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                         FOLK TALES OF BREFFNY


                                   BY

                                B. HUNT


                       MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
                      ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON
                                  1912








INTRODUCTION


Many of the stories in this volume were told by an old man who said
he had more and better learning nor the scholars. "The like of them,"
he declared, "do be filled with conceit out of books, and the most of
it only nonsense; 'tis myself has the real old knowledge was handed
down from the ancient times." The spread of education and cheap
literature robbed him of audience: the boys read of adventure by land
and sea, the girls interested themselves in the fate of heroes with
marble-white complexion and coal-black moustache. But it happened
that the old man took a contract to break stones for lime, and a
child with an insatiable desire for information came to watch him at
work. "I promise you will walk the world, like a Queen of ancient days,
renowned for learning and wit," he assured her, delighted to find a
listener at last. The child was only seven years old, and could not
remember all she heard, so most of his lore died with him.

"The King's Daughter of France," "The Dark Oath," and "Nallagh's Child"
were told by other friends.

The Folk Tale is essentially dramatic and loses much when it is
written down; moreover it is often put into a form unsuited to the
spirit of naïve philosophy from whence it springs. The peasant of
ancient race is more akin to the aristocratic type than the bourgeois
can ever be--and the story told from generation to generation bears
greater resemblance to the work of a poet than to that of the popular
novelist, who is the bourgeois of literature. Superstition in a race
is merely the proof of imagination, the people lacking fairy lore
must also lack intelligence and wit.


B. HUNT.








CONTENTS


                                                        PAGE

    I.      The King's Daughter of France                  1
    II.     The Cow of a Widow of Breffny                 13
    III.    Kate Ellen's Wake                             21
    IV.     The Dark Oath                                 29
    V.      Fairy Gold                                    37
    VI.     M'Carthy of Connacht                          45
    VII.    Nallagh's Child                               65
    VIII.   The Enchanted Hare                            73
    IX.     The Bridge of the Kist                        81
    X.      The Child and the Fiddle                      89
    XI.     The Cutting of the Tree                       97
    XII.    The Little Settlement                        105
    XIII.   The Tillage in the Fort                      115
    XIV.    The New Deck of Cards                        121
    XV.     The Lifting of a Child                       127
    XVI.    The Voice at the Door                        135
    XVII.   The Earl's Son of the Sea                    143
    XVIII.  The Girl and the Fairies                     153
    XIX.    Good-night, my Brave Michael                 159
    XX.     The Lad and the Old Lassie's Song            165
    XXI.    The Basket of Eggs                           169
    XXII.   The Broken Branch                            175
    XXIII.  Digging for Gold                             179
    XXIV.   Story of a Churn                             183
    XXV.    The Gankeynogue in the Oak Chest             187
    XXVI.   The Maker of Brogues                         193

            Glossary                                     197








I

THE KING'S DAUGHTER OF FRANCE


There was once an old man of Ireland who was terrible poor, and he
lived by his lone in a small wee house by the roadside. At the morning
of the day he would go for to gather sticks in a wood was convenient
to that place, the way he'd have a clear fire to be sitting at of
an evening.

It fell out one time, of a cold night, that Paddy heard a knock at
the door. He went over, and when he opened it he seen a little boy
in a red cap standing without.

"Let you come in and take an air to the fire," says he, for he always
had a good reception for every person.

The boy with the red cap walked in, and he stopped for a good while
conversing. He was the best of company, and the old man didn't find
the time passing until he rose for to go.

"Let you come in and rest yourself here any evening you are out in
these parts," says he.

The very next night the little fellow was in it again, and the night
after that, warming himself at the clear fire and talking away.

"Paddy," says he, the evening he was in it for the third time,
"Paddy, I do be thinking it is bitter poor you are!"

"I am, surely," says the old man.

"Well, let you pay attention to me, it is the truth I'm speaking,
you'll have more gold than ever you'll contrive for to spend."

"I could go through a fair share of gold," says Paddy.

"I am determined for to make a rich man of you," the little boy goes
on. "There is a lady at the point of death, and she is the King's
daughter of France. I have a bottle here in my pocket, and that is
the cure for the disease is on her. I'll be giving it to you, and let
you set out for France at the morning of the day. When you come to
the King's palace the servants will bid you be gone for an ignorant
beggar, but let you not be heeding them at all. Don't quit asking
to see the King, and in the latter end they'll give in to you. It is
with himself the most difficulty will be, for that man will think it
hard to believe the likes of a poor old Irishman could have a better
cure nor all the doctors in the world. A power of them allowed they'd
have her right well in no time, and it is worse they left her. The
King is after giving out that the next person coming with a false
cure be to lose their life. Let you not be scared at that decree,
for you are the man shall succeed. You may promise to have the lady
fit to ride out hunting in nine days. Three drops from the bottle is
all you have to give her, and that for three mornings after other."

Paddy paid great heed to all the boy in the red cap was telling
him. He took the wee bottle that was to make him a rich man, and he
made ready for to set out at the morning of the day.

He was a long time travelling the world before he came to the
palace where the King's daughter of France was lying at the point
of death. The servants made a great mock of the poor old Irishman,
but he paid no attention to their words at all. In the latter end he
got seeing the King, and that gentleman allowed the likes of Paddy
could never succeed when the doctors of the world were after failing.

"I'd only be having the head cut off you, my poor old man!" says he.

"I'm not the least bit in dread, your honour," says Paddy. "The lady
is bound to be ready to ride out hunting in nine days, if she uses
my medicine."

His perseverance and courage won over the King of France, and
permission was given for a trial of the cure.

The first morning, after taking the three drops from the bottle,
the lady turned in her bed. The second morning, after the treatment,
she sat up and ate her food.

The third morning, when she had taken the three drops, the King's
daughter of France rose from her bed. And in nine days she was ready
to ride out hunting.

They could not do enough for Paddy, there was great gratitude in
them. Well, the reward he accepted was a big sack of gold, and that
was the load he brought home to his cabin in Ireland.

The first evening he was sitting by his clear fire, the little boy
came in at the door.

"Didn't I do well for you, Paddy?" says he.

"You did surely. I have more gold in that sack than ever I'll contrive
for to spend."

"Ah, not at all! It is twice as much I'll be getting for you."

"Is it another King's daughter has need of a cure?" asks Paddy.

"No, but a different business entirely. There is a great bully to be
fought in the City of Dublin, and yourself is the man shall win it."

"Do you tell me so!" says Paddy.

"In troth I do. The man you have to fight is a big, fierce fellow no
one can get the better of. He has the youth of the world battered to
pieces, the way no person comes forward against him any more. There is
a fine purse of money put up for to entice a champion to face him; and
there will be great laughter when yourself puts in an appearance. They
will ask if you are wishful to fight with gloves on your hands, but
it is your bare fists are the best. Let you say you'll toss for which
it is to be, but toss with the half-crown I give you, and you are
certain to win. Myself is coming to that place for to second you, and
it's bound to be the grandest bully was seen in the City of Dublin."

With that the little fellow went away out of the house. And at the
morning of the day my brave old Paddy started for Dublin. He wasn't
too long on the road, for he got a lift from a man was driving there
to see the bully. Well, there was odious laughing and cheering when
the crowd saw the champion was come to accept the challenge. The
big man was after battering the youth of the world, allowed he had
no notion of striving against the likes of Paddy. But when no person
else came forward they were bound for to accept him, and they asked
would he wear gloves on his fists.

"We'll be tossing for that," says he, bringing out the half-crown he
had from the little boy in the red cap.

He won the toss, sure enough, and he allowed it was bare-handed he'd
strive. All the time he was looking round, anxious like, but he could
see no sign of the one that was to second him. He went into the ring
in odious dread; but then the little fellow came and stood beside
him. My brave Paddy let out and he struck the champion one blow,
and didn't he lay him dead at his feet.

It was then there was roaring and cheering for the old man. And in
all the confusion the little lad got away; Paddy never seen where he
went. The whole crowd took up a terrible great collection of money
for the champion was after destroying the man with a single blow. That
lot of gold, along with the purse was promised for the fight, filled
a sack as full as it could hold. So Paddy went home well rewarded,
and not a bit the worse of his jaunt to the City of Dublin.

The first evening he was sitting by his own fireside, the little boy
in the red cap came in at the door.

"Didn't I do well for you, Paddy?" says he.

"You did, surely. It is rich for life I am owing to your contrivances."

"Then will you be doing me a service in return for all?" asks the
little fellow.

"Indeed then, I will," says Paddy.

"We have all arranged for to cross over to France this night. We
intend for to bring away the lady you cured, the King's daughter of
that country," says the boy. "But we cannot contrive for to accomplish
the like unless we have flesh and blood along with us. Will you come?"

"Aye, surely!" says Paddy.

With that the two went out at the door and across the road into
a field. It was thronged with regiments of the Good People, past
belief or counting. They were running every way through the field,
calling out:

"Get me a horse, get me a horse!"

And what were they doing only cutting down the bohlans and riding
away on them.

"Get me a horse, get me a horse!" says old Paddy, calling out along
with them.

But the fellow in the red cap came over to him looking terrible vexed.

"Don't let another word out of you," says he, "except one of ourselves
speaks first. Mind what I'm telling you or it will be a cause of
misfortune."

"I'll say no more except in answer to a question," says Paddy.

With that they brought him a white yearling calf, and put him up
for to ride upon it. He thought it was a queer sort of a horse, but
he passed no remarks. And away they rode at a great pace, the Good
People on the bohlans and Paddy on the yearling calf.

They made grand going, and it wasn't long before they came to a big
lake had an island in the middle of it. With one spring the whole party
landed on the island and with another they were safe on the far shore.

"Dam, but that was a great lep for a yearling calf," says Paddy.

With that one of the Good People struck him a blow on the head,
the way the sense was knocked out of him and he fell on the field.

At daylight the old man came to himself, and he lying on the field
by the big lake. He was a long journey from home, and he was weary
travelling round the water and over the hills to his own place. But the
worst of all was the sacks of gold: didn't every bit of the fortune
melt away and leave him poor, the way he was before he came in with
the Good People.








II

THE COW OF A WIDOW OF BREFFNY


In the ancient times a man the name of M'Gauran ruled in these
parts. He was a cruel tyrant surely and prouder than the High King of
Ireland or O'Rourke was a Prince in Breffny. He conceited for to build
a house would stand to the end of time, a stronghold past the art of
man to overthrow or the fury of the wind to batter down. He gave out
that all the bullocks in his dominions were to be slaughtered and
mortar wet with the blood of them. Evenly the cows were not spared
at the latter end, the way a powerful lamentation went up from the
poor of the world were looking on the lonesome fields.

You that are young will be thinking the blackness of his spirit and
the cruelty of his heart brought a curse on him to rot the flesh off
his living bones. You will be expectant of the story of a king, and
he walking the provinces of Ireland a skeleton and a warning to the
eyes of man. But the aged and wise have understanding to know of the
tribulation laid out for the good and the just, they putting their
sorrows over them in this world where the evil have prosperity. The
like will be enduring for a short space only, and a queer fate waits
the wicked in the age-long hours of eternity. Proud is the tyrant
and wealthy till they set him in the clay: humbled with fear is his
spirit at the journey's end.

There was a widow woman had her little dwelling convenient to where
M'Gauran was building his castle. Gold she had none, nor evenly a
coin was of silver, one cow only was her riches on the earth. (And
surely them that had heart to molest her like would be robbing the
dead of the raiment is with them in the grave.) Herself was more nor
horrid lonesome the day she seen the creature driven from her by a
man of the chiefs, he having a lengthy knife in his hand.

At the fall of night a traveller came to the poor woman's cabin
door. He was a bent, aged man with a sorrowful countenance on him,
and the garments did cover him were rags. She invited him within,
giving him the kindly welcome, and she set out what food was in the
place for his refreshment.

"It is destroyed I am with a parching drouth is splitting my gullet,"
says he, "and I walking the mountainy ways since the screech of
dawn. The sun was splitting the bushes at the noon of day, and the
fury of it was eating into my skin. But no person took compassion on
me at all."

With that the widow set a mug of milk before him, and it the last
drop was in the countryside. He drank it down, middling speedy,
and he held out the cup to be filled again.

"'Tis a heart scald surely," says herself, "that I be to refuse the
request of a man is weary walking the territory of Ireland, since the
rising sun brought light on his path. There is a king in these parts,
stranger, and he has the cattle destroyed on the poor of the world,
the way he will have a lasting mortar to his house."

"Isn't yourself after giving me the loveliest mug of sweet milk?" says
he, like one was doubtful of the honesty of her words.

"The last drop was in this townland, stranger, and it is heart glad
I am that it refreshed you. I had but the one cow only, the grandest
milker in the land, and she was driven from me this day--up yonder
to the masons are working with their shovels dripping red."

"I am thinking it is four strong walls in the pit of Hell are
building for that chieftain's soul. Maybe it's red hot they'll be,
and he imprisoned within them for a thousand years and more," says
the traveller.

"Let there be what masonry there will in the next world, the wealth
of the people cements his castle there beyond. For the cow and the
milk and the butter are the gold of the dwellers on the land," says
the widow. "But let you be resting a while in this place: what haste
is on you to depart?" For she seen he was rising to be gone.

He raised his hand in benediction, and the voice of him speaking was
that sweet it charmed the birds off the bushes, the way they flew
round him in the darkening night. "May the blessing of the King of
Heaven be upon you. May He send you a cow will never run dry, and you
milking her at all seasons of the year to the day of your departure
from the world."

With that the place was bare of his presence. He was gone the like
of a spirit has power to travel the land unseen.

At the morning of the day following the poor woman stood at her
cottage door, facing out to the mountains are a long journey from
that place. Didn't she see a great wonder:--A piece fell clean from
the hillside and from it came a cow, white as the driven snow, she
travelling faster nor the wind. The widow seen all as clear as we
do be regarding the rising of the sun in the Eastern sky. Whatever
power was laid on her eyes the distance was no obstruction to her
vision that day. But it was not until the creature came and stood by
herself that she bethought her of the benediction of the traveller,
and the cow would never run dry.

That was the beast had the great renown on her: people came from every
art and part to be looking on her. The milk she gave was richer nor
the best of cream, and the butter off it was the best in Ireland.

The day the widow died, a young child seen the white cow travelling
away to the mountains. And no man beheld her more, nor evenly heard
tell of the like. But the Gap of Glan confronts us to this day,
and that is where the creature rose to the light of the world.








III

KATE ELLEN'S WAKE


Kate Ellen lived by her lone for her husband was employed overseas. She
was a strange sort of a creature, pale and scared looking, with one
blue eye in her head and the other one grey. She had some kind of
disease that came at her with a fluttering in her heart. Sometimes
she would die of it for a couple of hours, and all the while she was
dead she'd be dreaming she was drowning.

There was a fort not a many perches distant from my poor Kate Ellen's
house, and that was a noted place for the Good People to be out
diverting themselves. Moreover it was well known to the neighbours
that herself used to be away with them, but she allowed there was no
truth in the report. Now it happened of a May eve that a young child
seen her, and she milking the cushogues along with a score of the
fairies. Another night a man on his way from a distant fair found
her on the road before him riding with the little horseman.

One day Kate Ellen came into the kitchen of a friend's house, and
she stopped there chatting for an hour's time. She allowed that she'd
surely die in a short space for the disease was making great ravages
and the doctors could take no hold of it at all.

"No person can give me the least relief in the world," says she. "And
I'll be making but the one request of my friends and neighbours,
let there be no whiskey at the wake."

"Sure the like was never heard tell of before," says the woman of
the house. "What use would there be in a dry wake?"

"Maybe no use at all, as you are after saying," answers Kate
Ellen. "But let you pay heed to my words or there's like to be a
queer story told at the end of time."

"'Tis the raving of death is on you, my poor creature," says the
woman of the house. "Sure you'll be the beautiful corpse and every
one of us paying our best respects to the same."

Not a long after Kate Ellen was found in her own house and she lying
dead on the floor. All the friends and neighbours gathered in for
the wake, and what had they along with them only a beautiful jar of
the best whiskey. They could not think to give in to the arrangement
herself set out, that they'd remain in the place with a parching
drouth for company.

The whole party were sitting round, and the jar of itself was in the
middle of the floor. There came a noise and shouting on the street,
like as if there was a powerful assembly of people without; and
then a great battering on the windows. The door opened wide and the
disturbance came into the kitchen, yet no person sitting there seen
a heth that was not in it from the start. It was a queer gathering
surely, for the friends and neighbours of the dead were silent and
still, and the crying went round them on the air.

After a while didn't the jar of whiskey let a lep out of it and
begin for to roll on the floor. It was turned again and every drop
teemed from it before the watching eyes. Yet no person seen the Good
People were handling the drink and roving through the house. Then
the disturbance passed from the kitchen, and away down the field,
whatever was last for to go closed the door behind all.

A man stood up and he says: "This is no right gathering surely,
and we would do well to be gone."

With that another opens the door, and all made ready to depart. But
when they looked out and seen the fort all thronged with lights they
grew fearful to quit the house.

There was the powerfullest laughter and cheering down among the
thorn trees of the circle, and there came a blast of the loveliest
music--fiddles and pipes and voices singing.

"It is the Good People are having the whole beautiful wake down there
beyond," says a man. "Sure it is well known Kate Ellen was in league
with themselves."

"By the powers, it is more like a wedding they are conducting this
hour," says another.

"Come on away home," says a third, "what enticement is on us stop
when the drink is gone from us to the fairies are fiddling with joy!"

But they bid him depart by his lone, for the rest were in dread of
passing the fort before day. He was a bold, daring sort of a man,
and it's likely he'd have gone only for his brother taking a hold of
his coat.

"You'll be taken by the Good People," says he, "and they in great
humour after whipping off with the whiskey before our eyes."

Sure it was more nor horrid wonderful that Kate Ellen had understanding
for to know what might be taking place on the night of her departure
from home. Maybe it's in agreement she was to be going for good with
the fairies and not to her grave at all.








IV

THE DARK OATH


In the ancient times there was a young lad, and he gifted with a
temper was a fright to the world of man. He never controlled his
speech but took delight in letting great oaths and curses out of him,
they rising continually in his heart like water in a spring well.

There were few of the neighbours had a mind to make free with himself,
sure it was an odious dread came upon them and they regarding
the villainy of his heart lepping out at his mouth with the words
speaking. All the time he was middling great with another gosoon of
the one age who would not be warned from his company.

The two would be travelling the roads and roaming the fields of
Connacht from the screech of dawn to dark. But for all their diversions
together they fell out on a summer's day, and it was blows they gave
one another until a strong perspiration ran down from them and the
air moved before their eyes like the stars of heaven on a frosty
night. Neither could gain the mastery, and at long last they be to
quit striving for they were bone weary and feeble as an infant child.

The one was hasty in his speech let a dark oath that he would be the
death of his companion, evenly if the power of the lonesome grave
itself was set between them to hold him from the fulfilment of his vow.

In three days from the time the words were spoken he died of a strange,
sudden sickness.

The other had a great satisfaction on him, he having no dread of a
man was rotting in the clay, where rich and poor are alike and the
strong have no mastery above the weak. But in a short while a warning
came to the lad in a dream, the way he walked the world in fear from
that out:--

He seen a field where he was standing by his lone to confront a
black bull was charging down. The eyes of the beast were glowing red
as burning fire, and it was no right thing surely. There was such a
fluttering of dread on the boy that he could not endeavour for to run,
but he stood like a growing rush does be waving with the breeze. Three
times the likeness of the great black bull came down against him,
wounding him with the curved and lengthy horns were upon it; with
that he awoke.

"The devil will be gifting the spirit of the dead with the form of
a living beast, the way he'll get bringing me the dark destruction
he promised, and I looking fearful at the flames are burning in his
eyes," thinks the lad.

Sure enough, in a month's time, he was in a field, and the appearance
of the black bull came against him. Three times it struck him, the
way he was tormented with the agony of the goring horns. With that
the likeness of the living beast faded from the place leaving the
young lad sore and sorry but alive.

He had peace for a short space only to be thinking on his
escape. Didn't a second warning come in the night to restore the cold
fear to his heart:--

He seen a black goat come at him in standing leps, and the eyes of
it were glowing like a turf in the heart of a strong fire.

"It is less power the devil be's giving him this time," thinks the
lad. "All the while 'tis an ill hour stands before me: the like of
yon beast will be middling weighty and it striking me in a standing
lep with no one of its four feet upon the ground."

All came about as it was put on his eyes in the vision. Not a many
days went by before the likeness of the great black goat threw its
strength against him in the field. Three sore batterings he be to
endure, the way he was left lying on the grass with every bone of
him tormented in pain and a cold fear at his soul.

When the wounds were healed on his body and the passing of time
restored his mind to a better peace, didn't he behold a third dream
of the night:--

He stood in the lane between his house and the field, and the
appearance of a great turkey cock flew down upon him from the sky.

At that he let a hearty laugh, and he roused up in his bed.

"Sure the devil has little wit to be thinking I'll take my death
from the like," says he. "And how would it be possible a fine,
stout-hearted lad could be scared by the fowls of the sky!"

He laughed that night, and he laughed at the noon of day when the
bird flew against him in the lane. But the appearance of the turkey
cock opened the joining of his skull with one blow of the beak like a
sharpened knife was upon it. The second stroke and the third dashed
the brains from his head and scattered them grey on the brown and
dusty path.

And that is the how he came to a bad death as his companion promised
him, and the dark oath was accomplished no spite of the power of
the grave.

We that are yet in this world know well where we are, but ignorance is
on us of where we be to repair. Sure the passing of the spirit is the
strangest and awfullest thing was ever devised or heard tell of. It
was said in the ancient times and is well known to this present that
the soul quits the body by the joining of the skull. The eyes have
seen evil, the ears have heard it, and the mouth has made laughter
and speech of the same: how then would they be a right and a fitting
doorway for the feet of the spirit to pass! Moreover, I have heard
tell that the skull of man and the skull of woman are different one
from another--and it is the soul of herself has the sorest departure
from the flesh.








V

FAIRY GOLD


It happened one time that a poor man dreamt three nights after other
of a sack of fairy gold was buried in under the roots of a lone bush
and it growing in a field convenient to his house.

"It may be there is nothing in it," says he to himself. "But I will
be digging in that place and if I find a treasure it will be a big
reward for the labour."

He never let on a word of his intentions to any person, nor did
he evenly pass any remark on the strange dreams were after coming
to him. At the fall of the day he took a loy in his hand and set
out for the lone bush. He was not a great while at work before the
steel blade struck against a substance that had no feel of clay,
and the man was full sure it was not a stone he was after striking
against. He wraught hard to bring whatever was in it to light--and
what had he only a powerful fine sack of pure gold and splendid jewels.

He raised it up on his shoulders and set out for home, staggering
under the load. It was maybe a hundredweight of treasure he had with
him, and he went along planning out the uses of that wealth. Sure the
burden was a rejoicement to him and no hardship at all evenly if it
had him bent double like an aged and crippled man.

When he came to his own place he went to the byre, and it was there
he put down the sack in front of three cows were standing in the
bails. For he was not wishful to be making a display of that splendour
before the neighbours all, and it was likely he would find some person
within making their cailee. Sure enough when he went in on the door
of the house he seen two men sitting by the fire and they in no haste
to depart. Now the strangers had the English only, and the people of
the house spoke Irish with one another.

Says himself, using the Gaelic, "I have a beautiful treasure
without--bars of fine gold are in it, and jewels would be the delight
of a queen of the world."

"Oh, bring it into the house," says she. "Sure it will rise my heart
to be looking on the like; the hunger of it is put on my eyes by your
words speaking."

"I have better wit than to make display of my fortune to every person
is living in the land," says he. "Let you content yourself until the
two men have departed, and then we'll fetch the sack in from the byre
where I left it in front of the cows."

When the man and woman of the house were shut of the company they
went out to the yard, and they fair wild with delight. Himself told
the story of the three dreams and the finding of the gold in under
the roots of the lone bush.

"Did you spit on it?" she inquires.

"I did not," says he.

With that she allowed he was after making a big mistake.

"How would that be?" he asks.

"My father had great knowledge of the like," says herself. "I often
heard him tell of how those treasures do be enchanted, and power is
on them for to melt away. But if a man was to spit on fairy gold he'd
get keeping it surely."

"Amn't I after bringing it this far," says he, "and the weight of it
destroying my shoulders with bruises and pains. Not the least sign of
melting was on yon article and it a warrant to bring down the scales
at a hundred and more."

With that they went into the byre, and they seen the three cows were
striving to break out of the bails.

"They are in dread of what's lying there in front," says herself. "The
cattle of the world have good wisdom surely, and they do be looking
on more nor the eye of man gets leave to behold."

"Quit raving about the cows," says he. "Look at my lovely sack and
it bulging full."

When the two went up to the head of the bails the woman let a great
cry out of her.

"What are you after bringing to this place from among the roots of
the lone bush? It has the movement of life in it--and how could the
like be treasure at all!"

"Hold your whisht, woman," says the husband, and he middling vexed
at her words.

"Will you look at the bag is turning over on the ground?" says she.

He seen there was truth in her words, but all the while he would not
give in to be scared.

"It is likely a rat is after creeping in," he allows, "and he is
having his own times striving to win out."

"Let you open the sack, and I will be praying aloud for protection
on us--for it is no right thing is in it at all," says herself.

With that he went over and he turned the hundredweight of treasure
until he had it propped up against the bails. When he began for
to open the bag the cows went fair wild, striving and roaring and
stamping to get away from the place entirely.

The head of a great eel looked out from under the man's hand where
he was groping for the treasure. The eyes of it were the colour of
flame and as blinding to the sight as the naked sun at noon of a
summer's day.

The man gave one lep that carried him to the door and there the
paralysis of dread held him down. Herself let a scream could be
heard in the next townland, but she never asked to stir from where
she was standing.

The appearance of the eel twisted itself out of the sack and travelled
along the ground, putting the six feet of its length into the awfullest
loops and knots were ever seen. Then it reared up its head and neck to
stand swaying for a while, a full half of it in the air. The man and
woman were convenient to the door but the both were too scared to go
out on it; they watched the eel and they seen it twist up round a bail
until the head of it was touching the roof. Didn't it break away out
through the thatch, and whether it melted off the face of the earth or
travelled to other parts was never heard tell. But the likeness of that
beast was the whole and only treasure came out of the sack the poor man
dug from under the roots of the lone bush where the fairy gold was hid.








VI

M'CARTHY OF CONNACHT


I

There was a fine young gentleman the name of M'Carthy, he had a most
beautiful countenance and for strength and prowess there was none to
equal him in the baronies of Connacht. But he began to dwine away, and
no person knew what ailed him. He used no food at all and he became
greatly reduced, the way he was not able to rise from his bed and he
letting horrid groans and lamentations out of him. His father sent
for three skilled doctors to come and find out what sort of disease
it might be, and a big reward was promised for the cure.

Three noted doctors came on the one day and they searched every vein
in young M'Carthy's body, but they could put no name on the sickness
nor think of a remedy to relieve it. They came down from the room
and reported that the disease had them baffled entirely.

"Am I to be at the loss of a son is the finest boy in all
Ireland?" says the father.

Now one of the doctors had a man with him was a very soft-spoken
person, and he up and says:

"Maybe your honours would be giving me permission to visit the young
gentleman. I have a tongue on me is that sweet I do be drawing the
secrets of the world out of men and women and little children."

Well they brought him up to the room and they left him alone with
M'Carthy. He sat down by the side of the bed and began for to flatter
him, the like of such conversation was never heard before.

At long last he says, "Let your Lordship's honour be telling me--What
is it ails you at all?"

"You will never let on to a living soul?" asks M'Carthy.

"Is it that I'd be lodging an information against a noble person like
yourself?" says the man.

With that the young gentleman began telling the secrets of his heart.

"It is no disease is on me," says he, "but a terrible misfortune."

"'Tis heart scalded I am that you have either a sorrow or a sickness,
and you grand to look on and better to listen to," says the other.

"It is in love I am," says M'Carthy.

"And how would that be a misfortune to a fine lad like yourself?" asks
the man.

"Let you never let on!" says M'Carthy. "The way of it is this: I am
lamenting for no lady is walking the world, nor for one is dead that
I could be following to the grave. I have a little statue has the
most beautiful countenance on it was ever seen, and it is destroyed
with grief I am that it will never be speaking to me at all."

With that he brought the image out from under his pillow, and the
loveliness of it made the man lep off the chair.

"I'd be stealing the wee statue from your honour if I stopped in this
place," says he. "But let you take valour into your heart, for that
is the likeness of a lady is living in the world, you will be finding
her surely."

With that he went down to the three doctors and the old man were
waiting below. For all his promises to young M'Carthy he told the
lot of them all he was after hearing. The doctors allowed that if
the gentleman's life was to be saved he must be got out of his bed
and sent away on his travels.

"For a time he will be hopeful of finding her," says the oldest
doctor. "Then the whole notion will pass off him, and he seeing
strange lands and great wonders to divert him."

The father was that anxious for the son's recovery that he agreed to
sell the place and give him a big handful of money for the journey.

"It is little I'll be needing for myself from this out, and I am old
man near ripe for the grave," says he.

So they all went up to the room and told young M'Carthy to rise
from his bed and eat a good dinner, for the grandest arrangements
out were made for his future and he'd surely meet the lady. When he
seen that no person was mocking him he got into the best of humour,
and he came down and feasted with them.

Not a long afterwards he took the big handful of money and set out on
his travels, bringing the statue with him. He went over the provinces
of Ireland, then he took sea to England and wandered it entirely,
away to France with him next and from that to every art and part of
the world. He had the strangest adventures, and he seen more wonders
than could ever be told or remembered. At the latter end he came back
to the old country again, with no more nor a coin or two left of the
whole great fortune of money. The whole time he never seen a lady was
the least like the wee statue; and the words of the old doctor were
only a deceit for he didn't quit thinking of her at all. M'Carthy
was a handsome young gentleman, and if it was small heed he had for
any person he met it was great notice was taken of him. Sure it was a
Queen, no less, and five or six princesses were thinking long thoughts
on himself.

The hope was near dead in his heart and the sickness of grief was on
him again when he came home to Ireland. Soon after he landed from
the ship he chanced to come on a gentleman's place, and it a fine
big house he never had seen before. He went up and inquired of the
servants if he would get leave to rest there. He was given a most
honourable reception, and the master of the house was well pleased to
be entertaining such an agreeable guest. Now himself happened to be a
Jew, and that is the why he did not ask M'Carthy to eat at his table,
but had his dinner set out for him in a separate room. The servants
remarked on the small share of food he was using, it was scarcely what
would keep the life in a young child; but he asked them not to make
any observation of the sort. At first they obeyed him, yet when he used
no meat at all on the third day, didn't they speak with their master.

"What is the cause of it at all?" he says to M'Carthy. "Is the food
in this place not to your liking? Let you name any dish you have a
craving for, and the cook will prepare it."

"There was never better refreshment set before an emperor," says
M'Carthy.

"It is civility makes you that flattering," answers the Jew. "How
would you be satisfied with the meat is set before you when you are
not able to use any portion of it at all?"

"I doubt I have a sickness on me will be the means of my death," says
M'Carthy. "I had best be moving on from this place, the way I'll not
be rewarding your kindness with the botheration of a corpse."

With that the master of the house began for to speak in praise of a
doctor was in those parts.

"I see I must be telling you what is in it," says M'Carthy. "Doctors
have no relief for the sort of tribulation is destroying me."

He brought out the statue, and he went over the whole story from start
to finish. How he set off on his travels and was hopeful for awhile;
and how despair got hold of him again.

"Let you be rejoicing now," says the Jew, "for it is near that lady
you are this day. She comes down to a stream is convenient to this
place, and six waiting maids along with her, bringing a rod and line
for to fish. And it is always at the one hour she is in it."

Well, M'Carthy was lepping wild with delight to hear tell of the lady.

"Let you do all I'm saying," the Jew advises him. "I'll provide you
with the best of fishing tackle, and do you go down to the stream
for to fish in it too. Whatever comes to your line let you give to
the lady. But say nothing might scare her at all and don't follow
after her if she turns to go home."

The next day M'Carthy went out for to fish, not a long was he at the
stream before the lady came down and the six waiting maids along with
her. Sure enough she was the picture of the statue, and she had the
loveliest golden hair was ever seen.

M'Carthy had the luck to catch a noble trout, and he took it off
the hook, rolled it in leaves and brought it to the lady, according
to the advice of the Jew. She was pleased to accept the gift of it,
but didn't she turn home at once and the six waiting maids along with
her. When she went into her own house she took the fish to her father.

"There was a noble person at the stream this day," she says, "and he
made me a present of the trout."

Next morning M'Carthy went to fish again, and he seen the lady coming
and her six waiting maids walking behind her. He caught a splendid fine
trout and brought it over to her; with that she turned home at once.

"Father," says she, when she went in, "the gentleman is after giving
me a fish is bigger and better nor the one I brought back yesterday. If
the like happens at the next time I go to the stream I will be inviting
the noble person to partake of refreshment in this place."

"Let you do as best pleases yourself," says her father.

Well, sure enough, M'Carthy got the biggest trout of all the third
time. The lady was in the height of humour, and she asked would
he go up to the house with her that day. She walked with M'Carthy
beside her, and the six waiting maids behind them. They conversed
very pleasantly together, and at last he found courage for to tell
her of how he travelled the world to seek no person less than herself.

"I'm fearing you'll need to set out on a second journey, the way you
will be coming in with some other one," says she. "I have an old father
is after refusing two score of suitors were asking me off him. I do be
thinking I'll not get joining the world at all, unless a king would
be persuading himself of the advancement is in having a son-in-law
wearing a golden crown upon his head. The whole time it is great
freedom I have, and I walking where it pleases me with six waiting
maids along with me. The old man has a notion they'd inform him if
I was up to any diversion, but that is not the way of it at all."

"It is funning you are, surely," says M'Carthy. "If himself is that
uneasy about you how would it be possible you'd bring me to the house
to be speaking with him?"

"He is a kindly man and reasonable," says she, "and it is a good
reception you'll be getting. Only let you not be speaking of marriage
with me, for he cannot endure to hear tell of the like."

Well, the old man made M'Carthy welcome, and he had no suspicion the
two were in notion of other. But didn't they arrange all unbeknownst
to him, and plan out an elopement.

M'Carthy went back to the Jew, and he told him all. "But," says he,
"I am after spending my whole great fortune of money travelling the
territory of the world. I must be finding a good situation the way
I'll make suitable provision for herself."

"Don't be in the least distress," says the Jew. "I did not befriend
you this far to be leaving you in a bad case at the latter end. I'll
oblige you with the loan of what money will start you in a fine
place. You will be making repayment at the end of three years when
you have made your profit on the business."

The young gentleman accepted the offer, and he fair wild with
delight. Moreover, the Jew gave himself and the lady grand assistance
at the elopement, the way they got safe out of it and escaped from
her father was raging in pursuit.

M'Carthy was rejoicing surely, and he married to a wife was the
picture of the statue. Herself was in the best of humour too, for
it was small delight she had in her own place, roaming the fields
or stopping within and six waiting maids along with her. A fine,
handsome husband was the right company for her like. They bought a
lovely house and farm of land with the money was lent by the Jew;
and they fixed all the grandest ever was seen. After a while M'Carthy
got a good commission to be an officer, the way nothing more in the
world was needful to their happiness.




II

M'Carthy and his lady had a fine life of it, they lacking for no
comfort or splendour at all. The officer's commission he had, brought
himself over to England from time to time, and the lady M'Carthy would
mind all until he was home. He saved up what money was superfluous, and
all was gathered to repay the loan to the Jew only for a few pounds.

Well it happened that M'Carthy went to England, and there he fell
in with a droll sort of a man was the best of company. They played
cards together and they drank a great power of wine. In the latter
end a dispute came about between them, for the both claimed to have
the best woman.

"I have a lady beyond in Ireland," says M'Carthy, "and she is an
ornament to the roads when she is passing along. But no person gets
seeing her these times and that is a big misfortune to the world."

"What's the cause?" asks the Englishman.

"I'd have a grief on me to think another man might be looking on
her and I not standing by," says M'Carthy. "So she gives me that
satisfaction on her promised word: all the time I do be away she
never quits the house, and no man body is allowed within."

The Englishman let a great laugh out of him at the words.

"You are simple enough!" says he. "Don't you know rightly when you
are not in it herself will be feasting and entertaining and going on
with every diversion?"

M'Carthy was raging at the impertinence of him, and he offered for
to fight.

"What would that be proving?" says the Englishman. "Let you make a
powerful big bet with myself that I will not be able for to bring
you a token from your lady and a full description of her appearance."

"I'll be winning the money off you, surely!" says M'Carthy.

"Not at all," says the Englishman. "I'm not in the least uneasy about
it, for I'm full sure it's the truth I'm after speaking of how she
does be playing herself in your absence."

"You'll find me in this place and you coming back," says M'Carthy. "Let
you be prepared with the money to have along with you."

The Englishman took ship to Ireland, and he came to the house of the
lady M'Carthy. Herself was in the kitchen making a cake, and she seen
the man walking up to the door. Away she run to the parlour, and in
the hurry she forgot the lovely pearl ring she took off her finger
when she began at the cooking. Well, he found the door standing open,
and he seen the ring on the kitchen table. It was easy knowing it
was no common article would be in the possession of any one but the
mistress of the house. What did the lad do, only slip in and put it
in his pocket. With that the waiting maid came and asked his business,
the lady M'Carthy was after sending her down.

"Oh, no business at all," says he. "But I am weary travelling and I
thought I might rest in this place."

He began for to flatter the girl and to offer her bribes, and in the
latter end he got her to speak. She told him all what the mistress
of the house was like; how she had a mole under her right arm and
one on her left knee. Moreover she gave him a few long golden hairs
she got out of the lady's comb.

The Englishman went back to M'Carthy, brought him the tokens,
and demanded the payment of the bet. And that is the way the poor
gentleman spent the money he had saved up for the Jew.

M'Carthy sent word to his wife that he was coming home, and for her to
meet him on the ship. She put her grandest raiment upon her and started
away at once. She went out to the ship and got up on the deck where
she seen her husband standing. When she went over to him he never said
a word at all, but he swept her aside with his arm the way she fell
into the water. Then he went on shore full sure he had her drowned.

But there was another ship coming in, and a miller that was on her
seen the lady struggling in the sea. He was an aged man, yet he
ventured in after her and he saved the poor creature's life.

Well, the miller was a good sort of a man and he had great compassion
for herself when she told him her story. She had no knowledge of the
cause of her husband being vexed with her, and she thought it hard
to believe the evidence of her senses that he was after striving to
make away with her. The miller advised the lady M'Carthy to go on
with the ship was sailing to another port, for may be if she went
home after the man he would be destroying her.

When the ship came into harbour the news was going of a great
lawsuit. The miller heard all, and he brought word to the lady that
M'Carthy was in danger of death.

"There are three charges against him," says the miller. "Your father
has him impeached for stealing you away and you not wishful to be
with him: that is the first crime."

"That is a false charge," says she, "for I helped for to plan the
whole elopement. My father is surely saying all in good faith, but
it is a lie the whole time."

"A Jew has him accused for a sum of money was borrowed, and it due
for repayment: that is the second crime," says the miller.

"The money was all gathered up for to pay the debt," says the
lady. "Where can it be if M'Carthy will not produce it?"

"The law has him committed for the murder of yourself: and that is
the third crime," says the miller.

"And a false charge too, seeing you saved me in that ill hour. I am
thinking I'd do well to be giving evidence in court of law, for it's
maybe an inglorious death they'll be giving him," says she.

"Isn't that what he laid out for yourself?" asks the miller.

"It is surely, whatever madness came to him. But I have a good wish
for him the whole time."

"If that is the way of it we had best be setting out," says he.

The lady and the miller travelled overland, it being a shorter journey
nor the one they were after coming by sea. When they got to the court
of law wasn't the judge after condemning M'Carthy; and it was little
the poor gentleman cared for the sentence of death was passed on him.

"My life is bitter and poisoned on me," says he, "maybe the grave is
the best place."

With that the lady M'Carthy stood up in the court and gave out that she
had not been destroyed at all, for the miller saved her from the sea.

They began the whole trial over again, and herself told how she
planned the elopement, and her father had no case at all. She could not
tell why M'Carthy was wishful to destroy her, and he had kept all to
himself at the first trial. But by degrees all was brought to light:
the villainy of the Englishman and the deceit was practised on them
by him and the servant girl.

It was decreed that the money was to be restored by that villain,
and the Jew was to get his payment out of it.

The lady M'Carthy's father was in such rejoicement to see his
daughter and she alive, that he forgave herself and the husband for
the elopement. Didn't the three of them go away home together and
they the happiest people were ever heard tell of in the world.








VII

NALLAGH'S CHILD


In the ancient days there were a power of the Good People travelling
the land of Breffny. It was easy knowing they were middling proud
and conceity in themselves, for they rode upon what appeared to be
horses and had music with them, no less! Children were changed by the
fairies too, and no matter what way they were reared the like never
grew to be right things.

There was once a man the name of Nallagh, lived in a tidy little
place beyond the river. The wife and himself had one child, a gosoon,
that could never be learned to speak, nor walk, nor stand upright,
nor evenly to crawl upon the floor. The whole time the creature had
all his makes and shapes natural and good only for a powerful great
head was on him.

The mother had her own times minding the youngster. Evenly when he
was right big she'd be lifting him out of the bed, at the morning of
the day, and fixing him up in a chair. There he'd sit, watching the
fire until the fall of night, seemingly contented and in the best of
humour. He had great observation for all that would be doing in the
place, and if the least thing went astray he'd have an odious cor on
him. The fire was his whole delight, when a turf fell and the sparks
flew he'd open his mouth until you'd swear he was going to let a crow
out of him. But never a sound came at all.

It happened one time that Nallagh and the wife went to market,
leaving the servant boy and servant girl to mind the place.

"Let you keep up a good fire for the youngster, the way he will not be
lonesome, and he looking on the glowing turf is his whole delight. Let
you attend to your business the same as if myself was standing by
to bid you do all things particular and tasty," says the mistress,
and she going out at the door.

Not a long were the two by their lone before they quit working and
began for to play themselves through the kitchen.

Says the servant boy: "We'd do well to be making a little feast,
considering herself is not in it, and the wee coley but a silent
creature will not be clashing on us at all."

With that they brought the best of butter, cream and the like from
the dairy, and the girl mixed all in a meskin for to make a butter
cake. They built the fire with turf enough to roast the dinner of
a giant, set the pot-hooks in the ears of the pan and let down the
crook for to hang it on. "With the help of the Living Powers, that'll
be the luscious bit," says the servant girl, putting down the batter
for to bake.

The whole time they were at their diversions Nallagh's child never
quit watching the pair. Maybe it's in expectation he was of getting
his taste of the feast.

The butter cake was doing nicely, turning a grand colour and a lovely
smell rising off it. The two heroes were in the best of humour,
chatting other and funning, when all of a sudden the servant boy
chanced to look out over the half door. "I declare to man, we're
destroyed entirely," says he. "Himself and the mistress are without!"

Sure enough it was Nallagh and the wife were after delaying in
the market but a short space only. The girl, hearing tell of them
coming in on her sooner nor they were expected, had the wit to whip
the butter cake off the fire, and she slipped it in under the chair
where the child was all times sitting.

"It's the queer old cor he's putting on his countenance," says
she. "But what about it, considering he is unable for to clash on us!"

With that the father and mother came into the kitchen. And the four
near fell dead with wonderment and fear, for when he seen the parents
the wee lad cried out:

"Hot, hot under my chair!"

The servants were in odious dread, full sure they'd be found out and
hunted from the place. For the butter cake was steaming mad from the
fire, and the child never quit shouting:

"Hot, hot under my chair!"

He didn't let another word out of him but only the one thing, saying
it maybe a hundred times after other:

"Hot, hot under my chair."

Well, if he was to say it a hundred times, or a thousand itself,
Nallagh and the wife could not know what in under the shining Heaven
he was striving for to tell. They were all of a tremblement with the
wonder of the speech coming to him, and they never thought to consider
was there sense in the words at all. It was a great miracle, surely, to
hear the creature that never made a sound before, and he roaring out:

"Hot, hot under my chair!"

The old people were that put about they never thought to look round
the place to see was anything astray; and I promise you the two heroes
didn't ask to clash on themselves.

The whole house was left through other until the fall of night, and
every person in it was weary to the world with the dread and surprise
was on them. After dark the mother puts the son to bed, fixing him
up right comfortable. But it was not a sweet rest was laid out for
the people of that house.

In the darkness of the black midnight, a powerful great storm shook
the place. It was like as if the four winds of Heaven were striving
together, and they horrid vexed with one another. There were strange
noises in it too, music and shouting, the way it was easy knowing the
Good People were out playing themselves, or maybe disputing in a war.

Thinking the child might be scared at the commotion, herself took a
light in her hand and went over to his bed.

"Is all well with you, sonny?" says she, for she had a fashion of
speaking with him, evenly if it was no answers he'd give.

But the little fellow was not in it at all, he was away travelling
the world with the Fairy horsemen were after coming for him.

The whole disturbance died out as speedy and sudden as it came. The
music dwined in the far distance and the wind was still as the dawn
of a summer's day. Sure it was no right tempest at all but an old
furl blast the Good People had out for their diversion.

The child was never restored to Nallagh and the wife. The fairies
left them in peace from that out; they never heard the music on the
distant hills, nor the regiments of horsemen passing by. The whole
time it was lonesome they'd be, and they looking on the empty chair
where the strange child delighted to sit silent, watching the turf
was glowing red.








VIII

THE ENCHANTED HARE


There was a strong farmer one time and he had nine beautiful cows
grazing on the best of land. Surely that was a great prosperity,
and you'd be thinking him the richest man in all the countryside. But
it was little milk he was getting from his nine lovely cows, and no
butter from the milk. They'd be churning in that house for three hours
or maybe for five hours of a morning, and at the end of all a few wee
grains of butter, the dead spit of spiders' eggs, would be floating
on the top of the milk. Evenly that much did not remain to it, for
when herself ran the strainer in under them they melted from the churn.

There were great confabulations held about the loss of the yield,
but the strength of the spoken word was powerless to restore what
was gone. Herself allowed that her man be to have the evil eye, and
it was overlooking his own cattle he was by walking through them and
he fasting at the dawn of day. The notion didn't please him too well,
indeed he was horrid vexed at her for saying the like, but he went no
more among the cows until after his breakfast time. Sure that done no
good at all--it was less and less milk came in each day. And butter
going a lovely price in the market, to leave it a worse annoyance to
have none for to sell.

The man of the house kept a tongue hound that was odious wise. The
two walked the cattle together, and it happened one day that they
came on a hare was running with the nine cows through the field. The
hound gave tongue and away with him after the hare, she making a
great offer to escape.

"Maybe there is something in it," says the man to himself. "I have
heard my old grandfather tell that hares be's enchanted people;
let it be true or no, I doubt they're not right things in any case."

With that he set out for to follow his tongue hound, and the hunt went
over the ditches and through the quick hedges and down by the lake.

"Begob it's odious weighty I am to be diverting myself like a little
gosoon," says the man. And indeed he was a big, hearty farmer was
leaving powerful gaps behind him where he burst through the hedges.

There was a small, wee house up an old laneway, and that was where
the hunt headed for. The hare came in on the street not a yard in
front of the tongue hound, and she made a lep for to get into the
cabin by a hole on the wall convenient to the door. The hound got a
grip of her and she rising from the ground. But the farmer was coming
up close behind them and didn't he let a great crow out of him.

"Hold your hold, my bully boy! Hold your hold!" The tongue hound
turned at the voice of the master calling, and the hare contrived
for to slip from between his teeth. One spring brought her in on
the hole in the wall, but she splashed it with blood as she passed,
and there was blood on the mouth of the hound.

The man came up, cursing himself for spoiling the diversion, but
he was well determined to follow on. He took the coat off his back
and he stuffed it into the opening the way the hare had no chance to
get out where she was after entering, then he walked round the house
for to see was there any means of escape for what was within. There
wasn't evenly a space where a fly might contrive to slip through,
and himself was satisfied the hunt was shaping well.

He went to the door, and it was there the tongue hound went wild to
be making an entry, but a lock and a chain were upon it. The farmer
took up a stone and he broke all before him to get in after the hare
they followed so far.

"The old house is empty this long time," says he, "and evenly if I be
to repair the destruction I make--sure what is the price of a chain
and a lock to a fine, warm man like myself!"

With that he pushed into the kitchen, and there was neither sight
nor sign of a hare to be found, but an old woman lay in a corner and
she bleeding.

The tongue hound gave the mournfullest whine and he juked to his
master's feet, it was easy knowing the beast was in odious dread. The
farmer gave a sort of a groan and he turned for to go away home.

"It's a queer old diversion I'm after enjoying," says he. "Surely
there's not a many in the world do be hunting hares through the fields
and catching old women are bleeding to death."

When he came to his own place the wife ran out of the house.

"Will you look at the gallons of beautiful milk the cows are after
giving this day," says she, pulling him in on the door.

Sure enough from that out there was a great plenty of milk and a
right yield of butter on the churn.








IX

THE BRIDGE OF THE KIST


There was once a man the name of Michael Hugh, and he was tormented
with dreams of a kist was buried in under a bridge in England. For
awhile he took no heed to the visions were with him in the stillness
of the night, but at long last the notion grew in his mind that he
be to visit that place and find out was there anything in it.

"I could make right use of a treasure," thinks he to himself. "For 'tis
heart scalded I am with dwelling in poverty, and a great weariness
is on me from toiling for a miserable wage." Then he bethought of
the foolishness of making the journey if all turned out a deceit.

"Sure I'll be rid of belief in the dreams are driving me daft with
their grandeur and perseverance," says he. "Evenly failure will bring
a sort of satisfaction for I'll get fooling whatever spirit does be
bringing the vision upon me."

So my brave Michael Hugh took an ash plant in his hand, and away with
him oversea to England to discover the bridge of the kist.

He was a twelvemonth travelling and rambling with no success to rise
his heart, and he began for to consider he had better return to his
own place. But just as he was making ready to turn didn't he chance
on a strong flowing river, and the sight near left his eyes when he
found it was spanned by the bridge he was after dreaming of.

Well Michael Hugh went over and he looked down on the black depth of
water was flowing in under the arch.

"It'll be a hard thing surely to be digging for a kist in that place,"
says he. "I'm thinking a man would find a sore death and no treasure
at all if he lepped into the flood. But maybe it's laid out for
me to gather my fortune here, and some person may come for to give
me instruction."

With that he walked up and down over the bridge, hoping for further
advice since he could not contrive a wisdom for his use. There was
a house convenient to the river, and after awhile a man came from it.

"Are you waiting on any person in this place?" says he to Michael
Hugh. "It's bitter weather to be abroad and you be to be as hardy as
a wild duck to endure the cold blast on the bridge."

"I'm hardy surely," Michael Hugh makes his answer. "But 'tis no easy
matter to tell if I'm waiting on any person."

"You're funning me," says the Englishman. "How would you be abroad
without reason, and you having a beautiful wise countenance on you?"

With that Michael Hugh told him the story of the dreams that brought
him from Ireland, and how he was expectant of a sign to instruct him
to come at the kist. The Englishman let a great laugh.

"You're a simple fellow," says he. "Let you give up heeding the
like of visions and ghosts, for there is madness in the same and no
pure reason at all. There's few has more nor better knowledge than
myself of how they be striving to entice us from our work, but I'm
a reasonable man and I never gave in to them yet."

"Might I make so free as to ask," says Michael Hugh, "what sort of
a vision are you after resisting?"

"I'll tell you and welcome," says the Englishman. "There isn't a night
of my life but I hear a voice calling: 'Away with you to Ireland, and
seek out a man the name of Michael Hugh. There is treasure buried in
under a lone bush in his garden, and that is in Breffny of Connacht.'"

The poor Irishman was near demented with joy at the words, for he
understood he was brought all that journey to learn of gold was a
stone's throw from his own little cabin door.

But he was a conny sort of a person, and he never let on to the other
that Michael Hugh was the name of him, nor that he came from Breffny
of Connacht.

The Englishman invited him into his house for to rest there that night,
and he didn't spare his advice that dreams were a folly and sin.

"You have me convinced of the meaning of my visions," says Michael
Hugh. "And what's more I'll go home as you bid me."

Next morning he started out, and he made great haste with the desire
was on him to get digging the gold.

When he came to his own place in Connacht he made straight for a
loy and then for the lone bush. Not a long was he digging before he
hoked out a precious crock full of treasure, and he carried it into
the house.

There was a piece of a flag stone lying on top of the gold, and there
was a writing cut into it. What might be the meaning of that Michael
Hugh had no notion, for the words were not Gaelic nor English at all.

It happened one evening that a poor scholar came in for to make
his cailee.

"Can you read me that inscription, mister?" asks Michael Hugh,
bringing out the flag.

"Aye surely," says the poor scholar. "That is a Latin writing, and
I am well learned in the same."

"What meaning is in it?" asks the other.

"'The same at the far side,'" says the scholar. "And that is a droll
saying surely when it gives no information beyond."

"Maybe it will serve my turn, mister!" says Michael Hugh, in the best
of humour.

After the scholar was gone on his way, didn't himself take the loy
and out to the garden. He began for to dig at the far side of the
lone bush, and sure enough he found a second beautiful kist the dead
spit of the first.

It was great prosperity he enjoyed from that out. And he bought the
grandest of raiment, the way the neighbours began for to call him
Michael Hughie the Cock.








X

THE CHILD AND THE FIDDLE


There was a woman one time, and she had the fretfullest child in all
Ireland. He lay in the cradle and lamented from morning to night and
from dark to the dawn of day. There was no prosperity nor comfort in
that house from he came to it. All things went astray within in the
kitchen and without upon the farm: the cattle fell sick, the potatoes
took a blight, there was not a taste of butter on the churn, and evenly
the cat began for to dwine and dwine away. But of all the misfortunes
that come the woefullest was the continual strife between the man and
woman of the house, and they a couple that were horrid fond aforetime.

It happened when the child was about eighteen months of age that a
strange man was hired to work on the farm. Surely he'd never have
ventured into the place if he had heard tell of the ill luck was in
it, but he was from distant parts and didn't know a heth.

One day he chanced to be in from the work a while before the master
of the house, and herself was gone to the spring for water. The hired
man sat down by the kitchen fire, taking no heed of the child was
watching him from the cradle. The little fellow quit his lamenting;
he sat up straight, with a countenance on him like a wise old man.

"I will be playing you a tune on the fiddle, for I'm thinking 'tis
fond of the music you are," says he.

The man near fell into the fire with wonderment to hear the
old-fashioned talk. He didn't say one word in answer, but he waited
to see what would be coming next.

The small weak infant pulled a fiddle out from under the pillow of
the cradle, and he began for to play the loveliest music was ever
heard in this world. He had reels and jigs, songs and sets; merry
tunes would rise the heart of man and mournful tunes would fill the
mind with grief.

The man sat listening, and he was all put through other, thinking
the child was no right thing.

After a time the little lad quit playing, he put back the fiddle
where he took it from and began at his old whimpering again. Herself
came in at the door with a bucket of water in her hand. Well the man
walked out and he called her after him.

"That is a strange child you have, mistress," says he.

"A strange child, surely, and a sorrowful," she makes answer. "It
is tormented with his roaring you are, no person could be enduring
it continually."

"Did ever he play on the fiddle in your hearing?" asks the man.

"Is it raving you are?" says she.

"I am not, mistress," he answers. "He is after giving me the best of
entertainment with reels and marches and jigs."

"Let you quit funning me!" says she, getting vexed.

"I see you are doubting my words," he replies. "Do you stand here
without where he'll not be looking on you at all. I'll go into the
kitchen, and maybe he'll bring out the fiddle again."

With that he went in, leaving herself posted convenient to the window.

Says he to the child, "I'm thinking there's not above a score
of fiddlers in all Ireland having better knowledge of music nor
yourself. Sure that is a great wonder and you but an innocent little
thing."

"Maybe it's not that innocent I am," says the child. "And let me tell
you there isn't one fiddler itself to be my equal in the land."

"You're boasting, you bold wee coley," says the man.

The child sat up in a great rage, pulled the fiddle from under
the pillow and began for to play a tune was grander nor the lot he
gave first.

The man went out to herself.

"Are you satisfied now?" he asks.

"My heart beats time to his reels," says she. "Run down to the field
and send the master to this place that he may hear him too."

The man of the house came up in a terrible temper.

"If it's lies you are telling me, I'll brain the pair of you with
the loy," says he, when he heard the news of the fiddle.

"Put your ear to the window it's soft he is playing now," says
his wife.

But the words weren't out of her mouth before a blast of loud music
was heard. Himself ran in on the door, and he seen the gosoon sitting
up playing tunes.

"Let you be off out of this," says he, "or I'll throw you at the back
of the fire, for you are no right thing at all."

With that the little fellow made a powerful great lep out of the
cradle, across the floor and away with him out over the fields.

But he left his fiddle behind, and the master of the house threw it
down on the burning turf. And that was no true fiddle at all, only
a piece of an old bog stick was rotten with age.








XI

THE CUTTING OF THE TREE


There was a wild sort of a lad the name of Francis Pat, and he was
a great warrant to be entertaining the people with his airy talk. He
was the whole go in every spree and join was held in the countryside;
and the neighbours all had a fine welcome when he'd come to make
his cailee.

He joined the world when he was about thirty years of age, and he got
a fine sensible woman with a nice little handful of money. Herself
didn't care to be rambling at all, and she'd sit with her stitching
or knitting when he went out after dark.

It chanced one time, not a long from they were married, that Francis
Pat went to a raffle was held in the next townland. When the company
set out for to go away home, in the black darkness of the night,
every person in it was afraid to pass down by the fort.

"What is on you at all?" says Francis Pat. "I think scorn on the lot
of you are in dread of the Good People."

"God be with them--and their faces from us, their backs to us, the
way they're good friends," says an old man. "I have great experience
to know that it's a danger to evenly make fun in speech of the like."

"Away with you by the long hard road," says Francis Pat. "'Tis I will
walk my lone past the fort, and I dare the fairies to molest me." The
neighbours strove to break his intention, but he was persistent
and proud.

When he came to the fort he seen a light, he heard voices speaking
and the blows of an axe against wood.

"There is one more daring nor myself abroad this hour," thinks Francis
Pat. "I never heard tell of any person having audacity to interfere
with the trees of the circle."

Curiosity came on him to know who could it be, and he juked over
to the light. He seen no sign of the men, however he peeped, but he
heard the words and the blows.

"Where'll we carry the wood?" says a voice.

"To the house on the hill," says another. "We be to bring out the
wife of Francis Pat, and the tree may stop there in her stead."

"He'll never know the differ," says the first. "It's a fine thing
surely to make an image from a tree that a man couldn't know from
herself." With that there was great laughter and cheering, but the lad
didn't wait to hear more--he sped away home to the house on the hill.

Not a heth did he let on to the wife about what he was after
discovering, but he had a strong oath taken in his own mind that the
fairies should not lift her from him.

He bolted the door of the kitchen, and the two went into the
room. After awhile there came a cry on the street without, and it
dwined away into the byre. The cows began for to stamp and strive to
get free of the bails.

"Let you go out and see what ails the creatures," says herself.

"There is nothing on them," says he. "I'll not leave this place till
the sun rises for day."

Then there came a powerful blast of wind, and the pigs set up the
awfullest lamentation.

"I'm not that lazy but I'll find out what it is," says herself.

"You'll stop where you are," says he. "Didn't you hear the blast
going by, and every person knows that pigs see the wind?"

"Whatever they're beholding this minute is a sore distress to the
creatures," she answers.

"Aye!" he allows. "The wind is red, and that is the cause of them
crying." There came a crash on the door of the kitchen and it blew in;
the plates were dashed off the dresser, and the saucepans fell from
the nails on the wall.

Francis Pat had to hold herself by the arm to keep her from running
to gather the delf. Voices came shouting, and there was a stamping
of feet through the house. The woman began for to cry and to roar,
but himself kept a hold on her and nothing enticed him away.

At dawn the commotion died out.

"What was it at all?" asks herself.

"Sure what would it be only a wind was fit to batter the horns off
the cows!" says Francis Pat.

When they went into the kitchen what did they find only the image
lying on the floor. The wood was cut into the living likeness of the
woman of the house, and the Good People had thrown it there in the
anger of the disappointment was on them.

So my brave Francis Pat told his wife the whole story of the cutting
of the tree.








XII

THE LITTLE SETTLEMENT


There was a strong farmer one time and he was the boastfullest man
in all Ireland. He had a tidy, comfortable place, sure enough, but
to hear him speaking you'd be thinking his house was built of silver
and thatched with the purest gold.

Herself was a very different sort of a person, kindly and
simple-hearted; she took no pleasure in making out she had more
property and grandeur than another body; and she was neither envious,
uncharitable, nor a clash.

The two had but one child, a daughter, and she was their whole
delight. Bride was a beautiful white girl with a countenance on her
would charm a king from his golden throne to be walking the bogs
with herself. The boys were flocking after her by the score, and she
had but to raise her hand to draw any one of them to her side. But,
being a seemly, well-reared lass, she took her diversion without any
consideration of marriage at all--well satisfied her father would be
making a fitting settlement for her when the time came.

The youth of the world will always be playing themselves and chatting
together, all the while them that have right wit and a good upbringing
do leave their settlement in the hands of the parents have the best
understanding for the same.

"I'm thinking," says himself one evening, "that it's old and stiff
I am growing. It might be a powerful advantage to take a son-in-law
into the place, the way I'd get sitting in peace by the hearth,
and he out in the fields attending to the management of all."

"Bride is full young to be joining the world," says his wife. "But I
will not be putting any hindrance in the way of it, for maybe it's
better contented she'd be to have a fine man of her own, foreby to
be looking on an old pair like ourselves, and we dozing by the fire
of an evening."

"I'll be making a little settlement for her, surely," says himself.

The next day he gave out through the country that Bride was to be
married. What with the little handful of money, the fine farm of land
and the looks of the girl, the suitors were coming in plenty. There
were strong farmers, small farmers, tradesmen and dealers; a cow
doctor, a blacksmith, and evenly a man that travelled in tea. Himself
was disgusted with all; he put out the farmers and dealers very
civil and stiff, but the tea man he stoned down the road for a couple
of miles.

The next suitor to come was a beautiful young lad the name of Shan
Alec. He was a tasty worker, and he had the best of good money was left
him by his da. Now if you were to seek all Ireland ten times through,
I'll go bail you wouldn't be finding a more suitable match nor Shan
Alec and Bride. The girl and her mother were fair wild with delight,
but they got an odious disappointment for didn't himself run the poor
boy out of the house.

"I'm surprised at you," says the wife. "Why couldn't you have wit
and give that decent lad an honourable reception?"

"Is it to give my daughter to yon country coley?" says he. "And I
the warmest man in these parts."

"A better match for her like isn't walking this earth," says the wife.

"Hold your whisht, woman," says he. "I'd sooner let the devil have
her than see her join the world with Shan Alec."

"What is on you at all to be speaking such foolishness?" asks herself.

"I'd have you to know," says he, "that I'll have a gentleman for my
son-in-law and no common person at all."

"It is the raving of prosperity is on you," says she. "And that is
the worst madness out."

"Speak easy," says he, "or maybe I'll correct you with the pot stick."

With that she allowed he be to be gone daft entirely, or he'd never
have such an unseemly thought as to raise his hand to a woman.

"Hold your whisht," he answers. "Surely 'tis both hand and foot I'll
be giving you unless you quit tongueing."

Not a long afterwards a splendid gentleman came to the house, and he
riding on a horse.

"I have heard tell," says he to the farmer, "that you are seeking a
suitable settlement for your daughter."

"If your honour wants a wife," says himself. "Let you be stepping in,
for it's maybe in this house you'll find her."

With that the gentleman got down off his horse, and it was an
honourable reception they made him. Evenly herself was content to
remember the scorn put on poor Shan Alec, when she seen the magnificent
suitor was come.

The gentleman had a smile on his face when he heard all the boasts
of the farmer.

"My good man," says he, "I think scorn on your money and land, for
I'd have you to know that I am a King in my own place. But that girl
sitting by the hearth has a lovely white countenance on her, and her
heart I am seeking for love of the same."

"Oh mother," says Bride in a whisper, "will you send him away?"

"Is it raving you are?" asks herself.

"I'd go through fire and water for my poor Shan Alec!" says Bride.

"Will you hold your whisht," says her mother. "That is no right talk
for a well-reared girl."

The farmer and the gentleman made their agreement and opened the bottle
of whiskey. There was to be a nice little feast for to celebrate the
settlement, and the cloth was set in the parlour on account of the
grandeur of the suitor and he not used to a kitchen at all.

When the supper was served didn't the servant girl call the mistress
out to the kitchen.

"Oh mam," says she. "I couldn't get word with you in private
before. Let you hunt that lad from the place."

"And why, might I ask?" says herself.

"Sure how would he be a right gentleman and he having a foot on him
like a horse?" says the girl.

With that the mistress began to lament and to groan.

"What'll I do! What'll I do, and I scared useless with dread?"

"I'll go in and impeach him," says the servant girl.

In she went to the parlour.

"Quit off out of this," says she. "We'll have no horse feet in
this place."

The master got up to run her from the room.

"Look under the table at your lovely gentleman's foot!" says she.

The farmer done as she bid, but he was that set in his own conceit
he just answers:

"What harm is in a reel foot? It's no ornament surely, but that's
all there is to it."

"Many's the reel foot I've laid eyes on," she says. "But yon is the
hoof of a horse."

"It's truth you are speaking," says the gentleman. "I am the devil
and no person less."

"Quit off from here," says the servant. "A decent girl, like us two,
need never be fearing your like. I'd hit you a skelp with the pot
stick as soon as I'd stand on a worm."

"You can't put me out," says the devil. "For the man of the house
has me promised his daughter."

"There is no person living," says Bride, "might have power on the
soul of another. If my sins don't deliver me into your hand the word
of my da is no use."

"Then I'll be taking himself," says the devil, making ready to go.

"You may wait till he's dead," cries the woman of the house. "He made
you no offer of his bones and his flesh."

"The tongues of three women would argue the devil to death," says he,
and away with him in a grey puff of smoke. The man and woman of the
house began for to pray. But says Bride to the servant:

"Let you slip off to Shan Alec and bid him come up--for it's maybe
an honourable reception is waiting him here."








XIII

THE TILLAGE IN THE FORT


There was a man in these parts, and he thought it hard to see a square
inch of ground go to loss. He had a small wee farm on the top of a
windy hill, and there was a fort on the sweetest of the fields. He
couldn't pass by but he'd think of how much potatoes might be grown
within in the circle. Well with the dint of consideration didn't he
finally decide for to plant it.

He never let on to his wife, but away out with the loy, and he made
great work before the fall of night. When he came in he carried a
lengthy thorn root in his hand.

"What are you holding?" asks herself.

"An old thorn I hoked out of the ground," says he. "I brought it in
for the fire."

"Is it making gaps in the quick hedges you are?" she asks.

"Not at all," says he. "I have the circle beyond rooted up for to
set potatoes in it."

"Is it the fort!" says she.

When she heard what he was after doing she began for to roar and
to cry.

"It is destroyed we are in this ill hour," she lamented. "The Good
People will be following us surely with the black wrath of vengeance
and spite. Never before did I hear of a man setting spuds in a fort."

"Quit raving," says he.

"Many and many's the time I have seen them, they riding down by the
hill; their fiddles and fifes I have heard, their shouts and their
laughs. But I had no cause for a dread till it come on me now,"
she replies.

With that herself took the thorn from the fire, where he was after
casting it down; she left it out on the door of the house.

"Let their branch stop beyond on the street," says she, "the way they
will not be entering here and they seeking for to bring it away."

In the black darkness of midnight there came the awfullest cry on the
street, on past the house and into the byre. Then a great lamentation
came from the cows and the ass.

"The creatures are a killing this night," says herself.

The man rose out of his bed and he kindled a light. He had the heart
to go out to the beasts to see what ailed them at all. There was no
loss on the cows nor the ass, and the cry and the shouting were gone.

He went back to the house, but not a long was he in before the very
same trouble rose in the byre. Out with him again to make sure what
was wrong, and he found not a single heth astray.

He was back in his bed when a third cry passed on the wind. The ass
let a roar was more nor horrid lonesome, and the cows were stamping
and roaring with dread. All the while there was nothing in it when
the master went out.

There was no sound more until hard on the break of day. A laugh
that was hateful to hear passed the house, and a hand struck hard on
the window.

Himself rose early, and he opened the door. What did he see only
the ass lying dead on the street, and the two cows were destroyed in
the byre.

"'Twas the fairies, surely," says he. "And they brought this
destruction upon me for hoking a hole in their farm."

"It's a powerful great price they're after charging you for the hire
of a small piece of ground," says herself, coming out. "But the thorn
stick is gone off the street where I threw it last night, and if that
had remained in the house they'd have murdered ourselves."








XIV

THE NEW DECK OF CARDS


Of all the contrivances of the art and learning of man there is none
more curious nor cards. They have a connection with beings are not
right things at all, and it is well known that an Evil Angel can
house himself for a while in a new deck of cards.

There was a young lad called Terry the Luck, and he a great warrant
for gaining all games of skill and of chance. He was that strongly
renowned the roulette men would warn him away from their boards in a
fair, and the thimble trick man fled clean from the street when he
come; the gosoons were in dread to toss pence with himself for the
coin fell head or tail as he called.

Now it happened one night that Terry the Luck was on his way home
from the sports, and he carried a new deck of cards in his hand. He
was in the best of humour for he was after winning a powerful bet on
a race. Part of the gain was snug in his pocket, and the remainder
had paid for the drink of his friends and himself.

The road to his home was lonely, for he lived in a backward
townland. The river passed within sight of his door, and it spanned
by a bridge was four arches long.

When Terry the Luck set his foot on the bridge didn't he wheel away
round and start in the wrong direction.

"That's a strange thing," says he. "Sure my legs were right steady
till now."

With that he went at it again, but he couldn't succeed for to cross. He
went back about twenty yards and took a run at it--that was no use
either. Well any person that seen his antics that night would have
died of the laughter. Back he'd go and race up to the bridge for
all he was worth, but whenever his foot came upon it he'd turn like
a leaf on the wind and away to where he started from. What was more
nor horrid vexatious for the poor fellow was to see the light shining
in his own kitchen window beyond, and he not fit to get home.

"'Tis enchanted I am," says he.

At long last he thought of the new deck of cards, and he laid them
down by the roadside before he made another attempt to go home. He
passed the bridge without the least hindrance, but when he went into
the house he began to consider it was all a foolishness only.

"What use is there in laying out money for cards, and throwing them
there to be rotting with damp?" says he.

Back he went across the river to fetch the new deck of cards. But if
he was to strive till he died of exhaustion he couldn't get over the
bridge and they in his hand.

"I'll lay them in under a stone until dawn," says he. "Maybe whatever
is in them will quit before then."

So he settled his cards in a safe hiding hole, and away with him to
his bed.

He rose with the early dawn for to bring out the deck. But there
wasn't a heth to be found where he stowed it away--and the earth by
the stone was all burnt into ash.








XV

THE LIFTING OF A CHILD


There was a woman, a short while since, and she lived on a snug little
farm convenient to the lough. She went to the byre for to milk, of
a May morning, and no person stopped in the house only a young child
in the cradle.

Not a long was herself without, maybe the half of an hour, and when
she came in there was no appearance of any disorder or strife in the
kitchen. But the poor wee child lay cold and dead in the cradle. The
mother began for to roar and lament, and her heart was feeble with
dread.

There came a knock on the door, and a neighbouring man lifted the latch
and walked in. He never let on to observe the woeful countenance of
herself, but he says, in a hearty voice:

"Will you tell me how is the child?"

"He is after dying on us," she answers. "And he right well this
hour past."

The man went over to the cradle, and he lepped three foot off the
floor when he seen the wee corpse lying there.

"It's the strangest thing at all," she laments. "And what'll I be
saying to himself when he lands in from his work."

"Let you be telling him," says the man, "that the little fellow is
in my house this day."

"'Tis queer advice you are speaking to be bidding me utter the like
of yon lie, forenenst the innocent corpse," says herself.

"Not a lie in the world, mam," he answers. "Sure I am just after
leaving your child by my own kitchen fire, and he wrapped up in
a shawl."

With that she took a hold of the pot stick for to run him from the
place--she was odious vexed to think he'd make mock of her sore
lamentations.

"Ar'n't you the ungrateful besom," says he, "to go destroying a decent
neighbour with a pot stick, and he after saving your son from the
power of the Good People?"

"Let you tell a straight story, or quit off from here," she
answers. "For I am heart scalded listening to your old nonsense
and lies."

"'Tis striving I was not to give you your death of a scare," says
he. "But the strangest thing is after coming to pass in this house. Let
you sit down and have good courage, the way I'll be telling you a
rejoiceful news."

With that herself brought him over a chair, dusting it clean on
her apron, then she pulled up the creepy and sat down to attend to
his words.

"Did you hear any noise of disturbance," says he, "wherever you were?"

"I did not," she answers. "And not a far was I from this place at
all. I went to the byre for to milk; and no noise was in it only the
cow breathing and the splash of the milk in the can."

"That's more nor horrid strange," says he. "For I was passing down
by the lough and I heard a powerful commotion up here. There was
laughter and cheering, the tramp of men's boots on the street,
and horses galloping by. Thinks I to myself, 'The fairies are out
contriving some old villainy this morning of May.' What did I do
only walk up among them, and I seen no person at all. When I came
to the house the poor wee child was a handing out on the window,
but I could not behold the fairies were at the lifting.

"Well I'd have you to know I'm a brave and venturesome man, with a
heart as strong as an eagle! What did I do only make my way in among
the whole throng of Good People, and I standing on their feet, and
pushing them off to the wall to make space for myself. I took a hold
of the child for to pull him from the invisible hands were lifting him
out, and, as sure as I'm sitting here, I brought him safe from the lot.

"There went a whole roar of annoyance from the fairies, and they
mounted up on their horses and away. But I brought the little fellow
to my own house for fear they'd return for him to this place."

The poor mother was wild with delight to hear tell the son was alive.

"Let's be going to fetch him," says she. "And he'll never be left in
the house by his lone from this out."

The two went down to the neighbour's house, and sure enough the child
was in it asleep by the fire.

The man had to carry him home, for herself was exhausted with fright.

"Maybe the Good People are gone up to remove what they left in the
cradle," says she.

But when they went into the kitchen wasn't the old corpse in it yet.

"We be to bury yon article," says herself. But the man allowed there
was no need to be treating the like the same as a right thing.

"Throw it in on the back of the fire," says he.

Herself was in dread to lay her hand on the likeness of the child. So
the man lifted it out of the cradle and threw it down on the fire. And
it blazed away up the chimney for a second's time and departed in a
puff of smoke.








XVI

THE VOICE AT THE DOOR


There was one time a poor widow woman he name of Cathleen the Hollow,
for her house was down in a dip of the ground. She had two fine
beautiful sons, Shan the Hollow and Hughie Cathleen. Shan was a
dancer could step on a plate and not put a break in the delf; and
Hughie could sing every ballad and song was ever heard tell of at all.

They were wild daring lads, too, the way there was great talk of them
in the countryside. And the lamentations of the youth of the world
were more nor a fright when news came round to the neighbours that
Hughie was dead.

He lay down of a Friday night, and he in the best of health, on
the Saturday morning the brother went to rouse him, and found him
perished dead.

Well there was a most elegant wake, not a one in those parts but paid
respect to the corpse. And there wasn't the least suspicion but that
Hughie come by his death of some natural cause.

It was maybe a fortnight after the burying that the sleep quit Shan
the Hollow entirely. If evenly he began for to doze in his bed he'd
be roused up again by a rap on the door--but when he stepped out
there was no person visible there.

"Oh mother," says he, "I'm thinking poor Hughie is walking the world."

"He is not," says she. "For he was a decent lad would find peace
in the grave. But there is some person making free with this house,
for not a day goes by but I miss some article of food."

Shan let it be, but his mind was uneasy for Hugh. And not a long after
he heard a voice go past in the night, and it singing a beautiful
song. He rose and he went to the door.

"Oh Hughie," says he, "is that your spirit travelling the earth?"

"It's myself is walking the world, and I not buried at all," says
the voice. "The Good People have me away, and the corpse was an old
image cut from bog stick that they left in my bed to deceive you."

"Then it's yourself is using the food from this house, my poor
boy?" says Shan.

"Aye, indeed," says the voice, "and sometimes it's little I find. It
does be hard on me to refuse the noble refreshment the fairies set out,
but if I'd eat of the like I could never escape from their power. Do
you tell herself to leave me a mug of sweet milk and a morsel of
bread on the sill of the window, to keep me from hungering more."

"You'll have the best in the house left ready against you come,"
says Shan. "But will you tell me what way am I to contrive a rescue?"

"It's easy enough," says the voice. "But I'm diverting myself with
the fairies, and I'll not be coming home for a while. They took me
out oversea to America and showed me the wonders are there. Sure
maybe it's in France I'll be at the dawning of day!"

"I'd liefer sit by our own fireside than travel the realms of the
world with their like," says Shan. "Let you give them the slip and
come home."

"I seen the King's daughter of Spain, and a Queen of the East," says
the voice. "For let me be telling you there's few like myself with
the fairies, the way they are showing me great respect."

Shan gets vexed at the words and he says: "Is it boasting forenenst
your own brother you are? Sure we come of a poor stock of people,
and I have heard tell there are lords of the fairies."

"It's my singing has them crazed about me," says the voice, "for they
have right understanding for music and songs."

"Is there any man or woman of these parts excepting yourself abroad
with them now?" asks Shan.

"Not a one at this present. But at dark to-morrow we are going for
to lift young Cassidy's wife."

Well Shan kept inquiring of Hughie when would he like to come home. At
long last the lad gave out he'd be ready in three weeks from that hour.

"Let you come to the fort," says he, "and meet the whole host of the
fairies. We'll give them the slip at the gap." With that the voice
went away off the street, singing till the sound dwined out in the
distance. But my poor Shan was that put about he couldn't decide what
to do. At the dawn of the morning he set off to visit the Priest, and
he informed him every word he was after hearing. Well his Reverence
couldn't believe there was anything in it only a dream of the night.

"Let your Reverence go to the Cassidy's and keep herself from their
hands," says Shan. "For the Good People are determined to lift
her away."

"Go home now and attend to your farm," says the Priest. "'Tis the
raving of grief is on you for the brother you lost."

Still and all his Reverence set out for Cassidy's that evening to
see was anything wrong. Didn't he find the Good People before him
and they had herself brought away. "Oh if only I had come in time,"
says he. "But I might be some hindrance to them yet."

With that he went down to the hollow, and Shan was sitting within in
the house. Says the Priest: "Let you not stir from this for the calling
of voices that pass. You are after informing me of an intention you
have for to rescue your brother on a set and certain night. Now give
me your promise to make no attempt of the sort--for it's into the power
of the fallen angels you'd go, and you'd not get him rescued at all."

"I be to make an offer anyway," says Shan.

"Very well," says the Priest. "I'll send four strong men of this
parish to rope you down in your bed on that ill night."

Didn't they hold my poor Shan from his offer to bring home the brother,
and surely it was well done for his own destruction was in it. But the
voice came no more to the window and the bread lay uncut on the sill.








XVII

THE EARL'S SON OF THE SEA


When the Good People fell from the Heavens above, didn't some of them
sink in the sea, and there they are dwelling this day.

Many and many a story is told of their diversions and how they be
wrecking the ships; but the strangest account I ever heard tell was
the fisherman's daughter that met the Earl's son of the sea.

She was travelling the sands by her lone, on the west coast of Ireland,
and when she came near to the rocks she heard the notes of a harp. Of
course she was curious to know who was out playing in that place and
no dwelling near; so over she went towards the sound, and what did
she come on only a beautiful yellow-haired man.

"It's destroyed in a short space you'll be," she calls out, "for the
tide is beginning to rise and you'll be dashed dead on the rocks."

"Do you know who I am?" says he.

"I do not," she answers. "But you're surely a stranger to these parts
or you wouldn't sit there with the waves beginning to rise."

"Maybe I travelled this bay before you were born," says he.

With that she let a laugh out of her.

"I'm thinking the two of us are about the one age," says she. "So
quit your old-fashioned talk and come on out of that till I show you
the way up the cliff."

"You're a beautiful girl," says the stranger, "and the wish is on me
to please you. Climb up out of reach of the rising sea and I'll play
you a tune on the harp."

Well she travelled back over the sand and up by the path to the cliff,
never doubting but the stranger was following on. But when she looked
down she seen him below on the rock.

"It is drownded you'll be," she calls out.

"Let you not be uneasy," says he.

With that he began for to play on the harp, and the music enchanted
the fisherman's child and the tears ran down from her eyes. When she
looked again to the rock wasn't the stranger washed from it and a
big white wave curled up from the place.

"I'm after finding and losing a beautiful boy," says she, and she
went away home lamenting his death.

Not a long after she was travelling the sands, and she heard the music
again. There was himself sitting up on the rock as sound as a salmon
at play.

"I doubt you're no right thing," says she.

"Maybe not," he allows. "But I'll rise your heart with a tune--if
it was crying I had you the last time it's laughing I'll see you
this day."

With that he played the cleverest dancing tune on the harp, and he
had the fisherman's daughter in the best of humour.

After a while he says, "I'm thinking you have a poor way of living
in your home, for it's hard set to earn a bit and a sup that the
fishermen are in this place."

"We're miserable, surely," she answers.

"I'll be making you a great advancement," says he. "For I'd have
you to know that there's plenty of wealth in my power. Let you quit
from your own friends and marry myself. It's a beautiful castle I'll
build you, out on a rock in the ocean, and jewels and pearls for your
portion to wear."

"A lonesome life," says she, "to be watching the wild birds fly over
the waves, and maybe a ship passing by. Moreover you are no right
thing, evenly if you have the appearance of a beautiful gentleman. It's
a poor man of these parts will join the world with myself."

"Sure I'm an Earl's son of the sea," he allows.

But the grandeur didn't tempt her at all.

"A sea marriage would be no marriage," she answers, and with that
she bid him good-day.

"Let your man never travel the sea," he answers, "for I'll destroy
the ship from under his feet and leave him dead on a wave."

He lepped down into the water and away with him from out of her sight.

The fisherman's daughter never heard him out harping again, nor
seen a sight of his face. And after a while she forgot the queer lad
entirely. Didn't she marry a farmer inland, and it was a comfortable
life they enjoyed.

But a notion took himself that he'd prosper more in the States, for he
was greedy for gold. He took passage for the two on a great big ship,
and away with them from Ireland.

Not a long were they at sea before a sudden furl blast met the ship,
and a wave twenty times as high as a house stood up over the deck and
broke down. Every person was killed dead and smashed into the wood
of the ship only the fisherman's daughter. She felt the vessel sink
down from under her and she looked up and seen a beautiful castle
rise up on a rock on the sea.

The Earl's son came past on a wave and he lifted her up by the hair
of her head for to land her out on the rock.

The fisherman's daughter lived in that place for fourteen years
and she lamenting the lonesome hours of each day. She seen the wild
gulls flying and whales and every sort sailing the waves. She took
no delight in the jewels nor the dresses were stored in that house,
and the Earl's son of the sea allowed she grew ugly and old.

It happened one day he was travelling in other parts that herself
seen a ship coming down, and she waved a white flag out the window.

A man came out from the ship in a small little boat, and who was it
only her own brother Michael.

"Oh sister dear," says he, "is it sitting on a rock you are for
fourteen weary years? Sure we heard tell of the loss of the vessel
was bringing you out to the States."

"It's a fine castle is here," says she. "But it's lonesome I am for
my home."

"I see no more nor a rock and it green with the weed of the sea,"
says Michael. "It's on your eyes that there's more in it, for I see
nothing at all."

With that she told him the whole story. And he was in dread for to
bring her away lest the Earl's son might destroy them.

"I'll tell you what I'll do," says he. "It's back to Ireland I'll
sail, and I'll get an image made the down likeness of yourself. When
we set that up on the rock himself will believe you are in it, and
we may get away."

So he rowed his wee boat to the ship and home he sailed to Ireland. He
got the finest image made, and it the dead spit of herself. With that
in his keeping he travelled the sea till he came to the rock and his
sister still sat there lamenting. But she had a red flag hung out
and that was the sign they'd agreed for him not to come near. So he
be to wait until she put up a white one, and then he knew that the
Earl's son was not near.

He got her safe to the boat, and they left the old image stuck up on
the rock.

"There's two little fellows like sea-monkeys he's left to watch when
he's gone," says herself. "But they didn't see me slip out and they'll
never think but the statue is me. I haven't the least fear of them
bringing him word there is anything wrong, but if he returns we are
lost for he won't be that easy deceived."

They made great sailing to Ireland, and the ship was coming in on
the harbour the way they were sure they'd come safe. What did they
see only the Earl's son and he riding on a big white wave to catch up
to them. The image was with him, and he threw it after the ship the
way a hole was cleft in her side and she sank. But the fisherman's
daughter, her brother, and the sailors got on shore in a boat before
he came at them again.

They seen him from the shore, and he flittering something with his
two hands. What was it only the sea-monkeys, and he threw the bits
of them up on the shore. He came in himself, but they pelted him from
it with stones for his power was lost on the land.

But not a one of that family to this present day may venture into the
waves, for the Earl's son watches out to destroy them for vengeance
and spite.








XVIII

THE GIRL AND THE FAIRIES


There was a beautiful young girl living in these parts, and she was
greatly admired by every person that seen her.

It happened when she was about nineteen years of age that she fainted
one day on the street before the house, where she was washing the
spuds for dinner. The mother and sister went out for to carry her in,
and they laid her down on the bed--the poor girl never rose from it
more. Maybe a week she was lingering dying, not a word ever came from
her lips and she used no food at all.

Not a long after the burying her mother heard a rapping on the window,
close upon midnight. She rose and she says, "Oh Bridget dear, is
it you?"

"It is indeed, mamma," says a voice. "Let you give me a drink of
sweet milk and a small taste of bread."

"I've heard tell of the dead were uneasy, but never of one needing
food," says the mother.

"The fairies have me away," answers Bridget. "'Tis myself is living
this day, and you are after giving decent burial to an old thing they
left in my place."

With that the poor mother brought milk and bread to the window and
handed it out.

"Will you ever contrive to get home, my poor Bridget?" says she.

"Aye surely," answers the girl, "if the men of this place are worthy
their keep. Let you make inquiries among them until you find two
strong daring boys are willing to attempt my rescue."

She went away off the street, and the mother went back to her bed.

The next evening there were some of the neighbours came in, and herself
gave out all she was after hearing. There were two clever lads in it
and they promised for to bring the girl snug and safe to her home.

Not a long after Bridget came back to the window to speak with the
mother, so when she heard of the offer was made she says: "The Good
People are going away over the moor on Wednesday night and I must
journey with them. It is mounted on horses we'll be, and tell the
two lads I told them to stand by the gap and watch for the squad
going through. I'll be upon the third grey horse to go by, and let
the two lads take a hold of me, one at each side. Now if they're
not full sure they'll have courage and daring to hold their hold,
let them not come near me at all. For if I pass on with the fairies
they'll kill me dead for vengeance that night."

The mother promised she'd give the lads great warning to keep their
hold and do all as Bridget was saying.

Well on the Wednesday night the venturesome lads went down to the gap
of the fort field, and there they stood waiting one at each side of
the pass. Not a long were they in it before the Good People began to
go through. One grey horse went down beside another and a third came
behind with Bridget sitting upon his back.

The two lads caught a hold of her, but didn't the horse let a stag
lep and they lost their grip on the girl. She gave the lonesomest cry
as she was carried from them, and the fairies began for to cheer and
to laugh.

"We'll follow the Good People on," says one of the boys, "and maybe
we'll vanquish them yet."

So the two travelled after the riders, away towards the moor. The
river flows convenient to that place, and a fine bridge spans it
across. It was there that the awfullest cry rose out of the throng
of the fairies, and when the boys came on to the bridge they seen it
all red with my poor Bridget's blood. The horsemen were after dashing
her down on the stones to her death.








XIX

GOOD-NIGHT, MY BRAVE MICHAEL


There was a big gathering of neighbours sitting round a fire, telling
stories of an evening, and some person says:

"There's the strongest bolt and lock in all Ireland on the door there
beyond, and it couldn't be broken at all."

With that the Good People were listening outside began for to
laugh. Didn't they whip the lock off the door and away with them
through the fields.

Says the man of the house: "I'm thinking there's danger abroad;
let the lot of you stop here till dawn."

But there was a big, venturesome man in it and he allowed he'd go
home no spite of the fairies.

He started off by his lone, and he had a wet sort of field to pass
through with a great shaking scraw to one side. It was an awful and
dangerous place to any person not used to the like, but he knew his
way by the pass.

He was travelling at a good speed when all on a sudden he heard the
tramping of a score of horses behind him. Then they came up round
himself, but he seen no person at all nor a sign of a horse or an ass.

"The fairies are in it," says he.

With that one of them took a hold of him by the collar and turned
him round on the path.

"Good-night, my brave Michael," says the horsemen.

Then another of them took him by the shoulder and faced him away
round again.

"Good-night, my brave Michael," says he. Well the whole score of
fairies kept turning him round until he seen the stars dropping
down from the sky and his ears were deafened with a sound like
the sea. And every one that took him by the shoulder would say:
"Good-night, my brave Michael, good-night!"

The poor fellow didn't know what in under the shining Heaven was he
to do. He seen they were setting him astray, but he couldn't continue
for to keep on the path, and he was in odious dread they'd furl him
into the shaking scraw where he'd sink from the sight of man.

A sudden thought struck his mind of a saying he heard from his ma. He
whipped the coat off his back and he put it on with the wrong side
turned out. And then he found he was standing alone in the field,
on the edge of the scraw, and no person near him at all. So he went
away home without any mishap, but indeed he was trembling with dread.








XX

THE LAD AND THE OLD LASSIE'S SONG


There was a young lad living in these parts, not long since at all,
and his name was Francis John.

It chanced of a May morning that water was scarce for the tea, the way
his mother put a bucket in his hand and hunted him off to the spring.

Now an old lassie lived by her lone in a little wee house was built
right close to the path. The door stood open that morning, and my
brave Francis John looked in when he went on his way to the well. He
seen the old girl sitting on a small creepy stool by the fire, with
a row of clay images baking in front of the turf. Wasn't she singing
a song--and a queer cracked voice was her own--every word of it came
good and plain to the ears of the lad.


    Ye that I bake before the fire,
    Bring me the milk from my neighbour's byre;
    Gather the butter from off the churn
    And set it forenenst me before you burn.


Francis John didn't ask to disturb her diversions at all, so he went
on his way and filled up his can at the spring. But all the road home
the old lassie's song tormented his mind, and as he came in at the
door he began for to sing:


    Ye that she bakes before the fire,
    Bring me the milk from the neighbour's byre;
    Gather the butter from off the churn
    And set it forenenst me before you burn.


With the power of the words coming from him didn't the boots on his
feet fill up with sweet milk, and it running out on the lace holes.

"Man, but that's an enchanted song," says he. And what did he do only
step into four pounds of butter that fell on the threshold before him,
for he never remarked it at all!








XXI

THE BASKET OF EGGS


There was a woman one time, and she on her way to the market, counting
the price of her basket of eggs.

"If eggs are up," says she, "I'll be gaining a handful of silver,
and evenly if prices be down I'll not do too badly at all for I have
a weighty supply."

With that she remarked a little wee boy sitting down by the hedge,
he stitching away at a brogue.

"If I had a hold of yon lad," says she, "I'd make him discover a
treasure--for the like of him knows where gold does be hid."

She juked up behind him, like a cat would be after a bird, and she
caught a strong grip of his neck.

Well he let an odious screech out of him, for he was horrid surprised.

"I have you, my gosoon," says she.

"Oh surely you have, mam," he answers. "The strength of your thumb
is destroying my thrapple this day."

"Will you show me a treasure?" says she.

"I'd have you to know," he replies, "that the pot of gold I could
convey you in sight of is guarded by the appearance of a very strange
frog."

"What do I care for the creeping beasts of the world," says she. "Worse
nor a frog wouldn't scare me at all."

"You're a terrible fine woman, mistress dear," says the
leprachaun. "I've travelled a power of the earth and I never came in
with your equal."

"Go on with your old-fashioned chat," she replies, but she was middling
well pleased all the same.

"I'm a small little fellow," says he, "and I couldn't keep up with
yourself. But it's light in the body I am, the way I'd be never a
burden at all and I sitting up on the handle of the basket."

"Up with you," she answers, "for I'll soon put you down to walk by
my side if you are not speaking the truth."

But she didn't find the least burden more on the basket when himself
was on the handle.

He was a great warrant to flatter, and he had her in humour that day
all the while he was watching out for a chance to escape, but she
kept a hold of his ear.

What did he do only put his two wee hands down into the basket and
he began for to bail out the eggs. She fetched him a terrible clout,
but the harder she beat him the faster he threw out the eggs.

"Oh mam! oh mam!" says he, "what for are you skelping my head?"

"To make you quit breaking my eggs, you unmannerly coley," says she.

"Sure it's doing you favour I am," he replies. "I'd have you to
know when I spill an egg on the ground a well-grown spring chicken
leps out."

"Quit raving," says she.

"If you doubt my word," he makes answer, "let you turn and look back
at the chickens are flocking along."

With that she turned her head, and the leprachaun slipped from her
grasp. He made one spring from the basket into the hedge, and he
vanished away from the place.

"The wee lad has fooled me entirely," says she, "and my beautiful
eggs are destroyed--but I am the finest woman he's seen, and that is
a good thing to know!"








XXII

THE BROKEN BRANCH


There was a man in the olden time, and he owned a snug little farm.

What did he do, of a winter's day, only break a great branch off a
lone bush for to burn in the fire. A thorn went into his hand and it
pierced it through.

"That was a sore jag," says he.

But there was a little grey woman sitting in under the lone bush,
and she let a terrible laugh.

There were two of the neighbours seen what occurred, and they passing
down through the field. One of them ran away home, but the other,
a venturesome lad, came across.

"What are you after doing, my poor fellow?" says he.

"I am after destroying my hand with a thorn," says the man.

The neighbour allowed there was worse in it nor that.

"Did you hear the grey woman laugh?" he inquires.

"There is no woman here," says the other.

"I seen her a while past, and I coming down to your side. She was
sitting in under the bush, but now she is gone. When you drove the
thorn through your hand she let a lamentable laugh that was worse
nor a cry."

The man didn't believe it at all. But the jag in his hand festered
up and he died for breaking the branch of the thorn.








XXIII

DIGGING FOR GOLD


In the ancient times a poor decent labouring man dreamt three nights
of finding a kist was hid in the fort near his home.

So away there he went for to dig, and not long was he working at all
when he came on the beautiful gold.

"In troth I am rich from this out," he calls at the height of his
voice.

With that the whole treasure fell down through the earth: he should
not have spoken at all. Then there came a powerful great cat, and it
was the guard of the kist. Now the man had the wit to take hold of
the appearance before him, and let it strive never so hard it could
not contrive to escape. "I'll hold you," says he, "till you tell me
where is the gold!"

"Dig at the far side," says a voice. But whether it came from the
cat was past the man's wit for to know.

Well he went over and began for to dig at the far side, and he came
on a big copper pot. But no gold was in it at all.








XXIV

STORY OF A CHURN


There was a woman renowned for making the best of good butter.

Now it chanced in the spring that her man had three boys hired for
to work at the setting of spuds. One morning they passed through the
house when the churn was a making, and not one put his hand to the
work nor uttered a blessing upon it.

Herself was horrid annoyed to think they'd be that unseemly and
ignorant, yet she passed no remark of the sort. Didn't her whole
morning's work go to loss for no yield come on the churn.

She was not very great with her neighbours, and the first time she
chanced for to speak of what happened that day was next time she seen
her own mother.

The old woman says: "If you have one of them three lads impeached for
taking the yield from the churn, let you write his name backwards on
a small slip of paper and burn it in a shovel over the fire."

"What good'll that be?" asks the daughter.

"It will be the means of restoring the butter was lifted away,"
says the mother.

"I doubt not--and it two months and more since the loss," says the
young woman.

But she brought out the paper and ink for to write down the name of
the lad she impeached. She set it down backwards and burnt it over
the fire.

"Now," says the mother, "go out to the churn."

What did she find only five pounds of butter sitting within on the
dry wood!








XXV

THE GANKEYNOGUE IN THE OAK CHEST


There was once a man of these parts and he had a great longing for
to find a treasure.

It chanced one evening that he seen a gankeynogue in the field,
sitting in under a bush, and he says:

"Yon lad will surely be worth a powerful weight of gold."

With that he went over and caught a hold of the gankey.

"Let you discover a treasure," says he, "or else I'll keep you like
a dog on a chain from this out."

"Keep away!" says the gankey. "How would a poor creature like myself
be finding treasure for a strong farmer!"

"Let you not let on to be miserable," says the man, "for well I know
it's great wealth you enjoy."

"Is it me!" says the gankeynogue. "Sure I support a lengthy family
entirely by my own industry."

But the farmer would not believe a word of the sort. He carried the
gankey to his house and put him into a big oak chest.

"You'll never get out except for to show me where treasure is lodged,"
he allows.

But the gankeynogue wasn't in notion of giving the least
information. He sat up in the oak chest, hammering, shouting and
singing until he had the people's heads light.

All the while the farmer was determined to get the better of him and
he never agreed to let him go.

The lad was his tenth day in the chest when the man of the house came
running in that evening, shouting at the top of his voice:

"Darragh fort's on fire! Darragh fort's on fire!"

With that the gankey began the most woeful lamentations, and he
hammering like mad to get out of the chest.

"What ails you at all?" asks the farmer.

"My wife and family are in that place," says the gankey. "Let me away
to bring them safe from the fire."

"Will you show me a treasure?" asks the man. "Aye surely!" says the
gankeynogue. "But let's go first to Darragh fort to save my weak
family, and then I'll bestow the treasure."

So the two started off for Darragh fort, and it not on fire at
all--that was a story the man was after inventing for to scare the
gankeynogue.

When they landed in sight of the place the man allowed the fire be
to have burnt out. Didn't the gankey make a run and lep in among
the trees.

"I'm safe from you now," says he.

But the man never let on to be vexed that he couldn't see the lad any
more, he listened to his voice speaking for to know the direction
he went. Then he lay down in that part of the fort and let on to
be asleep.

After a while he heard the gankeynogue telling his wife about how he
was kept in the chest.

"I was ten days in that place," says he. "And I full of venom against
the farmer. But it's the cunning lad I am, for I never let on where
the treasure is buried at all."

"Where is it?" asks the gankeynogue's wife.

"Under a stone in the street before his house," says the gankey. "And
herself tripped and spilled a bucket of milk just over the place this
morning. I was looking out on a hole in the chest, and still I never
let on one word when I seen what happened."

"You're a wise little fellow, sure enough," says his wife.

The farmer got up and away home with him after hearing what they
said. He asked herself where she spilled the milk at the morning of
the day.

"By that stone," says she, setting her foot on a flag in the street.

He brought the loy and a crowbar for to hoke up the place, and didn't
he discover a beautiful treasure of gold.








XXVI

THE MAKER OF BROGUES


There was a young lad travelling the road to a fair, and he passed
convenient to a field had a sand pit in the middle of it. What did he
see, sitting up in that place with his legs dangling over the edge
of the pit, only a little wee man making brogues. The lad took one
lep into the field and he walked up to the cobbler.

"Good-morning, mister!" says he. "Might I make so bold as to ask what
work you are doing this hour of the morning dew, and what makes you
fancy the edge of a pit for a seat?"

"'Tis making brogues I am," says the leprachaun, "and they for the
Good People's wear."

"I'm thinking you're watching a treasure," says the lad.

"I'm not," says the leprachaun. "But I know where there's plenty hid."

"You be to discover it for me," says the lad.

"Let you wait till this one pair of brogues is made," says the fairy.

So the lad agreed and he sat down to watch him at work.

"Begob," says he, "I never seen any person could hammer in nails such
a rate."

"It's a slow worker I'm counted in these parts," says the
leprachaun. "Let you look down into the pit at the man is cobbling
below. I warrant it's three nails he's driving for each one of mine."

The lad looked over the edge.

"There is no man in it at all!" says he.

With that the leprachaun let a laugh.

"There is not," says he.

"There's a sore chastisement waiting on you for deceiving me,"
answers the other.

But when he stood on his feet and looked round wasn't the leprachaun
gone.

"I'm the fool of the whole wide world," says the lad, and he travelled
away to the fair.








GLOSSARY


A power of, a large number.

Bohlan, rag-weed.

Loy, a sort of spade peculiar to the west and north-west of Ireland.

Lone bush, a hawthorn growing at a distance from all other trees. The
lone bushes are dedicated to the fairies, and must not be cut down.

Cailee, a visit.

Join the world, to marry.

To allow, to declare.

Gankeynogue, possibly a synonym of leprachaun, used only in the
northern districts. A stone barred with fossil reed is said to be
the Gankeynogue's pipe.

Fort. The forts referred to are the circular enclosures supposed to
have been made, in pre-Christian days, by the Tuatha de Danaan.

Breffny, the counties of Cavan and Leitrim, originally part of
Connaught, though Cavan is now in Ulster.









End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Folk Tales of Breffny, by B. Hunt

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