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Fairy Tales
The Lothian Farmer's Wife
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THE wife of a farmer in Lothian had
been carried off by the fairies, and, during the year of probation,
repeatedly appeared on Sunday, in the midst of her children, combing their
hair. On one of these occasions she was accosted by her husband; when she
related to him the unfortunate event which had separated them, instructed
him by what means be might win her, and exhorted him to exert all
his courage, since her temporal and eternal happiness depended on the
success of his attempt. The farmer, who ardently loved his wife, set out
on Hallowe’en, and, in the midst of a plot of furze, waited impatiently
for the procession of the fairies. At the ringing of the fairy bridles,
and the wild, unearthly sound which accompanied the cavalcade, his heart
failed him, and he suffered the ghostly train to pass by without
interruption. When the last had rode past, the whole troop vanished, with
loud shouts of laughter and exultation; among which he plainly discovered
the voice of his wife, lamenting that he had lost her for ever. |
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