..and The Death Watch Beetle.....
Now
that I am in my early seventies there are many superstitions that I no longer
believe in. It was not always so for my mother, being a country
girl from the middle of nowhere in Ireland was a deep believer in most, if not
all of them. There were things she would not do on certain
days, there were places she would never visit and things she would never say – or
allow us children to do or say. Her belief in the
unnatural bordered on religious fervour.........
Most
if not all can be explained as totally natural but it would have been
impossible to convince my mother or my country grandparents of any fact that
contradicted their honest, if illogical, beliefs.
She
would never let us play with elder sticks.............those straight sticks
from the elderberry tree. They were great for fencing as young boys
but oh no, if mum caught you using them you were likely to get a flick of the
dishcloth around your ears. (Come to think of it, how we boys
never ended up blind is a mystery). Oh yes, the sticks, she
believed that if you were hit with an elder stick you would never grow.
It was
likewise with the blackberries when the wet October nights produced a white
froth on the berries. That was her signal that the blackberry
season was over. You see she claimed that the froth was ‘the
Pooka spit’ and could poison you at the very least.
The Pooka was supposed to be another fairy type character....
There
were dozens more but they would take too long to explain.....
One
summer, about 1950, we were ‘down the country’ with my grandparents
which turned out to be our last childhood holiday spent
there. Of course we did not know then that it was to be so
and would probably have broken our hearts had we realised it at the
time. You see, one evening whilst sitting around the turf
fire waiting for Granddad Gorman or one of our uncles to tell us a story,
gruesome or otherwise, we were introduced to the tale of ‘The Death Watch
Beetle’...................
We
were all sitting around with nothing to do with the silence almost perfect
except for the occasional crackle from the turf on the fire. I
suppose I was dozing off perched on my favourite corner hob almost on top of
the fire. Again it is amazing how I never actually fell asleep and
toppled over into the actual fire but that is getting away from the little
story I am trying to relate.
Suddenly,
and I will admit that his call frightened me, Granddad called out to Granny “Shush
now, can you hear it?” Granny replied “Hear what
Patsy?” “There it is again” he called as he
pointed to the ceiling. “Tis the Death Watch Beetle”.
I strained to listen and what I heard sounded to me like the clock ticking away
on the wall.
"What
is it you mean Granddad?” I asked. He took a long
time before he spoke and when he did there was a tremor in his
voice. Granny now stood with one hand over her mouth.
Granddad
spoke with an even softer voice than he generally used and I was shocked
to hear him say “Someone nearby is going to die shortly – you mark my word
Michael. As sure as eggs is eggs, someone will die soon”.
No one
else spoke as we sat in the silence listening to the sound which seemed to get
louder as time passed. Before we went to bed that night, Granny
told us to promise to pray for the person who was soon to die.
Two
days later, we went with Granny on the donkey and cart to the nearby town where
we boarded the train that would take us home. My older brother
carried a letter to mum from Granny. When we arrived home a
few hours later and mum had read the letter she let out a huge gasp and clasped
the letter to her breast. Even as young as I was, at nine or
ten years, I could still feel the tension in the air.
Two
nights later as we were getting ready for bed and mum stood at the open window
in our bedroom she cried out “Tis the Banshee, your Granddad was right”.
All I could hear was the soft howling of what I thought was one of the local
dogs crying at the moon. When I said so to mum, she cried out “Dog my
foot: ‘tis the Banshee I tell you. Someone is going to die tonight”. I
could tell that she was serious and truly believed in what she was saying.
(It
would be several years before I fully learned of the Banshee – The mythical
Woman Fairy – who can sometimes be seen combing her long black hair on the edge
of forests, wailing at the top of her voice, announcing the imminent death of
someone nearby. As for the beetle, it is a genuine character who eats
away at the rafter wood in old buildings).
The
strangest thing about Granddad hearing the Death Watch Beetle and mum hearing
the Banshee, about ten days later Granny Gorman passed away. We
were too young to attend her funeral with mum. Granddad
survived her by about fifteen years but visits to the country became rarer as the years passed.
Coincidence?
Of course it was but to this day, I cannot help but believe that the beetle and
Banshee foretold of her death............ a death that robbed me of one of the
greatest influences in my life and a woman whom I dearly loved...........
--------------Mike--------------
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