The Primrose Ring eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 142 pages of information about The Primrose Ring.

The Primrose Ring eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 142 pages of information about The Primrose Ring.

You may think it uncommonly strange that Sandy could make a song like this, by himself; but, you see, he was not entirely alone—­there were the baby faeries.  They helped a lot; as fast as ever he thought out the words they rhymed them for him—­this being a part of the A B C of faery education.

When the song was finished Sandy turned to the queen again.  “Aighe—­wull it do?”

“If the faeries like it, and think it good enough to send down to the children, they will have it all learned by heart and will sing it back to you in a minute.  Listen!  Can you hear anything?”

For a moment only the rustle of the trees could be heard.  Sandy strained his ears until he caught a low, sobbing sound coming through the hazel-leaves.

“’Tis but the wind—­greetin’,” he said, wistfully.

“Listen again!”

The sound grew, breaking into a cadence and a counter-cadence, and thence into a harmony. “‘Tis verra ilk the grand pipe-organ i’ the kirk, hame in Aberdeen.”

“Listen again!”

Mellow and sweet came the notes of the Jacobite air—­a bar of it; and then the faeries began to sing, sending the song back to Sandy like a belated echo: 

  “Ye weave a bonny primrose ring;
    Ye hear the River callin’;
  Ye ken the Land whaur faeries sing—­
    Whaur starlicht beams are fallin’.”

“For the love o’ Mike!” laughed Sandy.  “A’m unco glad—­a am.”  He dropped to his knees beside the queen and nestled his cheek in the hand that was resting in her lap. “’Tis aricht noo.”  And he sighed contentedly.

And it was.  The queen leaned over and lifted off the hump as easily as you might take the cover from a box.  Sandy stretched himself and yawned—­after the fashion of any one who has been sleeping a long time in a cramped position; and without being in the least conscious of it, he sidled up to the arm of the throne and rubbed his back up and down—­to test the perfect straightness of it.

“’Tis gone—­guid!  Wull it nae mair coom back?” And he eyed the queen gravely.

“Never to be burdensome, little lad.  Others may think they see it there, but for you the back will be straight and strong.”

Rosita came back—­empty-handed; she was so busy holding tight to Bridget’s hand and getting ready to be afraid that she forgot everything else.  As for Michael, he gave his patch into Bridget’s keeping; which brings us to what Bridget remembered.

From the moment that the penny had been given over to her she had been weighed down with a mighty responsibility.  The financier of any large syndicate is bound to feel harassed at times over the outcome of his investments; and Bridget felt personally accountable for the forthcoming happiness due the eight other stockholders in her company.  She was also mindful of what had happened in the past to other persons who had speculated heedlessly or unwisely with faery gifts.  There was the case of the fisherman and his wife, and the aged couple and their sausage, and the old soldier; on the other hand, there was the man from Letterkenny who had hoarded his gold and had it turn to dry leaves as a punishment.  She must neither keep nor spend foolishly.

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Project Gutenberg
The Primrose Ring from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.