Samuel R. Crockett

The Raiders: Being Some Passages In The Life Of John Faa, Lord And Earl Of Little Egypt


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      THE RAIDERS

      Samuel Rutherford Crockett was born in 1859, on the family farm in Kirkcudbrightshire, where his unmarried mother worked as a dairymaid. He was largely brought up by his grandparents who were devout Cameronians in the Convenanting tradition and the boy had a happy childhood in the Galloway countryside he came to love and to write about in his later fiction. Educated in Castle Douglas, Crockett gained a bursary to Edinburgh University in 1876 where he studied for an Arts degree, supplementing his small income by tutoring and by writing articles, stories and poetry for various periodicals. He spent the summer of 1878 in London hoping to find work as a journalist but returned to Edinburgh and graduated in the following year. Shortly after this he was engaged as a tutor and companion to two young men and the trio travelled together on a tour of Europe. Still keen on writing, but now seekng some more permanent position, Crockett came back to Edinburgh and attended science classes at the University there. Then, in 1881, he enrolled as a divinity student at New College. Four years later, he graduated as a Free Kirk minister and in 1886 he took up his first post at a kirk in Penicuik. Tall, bearded, energetic and committed to social, cultural and educational activities of all sorts, Crockett made quite an impression in his parish. During his travelling years he had met Ruth Mary Milner, the daughter of a Lancashire mill owner, and the couple were married in 1887. They were to have two sons and three daughters in the years to come.

      Crockett continued to place his essays and stories in newspapers and magazines, especially The Christian Leader, and in 1893 a collection of this work (set in Galloway) was published as The Stickit Minister and Other Common Men. This was followed by The Raiders; The Lilac Sunbonnet; Mad Sir Uchtred of the Hills and The Play-Actress (all 1894). The next year saw the publication of the stories in Bog Myrtle and Peat Tales, and two more novels, The Men of the Moss Hags and A Galloway Herd. Wholly committed to his writing now, and having achieved tremendous success in an immensely popular literary market, Crockett resigned from his ministry in 1895 and turned to full-time writing. His enthusiasm for Christian socialism found expression in Cleg Kelly Arab of the City (1896) which was set in the slums of Edinburgh. Crockett continued to publish in periodicals, including the prestigious The Cornhill, and over the next 18 years he produced seven books for children, three further collections of stories and another 43 popular novels, some set in contemporary times and many others as historical romances.

      The author established himself at Torwood House near Peebles where he amassed a major library. Having become friendly with J. M. Barrie, Andrew Lang, R. L. Stevenson, the Gosses and Rider Haggard, Crockett was well known in literary circles in both Scotland and England. He continued to travel widely, spending time abroad and setting some of his books in France and Spain. In later years his fiction ceased to sell so well, and his titles appeared or were reprinted as increasingly cheap paperbound editions. But he regarded himself as a storyteller and continued to write with zest despite failing health. Crockett died in 1914, while on holiday at Avignon in France, and he is buried in Balmaghie Churchyard at Castle Douglas.

      THE RAIDERS

      BEING SOME PASSAGES IN THE LIFE OF

      JOHN FAA, LORD AND EARL OF LITTLE EGYPT

      S.R. CROCKETT

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      Contents

       Introduction

       Foreword

      1. Moonlight and May Mischief

      2. John Heron of Isle Rathan

      3. Dawn on Rathan Sands

      4. The Cave of Adullam

      5. Auld Wives’ Clavers

      6. The Still Hunter

      7. The Red Cock Crows at Craigdarroch

      8. Night on the Moor

      9. In Ramsay Bay

      10. Smuggler and King’s Man

      11. The Great Cave of Isle Rathan

      12. Morning in the Cave

      13. The Defence of the Cave

      14. The Hill Gypsies

      15. The Dry Cave

      16. The Camp of Silver Sand

      17. Council of War

      18. To Introduce Mistress Crummie

      19. On the Track of the Raiders

      20. The Great Fight at the Bridge-Head

      21. Sammle Tamson Fetches a Rake of Water

      22. I Get the Right Side of Eppie Tamson

      23. The Forwandered Bairn

      24. A Meeting with Billy Marshall

      25. The Dungeon o’ Buchan

      26. The Wolf ’s Slock

      27. In Which By the Blessing of Providence I Lie Bravely

      28. The Black Sea-Chest

      29. The Murder Hole

      30. A Wooing Not Long A-Doing

      31. May Mischief Proves Her Mettle

      32. I Salute the Lady Grizel

      33. Jen Geddes’ Sampler Bag

      34. Sweet Cake and Conserves

      35. Silver Sand’s White Magic

      36. The Barring of the Door

      37. The Silver Whistle Blows

      38. The Second Crowing of the Red Cock

      39. The Earl’s Great Chair

      40. The Breaking of the Barrier

      41. A Race for Life upon the Ice

      42. The Fastness of Utmost Enoch

      43. The Aughty on the Star Hill

      44. The Sixteen Drifty Days

      45. Alien and Outlaw

      46. The Brownie

      47. The Last of the Outlaws

      48. The Earl’s Great Chair Once More

      Glossary

       Introduction

      The Raiders is an exciting, fast-paced adventure story in the style of Kidnapped or The Thirty-Nine Steps which carries the reader along by sheer narrative exuberance. Set in early eighteenth-century Galloway, it evokes:

      … the graceless unhallowed days after the Great Killing [of the Covenanters], when the saints of God had disappeared from the hills of Galloway and Carrick, and when the fastnesses of the utmost hills were held by a set of wild cairds, cattle reivers and murderers. (p. xiii)

      Patrick Heron, a straightlaced almost priggish character, tells how in his youth he had been caught up between these groups and entangled in a violent feud. Patrick is a generally reliable narrator who seems very much an innocent abroad in a world he does not fully understand. Even in retrospect he manages to sound thoroughly bemused by much of what he has to tell us, and quite often reveals himself to have had only the vaguest idea of the significance of the events he describes so vividly.

      The first chapter is marvellous, from the romance of its title ‘Moonlight and May Mischief ’ and its mysterious first sentence, so reminiscent of the beginning of Treasure Island and countless other smuggling tales ‘It was upon Rathan Head that I first heard their bridle-reins jingling clear’, to the description of