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1974. The date trips off my tongue with such familiar ease that it still seems fairly recent to my mind. Hard to believe, then, that it was actually 38 years ago when I was still a mere lad. Back then, DC COMICS had a title called BLACK MAGIC, which reprinted SIMON & KIRBY tales from a magazine of the same name published in the 1950s.
I remember buying the first issue with such startling clarity that I almost feel as if I went to bed last night as a 15 year old boy and woke up today the age I am now. Life really does go by so fast, alas. However, it's a story in the second issue that made a big impression on me which has lasted to this day - "BIRTH AFTER DEATH".
It purports to be a true account of events leading up to the birth of SIR WALTER SCOTT, the famed Scottish novelist, playwright and poet born in Edinburgh in 1771, who died in Melrose at the age of 61 in 1832. (ROB ROY and IVANHOE being but two of his works.)
Although I've checked, I've never been able to find any corroborating evidence to back up the tale, but I find it hard to believe that Simon & Kirby would simply have made the whole thing up. I remember reading the comic (on the day I bought it) in the graveyard of a local centuries-old church, complete with the burial vault of a once-prominent family from ages past. Creepy but apt, don't you think? Obviously that's why I associate the tale with the place today.
1822 portrait of Scott by Raeburn |
Anyway, have a read and make up your own mind. Fact or fiction? To me though, it's one of those stories that - if it isn't true - it ought to be.
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UPDATE: Simon & Kirby's story is true after all (with just a little artistic licence in regard to minor details). From THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL, Tuesday, October 18th, 1932, comes the following account. (Thanks, Tongalad.)
Sir Walter Scott's Mother Buried Alive Five Years Before His Birth
Old Essay Reveals She Was Rescued From Tomb Due to Ghoulish Sexton
London England - The astonishing fact that Sir Walter Scott's mother was declared to be dead and was actually interred five years before Sir Walter Scott's birth is recalled in a letter to the Daily Express, sent by George MacDonald, Birmingham.
"Her weird sepulchral experience," says MacDonald, "is described as follows by a great essayist of many decades ago."
Buried in Vault
Here is the description:
"Miss Rutherford, while lying in a trance and declared by the physicians to be dead, was laid away in the family tomb in the great vaults under the parish church.
"At night the ghoulish sexton stealthily entered the tomb, opened the casket and proceeded to rob the elegant and entombed lady of the jewels which were on her person according to the then prevalent custom. Finding some of the finger rings too tightly fixed, the unconscionable thief took his pocket knife and slashed the flesh from the fingers.
"Came to Life"
"The sudden shock and flow of blood caused a reaction of the vital forces, and the reanimated lady opened her eyes, uttered an exclamation of amazement and attempted to rise up.
"The guilty and horror-stricken rascal's hair rose straight upon his head, and with the yell of a desperate madman he rushed forth, thus raising the alarm which brought help and rescue to her.
"She lived many years subsequently, none the worse for her awful adventure which occurred five years previously to the birth of Sir Walter."
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Click the link below (provided by Tongalad) to see the actual newspaper's front cover:
http://news.google.com/newspapersnid=1499&dat=19321018& id=uahQAAAAIBAJ &sjid=2SEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5668,6482729
Unfortunately, the above link appears to be no longer active, though it was for years.
8 comments:
Does this shed any light on Walter Scott's mother being buried alive?
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19321018&id=uahQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=2SEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5668,6482729
Thanks, tongalad - nice to see that the story is true, 'though a a couple of trivial details differ. (The fact that she was in a vault and not buried six feet under, and that the sexton was the culprit and not two graverobbers.)
Thirty eight years???!!!
Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesssssssssss.
Scary, ain't it?
This grave robbing/birth after death story is also told In House Of Mystery #196 in a 2 page tale drawn by Wayne Howard.
Yeah, it's a 1971 issue so I'm assuming that it's a new version of the Simon & Kirby tale, which was originally published back in the '50s (and reprinted in #2 of the 9-issue '70s revival of the mag).
I remember having this story read to us in my 7th Grade class in the late 1960s, from an anthology book of scary stories. The reason I remember it so well is that a few weeks later, our Junior High school assembly for skits came up (in which each homeroom section got to present a skit). Every other section did comedy skits parodying life in our school. Our homeroom teacher decided he wanted to do something different and twisted our arms into rewriting the Resurrection of Anne Rutherford Scott as a straight drama skit. It wne over like a lead zeppelin (and I don't mean the rock group!).
At least it's probably still being talked about to this day by those who saw it, whereas the comedy skits are likely long-forgotten. Thanks for commenting.
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