It is said in Scotland that misfortune will follow those who
give away gifts from the fairies. But, when
a man is forced to choose loyalty to his friends over the fairies’ gifts, what
is he to do?
John Macqueen, known as “Black John of Pollochaig,” was faced
with just such a dilemma. The Macqueens
of Pollochaig, which means “Pool of the Little Black One,” had always been
favorites of the fairy folk, and in times before Black John, the fairies of
Strathdearn had given the Macqueens three magic candles. The candles were
talismans of great virtue. Supposedly, it was the parting of the candles, the
generation previous to Dugal McQueen, that
brought destruction upon the McQueens of Pollachaig.
Two versions of the story exist. One involves the beautiful wife
of Mackintosh of Daviot who was supposedly stolen by the fairies and was hidden
in their banqueting chamber. The wise men of the country declared that the only
way of entering the chamber was by the use of the Macqueen “magic” candles. The other story involves the wife of a humble
McGillivray clansmen. In both versions, "Black John” Macqueen was reluctantly convinced to use the candles to light the way
into the hillock. In the second version, he loses first one candle, and then
the other, and finally the last before the lady is rescued and given back to
her husband.
In both stories, Macqueen paid dearly as he had expected. Having
parted with a gift from the fairies, the house at Pollochaig was beset with one
bad fortune after another. Dugal, possibly Black John's son (but for sure his grandson or great-grandson) was taken prisoner after
the Battle of Preston and banished to the colonies. Even the house at
Pollochaig later fell to ruins.
But one man’s misfortune is another man’s gain. Dugal
McQueen, as stated before, did well for himself in the colonies, and he never
chose to go back to Scotland.
The fairies, it seemed, didn’t get the last laugh after all.
Sources
The Spectator Archive, “The River Findhorn,” 6 April 1912,
pg 10, found at http://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/6th-april-1912/10/the-river-findhorn.
Deerhound, “Hallowe’en, The Bairn Eating Wolf and the Hound,”
Wednesday, October 31, 2007, found at http://deerhounds.blogspot.com/2007/10/halloween-and-hounds-of-wolf-hunt.html.