Page:English Fairy Tales.djvu/239

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
The Cauld Lad of Hilton
213

What! you don't know what's a Bogle or a Redcap! Ah, me! What's the world a-coming to? Of course a Brownie is a funny little thing, half man, half goblin, with pointed ears and hairy hide. When you bury a treasure, you scatter over it blood drops of a newly slain kid or lamb, or, better still, bury the animal with the treasure, and a Brownie will watch over it for you, and frighten everybody else away.

Where was I? Well, as I was a-saying, the Brownie at Hilton Hall would play at mischief, but if the servants laid out for it a bowl of cream, or a knuckle cake spread with honey, it would clear away things for them, and make everything tidy in the kitchen. One night, however, when the servants had stopped up late, they heard a noise in the kitchen, and, peeping in, saw the Brownie swinging to and fro on the Jack chain, and saying:

"Woe's me! woe's me!
The acorn 's not yet
Fallen from the tree.
That's to grow the wood,
That 's to make the cradle,
That's to rock the bairn,
That's to grow to the man.
That's to lay me.
Woe's me! Woe's me!"

So they took pity on the poor Brownie, and asked the nearest henwife what they should do to send it away. "That's easy enough," said the henwife, and told them that a Brownie that's paid for its service, in