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“Prolific May, whose everburning
lamp
Through dang’rous seas, between approaching coasts,
‘Mid hidden scares, unseen, and broken rocks,
In pitch of night, directs the doubtful path
Of fearless mariner.’
Extent.—This Guide would be
incomplete if it did not contain a chapter on the Isle of May—although
its nearest point is five miles from the Harbour of Crail—since it is
historically and otherwise so intimately associated with the East of
Fife. The extreme length of the island is only a mile and a sixth, its
greatest breadth is a quarter of a mile, and it contains little more
than 140 acres, of which a tenth is fore-shore; yet many memories of no
common kind cluster around it.
Name.—In the first part of
his History of Fife, Sibbald says that the May “in the ancient Gothic
signifieth a green island;“ but, in the second part, he says that “the
word Maia seemeth to have some affinity with Moeotoe, the name of some
tribes of the Picts, who at the Romans their first coming to the north
parts of Britain, lived besouth the Scots wall, which ran betwixt the
Firths of Forth and Clyde, as Dion, in the life of Severus telleth us;
and it is very probable that a colony of these people first took
possession of it, and gave it the name Maia.”
The Earliest Reference to
the Isle of May is found in a fragment of the Life of Kentigern. It is
there stated that the saint’s mother, Thaney, was, by the order of her
father, King Leudonus, placed into a boat made of hides, carried out
into deep water beyond the Isle of May, and there abandoned. She was put
in the coracle at “the mouth of a river which is called Aberlessic [now
Aberlady], that is, the Mouth of Stench, for at that time there was such
a quantity of fish caught there that it was a fatigue to men to carry
off the multitude of fish cast from the boats upon the sand, and so
great putrefaction arose from the fish which were left on the shore,
where the sand was bound together with blood, that a smell of detestable
nature used to drive away quickly those who approached the place.” But
the fish all followed Thaney and her boat to the place where she was
abandoned, and there they remained—so, at least, Kentigern’s unknown
biographer says. He adds that “from that time until now the fish are
found there in such great abundance, that from every shore of the sea,
from England, Scotland, and even from Belgium and France, very many
fishermen come for the sake of fishing, all of whom the Isle of May
conveniently accomodateth in her ports.”
Adrian.—The next notice of
the May is by Wyntoun, who, in his Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland, says
that :—
“Saynt Adriane wyth hys cumpany
Come off the land of Hyrkany,
And arrywyd in to Fyffe,
Quhare that thai chesyd to led thar lyff.
At the king than askyd thai
Leve to preche the Crystyn fay.
That he grantyd wyth gud will,
And thaire lykyng to fuiflule,
And (leif) to duehl in to his land,
Quhare thai couth chea it mayst plesand.
Than Adriane wyth hys cumpany
Togydder come tyl Caplawchy.
Thare sum in to the lie off May
Chesyd to byde to thare enday.
And sum off thame chesyd be northe
In steddis sere the Wattyr off Forth.”
Alas ! poor Adrian and his company
were not allowed to preach the Christian faith in peace. The heathen
Danes quickly slew the leader and many of his followers. Wyntoun thus
describes the tragedy
“Hwb, Haldane, and Hyngare
Off Denmark this tyme cummyn ware
In Scotland wyth gret multitude,
And wyth thare powere it oure-ghude.
In hethynnes all lyvyd thai;
And in dispyte off Crystyn fay
In to the land thai siwe mony,
And put to dede by martyry.
And apon Haly Thurysday
Saynt Adriane thai siwe in May,
Wyth mony off hys cumpany:
In to that haly Isle thai ly.”
In some of the lists of the
Bishops of St Andrews, Adrian is put as the first. His martyrdom is said
to have taken place in 875; and Thaney’s adventure fully three centuries
and a-half earlier.
Monastery Founded.—It was
probably because of its association with Adrian, that King David the
First founded a monastery on the Isle of May, “before the middle of the
twelfth century, which he forthwith granted to the Benedictine Abbey of
Reading in Berkshire, recently founded by his brother-in-law, Henry
Beauclerc.” The monks of Reading were bound by the charter of donation
to maintain nine priests on the May to pray for David’s soul, and the
souls of his predecessors and successors, the Kings of Scotland. Not
long afterwards, Swein Asleif wasted the island and plundered the
monastery; but it was greatly enriched by David, Malcolm the Maiden,
William the Lion, and Alexander the Second. Among other gifts, David
granted to the Abbey of Reading the viii of Rindaigros, occupying the
angle where the Tay is joined by the Earn, and there a religious house
was also established. Malcolm the Fourth commanded all good men who
fished round the May, to pay their tithes to the monks as in the time of
his grandfather. William the Lion prohibited all from fishing in their
waters without their leave; and “granted them fourpence from all ships
having four hawsers coming to the ports of Pittenweem and Anstruther
for the sake of fishing or selling fish, and in like manner .of boats
with fixed helms.”
Recovered from the English.
—For fully a century, the monks of Reading retained possession of the
Priory of May. But it is said that Alexander the Third was anxious to
recover the island from the hands of the English aliens, as they could
use it for spying out the weak parts of the country. And so, Bishop
Wishart of St Andrews bought it, in or about 1269, from one of the
Abbots of Reading, and paid to him 1100 merks of the price. One of the
Abbot’s successors, however, being dissatisfied with the bargain, tried
to overturn it. He sent two representatives to Baliol’s Parliament at
Scone, in 1292, to claim possession of the Priory, or to get the rest of
the price. The Bishop of St Andrews appealed the case to Rome, and the
two attornies appealed to King Edward as Lord Superior of Scotland. That
King, ever on the watch in his designs on the independence of Scotland,
cited Baliol four different times to appear before him. The dispute,
with others of more importance, was finally settled at Bannockburn. All
the rights to the Priory of May were transferred to the Canons of St
Andrews in 1318. “In this deed,” says Dr John Stuart, in his Preface to
the Records of the Priory of the Isle of May, “we find the Priory styled
as that of ‘May and Pittenweem;’ and in later documents it is frequently
designated as that of ‘Pittenweem, otherwise Isle of May,’ or ‘Isle of
St Adrian of May,’ and at times as that of Pittenweem alone. This has
led several writers to suppose that originally there were two distinct
priories, one of May and another of Pittenweem, and that the latter was
dedicated to the Blessed Virgin. The explanation seems to be, that the
monks of May had, from the first, erected an establishment of some sort
on their manor of Pittenweem, on the mainland of Fife, which, after the
Priory was des-severed from the house of Reading and annexed to that of
St Andrews, became their chief seat, and that thereafter the monastery
on the island was deserted in favour of Pittenweem, which was less
exposed to the incursions of the English, nearer to their superior house
at St Andrews, and could he reached without the necessity of a
precarious passage by sea.” Mr David Cook, in Fifiana, contests Dr
Stuart’s opinion; but, it seems to me, that he has done so
unsuccessfully. The outline of the later history of the Priory is
continued under Pittenweem.
Alienation.—In 1549, the
Prior of Pittenweem feued the Isle of May to Patrick Learmonth of
Dairsie, Provost of St Andrews; and the deed of conveyance, containing
an epitome of the history of the Priory, has been printed by Dr Stuart.
“The Prior alleges as motives for the alienation of the island, its
insular situation, at a distance from himself, yielding little or no
revenue, and that on the outbreak of hostilities the place was wont to
be seized by the enemy, and was thus rendered a sterile and useless
possession of the monastery. He therefore granted the island—which he
describes as now waste, and spoiled by rabbits from which the principal
revenue used to accrue, but of which the warrens were now completely
destroyed, and the place ruined by the English—together with the right
of patronage of the church on the island, and of presenting a chaplain
to continue divine service therein, out of reverence for the relics and
sepulchres of the saints resting in the island, and for the reception of
pilgrims and their oblations, according to the use of old times, and
even within memory of man.”
Ruins.—The “stately
monastery of stone” had been destroyed by the barbarous English; but a
church remained which was resorted to by the faithful on account of the
frequent miracles there wrought. There is still a fragment of this
church. It has been a plain parallelogram measuring inside barely 32
feet by 15k. The two windows in the west wall show that it dates from
the thirteenth century. Their external tops are each cut out of one
stone, and internally they are arched and enormously splayed. The most
remarkable thing about this chapel is that it stands almost due north
and south. There can be little doubt that it was long preserved “out of
reverence for St Adrian and the other saints there interred.” The
foundations of some of the other buildings can still be traced. The
portion of a stone coffin which still remains may have been Adrian’s,
although that is unlikely enough; but there need be no hesitation, at
any rate, in rejecting the tradition which seeks to prove that a
somewhat similar fragment, preserved at West Anstruther Church, is a
portion of this one, by asserting that it floated over. The chapel has
suffered from alteration as well as from dilapidation. The oven in the
bottom of the south window is modern; but the large press in the west
wall, and the circular tower pierced with shot-holes are pretty old. The
latter has evidently been built at some time for defence.
No trace seems to be left of the
chapel of the “Blessed Virgin,” which is known to have been on the
island. There appears also to have been a chapel, or perhaps more
probably an altar, of St Ethernan. Many curious details of the
pilgrimages of James the Fourth to the May are given by Dr Stuart, but
want of space compels me to omit them.
Old
Lighthouse.—The island only remained two years in Learmonth’s
possession, for it was conferred on Balfour of Manquhany in 1551, and
seven years later it was granted to Forret of Fyngask. It afterwards
became the property of Allan Lamont, who sold it to Cunningham of Barns.
Alexander Cunningham is commonly said to have been the first to erect a
lighthouse upon it. “He built there,” says Sibbald, “a tower fourty
foot high, vaulted to the top, and covered with flag-stones, whereon all
the year over, there burns in the night-time a fire of coals, for a
light; for which the masters of ships are obliged to pay for each tun
two shillings—that is, twopence sterling. Sibbald is certainly wrong
about the builder of the Lighthouse, and he is also inaccurate in regard
to the dues. In 1641, Parliament ratified the letters-patent which had
been granted, in 1636, to James Maxwell of Innerweeke, one of His
Majesty’s “bed chalmer,” and to John Cunynghame, of Barnes, for erecting
and maintaining a light on the Isle of May. According to the
letters-patent, they had been granted an impost of 2s Scots on the ton
of all native ships and vessels coming within “Dunnoter and St tobe’s
heid,” and 4s Scots on strangers, for “ilko veadge” —i.e., each voyage.
But, in 1639, the “patenteres” being willing to give all reasonable
satisfaction to the Convention of Burghs, the dues were restricted to 1s
6d Scots per ton for natives, and 3s for strangers; while all “barkes,
creires, and others weschelles,” during the months of May, June, and
July, and 15 days of August, and “Northland victuellers,” were to be
free of all duty. The “patenteres” would not suffer by this restriction,
as the members of Convention obliged themselves to cause their
neighbours to “make thankful! payment,” as also to assist in collecting
the dues, and to furnish a list of the “haill shippes” pertaining to
their burghs, with the number of “the tunes of ilke shipe.” The Act of
the Convention was also ratified by Parliament in 1641. And a new
charter, which had been granted by the King to John Cunynghame, of the
lands and barony of West Barns, comprehending “the Tie landes and Isle
of Maij,” was ratified by Parliament in 1645, for his good, true, and
thankful service in “bigging and erecting . . . . ane Light hotis,” and
maintaining the light continually. Two years later, Parliament ordained
that the restricted duty should be peaceably uplifted and enjoyed by
John Cuuynghame, who now had the full right of the gift and patent. In
1651, Sir Patrick Myrtoun of Cambo complained that, owing to the loss of
trade, the lights of the May were no benefit to him, although a great
part of his estate was engaged for the same. Ten years afterwards,
Parliament enacted that the restricted duty should be paid to Sir James
Halket of Pitfirren, and Sir David Carmichaell of Balmadie. The island
is included in a charter granted to the Earl of Kellie in 1671 and
ratified in 1672. Before 1790 the duty was let at £280 sterling per
annum, but in that year it rose to £960, and in 1800 it was let at
£1500. About 380 tons of coal were consumed every year; but the light,
even then, was not satisfactory, as in a gale it hardly showed except on
the leeward side, where it was of least use. As the event proved, it was
also dangerous. In January 1791, the keeper, his wife, and five
children, were suffocated. One child, who was found sucking the breast
of her dead mother, was saved; and the two assistant keepers, though
senseless, were got out alive. The ashes, which had been allowed to
accumulate for more than ten years, reached up to the window of the
keeper’s room; and having been set on fire by live coals falling from
the lighthouse, and the wind blowing the smoke into the windows, and the
door below being shut, the result was inevitable. The two men who
escaped declared that a sulphureous steam was observed to issue from the
heap of cinders for several weeks before the fatal night on which it
burst into flames, and therefore it was supposed by some that there had
been a fermentation among the ashes. Formerly, the families who resided
there lived in houses detached from the tower, and it was now resolved
to re-adopt the old plan. In Sibbald’s time there was “a convenient
house with accomodations for a family,” which may have become ruinous
before 1791. Probably this house and the old tower were built with the
stones of the monastery. The architect who planned and built the tower
was drowned in returning to his house, which led to the burning of
several witches who were supposed to have raised that storm. In a
bombastically written book, entitled The Key of the Forth, or Historical
Sketches of the Island of May, the story of the architect and the
witches is spun out to a great length, being made the ground-work of
something like a tragic romance of love. The old tower, which is now
used as a look-out by pilots, still bears over the door the date 1636.
As it is supposed to have been the first lighthouse erected in
Scotland, a special interest attaches to it. Mr Merson states that an
earlier light-house existed on the island, but he gives no authority.
The accompanying illustration shows how the coals were raised.
New Lighthouse.—The old
lighthouse was the only private one in Scotland, and the Commissioners
of Northern Lighthouses deemed it wise to buy the island from the Duke
of Portland, who had acquired it by marrying the heiress of Scott of
Balcomie. Accordingly, a bill was introduced into Parliament
authorising its purchase for £60,000. Whenever it became the property of
the Commissioners, they began to erect the new lighthouse, which is
massive and elegant. There is plenty of accommodation for the three
keepers and their families, and an excellent room for the
Commissioners. On the 1st of September 1816, the coal fire was
discontinued, and the oil light exhibited instead. The catoptric or
reflecting light was afterwards converted into a dioptric or refracting
one, by Mr Alan Stevenson, who, in doing so, introduced several
important and ingenious improvements. Operations have this year (1885)
been begun to still further improve the beacon by introducing the
electric light, to work which a large engine-house has been erected. The
light-room, which crowns the building at a height of 240 feet above
sea-level, is one of the sights of the island, and is well worth
inspecting. In order to point out the position of the Carr, and to make
the entrance of the Firth safer, another lighthouse was built on the
island in 1843-4. Some interesting notices of the May will he found in
two papers on “Our Lighthouses,” which appeared in Good Words in 1864.
There is also a small farm-steading, but the relative fields are few and
small. The latter, when enclosed, have been laid out in the form of a
cross, and are divided among the keepers. One horse, several cows, and a
number of sheep are kept, and poultry besides. The place was lately
over-run with ants; but determined efforts have been made to exterminate
them.
Pasture.—Mr Forrester wrote
in 1791 that:— “A very intelligent farmer, who has dealt in sheep above
thirty years, and has had them from all the different corners of
Scotland, says, that he knows no place so well adapted for meliorating
wool as the Island of May; he adds, that the fleeces of the coarsest
woolled sheep, that ever came from the worst pasture in Scotland, when
put on the Island of May, in the course of one season, become as fine as
sattin; their flesh also has a superior flavour; and that rabbits bred
on this island have a finer fur than those which are reared on the
mainland.” May mutton is still in some repute, but there seems to be
little faith now in the extra quality of the fleece, and yet the nature
of the pasture may have au effect on the wool. An Australian paper
recently contained an article on the “Change in structure of scrub-fed
sheep,” in which it was stated that these animals having to feed on
herbage above, instead of below, them, were growing longer in the neck
and legs and smaller in the body, and that in course of time there might
be produced “a kind of giraffe sheep—all neck and legs, with small body,
little wool, and less mutton.”
Water.—-Sibbald says that,
“the isle is well provided with fountains of sweet water, and a pool or
small lake.” Although there are several springs and also a small lake,
the water is not considered to be either good or safe. Even the water of
the romantically-situated Ladies’ Well is slightly brackish. And so the
keepers are regularly supplied with that beverage from Crail.
Nevertheless, Sibbald’s statement, or a similar one, has been frequently
repeated, in the same way as his erroneously-stated dimensions of the
island, by those who ought to have known better.
Fishermen.—In 1792, Mr Bell
said that there were no inhabitants except the keepers and their wives,
but that “there were formerly 10 or 15 fishermen’s families, with a
proportionable number of boats.” And Sibbald’s editor adds, in 1803,
that “the want of these families is a considerable loss to the general
interests of the fishery in the Frith; for, placed as centinels at its
entrance, they were enabled to descry and follow every shoal of herrings
or other fish that came in from the ocean.” In the Burying-ground, which
is still pointed out, there is only one grave-stone, and it is in memory
of John Wishart, who died in 1730, aged 45, and “who lived on the Island
of May.” Probably he had been one of the fishermen.
Birds.—There are also
inhabitants and visitors of another kind, bipeds likewise, and very
numerous. “Many fowls,” says Sibbald, “frequent the rocks of it, the
names the people gave to them are skarts, dun turs, gulls, scouts (and)
kittiewakes.” Standing on the top of the precipitous cliffs, it is
delightful to watch the fowls circling high o’er head, nestling on
narrow ledges of the rock, or diving in the water 100 feet below. An
interesting paper on the “Isle of May and its Birds” by Mr Agnew, the
head-keeper, appeared in Chamber’s Journal for September 1883.
Caves and Havens.—There are
several large caves into which access can be had at low water, and which
are said to have been utilised in former times by the smugglers. There
are two places where passengers can be landed in good weather, but which
are respectively unapproachable when the wind is in the east or west. At
a third point the mails are sometimes landed, and this leads me to say
that no visitor should go without taking newspapers for the
keepers. They are so shut out from the rest of the world
that these are highly acceptable. On the 1st of July 1837, a boat from
Cellardyke, containing 58 passengers, besides a crew of seven, was
swamped at the landing, and thirteen persons, chiefly young women, were
drowned.
Boatman. —A better place
for a picnic than the May cannot be imagined. Mr Alexander Watson, the
official “Isle of May Boatman,” sails from Crail every Tuesday in
summer, and every alternate Tuesday in winter. He is also ready to go on
any day with a party, but of course he should get notice. A more
cautious or obliging skipper, or a better guide over the island, could
not be desired. |