<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The<br/> Mystery of the Sea</h1>
<p class="tp1">By<br/>
<span class="f14">Bram Stoker</span><br/>
</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER I<br/> <span class="f8">SECOND SIGHT</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">I had</span> just arrived at Cruden Bay on my annual visit,
and after a late breakfast was sitting on the low
wall which was a continuation of the escarpment
of the bridge over the Water of Cruden. Opposite to
me, across the road and standing under the only little
clump of trees in the place was a tall, gaunt old woman,
who kept looking at me intently. As I sat, a little group,
consisting of a man and two women, went by. I found
my eyes follow them, for it seemed to me after they
had passed me that the two women walked together and
the man alone in front carrying on his shoulder a little
black box—a coffin. I shuddered as I thought, but a moment
later I saw all three abreast just as they had been.
The old woman was now looking at me with eyes that
blazed. She came across the road and said to me without
preface:</p>
<p>“What saw ye then, that yer e’en looked so awed?”
I did not like to tell her so I did not answer. Her great
eyes were fixed keenly upon me, seeming to look me
through and through. I felt that I grew quite red, whereupon
she said, apparently to herself: “I thocht so! Even
I did not see that which he saw.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“How do you mean?” I queried. She answered ambiguously:
“Wait! Ye shall perhaps know before this
hour to-morrow!”</p>
<p>Her answer interested me and I tried to get her to
say more; but she would not. She moved away with a
grand stately movement that seemed to become her great
gaunt form.</p>
<p>After dinner whilst I was sitting in front of the hotel,
there was a great commotion in the village; much running
to and fro of men and women with sad mien. On
questioning them I found that a child had been drowned
in the little harbour below. Just then a woman and a
man, the same that had passed the bridge earlier in the
day, ran by with wild looks. One of the bystanders
looked after them pityingly as he said:</p>
<p>“Puir souls. It’s a sad home-comin’ for them the
nicht.”</p>
<p>“Who are they?” I asked. The man took off his cap
reverently as he answered:</p>
<p>“The father and mother of the child that was
drowned!” As he spoke I looked round as though some
one had called me.</p>
<p>There stood the gaunt woman with a look of triumph
on her face.</p>
<p class="ast">*****</p>
<p>The curved shore of Cruden Bay, Aberdeenshire, is
backed by a waste of sandhills in whose hollows seagrass
and moss and wild violets, together with the pretty “grass
of Parnassus” form a green carpet. The surface of the
hills is held together by bent-grass and is eternally
shifting as the wind takes the fine sand and drifts it to
and fro. All behind is green, from the meadows that
mark the southern edge of the bay to the swelling uplands
that stretch away and away far in the distance,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
till the blue mist of the mountains at Braemar sets a kind
of barrier. In the centre of the bay the highest point of
the land that runs downward to the sea looks like a
miniature hill known as the Hawklaw; from this point
onward to the extreme south, the land runs high with a
gentle trend downwards.</p>
<p>Cruden sands are wide and firm and the sea runs out
a considerable distance. When there is a storm with the
wind on shore the whole bay is a mass of leaping waves
and broken water that threatens every instant to annihilate
the stake-nets which stretch out here and there along
the shore. More than a few vessels have been lost on
these wide stretching sands, and it was perhaps the roaring
of the shallow seas and the terror which they inspired
which sent the crews to the spirit room and the bodies
of those of them which came to shore later on, to the
churchyard on the hill.</p>
<p>If Cruden Bay is to be taken figuratively as a mouth,
with the sand hills for soft palate, and the green
Hawklaw as the tongue, the rocks which work the extremities
are its teeth. To the north the rocks of red
granite rise jagged and broken. To the south, a mile
and a half away as the crow flies, Nature seems to have
manifested its wildest forces. It is here, where the
little promontory called Whinnyfold juts out, that
the two great geological features of the Aberdeen coast
meet. The red sienite of the north joins the black gneiss
of the south. That union must have been originally a
wild one; there are evidences of an upheaval which must
have shaken the earth to its centre. Here and there are
great masses of either species of rock hurled upwards
in every conceivable variety of form, sometimes fused
or pressed together so that it is impossible to say exactly
where gneiss ends or sienite begins; but broadly
speaking here is an irregular line of separation. This<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
line runs seawards to the east and its strength is shown
in its outcrop. For half a mile or more the rocks rise
through the sea singly or in broken masses ending in
a dangerous cluster known as “The Skares” and which
has had for centuries its full toll of wreck and disaster.
Did the sea hold its dead where they fell, its floor around
the Skares would be whitened with their bones, and
new islands could build themselves with the piling wreckage.
At times one may see here the ocean in her fiercest
mood; for it is when the tempest drives from the south-east
that the sea is fretted amongst the rugged rocks and
sends its spume landwards. The rocks that at calmer
times rise dark from the briny deep are lost to sight for
moments in the grand onrush of the waves. The seagulls
which usually whiten them, now flutter around
screaming, and the sound of their shrieks comes in on
the gale almost in a continuous note, for the single cries
are merged in the multitudinous roar of sea and air.</p>
<p>The village, squatted beside the emboucher of the
Water of Cruden at the northern side of the bay is
simple enough; a few rows of fishermen’s cottages, two
or three great red-tiled drying-sheds nestled in the
sand-heap behind the fishers’ houses. For the rest of the
place as it was when first I saw it, a little lookout beside
a tall flagstaff on the northern cliff, a few scattered
farms over the inland prospect, one little hotel down on
the western bank of the Water of Cruden with a fringe
of willows protecting its sunk garden which was always
full of fruits and flowers.</p>
<p>From the most southern part of the beach of Cruden
Bay to Whinnyfold village the distance is but a few
hundred yards; first a steep pull up the face of the
rock; and then an even way, beside part of which runs a
tiny stream. To the left of this path, going towards
Whinnyfold, the ground rises in a bold slope and then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
falls again all round, forming a sort of wide miniature
hill of some eighteen or twenty acres. Of this the
southern side is sheer, the black rock dipping into the
waters of the little bay of Whinnyfold, in the centre of
which is a picturesque island of rock shelving steeply
from the water on the northern side, as is the tendency
of all the gneiss and granite in this part. But to east and
north there are irregular bays or openings, so that the
furthest points of the promontory stretch out like fingers.
At the tips of these are reefs of sunken rock falling
down to deep water and whose existence can only be
suspected in bad weather when the rush of the current
beneath sends up swirling eddies or curling masses of
foam. These little bays are mostly curved and are green
where falling earth or drifting sand have hidden the
outmost side of the rocks and given a foothold to the
seagrass and clover. Here have been at some time or
other great caves, now either fallen in or silted up with
sand, or obliterated with the earth brought down in the
rush of surface-water in times of long rain. In one of
these bays, Broad Haven, facing right out to the Skares,
stands an isolated pillar of rock called locally the “Puir
mon” through whose base, time and weather have worn
a hole through which one may walk dryshod.</p>
<p>Through the masses of rocks that run down to the sea
from the sides and shores of all these bays are here
and there natural channels with straight edges as though
cut on purpose for the taking in of the cobbles belonging
to the fisher folk of Whinnyfold.</p>
<p>When first I saw the place I fell in love with it. Had
it been possible I should have spent my summer there, in
a house of my own, but the want of any place in which
to live forbade such an opportunity. So I stayed in the
little hotel, the Kilmarnock Arms.</p>
<p>The next year I came again, and the next, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
next. And then I arranged to take a feu at Whinnyfold
and to build a house overlooking the Skares for myself.
The details of this kept me constantly going to Whinnyfold,
and my house to be was always in my thoughts.</p>
<p>Hitherto my life had been an uneventful one. At
school I was, though secretly ambitious, dull as to results.
At College I was better off, for my big body
and athletic powers gave me a certain position in which
I had to overcome my natural shyness. When I was about
eight and twenty I found myself nominally a barrister,
with no knowledge whatever of the practice of law and
but little less of the theory, and with a commission in the
Devil’s Own—the irreverent name given to the Inns of
Court Volunteers. I had few relatives, but a comfortable,
though not great, fortune; and I had been round the
world, dilettante fashion.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span></p>
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