That
brig sank with considerable loss of life more than a century and a half ago,
but its ghostly re-enactment of its own final moments have often be seen again
since, usually presaging another imminent shipping tragedy.
She
was said to have been seen, for example, some nights before the terrible loss
of the Retriever/Connemara in November 1916.
That night the moon was up on our (almost) landlocked Lough and it was
looking its best, mirroring a clear moonlight sky. There was just enough frost to make the fish
bite well and it was our intention to stop out all night.
The
water was like a mirror not a ripple disturbed the silvery surface on the bay
not a breadth of wind from the Benns of Burka or Carlingford. Manannan the Sea God of the Gael and his
brother Gaoith, the God of the Wind, had gone to sleep.
As
midnight drew near we were very much surprised to see a small, white, vapoury
cloud, low down in the water, out towards the Bar. It came drifting up in our direction, towards
Warrenpoint and in a straight line from where we rode at anchor.
We
felt alarmed at this extraordinary phenomenon and observed it closely. As it approached us we could see appear dimly
through the mist the tall masts and funnel of a steamer, as if she was rising
from the breast of the sea. Then the
mast-head light, shining like a star, burst full upon us.
The
ship was tossing, as if knocked about in a storm although we lay in the dead
calm. We could hear the sound of the
water rushing against her sides and the wind blowing fiercely against her
rigging as she rolled onward on her course.
When
she came opposite to the Quays at Warrenpoint we saw the clouds of steam go up
as if the whistle was shrieking a warning. Then suddenly she slowly sank, her stern lights vanishing below the
waves. The vapoury cloud in which she
was enveloped dissolved, fading out of sight, and nothing was left to our view
but the calm moonlit waters of Carlingford Lough.
The
boatmen in our humble craft were half-frozen with fear and the dread of the
supernatural scene they had just witnessed and prayed to be themselves
delivered from such phantoms of the deep.
I
was personally convinced that I had witnessed a good ship go down just off the
pier-head and I thought perhaps she had struck the Scaur a submerged bank
that reaches out at that point. I forced
the boatmen to row over to that place where we had seen the vessel sink. I fancied perhaps that some of her people
might yet be holding on to floating pieces of wreckage.
We
searched all about for some considerable time but all in vain. There was no evidence at all that a vessel
had just gone down in that spot.
It
was the Fetch! Or Ghost Ship of the Lord
Blaney!