<h2><SPAN name="THE_FAIRIES_AND_THE_FIDDLER" id="THE_FAIRIES_AND_THE_FIDDLER"></SPAN>THE FAIRIES AND THE FIDDLER.</h2>
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<p class="minus"><span class="hide">I</span><b>N</b>
In the pretty little village of Hayfield, not far
from the borders of a thick forest, lived a
good-natured, idle fellow, named Simon, who
supported his wife and two children by trapping or
shooting in winter, and by fishing or doing odd jobs
of harvest work in summer. Simon could play upon
the fiddle in a way to make the tears come into your
eyes; or if he chose to be merry, his tunes would set
every foot in motion, as the wind starts the leaves upon
an aspen tree. This accomplishment caused him to
be much in demand among the young people of the
village, who dropped many a bit of silver into his worn
old hat; and at all the weddings and barn-dances,
Simon might be seen with a huge bunch of flowers in
his buttonhole, and his fiddle under his arm, footing it
in the procession. Then, too, Simon was the best man<span class="pagenum">[108]</span>
in the village to coax stories from, especially the old-time
gossip about the little folk in green, for whom in
former days Hayfield had been famous. Simon knew
how the fairies dressed, what they ate and drank, how
they punished saucy human beings who offended
them; and could point out the smooth rings of short
fine grass where they had held their midnight revels.
That the fairies really had haunted Hayfield and its
surrounding woods, nobody in the village doubted.
They had heard too many things to prove it from their
grandparents, whose parents were said to have lived
on the best of terms with the little people—setting pans
of cream by the hearth-stone at night for them to skim—leaving,
when the holidays came around, a cheese and
bag of nuts in a hollow tree at the entrance of the
wood—and getting all sorts of kind offices from the
fairies back again. Although it had now been a long
time since any one could testify to having actually
seen a fairy (as it was well known that the band were
frightened out of Hayfield when the first stage-coach,
with its noise and clatter, took to dashing along the
village street), many people believed the men in green
to be still lurking in the neighborhood. What else
could account for the trouble some of the good wives<span class="pagenum">[109]</span>
had with their butter and their bees? What could
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it be but fairy thumps
and pinches that kept
the lazy folk from sleeping
soundly, when their
houses were not to
rights before they went
to bed. And what could
explain the silver penny
often found in the shoe
of a tidy housekeeper,
when up she jumped at
break of day to set her
maids to work? For
fairies never show by
day, and it is only when
the people of a house
are fast asleep and snoring,
that they glide in
by key-holes, through
cracks and broken panes
of glass, and swarm over
the rooms, spying out
everything amiss, and leaving tracks on the dust of<span class="pagenum">[110]</span>
shelves or tables, scattering the ashes of an unswept
hearth, and bewitching the inside of a dirty iron pot,
so that it never more may cook sweet porridge!</p>
<p>Of all the villagers, as I have said, Simon alone professed
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to have any
recent acquaintance
with the little
folk, and the wonder
was how they,
who were known
to be sworn enemies
to idleness,
could keep him in
their favor.</p>
<p>Simon's house
was a poor little
cottage on the outskirts
of the town.
His wife, once a
pretty, rosy lass,
had taken to drink, and the husband and children led
a dog's life within doors. Consequently, their one
pleasure was to roam the woods and fields, and the
children were growing up brown and barefoot as two<span class="pagenum">[111]</span>
young gypsies. They were a boy named Timothy and
a girl named Bess, of whom Simon was very proud,
their fresh young faces making a strong contrast with
his wizened visage, crossed with a hundred lines, and
topped with a sunburned mop of hair. As they grew
old enough to understand, their father instructed them
in all the arts of woodcraft. There was no tree or
plant for which he had not a name or a virtue. The
habits of all birds and fishes and animals were as familiar
to him as their haunts. In this way, the vast green
forest, with its great tree-boles and twisted boughs, its
verdant moss-carpet and hidden streams, became to
them an enchanted world, through which the children
strayed like a sylvan king and queen. A sad change it
was to come back to the dirt and confusion of their
miserable home, where the mother received them
either with grudging welcome if they brought berries
or a string of brook trout, or with blows and drunken
curses if they came empty-handed. As his wife's intemperance
increased, Simon stayed less and less at
home, and the children dreaded lest some day their
poor father would be driven to desert them altogether.
So they resolved to keep a close watch on his movements,
and to follow him should he go away.<span class="pagenum">[112]</span></p>
<p>One night the harvest moon was riding her glorious
way across the heavens, and the little village of Hayfield
lay steeped in silver light. Not a lamp or a taper
glimmered in the hamlet, and every one of the brown
thatched cottages was buried in profound repose.
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Not even a watch-dog
barked; and
the forest-leaves
yielded to the universal
spell, and
ceased to rustle.</p>
<p>There had been
held a harvest-home
that day,
and Simon had
been hard at work
with his fiddle,
playing jigs and
reels for the dance in the squire's great barn. Between
every dance, he had quenched his thirst at the
cider-barrel, or quaffed the big brown mug of beer
they kept brimming at his side. Naturally, Simon's
brain was a little the worse for such free potations;
and when the last strains of the "Wind that Shakes<span class="pagenum">[113]</span>
the Barley" had died upon his fiddle-strings, and all the
gay company had gone their homeward way, Simon
with his pocket full of silver pennies staggered out into
the field, and lay down under a haystack to take his
well-earned rest.</p>
<p>There, just before midnight, his two children, who
had come in search of him, found their father peacefully
sleeping, his fiddle on his breast. Not wishing
to disturb him, the children decided to have their own
night's sleep in the same fragrant nest of hay; and
curling up at some little distance from the slumbering
fiddler, they whispered together for a while, and then
were about to drop asleep. Just as their eyes were
closing they heard an odd sound, as of hundreds of
little pattering feet, and out from the shadow of the<span class="pagenum">[114]</span>
wood came into the unbroken argent of the field a long
train of little men, women, and children, dressed magnificently
in cobweb gauze and green, bespangled with
glittering gems, and wearing each a tiny crimson cap
with a golden bell upon its peak. The two children
were broad awake in a moment, for they knew that
these were the fairies they had so longed to see, all
dressed in holiday costume, and proceeding to their
famous midsummer festival. The procession wavered
like a gleaming snake across the field, and, when passing
near the haystack, came to a halt. To the children's
surprise, two queer little old men, holding carved
ivory wands, came straight up, and tapped the sleeping
fiddler across the bridge of his nose.</p>
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<p>"Nay, I will play no more for you, you light-of-head
and light-of-heel," said sleepy Simon, believing
himself to be still perched upon the barrel that served
as the fiddler's throne.</p>
<p>"Aye, but play you shall, at his Majesty's command,"
said the little old man, thumping him more sharply.
"Isn't that part of your bargain with us, if we allow
the trout to haunt your brook, and the hares to run
into your traps? Come, mortal! Up with you and
follow. Here's the bandage to blindfold your eyes, as<span class="pagenum">[115]</span>
usual; and remember that, if you peep, you are our
prisoner for life."</p>
<p>By this time thoroughly awakened, Simon stumbled
upon his feet, and stood making abject bows before
the angry little fairy chamberlains. He let his eyes be
bound with a green silk ribbon, and leading-strings
were passed around his waist. At the blast of a golden
trumpet, the procession moved forward with a sound
of tripping feet and whirring gauzy wings and tinkling
bells most lovely to the ear.</p>
<p>Last of all came Simon, in fairy leading-strings, and
the two children, unable to resist the impulse, followed
noiselessly.</p>
<p>Their way led again into the forest, through the
dense underwood, to a smooth circle of velvet sward,
set around with hundreds of little mushrooms, on
which the fairies took their seats. In the centre was a
hammock of silver cobweb, swinging by jewelled chains
from the crossed stems of two tall white lilies, under a
bower of maiden-hair ferns. Sweet blue violets were
sprinkled in the grass, making a path where the king
and queen of the fairies marched to take their places
on the cobweb-throne. Dew was handed around in
acorn-cups, of which the fairy guests sipped daintily,<span class="pagenum">[116]</span>
followed by bark trays containing every variety of
fairy refreshment. There were delicate fried butterflies,
marrow-bones of a field-mouse, snail soup served
in nutshells, and wild strawberries in baskets made
of moss.</p>
<p>When the banquet was at an end, the chamberlains
gave notice to Simon, who had been bound with
ropes made of plaited grass to the trunk of a wide-spreading
oak; the fiddle struck up a tune, and at once
the dance began. Such a mad and merry dance the
wondering children had never seen before! Old and
young joined hands and trod a circle, then, breaking
the chain, formed into a hundred fantastic figures; and
at each touch of a light footstep, the earth opened to
give birth to a flower, until the entire fairy ring was
enamelled with fragrant blossoms. Fast flew the fiddle-bow,
but faster flew the tiny feet; and when the mirth
was at its height, Simon who, as we know, had taken
a drop too much, was suddenly inspired to tear the
bandage from his eyes, and crying, "It's my turn now,"
capered right into the middle of the magic ring.</p>
<p>The honest fellow had meant no harm, but his offence
was a mortal one!</p>
<p>Instantly, he was surrounded by a swarm of the<span class="pagenum">[117]</span>
furious little men in green, who, without waiting for
an excuse, stabbed out both his eyes, and taking away
his fiddle and bow, bound his arms behind his back.
Again the procession—this time sad and silent—was
formed, and the king striking the nearest tree with his
wand, it flew open; the whole party, leading Simon
behind them, entered the aperture, and before the
children knew where to turn, it had closed upon their
father.</p>
<p>And now, in what a distressing condition were the
unhappy Timothy and Bess! Not knowing what better
to do, they sat down at the foot of the great oak-tree
which had swallowed up their father, and from
sheer weariness fell asleep. When morning came,
and the birds piped upon the boughs, the children
awoke and looked in wonder about them. All was
dewy, green, and fragrant in the deep woods, but no
sign remained of the fairy revel, except a fine fringe
of newly sprung grass, growing in a circle where
their ring had been.</p>
<p>The bark of the great oak tree was unbroken, and
above stretched a broad canopy of dark-green leaves,
which whispered in the morning breeze, but told no
tales of what the children longed to know. Hunger<span class="pagenum">[118]</span>
drove them to retrace their steps homeward; and when
they reached the cottage, their mother was so cross at
her husband's failure to fetch her the usual stock of
silver pennies earned at the harvest-home, that she
beat them both soundly, and gave them but a dry
crust apiece for breakfast.</p>
<p>Still the children hoped their father might return;
and, not knowing to whom to confide their
wonderful tale, they kept silence. When it was found
Simon had disappeared in earnest, all the wise heads
in Hayfield decided that he had run away to escape
from his good wife's tongue, an act of independence
which had the bad effect of making more than one
married man in the village unduly restless.</p>
<p>A month passed, and the two children were again
wandering in the forest trying to find a few berries to
appease their hunger (for things at home were now
worse than before), when they fancied they heard a
child crying close at hand. They searched everywhere,
and at length the sound was renewed, seeming to come
from a thicket of tall ferns. Falling on their knees,
the children worked their way under the bushes and
through the brakes, until they came in view of a lovely
chubby elf sitting forlorn upon a mushroom on a<span class="pagenum">[119]</span>
hillock of soft green moss, beneath a screen of ferns
and wild flowers, and letting fall a flood of tears from
his big blue eyes. He wore no clothing, if we may
except a pair of drooping wings, and in his hand he
held a stalk of snowy lilies.</p>
<p>"Who are you, dear little one, and how came you
here?" they asked.</p>
<p>"I am a fairy," the tiny creature sobbed. "Last
night was the monthly revel, and we sported till the
moon set. But I saw these lilies growing over in
yonder swamp, and I wanted them so; and as I ran,
they seemed to run too. I had such hard work to
gather them; when at last I succeeded, my red cap
dropped off; and without it I am as helpless as a mere
mortal. While searching for the cap, which I have not
found, a cock in the village crowed, and the fairies all
fled away and left me. The door of the mound is
closed, and for a whole long month there is no hope of
my getting in again. Oh! I wish I could find my
cap."</p>
<p>"If we help you to find the cap, will you stop crying?"
said the children.</p>
<p>The shivering sprite wiped his eyes and promised
that he would weep no more. The girl wrapped him<span class="pagenum">[120]</span>
in her apron, and then all three of them set out in
search of the missing treasure. At last Timothy saw
in the water around some reeds a red object which a
bull-frog was opening his mouth to swallow; and, wading
into the stream, he was able to rescue the magic
cap, dry it in the sun, and restore it to its happy little
owner.</p>
<p>"And now," said the smiling elf, who appeared to
have suddenly grown old and wise, "as for a whole long
month I am without a home, what do you say to taking
me to yours? You will never regret it, that I
promise you."</p>
<p>The children told their new friend what a poor place
their home was, but the elf smiled and shook his head
as if he knew what he was about. He bade the children
lead him to their cottage, and once across the
threshold of the wretched place, where the drunken
mother was sleeping heavily on a pallet of straw in the
loft above, the elf took his perch upon the mantel-shelf.</p>
<p>"Next, since I am obliged to live with mortals, let
me see what the magic cap can do."</p>
<p>He put on the cap and immediately disappeared from
the children's sight. When night came, Timothy fell
asleep, but Bess watched; and at midnight she saw<span class="pagenum">[121]</span>
her new friend appear upon the hearth, conducting a
perfect army of little workmen and workwomen. He
waved his cap thrice around his head, and at once
little carpenters set to building up the cottage-walls,
little whitewashers made the ceilings wholesome, little
painters covered all the woodwork with a coat
of yellow. By sunrise what a change! The broken
bricks of the floor were transformed into pretty blue
and white tiles, lattice windows took the place of their
old and dim ones, the pots and pans were scoured until
they shone, roses looked in at the outer door, where
rows of larkspur and of gillyflower, of bachelor's-button
and "Love-in-a-mist" were growing on either side
of a neat flagged walk to the garden gate. Instead of
Timothy's old straw mattress, the boy lay on a clean
white bed; and his sister, who had kept awake all night
in utter wonderment, falling asleep at dawn, because
her eyes refused to stay open any longer, found him
shaking her arm, and begging her to come and share
in the nice hot breakfast that—wonder of wonders!—their
mother, sober, and clean, and smiling, had made
ready at the fire.</p>
<p>It was a day of marvels! The mother seemed to
have entirely forgotten her past degraded life, and<span class="pagenum">[122]</span>
was once more the brisk and rosy woman Simon had
fallen in love with. A dozen times a day she paused
in her spinning, or weaving, or baking, to run to the
gate and wonder when dear father would come back.
Timothy worked in the garden, Bess sewed and helped
her mother, not daring to tell what she alone knew of
the magic change. That night Bess slept, and Timothy
kept watch. At midnight the fairy appeared upon the
hearth, leading a dozen little bakers in white caps and
aprons.</p>
<p>"Now make ready fifty loaves of your best white
bread, that the goodwife may sell them on the morrow!"
the fairy ordered; and at once the tiny men set
to work mixing and kneading and baking, and at daybreak
there were fifty of the sweetest white loaves
money could buy. The fame of Simon's widow soon
spread through the village, and every one was eager to
see the wonderful reform worked in her, no less than
in her cottage. Her bread was bought up as fast as
she could furnish it, and next night Bess watched
while Timothy slept. Then Bess saw the fairy appear
at midnight, followed by a swarm of bees like a cloud.</p>
<p>"Make fifty pounds of your clearest honey, that the
goodwife may sell it on the morrow."<span class="pagenum">[123]</span></p>
<p>The bees flew out of the door, and next morning
the hives were found overflowing with luscious honey
that smelt like a bed of clover all a-blow.</p>
<p>Next night came the bakers, and next night again
the bees. Money flowed into the widow's purse as
rapidly as it had once flowed out. Now was there lacking
but one thing to complete their happiness, and that
was the return of Simon to his family. Bess and Timothy
together planned what they should do, and when
the month had passed away, and the night of the full
moon had come once more, neither went to bed, but
both hid, watching for the coming of the sprite. Exactly
at twelve o'clock, their kind little friend made his
appearance, and summoning cooks and bees, ordered
them to keep up their service on alternate nights, until
the dame's coffers should be full to last a lifetime. Seeing
him about to take leave, out rushed Timothy and
Bess, threw themselves on their knees before the fairy,
and, thanking him a thousand times over for his goodness,
begged for one more act of grace—their father's
release and restoration to his family. The fairy looked
graver than they had ever seen him, and his brows
puckered in a frown.</p>
<p>"Your father has committed an offence we never<span class="pagenum">[124]</span>
pardon," he said, after a short silence. "He has been
punished according to our laws, and must abide by the
sentence, which is imprisonment for life."</p>
<p>The children burst into tears at this, and cried so
that the fairy sneezed several times.</p>
<p>"I believe I am taking cold in all this dampness,"
he said, shivering slightly. "Come, dry up that deluge,
and say good-by to me. The utmost I can do
is to look up your father when I get back again, and
tell him you are well and happy. I suppose you do
not know that for some years past he has been attending
our holiday frolics as musician, since our own best
player broke his arm. Simon was under oath never to
look at us, or to betray us, and this was the first time
he transgressed. But our laws are very strict, and I
am afraid to bid you even hope to see him again. One
thing I may tell you. The king's chief counsellor has
a mantle of red, worked with a device of six golden
birds flying into a serpent's open jaws. If you should
ever find that mantle, walk boldly to the oak-tree in
the forest, knock three times, and cry, 'The King's
Chief Counsellor!' Then you may be able to secure
your father's freedom, but not else. And now, good-by
to you."<span class="pagenum">[125]</span></p>
<p>The good elf vanished, and Timothy and Bess spent
more time than ever in the forest. They had now
taken their mother into the secret, for she, poor woman,
had become as gentle and loving as she had before
been hard and cruel. The one desire of the entire
family was to get possession of the chief counsellor's
mantle, but nothing seemed more unlikely.</p>
<p>A year passed, and Timothy had gone out to look at
his rabbit-trap without particularly thinking of what
it might contain, when a tremendous bustle inside
attracted his attention. Cautiously he lifted the
door, and up sprang an angry little man in green,
having a long white beard, and a hump upon his back,
who vanished from sight as quickly as he had appeared.
Timothy lamented the loss of such unusual game, and
then espied at the bottom of the trap nothing less
than a tiny cloak of red, embroidered with six golden
birds flying into a serpent's open jaws!</p>
<p>He made a joyful dive after the little garment,
but, strange to say, it stuck tight to the fingers of his
right hand, dragging after it the trap. Timothy shook
it and pulled at it in vain; there it was, and not to be
dislodged.</p>
<p>He ran home and called Bess to his assistance. The<span class="pagenum">[126]</span>
little girl came out, and no sooner had she touched
her brother than she stuck fast to him. The mother
flew to the rescue, and became fastened to her daughter;
and there they all were, in a long string, not
knowing whether to laugh or cry at their strange predicament.
The only thing was to make a pilgrimage to
the oak-tree in the forest. Timothy's dog followed them,
and rubbed against his master's coat. He, too, stuck
fast, and so did Bessy's cat. Everybody they passed
upon the way was attracted to the queer family party,
and before long a little army of curious people were
compelled to walk along in the direction of the
forest.</p>
<p>Timothy did not know the secret of the little cloak,
which had power to attract everything to it, drawing
even people's thoughts out of their hearts, as a magnet
draws the needle. Only in fairy-land could the objects
so attracted be set free.</p>
<p>When they reached the oak-tree in the forest, Timothy
struck upon it three times and called with a bold
voice, though not without a trembling of the legs, for
the king's chief counsellor. The bark of the great tree
cleft slowly open, and out came the same old white-bearded
fairy he had captured in the rabbit-trap. Bowing<span class="pagenum">[127]</span>
with mock humility, the old fellow asked what his
visitors would be pleased to have.</p>
<p>"I demand my father, and also to be rid of this
wretched little rag," said Timothy hotly.</p>
<p>"Step inside, step inside," said the elf with a malicious
smile, for he knew that, once within, he might
get the audacious mortals in his power, and force them
to work his gold mines.</p>
<p>"Not a step will I go inside until I see my father,"
said Timothy firmly.</p>
<p>"Then here may you abide!" cried the old man,
turning white with rage.</p>
<p>Timothy put one hand <i>within</i> the tree, holding the
magic mantle at arm's-length.</p>
<p>"I demand my father," he cried in a loud voice.</p>
<p>The power of the mantle did not fail, for, rising from
the darkness within, came poor blind Simon, stretching
his arms toward his child, but holding tight his fiddle.
At the moment Timothy's hand had come inside the
fairy kingdom, the spell of enchantment was broken,
and all of the strangely linked people were set free.
Simon's wife and children threw their arms around
him, and welcomed his return, while his neighbors
shook his hand in warm congratulation. As for the<span class="pagenum">[128]</span>
old fairy, he fairly danced with rage. With the mantle
in Timothy's possession, half the chief counsellor's
power and reputation for wisdom would pass away.
He offered rich bribes of gold and jewels, he threatened,
he howled, he grinned, he hurled curses on their
heads, but Timothy was firm.</p>
<p>"Then name your price, you wretch!" cried the
angry fairy.</p>
<p>"It is that you shall restore my father's eye-sight,"
said Timothy.</p>
<p>This went very hard with the wicked old elf, who
had been congratulating himself that Simon would
bear away at least one mark of fairy vengeance. But
he had met his match in Timothy, and there was no
escape for the chief counsellor, who, diving down into
the cavern beneath the hollow tree, reappeared fetching
a box of magic ointment, which, rubbed upon
Simon's eyes, made them better than ever.</p>
<p>When Simon saw not only the light of day, but his
two dear children, and his wife looking as he had
known her in her blooming youth, he uttered a cry of
delight.</p>
<p>Then, to relieve his feelings, he struck up the old
"Wind that Shakes the Barley," when, behold, not only<span class="pagenum">[129]</span>
all the people there assembled, but a score of little
green folk, who had been in hiding, enjoying the discomfiture
of the cross old counsellor, began to foot it
on the greensward. Simon himself danced, and the old
counsellor, sorely against his will, was forced to skip
until his legs ached, for Timothy still held the mantle
in his hand.</p>
<p>At last, when all were out of breath, the elf received
his mantle. With a storm of angry words, he disappeared
from sight. Immediately the sky darkened, a
cold wind blew, and a shower of hail-stones fell upon
our friends, sending them scampering and laughing
away from the region where the fairy's spite prevailed.</p>
<p>Under the spell of the kind little sprite who had been
their guest, the cottage was never approached by any
unkind visitors. Simon fiddled and grew fat, his wife
remained as sweet as fresh cream to the last day of her
life, and their children came to be the pride of all the
village.</p>
<p>So far as I have heard, that is the last visit Hayfield
has had from the little men in green.</p>
<hr class="chapter">
<p><span class="pagenum">[130]</span></p>
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