to help with the funeral. He was waked the next day and the following day his coffin was carried on a cart to the rocky graveyard a couple of miles from the cottage. All the neighbours attended the funeral. However, the old widow was devastated by the loss of her son, so it was decided that she would remain at home.

  As you can imagine, it took some time for the funeral procession to get to the graveyard and the return journey was even worse. The road – if you could call a mountain track a road – was rough and uneven and night began to fall before the people came within sight of their homes. As the mourners approached the final hill before the end of their journey, they saw a man approaching them. He seemed to be walking very quickly. All the mourners looked at each other. Every man in the community had attended the funeral, so this man’s identity was a mystery.

  ‘Who could that be? And why is he coming from the cottages?’ they asked each other.

  They all stopped and stood by the roadside and waited for the stranger to pass. As he came nearer they saw his face. It was the face of the man they had just buried.

  He passed by on the far side of the road, walking at what was described as an almost inhuman speed. He turned his face away from them but even so they were able to make out his features: pale skin, hard glittering eyes and lips drawn across his shrivelled gums as though he had died with a look of horror upon his face. He was not wearing the death shroud he had been buried in, but he had on the black frock coat he wore as a priest. He walked past them and disappeared around a bend in the road that led to the graveyard. When he had gone the local people all made either th
e sign of the cross or the horned sign against the evil eye, casting fearful glances at each other. They all started talking at once and it was decided that they should go and check on the old widow as she was the only one left in the cottages.

  Eventually they arrived at the cottage and knocked on the door, but there was no answer. Climbing onto an old bucket, one of the mourners looked through the kitchen window and saw the old woman lying on the floor. Some of the bigger men opened the door and gently lifted her onto a chair. One of the women gave her a little poteen to revive her. The old widow told them what had happened.

  Earlier on, just as night fell, there had been a knock on her door. She could not think who it was as she knew that all her neighbours were at her son’s funeral and for some reason she was afraid of answering the door. The knock came again, this time louder and more insistent. Rather than answering it, she stood on a stool and looked out the window. To her horror, she saw her dead son standing there. She saw the ghostly pallor of his skin and the terrible look of a wild animal upon his face. He was crouched down, as if preparing to pounce on her when she answered the door. She said that she felt so afraid she must have fainted in fear. She felt her legs give way and she fell to the floor. There she remained until her neighbours arrived and picked her up.

  The undead priest was never seen in the neighbourhood again, but people in that remote community still pass his grave in that lonely mountain cemetery with a quick and fearful step.

  24

  ABHARTACH, THE VAMPIRE

  COUNTY DERRY

  The story of Abhartach, a cruel, deformed and evil Irish chieftain, suggests a possible link between Irish vampire myths and Bram Stoker’s Dracula. People over the years have thought that Dracula was based on that old Romanian prince, Vlad the Impaler, who had a nasty habit of killing those who opposed him in a rather bloodthirsty manner. However, the truth may be closer to home.

  In the north Derry area, between the towns of Garvagh and Dungiven, in a district known as Glenullin, the glen of the eagle, we may find a clue to Dracula’s origins. In the middle of a field in the remote townland of Slaughtaverty is an area known locally as the ‘Giant’s Grave’ but it might be more accurately described as Abhartach’s tomb.

  On the grave there is a curling thorn bush, under which lies a large and heavy stone. Originally there were more stones, the remnants of an old monument, but these have been removed over time by local farmers for building purposes. However, there is little doubt that the tomb was once an imposing structure and that it gave the townland its name.

  But who was Abhartach?

  During the fifth and sixth centuries, the Glenullin area was a patchwork of petty kingdoms, each with its own local ruler or ‘king’. These kings may have been little more than tribal warlords. There is ample evidence of their rule as the countryside is dotted with hill forts, ancient raths and early fortifications marking their respective territories. Abhartach, according to tradition, was one of these chieftains.

  Local descriptions of him vary. Some say he was deformed in some way and others say that he was a dwarf. However, most accounts agree that he was a powerful wizard and was extremely evil. Abhartach was a jealous and suspicious man who trusted no one, not even his wife, who he was convinced was having an adulterous affair. He decided to catch her in the act. One night he climbed out one of the windows of their castle and crept along a ledge towards his wife’s bedroom. However, either because of his deformity or poor balance, he slipped and fell to his death. His body was found the following morning and the people of the town quickly buried him. He was a high-ranking chieftain with the same rights as a king, so he was buried standing upright, which was the custom at the time. The following day, Abhartach returned and demanded that each of his subjects cut their wrist and gather the blood in a bowl. They were told to do this and deliver the blood to him each day in order to sustain his life. Too terrified to refuse, they did as he ordered.

  Eventually, the people decided that they could not live in fear of Abhartach any longer. They hated him when he was alive, but now that he had returned as one of the marbh bheo, or the living dead, they were terrified of what he could do to them. They decided to hire an assassin to kill him. They persuaded another chieftain, Cathán, to perform the deed for them. Cathán slew Abhartach and buried him once again, standing up in an isolated grave. However, the following day Abhartach returned, as evil as ever, and once again demanded a bowl of blood, drawn from the veins of his subjects, in order to sustain his vile corpse. In great terror, the people asked Cathán to slay him once more. This Cathán did, burying the corpse as before. However, the following day, Abhartach returned again, demanding the same gory tribute from his people.

  Depending on which version of the folk tale you hear, Cathán was puzzled and consulted either a local druid or an early Christian saint about why Abhartach could not be killed. There are several ‘hermitages’ in the area. According to tradition, these were the dwellings of particularly holy men. The most notable is in Gortnamoyagh Forest on the very edge of Glenullin, where local people will still point out ‘the saint’s track’, a series of stations near a holy well. Close by was said to have been the hermitage of a saint known as Eoghan, or John, who is credited with having founded a place of Christian worship in the area (the site is still known as Churchtown, although any related foundation has long since vanished).

  A ‘footprint’ on a stony prominence in the forest is also attributed to this saint. It is said that from here he flew from Gortnamoyagh to say Mass in his own foundation. His name appears in several local place names, such as Killowen in Coleraine (about fifteen miles away) and Magilligan (about twenty miles away). It was to this Druid or saint that Cathán is believed to have gone. The venerable old man listened long and hard to the chieftain’s tale. When Cathán had finished, the old man said to him, ‘Abhartach is not really alive. Through his devilish arts he has become one of the undead. He has become a drinker of human blood. He can’t actually be slain but he can be restrained.’

  He then proceeded to give the astonished Cathán instructions as to how to ‘suspend’ the vampiric creature.

  ‘Abhartach must be slain with a sword made from yew wood and must be buried upside down in the earth,’ said the old man. ‘Thorns and ash twigs must be sprinkled around him and a heavy stone must be placed directly on top of him. Should the stone be lifted, however, he will be free to walk the earth once more.’

  Cathán returned to Glenullin and did what the holy man had told him. Abhartach was slain with a wooden sword and buried upside down. Thorns were placed all around the gravesite. On top of the grave, Cathán built a great tomb which could be seen for miles around. This has now vanished but the stone remains and a tree, which grew from the scattered thorns, rises above it.

  The land on which the grave is situated has acquired a rather sinister reputation over the years. Locally it is considered to be ‘bad ground’ and has been the subject of a number of family disagreements. In 1997, attempts were made to clear the land, but, if local tradition is to be believed, workmen who tried to fell the tree found that their brand-new chainsaw stopped for no reason on three occasions.

  When attempting to lift the great stone, a steel chain suddenly snapped, cutting the hand of one of the labourers and, significantly, allowing blood to soak into the ground. Although legends still abound in the locality of the ‘man who was buried three times’ and the fantastic treasure that was buried with him, few local people will approach the grave, especially after dark.

  This, then, in essence is the legend with its folkloric additions. But is it simply an isolated tale or does it fit into a tradition of Irish tales of vampires? The spilling of blood was not uncommon amongst the ancient Irish – indeed animal blood was ritually let under Christian directive upon St Martin’s Eve (11 November). The roots of this tradition undoubtedly go back to pagan times and may have a connection with the returning dead.

  The horrors of the famine added considera
bly to the lore. The blood of pigs and cows supplemented a meagre diet, either drunk raw or made into relish cakes (a mixture of meal, vegetable tops and blood brought together in a kind of patty).

  Although most cultures have vampire stories, such tales have a particular resonance in Ireland. Here, interest in and veneration of the dead seems to have played a central part in Celtic thinking. However, it was the historian and folklorist Patrick Weston Joyce who actually made connections between Abhartach and the Irish vampire tradition. Joyce enthusiastically recounted the legend in his own book A History of Ireland (1880). This was seventeen years before Dracula was published and it is believed that Stoker, then a Dublin civil servant, read Joyce’s work (and presumably the Abhartach legend) with some relish. Around the same time, manuscript copies of Geoffrey Keating’s History of Ireland, which made much of the undead, were placed on public display in the National Museum in Dublin. They were on loan from Trinity College Library (which possessed two manuscript copies) and the display included chapter ten on the undead. Although Stoker himself could not read Irish, he had many friends and acquaintances that did and he may have received at least part of the work in translation.

  So there you have it. Could the legend of the vampire king, coupled with the strong tradition of blood-drinking Irish chieftains and nobles, be responsible for giving birth to the gothic tale of Count Dracula? Can we really consign the vampire to some remote part of Eastern Europe, where he is unlikely to do us any harm, or should we keep a clove of garlic handy?

  25

  THE LEGEND OF

  CARRICKAPHOUKA CASTLE

  COUNTY CORK

 

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