More English Fairy Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about More English Fairy Tales.

More English Fairy Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about More English Fairy Tales.

But now she saw her sweetheart coming through the crowd, and he held over his head in the air her own golden ball; so she said: 

     “Stop, stop, I see my sweetheart coming! 
     Sweetheart, hast brought my golden ball
       And come to set me free?”

     “Aye, I have brought thy golden ball
       And come to set thee free,
     I have not come to see thee hung
       Upon this gallows-tree.”

And he took her home, and they lived happy ever after.

My Own Self

In a tiny house in the North Countrie, far away from any town or village, there lived not long ago, a poor widow all alone with her little son, a six-year-old boy.

The house-door opened straight on to the hill-side and all round about were moorlands and huge stones, and swampy hollows; never a house nor a sign of life wherever you might look, for their nearest neighbours were the “ferlies” in the glen below, and the “will-o’-the-wisps” in the long grass along the pathside.

And many a tale she could tell of the “good folk” calling to each other in the oak-trees, and the twinkling lights hopping on to the very window sill, on dark nights; but in spite of the loneliness, she lived on from year to year in the little house, perhaps because she was never asked to pay any rent for it.

But she did not care to sit up late, when the fire burnt low, and no one knew what might be about; so, when they had had their supper she would make up a good fire and go off to bed, so that if anything terrible did happen, she could always hide her head under the bed-clothes.

This, however, was far too early to please her little son; so when she called him to bed, he would go on playing beside the fire, as if he did not hear her.

He had always been bad to do with since the day he was born, and his mother did not often care to cross him; indeed, the more she tried to make him obey her, the less heed he paid to anything she said, so it usually ended by his taking his own way.

But one night, just at the fore-end of winter, the widow could not make up her mind to go off to bed, and leave him playing by the fireside; for the wind was tugging at the door, and rattling the window-panes, and well she knew that on such a night, fairies and such like were bound to be out and about, and bent on mischief.  So she tried to coax the boy into going at once to bed: 

“The safest bed to bide in, such a night as this!” she said:  but no, he wouldn’t.

Then she threatened to “give him the stick,” but it was no use.

The more she begged and scolded, the more he shook his head; and when at last she lost patience and cried that the fairies would surely come and fetch him away, he only laughed and said he wished they would, for he would like one to play with.

At that his mother burst into tears, and went off to bed in despair, certain that after such words something dreadful would happen; while her naughty little son sat on his stool by the fire, not at all put out by her crying.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
More English Fairy Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.