THE GIANTS OF THE MOUNT.
THE history of the redoubtable Jack proves that St Michael's Mount was the
abode of the giant Cormelian, or, as the name is sometimes given, Cormoran. We
are told how Jack destroyed the giant, and the story ends. Now, the
interesting part, which has been forgotten in the narrative, is not only that
Cormoran lived on, but that he built the Mount, his dwelling-place. St
Michael's Mount, as is tolerably well known, is an island at each rise of the
tide--the distance between it and the mainland being a little more than a
quarter of a mile. In the days of the giants, however, it was some six miles
from the sea, and was known as the White Rock in the wood, or in
Cornish, "Carreg luz en kuz." Of the evidences in favour of this, more will be
said when the traditions connected with physical phenomena are dealt with. In
this wood the giant desired to build his home, and to rear it above the trees,
that he might from the top keep watch over the neighbouring country. Any
person carefully observing the structure of the granite rocks will notice
their tendency to a cubical form. These stones were carefully selected by the
giant from the granite of the neighbouring hills, and he was for a long period
employed in carrying and piling those huge masses, one on the other, in which
labour he compelled his wife to aid him. It has been suggested, with much show
of probability, that the confusion of the two names alluded to has arisen from
the fact that the giant was called Cormoran, and that the name of his wife was
Cormelian; at all events, there is no harm in adopting this hypothesis. The
toil of lifting those granitic masses from their primitive beds, and of
carrying them through the forest, was excessive. It would seem that the
heaviest burthens were imposed upon Cormelian, and that she was in the habit
of carrying those rocky masses in her apron. At a short distance from the
"White Rock," which was now approaching completion, there exists large masses
of greenstone rock. Cormelian saw no reason why one description of stone would
not do as well as another; and one day, when the giant Cormoran was sleeping,
she broke off a vast mass of the greenstone rock, and taking it in her apron,
hastened towards the artificial hill with it, hoping to place it without being
observed by Cormoran. When, however, Cormelian was within a short distance of
the "White Rock," the giant awoke, and presently perceived that his wife was,
contrary to his wishes, carrying a green stone instead of a white one. In
great wrath he arose, followed her, and, with a dreadful imprecation, gave her
a kick. Her apron-string broke, and the stone fell on the sand. There it has
ever since remained, no human power being sufficient to remove it. The
giantess died, and the mass of greenstone, resting, as it does, on clay slate
rocks, became her monument. In more recent days, when the light of
Christianity was dawning on the land, this famous rock was still rendered
sacred: "a lytle chapel" [a] having been built on it; and to this day it is
usually known as the "The Chapel Rock." [b]
[a] Leland. [b] See Appendix C for the Irish legend of Shara and Sheela.