Very few "fairy stories" are given such credence as that of Thomas
and his dalliance with the Queen of Elfland. After all, he was no fairy.
He was a real person and his predictions – which were written down -
were treated so seriously that they were consulted before both the two
Jacobite rebellions.
So who was Thomas and
why was he singled out for mystical powers? Born around 1220, he lived
in Learmont Tower, near Ercildoune, now Earlston in Berwickshire. Close
by there stood a grove of hardwood trees on the banks of Huntly Burn and
as a youngster Thomas had a favourite tree under which he used to lie.
The
story goes that as he lay there one day he saw the beautiful Queen of
the Fairies approaching on her graceful white horse. She was wearing
green silk and velvet and on her horse's mane there hung 59 silver
bells. Thomas was entranced by her beauty and readily complied when the
Queen asked him to kiss her underneath his favourite tree. He then
agreed to accompany her, and the two rode off into the Eildon Hills
where Thomas spent seven years as the Queen's lover in her fairy home in
Elfland.The years seemed only a few minutes to Thomas. But when the
time came for the Queen to return him to mortal land, she made him
promise never to speak of what he had seen. He agreed and she gave him
an apple and said: "Take this for thy wages Thomas, it will give thee a
tongue that can never lie."
From then on he was known as "True Thomas". The Queen also conferred on him the gift of prophecy.
He
used his new powers to prophesy several significant historical events
including the death of King Alexander lll; the succession of Robert the
Bruce to the throne of Scotland; the defeat of the Scots at the Battle
of Flodden; the defeat of Mary, Queen of Scots' forces at the Battle of
Pinkie in 1567; and the Union of the Crowns in 1603.
He is also said to have predicted the Scottish success at the Battle of Bannockburn and the Jacobite uprisings of 1715 and 1745.
The
story of Thomas is told in the ballad Thomas the Rhymer, which was
included by Sir Walter Scott in his work, Minstrelsy of the Scottish
Border. In recent years recordings of the ballad have been made by the
folk-rock band Steeleye Span and Scottish folk musician Ewan MacColl.
Thomas
himself was a noted poet and is supposed to be the author of one of the
oldest-known surviving Scottish stories, Sir Tristrem, also edited by
Sir Walter himself.
There is one final twist
to the saga of Thomas the Rhymer. One day, many years after returning
from Elfland, he walked out of his house to his favourite tree under
which he had first met the Queen. He has never returned and has not been
seen since.
According to legend he will
return one day to help Scotland in her hour of greatest need. Some might
say that time is not far off.
Source
No comments:
Post a Comment