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<h2> The Brownie of the Lake </h2>
<p>Once upon a time there lived in France a man whose name was Jalm Riou. You
might have walked a whole day without meeting anyone happier or more
contented, for he had a large farm, plenty of money, and above all, a
daughter called Barbaik, the most graceful dancer and the best-dressed
girl in the whole country side. When she appeared on holidays in her
embroidered cap, five petticoats, each one a little shorter than the
other, and shoes with silver buckles, the women were all filled with envy,
but little cared Barbaik what they might whisper behind her back as long
as she knew that her clothes were finer than anyone else's and that she
had more partners than any other girl.</p>
<p>Now amongst all the young men who wanted to marry Barbaik, the one whose
heart was most set on her was her father's head man, but as his manners
were rough and he was exceedingly ugly she would have nothing to say to
him, and, what was worse, often made fun of him with the rest.</p>
<p>Jegu, for that was his name, of course heard of this, and it made him very
unhappy. Still he would not leave the farm, and look for work elsewhere,
as he might have done, for then he would never see Barbaik at all, and
what was life worth to him without that?</p>
<p>One evening he was bringing back his horses from the fields, and stopped
at a little lake on the way home to let them drink. He was tired with a
long day's work, and stood with his hand on the mane of one of the
animals, waiting till they had done, and thinking all the while of
Barbaik, when a voice came out of the gorse close by.</p>
<p>'What is the matter, Jegu? You mustn't despair yet.'</p>
<p>The young man glanced up in surprise, and asked who was there.</p>
<p>'It is I, the brownie of the lake,' replied the voice.</p>
<p>'But where are you?' inquired Jegu.</p>
<p>'Look close, and you will see me among the reeds in the form of a little
green frog. I can take,' he added proudly, 'any shape I choose, and even,
which is much harder, be invisible if I want to.'</p>
<p>'Then show yourself to me in the shape in which your family generally
appear,' replied Jegu.</p>
<p>'Certainly, if you wish,' and the frog jumped on the back of one of the
horses, and changed into a little dwarf, all dressed in green.</p>
<p>This transformation rather frightened Jegu, but the brownie bade him have
no fears, for he would not do him any harm; indeed, he hoped that Jegu
might find him of some use.</p>
<p>'But why should you take all this interest in me?' asked the peasant
suspiciously.</p>
<p>'Because of a service you did me last winter, which I have never
forgotten,' answered the little fellow. 'You know, I am sure, that the
korigans[FN#3: The spiteful fairies.] who dwell in the White Corn country
have declared war on my people, because they say that they are the friends
of man. We were therefore obliged to take refuge in distant lands, and to
hide ourselves at first under different animal shapes. Since that time,
partly from habit and partly to amuse ourselves, we have continued to
transform ourselves, and it was in this way that I got to know you.'</p>
<p>'How?' exclaimed Jegu, filled with astonishment.</p>
<p>'Do you remember when you were digging in the field near the river, three
months ago, you found a robin redbreast caught in a net?</p>
<p>'Yes,' answered Jegu, 'I remember it very well, and I opened the net and
let him go.'</p>
<p>'Well, I was that robin redbreast, and ever since I have vowed to be your
friend, and as you want to marry Barbaik, I will prove the truth of what I
say by helping you to do so.'</p>
<p>'Ah! my little brownie, if you can do that, there is nothing I won't give
you, except my soul.'</p>
<p>'Then let me alone,' rejoined the dwarf, 'and I promise you that in a very
few months you shall be master of the farm and of Barbaik.'</p>
<p>'But how are you going to do it?' exclaimed Jegu wonderingly.</p>
<p>'That is my affair. Perhaps I may tell you later. Meanwhile you just eat
and sleep, and don't worry yourself about anything.'</p>
<p>Jegu declared that nothing could be easier, and then taking off his hat,
he thanked the dwarf heartily, and led his horses back to the farm.</p>
<p>Next morning was a holiday, and Barbaik was awake earlier than usual, as
she wished to get through her work as soon as possible, and be ready to
start for a dance which was to be held some distance off. She went first
to the cow-house, which it was her duty to keep clean, but to her
amazement she found fresh straw put down, the racks filled with hay, the
cows milked, and the pails standing neatly in a row.</p>
<p>'Of course, Jegu must have done this in the hope of my giving him a
dance,' she thought to herself, and when she met him outside the door she
stopped and thanked him for his help. To be sure, Jegu only replied
roughly that he didn't know what she was talking about, but this answer
made her feel all the more certain that it was he and nobody else.</p>
<p>The same thing took place every day, and never had the cow-house been so
clean nor the cows so fat. Morning and evening Barbaik found her earthen
pots full of milk and a pound of butter freshly churned, ornamented with
leaves. At the end of a few weeks she grew so used to this state of
affairs that she only got up just in time to prepare breakfast.</p>
<p>Soon even this grew to be unnecessary, for a day arrived when, coming
downstairs, she discovered that the house was swept, the furniture
polished, the fire lit, and the food ready, so that she had nothing to do
except to ring the great bell which summoned the labourers from the fields
to come and eat it. This, also, she thought was the work of Jegu, and she
could not help feeling that a husband of this sort would be very useful to
a girl who liked to lie in bed and to amuse herself.</p>
<p>Indeed, Barbaik had only to express a wish for it to be satisfied. If the
wind was cold or the sun was hot and she was afraid to go out lest her
complexion should be spoilt, she need only to run down to the spring close
by and say softly, 'I should like my churns to be full, and my wet linen
to be stretched on the hedge to dry,' and she need never give another
thought to the matter.</p>
<p>If she found the rye bread too hard to bake, or the oven taking too long
to heat, she just murmured, 'I should like to see my six loaves on the
shelf above the bread box,' and two hours after there they were.</p>
<p>If she was too lazy to walk all the way to market along a dirty road, she
would say out loud the night before, 'Why am I not already back from
Morlaix with my milk pot empty, my butter bowl inside it, a pound of wild
cherries on my wooden plate, and the money I have gained in my apron
pocket?' and in the morning when she got up, lo and behold! there were
standing at the foot of her bed the empty milk pot with the butter bowl
inside, the black cherries on the wooden plate, and six new pieces of
silver in the pocket of her apron. And she believed that all this was
owing to Jegu, and she could no longer do without him, even in her
thoughts.</p>
<p>When things had reached this pass, the brownie told the young man that he
had better ask Barbaik to marry him, and this time the girl did not turn
rudely away, but listened patiently to the end. In her eyes he was as ugly
and awkward as ever, but he would certainly make a most useful husband,
and she could sleep every morning till breakfast time, just like a young
lady, and as for the rest of the day, it would not be half long enough for
all she meant to do. She would wear the beautiful dresses that came when
she wished for them, and visit her neighbours, who would be dying of envy
all the while, and she would be able to dance as much as she wished. Jegu
would always be there to work for her and save for her, and watch over
her. So, like a well-brought-up girl, Barbaik answered that it should be
as her father pleased, knowing quite well that old Riou had often said
that after he was dead there was no one so capable of carrying on the
farm.</p>
<p>The marriage took place the following month, and a few days later the old
man died quite suddenly. Now Jegu had everything to see to himself, and
somehow it did not seem so easy as when the farmer was alive. But once
more the brownie stepped in, and was better than ten labourers. It was he
who ploughed and sowed and reaped, and if, as happened, occasionally, it
was needful to get the work done quickly, the brownie called in some of
his friends, and as soon as it was light a host of little dwarfs might
have been seen in the fields, busy with hoe, fork or sickle. But by the
time the people were about all was finished, and the little fellows had
disappeared.</p>
<p>And all the payment the brownie ever asked for was a bowl of broth. From
the very day of her marriage Barbaik had noted with surprise and rage that
things ceased to be done for her as they had been done all the weeks and
months before. She complained to Jegu of his laziness, and he only stared
at her, not understanding what she was talking about. But the brownie, who
was standing by, burst out laughing, and confessed that all the good
offices she spoke of had been performed by him, for the sake of Jegu, but
that now he had other business to do, and it was high time that she looked
after her house herself.</p>
<p>Barbaik was furious. Each morning when she was obliged to get up before
dawn to milk the cows and go to market, and each evening when she had to
sit up till midnight in order to churn the butter, her heart was filled
with rage against the brownie who had caused her to expect a life of ease
and pleasure. But when she looked at Jegu and beheld his red face,
squinting eyes, and untidy hair, her anger was doubled.</p>
<p>'If it had not been for you, you miserable dwarf!' she would say between
her teeth, 'if it had not been for you I should never have married that
man, and I should still have been going to dances, where the young men
would have brought me present of nuts and cherries, and told me that I was
the prettiest girl in the parish. While now I can receive no presents
except from my husband. I can never dance, except with my husband. Oh, you
wretched dwarf, I will never, never forgive you!'</p>
<p>In spite of her fierce words, no one knew better than Barbaik how to put
her pride in her pocket when it suited her, and after receiving an
invitation to a wedding, she begged the brownie to get her a horse to ride
there. To her great joy he consented, bidding her set out for the city of
the dwarfs and to tell them exactly what she wanted. Full of excitement,
Barbaik started on her journey. It was not long, and when she reached the
town she went straight to the dwarfs, who were holding counsel in a wide
green place, and said to them, 'Listen, my friends! I have come to beg you
to lend me a black horse, with eyes, a mouth, ears, bridle and saddle.'</p>
<p>She had hardly spoken when the horse appeared, and mounting on his back
she started for the village where the wedding was to be held.</p>
<p>At first she was so delighted with the chance of a holiday from the work
which she hated, that she noticed nothing, but very soon it struck her as
odd that as she passed along the roads full of people they all laughed as
they looked at her horse. At length she caught some words uttered by one
man to another. 'Why, the farmer's wife has sold her horse's tail!' and
turned in her saddle. Yes; it was true. Her horse had no tail! She had
forgotten to ask for one, and the wicked dwarfs had carried out her orders
to the letter!</p>
<p>'Well, at any rate, I shall soon be there,' she thought, and shaking the
reins, tried to urge the horse to a gallop. But it was of no use; he
declined to move out of a walk; and she was forced to hear all the jokes
that were made upon her.</p>
<p>In the evening she returned to the farm more angry than ever, and quite
determined to revenge herself on the brownie whenever she had the chance,
which happened to be very soon.</p>
<p>It was the spring, and just the time of year when the dwarfs held their
fete, so one day the brownie asked Jegu if he might bring his friends to
have supper in the great barn, and whether he would allow them to dance
there. Of course, Jegu was only too pleased to be able to do anything for
the brownie, and he ordered Barbaik to spread her best table-cloths in the
barn, and to make a quantity of little loaves and pancakes, and, besides,
to keep all the milk given by the cows that morning. He expected she would
refuse, as he knew she hated the dwarfs, but she said nothing, and
prepared the supper as he had bidden her.</p>
<p>When all was ready, the dwarfs, in new green suits, came bustling in, very
happy and merry, and took their seats at the table. But in a moment they
all sprang up with a cry, and ran away screaming, for Barbaik had placed
pans of hot coals under their feet, and all their poor little toes were
burnt.</p>
<p>'You won't forget that in a hurry,' she said, smiling grimly to herself,
but in a moment they were back again with large pots of water, which they
poured on the fire. Then they joined hands and danced round it, singing:</p>
<p>Wicked traitress, Barne Riou,<br/>
Our poor toes are burned by you;<br/>
Now we hurry from your hall—<br/>
Bad luck light upon you all.<br/></p>
<p>That evening they left the country for ever, and Jegu, without their help,
grew poorer and poorer, and at last died of misery, while Barbaik was glad
to find work in the market of Morlaix.</p>
<p>From 'Le Foyer Breton,' par E. Souvestre.</p>
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