|
I SEE that you are fond
of talks about fairies, children; and a
story about a fairy and the goodwife of
Kittlerumpit has just come into my mind;
but I can't very well tell you now
whereabouts Kittlerumpit lies. I think it
is somewhere in the Debatable Ground.
Anyway, I shall not pretend to know more
than I do, like everybody nowadays. I wish
they would remember the ballad we used to
sing long ago:
Mony ane sings the gerss, the gerss,
And mony ane sings the corn;
And mony ane clatters o' bold Robin
Hood,
Ne'er kent where he was born.
But howsoever about Kittlerumpit. The
goodman was a rambling sort of body; and
he went to a fair one day, and not only
never came home again, but nevermore was
heard of. Some said he 'listed, and others
that the tiresome press-gang snatched him
up, though he was furnished with a wife
and a child to boot. Alas! that wretched
press-gang! They went about the country
like roaring lions, seeking whom they
might devour. Well do I remember how my
eldest brother Sandy was all but smothered
in the meal-chest, hiding from those
rascals. After they were gone, we pulled
him out from among the meal, puffing and
crying, and as white as any corpse. My
mother had to pick the meal out of his
mouth with the shank of a horn spoon.
Ah well, when the goodman of Kittlerumpit
was gone, the goodwife was left with small
means. Little resources had she, and a
baby boy at her breast. All said they were
sorry for her; but nobody helped her --
which is a common case, sirs. Howsoever,
the goodwife had a sow, and that was her
only consolation; for the sow was soon to
farrow, and she hoped for a good litter.
But we all know hope is fallacious. One
day the woman goes to the sty to fill the
sow's trough; and what does she find but
the sow lying on her back, grunting and
groaning, and ready to give up the ghost.
I trow [trust, believe] this was a new
pang to the goodwife's heart; so she sat
down on the knocking stone [a stone with a
hollow in it for pounding grain, so as to
separate the husks from the kernels], with
her bairn [child] on her knee, and cried
sorer than ever she did for the loss of
her own goodman.
Now I premise that the cottage of
Kittlerumpit was built on a brae
[hillside], with a large fir wood behind
it, of which you may hear more ere we go
far on. So the goodwife, when she was
wiping her eyes, chances to look down the
brae; and what does she see but an old
woman almost like a lady, coming slowly up
the road. She was dressed in green, all
but a short white apron and a black velvet
hood, and a steeple-crowned beaver hat on
her head. She had a long walking staff, as
long as herself, in her hand -- the sort
of staff that old men and old women helped
themselves with long ago. I see no such
staffs now, sirs.
Ah well, when the goodwife saw the green
gentlewoman near her, she rose and made a
curtsy; and "Madam," quoth she, weeping,
"I am one of the most misfortunate women
alive."
"I don't wish to hear pipers' news and
fiddlers' tales, goodwife," quoth the
green woman. "I know you have lost your
goodman -- we had worse losses at the
Sheriff Muir [a common saying, in response
to a complaint about a trifle]; and I know
that your sow is unco [strangely,
extremely] sick. Now what will you give me
if I cure her?"
"Anything your ladyship's madam likes,"
quoth the witless goodwife, never guessing
whom she had to deal with.
"Let us wet thumbs on that bargain," quoth
the green woman; so thumbs were wetted, I
warrant you; and into the sty madam
marches.
She looks at the sow with a long stare,
and then began to mutter to herself what
the goodwife couldn't well understand; but
she said it sounded like:
Pitter patter,
Holy water.
Then she took out of her pocket a wee
bottle, with something like oil in it; and
she rubs the sow with it above the snout,
behind the ears, and on the tip of the
tail. "Get up, beast," quoth the green
woman. No sooner said than done. Up jumps
the sow with a grunt, and away to her
trough for her breakfast.
The goodwife of Kittlerumpit was a joyful
goodwife now, and would have kissed the
very hem of the green woman's gown-tail,
but she wouldn't let her.
"I am not so fond of ceremonies," quoth
she; "but now that I have righted your
sick beast, let us end our settled
bargain. You will not find me an
unreasonable, greedy body. I like ever to
do a good turn for a small reward. All I
ask, and will have, is that baby boy in
your bosom."
The goodwife of Kittlerumpit, who now knew
her customer, gave a shrill cry like a
stuck swine. The green woman was a fairy,
no doubt; so she prays, and cries, and
begs, and scolds; but all wouldn't do.
"You may spare your din," quoth the fairy,
"screaming as if I was as deaf as a
doornail. But this I'll let you know: I
cannot, by the law we live under, take
your bairn till the third day; and not
then, if you can tell me my right name."
So madam goes away round the pigsty end;
and the goodwife falls down in a swoon
behind the knocking stone.
Ah well, the goodwife of Kittlerumpit
could not sleep any that night for crying,
and all the next day the same, cuddling
her bairn till she nearly squeezed its
breath out. But the second day she thinks
of taking a walk in the wood I told you
of. And so with the bairn in her arms, she
sets out, and goes far in among the trees,
where was an old quarry hole, grown over
with grass, and a bonny spring well in the
middle of it. Before she came very near,
she hears the whirring of a flax wheel,
and a voice singing a song; so the woman
creeps quietly among the bushes, and peeps
over the brow of the quarry; and what does
she see but the green fairy tearing away
at her wheel, and singing like any
precentor:
Little kens [knows] our guid dame at
hame,
That Whuppity Stoorie is my name.
"Ha, ha!" thinks the woman, "I've got the
mason's word at last. The devil give them
joy that told it!"
So she went home far lighter than she came
out, as you may well guess -- laughing
like a madcap with the thought of cheating
the old green fairy.
Ah well, you must know that this goodwife
was a jocose woman, and ever merry when
her heart was not very sorely overladen.
So she thinks to have some sport with the
fairy; and at the appointed time she puts
the bairn behind the knocking stone, and
sits on the stone herself. Then she pulls
her cap over her left ear and twists her
mouth on the other side, as if she were
weeping; and an ugly face she made, you
may be sure. She hadn't long to wait, for
up the brae climbs the green fairy,
neither lame nor lazy; and long ere she
got near the knocking stone she screams
out, "Goodwife of Kittlerumpit, you know
well what I come for. Stand and deliver!"
The woman pretends to cry harder than
before, and wrings her hands, and falls on
her knees with "Och, sweet madam mistress,
spare my only bairn, and take the wretched
sow!"
"The devil take the sow, for my part,"
quoth the fairy. "I come not here for
swine's flesh. Don't be contramawcious,
huzzy, but give me the child instantly!"
"Ochone, dear lady mine," quoth the crying
goodwife; "forgo my poor bairn, and take
me myself!"
"The devil is in the daft jade," quoth the
fairy, looking like the far end of a
fiddle. "I'll bet she is clean demented.
Who in all the earthly world, with half an
eye in his head, would ever meddle with
the likes of thee?"
I trow this set up the woman of
Kittlerumpit's bristle, for though she had
two blear eyes and a long red nose
besides, she thought herself as bonny as
the best of them. So she springs off her
knees, sets the top of her cap straight,
and with her two hands folded before her,
she makes a curtsy down to the ground,
and, "In troth, fair madam," quoth she, "I
might have had the wit to know that the
likes of me is not fit to tie the worst
shoestrings of the high and mighty
princess, Whuppity Stoorie."
If a flash of gunpowder had come out of
the ground it couldn't have made the fairy
leap higher than she did. Then down she
came again plump on her shoe-heels; and
whirling round, she ran down the brae,
screeching for rage, like an owl chased by
the witches.
The goodwife of Kittlerumpit laughed till
she was like to split; then she takes up
her bairn, and goes into her house,
singing to it all the way:
A goo and a gitty, my bonny wee tyke,
Ye'se noo ha'e your four-oories;
Sin' we've gien Nick a bane to pyke,
Wi' his wheels and his Whuppity Stoories.
Rhys' source: Chambers,
Robert. Popular Rhymes of Scotland. Edinburgh: 1858.
Rhys, John. Celtic Folklore: Welsh and Manx.Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1901.
Volume 2.
|
|