Page:Cornish feasts and folk-lore.djvu/135

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Fairies. 123 or try to reward him for his services by giving him a new suit of clothes, he leaves the house never to return, and in the latter case may be heard to say: ' ' Pisky fine, pisky gay ! Pisky now will fly away." Or in another version : " Pisky new coat, and pisky new hood, Pisky now will do no more good." — (T.Q.C.) Mr. Cornish, the Town Clerk of Penzance, mentioned at an antiquarian meeting recently held in that town, "that there was a brownie still existing in it ; that a gentleman, whose opinion he would take on many matters, had told him that he had often seen it sitting quietly by the fireside." When mischievously inclined pisky often leads benighted people a sad dance ; like Will of the Wisp, he takes them over hedges and ditches, and sometimes round and round the same field, from which they in vain try to find their way home (although they can always see the path close at hand), until they sit down and turn their stockings the wrong side out, as an old lady, born in the last century, whom I well knew, once told me she had done. To turn a pocket inside out has the same effect. But to quote the words of a late witty Cornish doctor, " Pisky led is often whiskey led." Mr. T. Q. Couch in his before-mentioned book has two or three amusing stories of their merry pranks. One is called "A Voyage with the Piskies." A Polperro lad meeting them one night as he was going on an errand heard them say in chorus, " Fm for Portallow Green " (a place in the neighbourhood). Repeating the cry after them, " quick as thought he found himself there sur- rounded by a throng of laughing piskies." The next place they visited was Seaton Beach, between Polperro and Plymouth ; the third and last cry was " I'm for the King of France's cellar." Again he decided on joining them, dropped the bundle he was carrying on the sands, and " immediately found himself in a spacious cellar, engaged with his mysterious companions in tasting the richest wines." Afterwards they strolled through the palace, where in a room he saw all the preparations made for a feast.