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    Chapter 5

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    CHAPTER V SOME STRANGE PHENOMENA

    MANY superstitious beliefs exist both in the Highlands and Lowlands
    of Scotland. Of course the mining population must furnish its
    contingent of legends and fables to this mythological repertory.
    If the fields are peopled with imaginary beings, either good
    or bad, with much more reason must the dark mines be haunted
    to their lowest depths. Who shakes the seam during tempestuous
    nights? who puts the miners on the track of an as yet unworked
    vein? who lights the fire-damp, and presides over the terrible
    explosions? who but some spirit of the mine? This, at least,
    was the opinion commonly spread among the superstitious Scotch.

    In the first rank of the believers in the supernatural
    in the Dochart pit figured Jack Ryan, Harry's friend.
    He was the great partisan of all these superstitions.
    All these wild stories were turned by him into songs,
    which earned him great applause in the winter evenings.

    But Jack Ryan was not alone in his belief. His comrades affirmed,
    no less strongly, that the Aberfoyle pits were haunted,
    and that certain strange beings were seen there frequently,
    just as in the Highlands. To hear them talk, it would have
    been more extraordinary if nothing of the kind appeared.
    Could there indeed be a better place than a dark and deep coal
    mine for the freaks of fairies, elves, goblins, and other
    actors in the fantastical dramas? The scenery was all ready,
    why should not the supernatural personages come there to
    play their parts?

    So reasoned Jack Ryan and his comrades in the Aberfoyle mines.
    We have said that the different pits communicated with
    each other by means of long subterranean galleries.
    Thus there existed beneath the county of Stirling
    a vast tract, full of burrows, tunnels, bored with caves,
    and perforated with shafts, a subterranean labyrinth,
    which might be compared to an enormous ant-hill.

    Miners, though belonging to different pits, often met, when going
    to or returning from their work. Consequently there was a constant
    opportunity of exchanging talk, and circulating the stories
    which had their origin in the mine, from one pit to another.
    These accounts were transmitted with marvelous rapidity,

    passing from mouth to mouth, and gaining in wonder as they went.

    Two men, however, better educated and with more practical
    minds than the rest, had always resisted this temptation.
    They in no degree believed in the intervention of spirits,
    elves, or goblins. These two were Simon Ford and his son.
    And they proved it by continuing to inhabit the dismal crypt,
    after the desertion of the Dochart pit. Perhaps good Madge,
    like every Highland woman, had some leaning towards the supernatural.
    But she had to
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