The Fairy Nurse
There was once a little farmer and his wife living near
Coolgarrow. They had three children, and my story happened while the youngest
was a baby. The wife was a good wife enough, but her mind was all on her family
and her farm, and she hardly ever went to her knees without falling asleep, and
she thought the time spent in the chapel was twice as long as it need be. So,
friends, she let her man and her two children go before her one day to Mass,
while she called to consult a fairy man about a disorder one of her cows had.
She was late at the chapel, and was sorry all the day after, for her husband was
in grief about it, and she was very fond of him.
Late that night he was wakened up by the cries of his
children calling out 'Mother! Mother!' When he sat up and rubbed his eyes,
there was no wife by his side, and when he asked the little ones what was
become of their mother, they said they saw the room full of nice little men and
women, dressed in white and red and green, and their mother in the middle of
them, going out by the door as if she was walking in her sleep. Out he ran, and
searched everywhere round the house but, neither tale nor tidings did he get of
her for many a day.
Well, the poor man was miserable enough, for he was as fond
of his woman as she was of him. It used to bring the salt tears down his cheeks
to see his poor children neglected and dirty, as they often were, and they'd be
bad enough only for a kind neighbour that used to look in whenever she could
spare time. The infant was away with a nurse.
About six weeks after--just as he was going out to his work
one morning--a neighbour, that used to mind women when they were ill, came up
to him, and kept step by step with him to the field, and this is what she told
him.
'Just as I was falling asleep last night, I heard a horse's
tramp on the grass and a knock at the door, and there, when I came out, was a
fine-looking dark man, mounted on a black horse, and he told me to get ready in
all haste, for a lady was in great want of me. As soon as I put on my cloak and
things, he took me by the hand, and I was sitting behind him before I felt
myself stirring. "Where are we going, sir?" says I. "You'll soon
know," says he; and he drew his fingers across my eyes, and not a ray
could I see. I kept a tight grip of him, and I little knew whether he was going
backwards or forwards, or how long we were about it, till my hand was taken
again, and I felt the ground under me. The fingers went the other way across my
eyes, and there we were before a castle door, and in we went through a big hall
and great rooms all painted in fine green colours, with red and gold bands and
ornaments, and the finest carpets and chairs and tables and window curtains,
and grand ladies and gentlemen walking about. At last we came to a bedroom,
with a beautiful lady in bed, with a fine bouncing boy beside her. The lady
clapped her hands, and in came the Dark Man and kissed her and the baby, and
praised me, and gave me a bottle of green ointment to rub the child all over.
'Well, the child I rubbed, sure enough; but my right eye
began to smart, and I put up my finger and gave it a rub, and then stared, for
never in all my life was I so frightened. The beautiful room was a big, rough
cave, with water oozing over the edges of the stones and through the clay; and
the lady, and the lord, and the child weazened, poverty-bitten
creatures--nothing but skin and bone--and the rich dresses were old rags. I
didn't let on that I found any difference, and after a bit says the Dark Man,
"Go before me to the hall door, and I will be with you in a few moments,
and see you safe home." Well, just as I turned into the outside cave, who
should I see watching near the door but poor Molly. She looked round all
terrified, and says she to me in a whisper, "I'm brought here to nurse the
child of the king and queen of the fairies; but there is one chance of saving
me. All the court will pass the cross near Templeshambo next Friday night, on a
visit to the fairies of Old Ross. If John can catch me by the hand or cloak
when I ride by, and has courage not to let go his grip, I'll be safe. Here's
the king. Don't open your mouth to answer. I saw what happened with the
ointment."
'The Dark Man didn't once cast his eye towards Molly, and he
seemed to have no suspicion of me. When we came out I looked about me, and
where do you think we were but in the dyke of the Rath of Cromogue. I was on
the horse again, which was nothing but a big rag-weed, and I was in dread every
minute I'd fall off; but nothing happened till I found myself in my own cabin.
The king slipped five guineas into my hand as soon as I was on the ground, and
thanked me, and bade me good night. I hope I'll never see his face again. I got
into bed, and couldn't sleep for a long time; and when I examined my five
guineas this morning, that I left in the table drawer the last thing, I found
five withered leaves of oak--bad luck to the giver!'
Well, you may all think the fright, and the joy, and the
grief the poor man was in when the woman finished her story. They talked and
they talked, but we needn't mind what they said till Friday night came, when
both were standing where the mountain road crosses the one going to Ross.
There they stood, looking towards the bridge of Thuar, in the
dead of the night, with a little moonlight shining from over Kilachdiarmid. At
last she gave a start, and "By this and by that," says she,
"here they come, bridles jingling and feathers tossing!" He looked,
but could see nothing; and she stood trembling and her eyes wide open, looking
down the way to the ford of Ballinacoola. "I see your wife," says
she, "riding on the outside just so as to rub against us. We'll walk on
quietly, as if we suspected nothing, and when we are passing I'll give you a
shove. If you don't do YOUR duty then, woe be with you!"
Well, they walked on easy, and the poor hearts beating in
both their breasts; and though he could see nothing, he heard a faint jingle
and trampling and rustling, and at last he got the push that she promised. He
spread out his arms, and there was his wife's waist within them, and he could
see her plain; but such a hullabulloo rose as if there was an earthquake, and
he found himself surrounded by horrible-looking things, roaring at him and
striving to pull his wife away. But he made the sign of the cross and bid them
begone in God's name, and held his wife as if it was iron his arms were made
of. Bedad, in one moment everything was as silent as the grave, and the poor
woman lying in a faint in the arms of her husband and her good neighbour. Well,
all in good time she was minding her family and her business again; and I'll go
bail, after the fright she got, she spent more time on her knees, and avoided
fairy men all the days of the week, and particularly on Sunday.
It is hard to have anything to do with the good people
without getting a mark from them. My brave nurse didn't escape no more than
another. She was one Thursday at the market of Enniscorthy, when what did she
see walking among the tubs of butter but the Dark Man, very hungry-looking, and
taking a scoop out of one tub and out of another. 'Oh, sir,' says she, very
foolish, 'I hope your lady is well, and the baby.' 'Pretty well, thank you,'
says he, rather frightened like. 'How do I look in this new suit?' says he,
getting to one side of her. 'I can't see you plain at all, sir,' says she.
'Well, now?' says he, getting round her back to the other side. 'Musha, indeed,
sir, your coat looks no better than a withered dock-leaf.' 'Maybe, then,' says
he, 'it will be different now,' and he struck the eye next him with a switch.
Friends, she never saw a glimmer after with that one till the day of her death.
'Legendary Fictions of the Irish Celts,' by Patrick Kennedy.
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