PERSONS of a notoriously wicked character were said to have been
frequently taken off bodily by Old Nick when they died. The following is
one of many stories to that effect.
More than a hundred years ago a dark strange man appeared in St.
Just; no one knew whence he came, but it was supposed, however, that he
was put ashore from a pirate ship, by way of marooning him; as the crews
of such are wont to do by any wretch that is too bad even to consort,
with high sea robbers.
He
didn't appear to want for money as he soon rented a small, lone,
tenement, near the shore, and married a widow of the neighbourhood.
People wondered, for a long while, how so many vessels got wrecked under
the cliff that bordered the stranger's farm. At length it was
discovered that, on dark winter nights—when honest
folks were a-bed—he made it his practice to fasten a lantern to the neck
of a horse, which he had hobbled, by tying down its head to a fore-leg;
then he drove the horse along near the cliff, and the lantern, from its
motion, would be taken for a vessel's stern-light.
Consequently those on board ships sailing by, expecting to find
plenty of sea room, would come right in and be wrecked on the rocks. Any
of their crews that escaped a watery grave the wretch would knock on
the head with his axe, or cut off their hand when they tried to grasp
the rocks.
He lived long and became rich by his sin. At length, however, the
time came for the fiend to claim his own. When he was dying his awful
shrieks were heard far away, as he cried, "Do save me from the devil,
and the sailors, there, looking to tear me to pieces." Several parsons
and other pious folks were sent for,—all those of the neighbourhood
readily came, for the dying sinner was rich.
Though it was in harvest time and high day, the old wrecker's chamber
became, at times, as dark as night. The parsons saw the devil in the
room, when others could not; by their reading they drove him to take
many shapes, but for all that he would not be put out; at last, when he
took the form of a fly, and buzzed about the dying wretch, they saw it
was in vain for them to try any longer.
During the time the exorcists were engaged, the chamber seemed—by the
sound—to be filled with the sea splashing around the bed; waves were
heard as if surging and breaking against the house, though it was a good
bit inland.
Whilst this was taking place at the dying wrecker's bedside, two men,
who were about harvest work in one of his fields near the cliff, heard a
hollow voice, as if coming from the sea, which said, "The hour is come
but the man is not come."
Looking in the direction whence the words came, they saw no person;
but far out to sea, they beheld a black, heavy, square-rigged ship, with
all sail set, coming fast in, against wind and tide, and not a hand to
be seen aboard her.
She came so close under cliff that only her topmast could be seen;
when black clouds—that seemed to rise out of the deep—gathered around
her and extended thence straight to the dying man's dwelling.
The harvest-men, terrified at the sight of this ship-of-doom so near
them, ran up to the town-place, just as the old sinner died, when his
dwelling shook as if about to fall. Everybody, in great fright, rushed
out and saw the black clouds roll off towards the death-ship, which, at
once, sailed away amidst a blaze of lightning—far over sea, and
disappeared.
The weather immediately cleared, and nothing unusual occurred until a
few men assembled to put the wrecker's ghastly remains quickly off the
face of the earth; then, as the coffin was borne towards the churchyard,
a large black pig came—no one knew from whence—and followed the
bearers, who all declared the coffin was too light to contain any body.
The sky, too, became suddenly overcast, and a tempest raged to that
degree, they could scarcely keep on their legs to reach the churchyard
stile, where such sheets of blinding lightning flashed around them, that
they dropped the coffin and rushed into the church.
The storm having abated, they ventured out, and found nothing of the
coffin but its handles and a few nails, for it had been set on fire, and
all else consumed, by the lightning.
It does not appear what business the black pig had in the funeral
procession; such is the way, however, in which the story is always told.
From Traditions and Hearthside Stories of West Cornwall, Vol. 2, by William Bottrell, 1873.
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