Page:Traditional Tales of the English and Scottish Peasantry - 1887.djvu/147

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MILES COLVINE,

THE CUMBERLAND MARINER.


William Glen was our captain's name;
He was a bold and a tall young man,
As brave a sailor as e'er sailed the sea,
And he was bound for New Barbarie.


The first of April we spread our sail,
To a low, a sweet, and a pleasant gale;
With a welcome wind on a sunny sea,
Away we sailed for New Barbarie.


We had not sailed more days than two,
Till the sky waxed dark and the tempest blew;
The lightning flashed, and loud roared the sea,
As we were bound for New Barbarie.

Old Ballad.


On the Cumberland side of the firth of Solway lies a long line of flat and unelevated coast, where the sea-fowl find refuge from the gun of the fowler, and which, save the barren land and the deep sea, presents but one object to our notice—the ruins of a rude cottage, once the residence of Miles Colvine, the Mariner. The person who built this little house of refuge, a seaman, a soldier, a scholar, and a gentleman, suffered shipwreck on the coast; and it was not known for a time that any one else had escaped from the fatal storm. His vessel was from a foreign land, had no merchandise aboard, nor seemed constructed for traffic; and when the tempest drove her along the Allanbay shore, three persons only were visible on deck. Something mysterious hung over the fate of the vessel and crew. The conduct of Miles Colvine was less likely to remove than confirm suspicion; he was a silent and melancholy man; and when the peasantry who saved him from the storm inquired concerning the history of his ship and seamen, he heard them, but answered them not, and seemed anxious to elude all