<h2><SPAN name="THE_FIDDLER_IN_THE_FAIRY_RING" id="THE_FIDDLER_IN_THE_FAIRY_RING"></SPAN>THE FIDDLER IN THE FAIRY RING.</h2>
<p>Generations ago, there once lived a farmer's son, who had no
great harm in him, and no great good either. He always meant
well, but he had a poor spirit, and was too fond of idle
company.</p>
<p>One day his father sent him to market with some sheep for
sale, and when business was over for the day, the rest of the
country-folk made ready to go home, and more than one of them
offered the lad a lift in his cart.</p>
<p>"Thank you kindly, all the same," said he, "but I am going
back across the downs with Limping Tim."</p>
<p>Then out spoke a steady old farmer and bade the lad go home
with the rest, and by the main road. For Limping Tim was an
idle, graceless kind of fellow, who fiddled for his livelihood,
but what else he did to earn the money he squandered, no one
knew. And as to the sheep path over the downs, it stands to
reason that the highway is better travelling after sunset, for
the other is no such very short cut; and has a big fairy ring
so near it, that a butter-woman might brush it with the edge of
her market cloak, as she turned the brow of the hill.</p>
<p>But the farmer's son would go his own way, and that was with
Limping Tim, and across the downs.</p>
<p>So they started, and the fiddler had his fiddle in his hand,
and a bundle of marketings under his arm, and he sang snatches
of strange songs, the like of which the lad had never heard
before. And the moon drew out their shadows over the short
grass till they were as long as the great stones of
Stonehenge.</p>
<p>At last they turned the hill, and the fairy ring looked dark
under the moon, and the farmer's son blessed himself that they
were passing it quietly, when Limping Tim suddenly pulled his
cloak from his back, and handing it to his companion, cried,
"Hold this for a moment, will you? I'm wanted. They're calling
for me."</p>
<p>"I hear nothing," said the farmer's son. But before he had
got the words out of his mouth, the fiddler had completely
disappeared. He shouted aloud, but in vain, and had begun to
think of proceeding on his way, when the fiddler's voice cried,
"Catch!" and there came, flying at him from the direction of
the fairy ring, the bundle of marketings which the fiddler had
been carrying.</p>
<p>"It's in my way," he then heard the fiddler cry. "Ah, this
is dancing! Come in, my lad, come in!"</p>
<p>But the farmer's son was not totally without prudence, and
he took good care to keep at a safe distance from the fairy
ring.</p>
<p>"Come back, Tim! Come back!" he shouted, and, receiving no
answer, he adjured his friend to break the bonds that withheld
him, and return to the right way, as wisely as one man can
counsel another.</p>
<p>After talking for some time to no purpose, he again heard
his friend's voice, crying, "Take care of it for me! The money
dances out of my pocket." And therewith the fiddler's purse was
hurled to his feet, where it fell with a heavy chinking of gold
within.</p>
<p>He picked it up, and renewed his warnings and entreaties,
but in vain; and, after waiting for a long time, he made the
best of his way home alone, hoping that the fiddler would
follow, and come to reclaim his property.</p>
<p>The fiddler never came. And when at last there was a fuss
about his disappearance, the farmer's son, who had but a poor
spirit, began to be afraid to tell the truth of the matter.
"Who knows but they may accuse me of theft?" said he. So he hid
the cloak, and the bundle, and the money-bag in the garden.</p>
<p>But when three months passed, and still the fiddler did not
return, it was whispered that the farmer's son had been his
last companion; and the place was searched, and they found the
cloak, and the bundle, and the money-bag and the lad was taken
to prison.</p>
<p>Now, when it was too late, he plucked up a spirit, and told
the truth; but no one believed him, and it was said that he had
murdered the fiddler for the sake of his money and goods. And
he was taken before the judge, found guilty, and sentenced to
death.</p>
<p>Fortunately, his old mother was a Wise Woman. And when she
heard that he was condemned, she said, "Only follow my
directions, and we may save you yet; for I guess how it
is."</p>
<p>So she went to the judge, and begged for her son three
favours before his death.</p>
<p>"I will grant them," said the judge, "if you do not ask for
his life."</p>
<p>"The first," said the old woman, "is, that he may choose the
place where the gallows shall be erected; the second, that he
may fix the hour of his execution; and the third favour is,
that you will not fail to be present."</p>
<p>"I grant all three," said the judge. But when he learned
that the criminal had chosen a certain hill on the downs for
the place of execution, and an hour before midnight for the
time, he sent to beg the sheriff to bear him company on this
important occasion.</p>
<p>The sheriff placed himself at the judge's disposal, but he
commanded the attendance of the gaoler as some sort of
protection; and the gaoler, for his part, implored his
reverence the chaplain to be of the party, as the hill was not
in good spiritual repute. So, when the time came, the four
started together, and the hangman and the farmer's son went
before them to the foot of the gallows.</p>
<p>Just as the rope was being prepared, the farmer'a son called
to the judge, and said, "If your Honour will walk twenty paces
down the hill, to where you will see a bit of paper, you will
learn the fate of the fiddler."</p>
<p>"That is, no doubt, a copy of the poor man's last
confession," thought the judge.</p>
<p>"Murder will out, Mr. Sheriff," said he; and in the
interests of truth and justice he hastened to pick up the
paper.</p>
<p>But the farmer's son had dropped it as he came along, by his
mother's direction, in such a place that the judge could not
pick it up without putting his foot on the edge of the fairy
ring. No sooner had he done so than he perceived an innumerable
company of little people dressed in green cloaks and hoods, who
were dancing round in a circle as wide as the ring itself.</p>
<p>They were all about two feet high, and had aged faces, brown
and withered, like the knots on gnarled trees in hedge bottoms,
and they squinted horribly; but, in spite of their seeming age,
they flew round and round like children.</p>
<p>"Mr. Sheriff! Mr. Sheriff!" cried the judge, "come and see
the dancing. And hear the music, too, which is so lively that
it makes the soles of my feet tickle."</p>
<p>"There is no music, my Lord Judge," said the sheriff,
running down the hill. "It is the wind whistling over the grass
that your lordship hears."</p>
<p>But when the sheriff had put his foot by the judge's foot,
he saw and heard the same, and he cried out, "Quick, Gaoler,
and come down! I should like you to be witness to this matter.
And you may take my arm, Gaoler, for the music makes me feel
unsteady."</p>
<p>"There is no music, sir," said the gaoler; "but your worship
doubtless hears the creaking of the gallows."</p>
<p>But no sooner had the gaoler's feet touched the fairy ring,
than he saw and heard like the rest, and he called lustily to
the chaplain to come and stop the unhallowed measure.</p>
<p>"It is a delusion of the Evil One," said the parson; "there
is not a sound in the air but the distant croaking of some
frogs." But when he too touched the ring, he perceived his
mistake.</p>
<p>At this moment the moon shone out, and in the middle of the
ring they saw Limping Tim the fiddler, playing till great drops
stood out on his forehead, and dancing as madly as he
played.</p>
<p>"Ah, you rascal!" cried the judge. "Is this where you've
been all the time, and a better man than you as good as hanged
for you? But you shall come home now."</p>
<p>Saying which, he ran in, and seized the fiddler by the arm,
but Limping Tim resisted so stoutly that the sheriff had to go
to the judge's assistance, and even then the fairies so pinched
and hindered them that the sheriff was obliged to call upon the
gaoler to put his arms about his waist, who persuaded the
chaplain to add his strength to the string. But as ill luck
would have it, just as they were getting off, one of the
fairies picked up Limping Tim's fiddle, which had fallen in the
scuffle, and began to play. And as he began to play, every one
began to dance—the fiddler, and the judge, and the
sheriff, and the gaoler, and even the chaplain.</p>
<p>"Hangman! hangman!" screamed the judge, as he lifted first
one leg and then the other to the tune, "come down, and catch
hold of his reverence the chaplain. The prisoner is pardoned,
and he can lay hold too."</p>
<p>The hangman knew the judge's voice, and ran towards it; but
as they were now quite within the ring he could see nothing,
either of him or his companions.</p>
<p>The farmer's son followed, and warning the hangman not to
touch the ring, he directed him to stretch his hands forwards
in hopes of catching hold of some one. In a few minutes the
wind blew the chaplain's cassock against the hangman's fingers,
and he caught the parson round the waist. The farmer's son then
seized him in like fashion, and each holding firmly by the
other, the fiddler, the judge, the sheriff, the gaoler, the
parson, the hangman, and the farmer's son all got safely out of
the charmed circle.</p>
<p>"Oh, you scoundrel!" cried the judge to the fiddler; "I have
a very good mind to hang you up on the gallows without further
ado."</p>
<p>But the fiddler only looked like one possessed, and
upbraided the farmer's son for not having the patience to wait
three minutes for him.</p>
<p>"Three minutes!" cried he; "why, you've been here three
months and a day."</p>
<p>This the fiddler would not believe, and as he seemed in
every way beside himself, they led him home, still upbraiding
his companion, and crying continually for his fiddle.</p>
<p>His neighbours watched him closely, but one day he escaped
from their care and wandered away over the hills to seek his
fiddle, and came back no more.</p>
<p>His dead body was found upon the downs, face downwards, with
the fiddle in his arms. Some said he had really found the
fiddle where he had left it, and had been lost in a mist, and
died of exposure. But others held that he had perished
differently, and laid his death at the door of the fairy
dancers.</p>
<p>As to the farmer's son, it is said that thenceforward he
went home from market by the high-road, and spoke the truth
straight out, and was more careful of his company.</p>
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