The Child That Went With the Fairies

by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, 1870 
Eastward of the old city of  Limerick, about ten Irish miles under the range 
of mountains known as the  Slieveelim hills, famous as having afforded 
Sarsfleld a shelter among  their rocks and hollows, when he crossed them in his 
gallant descent upon  the cannon and ammunition of King William, on its way to 
the 
beleaguering  army, there runs a very old and narrow road. It connects the 
Limerick road  to Tipperary with the old road from Limerick to Dublin, and runs 
by bog  and pasture, hill and hollow, straw-thatched village, and roofless 
castle,  not far from twenty miles. 
Skirting the healthy mountains of which I have spoken, at one part it  
becomes singularly lonely. For more than three Irish miles it traverses a  
deserted 
country. A wide, black bog, level as a lake, skirted with copse,  spreads at 
the left, as you journey northward, and the long and irregular  line of 
mountain rises at the right, clothed in heath, broken with lines  of grey rock 
that 
resemble the bold and irregular outlines of  fortifications, and riven with 
many a gully, expanding here and there into  rocky and wooded glens, which open 
as they approach the road. 
A scanty pasturage, on which browsed a few scattered sheep or kine,  skirts 
this solitary road for some miles, and under shelter of a hillock,  and of two 
or three great ash-trees, stood, not many years ago, the little  thatched 
cabin of a widow named Mary Ryan. 
Poor was this widow in a land of poverty. The thatch had acquired the  grey 
tint and sunken outlines, that show how the alternations of rain and  sun have 
told upon that perishable shelter. 
But whatever other dangers threatened, there was one well provided  against 
by the care of other times. Round the cabin stood half a dozen  mountain ashes, 
as the rowans, inimical to witches, are there called. On  the worn planks of 
the door were nailed two horse-shoes, and over the  lintel and spreading along 
the thatch, grew, luxuriant, patches of that  ancient cure for many maladies, 
and prophylactic against the machinations  of the evil one, the house-leek. 
Descending into the doorway, in the  chiaroscuro of the interior, when your eye 
grew sufficiently accustomed to  that dim light, you might discover, hanging 
at the head of the widow’s  wooden-roofed bed, her beads and a phial of holy 
water. 
Here certainly were defences and bulwarks against the intrusion of that  
unearthly and evil power, of whose vicinity this solitary family were  
constantly 
reminded by the outline of Lisnavoura, that lonely hill-haunt  of the “Good 
people,” as the fairies are called euphemistically, whose  strangely dome-like 
summit rose not half a mile away, looking like an  outwork of the long line of 
mountain that sweeps by it. 
It was at the fall of the leaf, and an autumnal sunset threw the  lengthening 
shadow of haunted Lisnavoura, close in front of the solitary  little cabin, 
over the undulating slopes and sides of Slieveelim. The  birds were singing 
among the branches in the thinning leaves of the  melancholy ash-trees that 
grew 
at the roadside in front of the door. The  widow’s three younger children were 
playing on the road, and their voices  mingled with the evening song of the 
birds. Their elder sister, Nell, was  “within in the house,” as their phrase 
is, seeing after the boiling of the  potatoes for supper. 
Their mother had gone down to the bog, to carry up a hamper of turf on  her 
back. It is, or was at least, a charitable custom—and if not disused,  long may 
it continue—for the wealthier people when cutting their turf and  stacking it 
in the bog, to make a smaller stack for the behoof of the  poor, who were 
welcome to take from it so long as it lasted, and thus the  potato pot was kept 
boiling, and hearth warm that would have been cold  enough but for that 
good-natured bounty, through wintry months. 
Moll Ryan trudged up the steep “bohereen” whose banks were overgrown  with 
thorn and brambles, and stooping under her burden, re-entered her  door, where 
her dark-haired daughter Nell met her with a welcome, and  relieved her of her 
hamper. 
Moll Ryan looked round with a sigh of relief, and drying her forehead,  
uttered the Munster 
ejaculation: 
“Eiah, wisha! It’s tired I am with it, God bless it. And where’s the  
craythurs, Nell?” 
“Playin’ out on the road, mother; didn’t ye see them and you comin’  up?” 
“No; there was no one before me on the road,” she said, uneasily; “not  a 
soul, Nell; and why didn’t ye keep an eye on them?” 
“Well, they’re in the haggard, playin’ there, or round by the back o’  the 
house. Will I call them in?” 
“Do so, good girl, in the name o’ God. The hens is comin’ home, see,  and 
the sun was just down over Knockdoulah, an’ I comin’ up.” 
So out ran tall, dark-haired Nell, and standing on the road, looked up  and 
down it; but not a sign of her two little brothers, Con and Bill, or  her 
little sister, Peg, could she see. She called them; but no answer came  from 
the 
little haggard, fenced with straggling bushes. She listened, but  the sound of 
their voices was missing. Over the stile, and behind the  house she ran—but 
there all was silent and deserted. 
She looked down toward the bog, as far as she could see; but they did  not 
appear. Again she listened—but in vain. At first she had felt angry,  but now a 
different feeling overcame her, and she grew pale. With an  undefined boding 
she looked toward the heathy boss of Lisnavoura, now  darkening into the 
deepest purple against the flaming sky of sunset. 
Again she listened with a sinking heart, and heard nothing but the  farewell 
twitter and whistle of the birds in the bushes around. How many  stories had 
she listened to by the winter hearth, of children stolen by  the fairies, at 
nightfall, in lonely places! With this fear she knew her  mother was haunted. 
No one in the country round gathered her little flock about her so  early as 
this frightened widow, and no door “in the seven parishes” was  barred so 
early. 
Sufficiently fearful, as all young people in that part of the world are  of 
such dreaded and subtle agents, Nell was even more than usually afraid  of 
them, for her terrors were infected and redoubled by her mother’s. She  was 
looking towards Lisnavoura in a trance of fear, and crossed herself  again and 
again, and whispered prayer after prayer. She was interrupted by  her mother’s 
voice on the road calling her loudly. She answered, and ran  round to the front 
of 
the cabin, where she found her standing. 
“And where in the world’s the craythurs—did ye see sight o’ them  anywhere?”
 cried Mrs. Ryan, as the girl came over the stile. 
“Arrah! mother, ’tis only what they’re run down the road a bit. We’ll  see 
them this minute coming back. It’s like goats they are, climbin’ here  and 
runnin’ there; an’ if I had them here, in my hand, maybe I wouldn’t  give them 
a hiding all round.” 
“May the Lord forgive you, Nell! the childhers gone. They’re took, and  not 
a soul near us, and Father Tom three miles away! And what’ll I do, or  who’s 
to help us this night? Oh, wirristhru, wirristhru! The craythurs is  gone!” 
“Whisht, mother, be aisy: don’t ye see them comin’ up. 
And then she shouted in menacing accents, waving her arm, and beckoning  the 
children, who were seen approaching on the road, which some little way  off 
made a slight dip, which had concealed them. They were approaching  from the 
westward, and from the direction of the dreaded hill of  Lisnavoura. 
But there were only two of the children, and one of them, the little  girl, 
was crying. Their mother and sister hurried forward to meet them,  more alarmed 
than ever. 
“Where is Billy—where is he?” cried the mother, nearly breathless, so  soon 
as she was within hearing. 
“He’s gone—they took him away; but they said he’ll come back again,”  
answered little Con, with the dark brown hair. 
“He’s gone away with the grand ladies,” blubbered the little girl. 
“What ladies—where? Oh, Leum, asthora! My darlin’, are you gone away at  
last? Where is he? 
Who took him? What ladies are you talkin’ about? What way did he go?”  she 
cried in distraction. “I couldn’t see where he went, mother; ’twas  like as if 
he was going to Lisnavoura.”
With a wild exclamation the  distracted woman ran on towards the hill alone, 
clapping her hands, and  crying aloud the name of her lost child. 
Scared and horrified, Nell, not daring to follow, gazed after her, and  burst 
into tears; and the other children raised high their lamentations in  shrill 
rivalry. Twilight was deepening. It was long past the time when  they were 
usually barred securely within their habitation. Nell led the  younger children 
into the cabin, and made them sit down by the turf fire,  while she stood in 
the open door, watching in great fear for the return of  her mother. 
After a long while they did see their mother return. She came in and  sat 
down by the fire, and cried as if her heart would break. 
“Will I bar the doore, mother?” asked Nell. 
“Ay, do—didn’t I lose enough, this night, without lavin’ the doore  open, 
for more o’ yez to go; but first take an’ sprinkle a dust o’ the  holy waters 
over ye, acuishla, and bring it here till I throw a taste iv  it over myself 
and the craythurs; an’ I wondher, Nell, you’d forget to do  the like yourself, 
lettin’ the craythurs out so near nightfall. Come here  and sit on my knees, 
asthora, come to me, mavourneen, and hould me fast,  in the name o’ God, and I’
ll hould you fast that none can take yez from  me, and tell me all about it, 
and what it was—the Lord between us and  harm—an’ how it happened, and who 
was in it.” 
And the door being barred, the two children, sometimes speaking  together, 
often interrupting one another, often interrupted by their  mother, managed to 
tell this strange story, which I had better relate  connectedly and in my own 
language. 
The Widow Ryan’s three children were playing, as I have said, upon the  
narrow old road in front of her door. Little Bill or Leum, about five  years 
old, 
with golden hair and large blue eyes, was a very pretty boy,  with all the 
clear tints of healthy childhood, and that gaze of earnest  simplicity which 
belongs not to town children of the same age. His little  sister Peg, about a 
year 
older, and his brother Con, a little more than a  year elder than she, made up 
the little group. 
Under the great old ash-trees, whose last leaves were falling at their  feet, 
in the light of an October sunset, they were playing with the  hilarity and 
eagerness of rustic children, clamouring together, and their  faces were turned 
toward the west and storied hill of Lisnavoura. 
Suddenly a startling voice with a screech called to them from behind,  
ordering them to get out of the way, and turning, they saw a sight, such  as 
they 
never beheld before. It was a carriage drawn by four horses that  were pawing 
and snorting, in impatience, as if just pulled up. The  children were almost 
under their feet, and scrambled to the side of the  road next their own door. 
This carriage and all its appointments were old-fashioned and gorgeous,  and 
presented to the children, who had never seen anything finer than a  turf car, 
and once, an old chaise that passed that way from Killaloe, a  spectacle 
perfectly dazzling. 
Here was antique splendour. The harness and trappings were scarlet, and  
blazing with gold. The horses were huge, and snow white with great manes,  that 
as 
they tossed and shook them in the air, seemed to stream and float  sometimes 
longer and sometimes shorter, like so much smoke—their tails  were long, and 
tied up in bows of broad scarlet and gold ribbon. The coach  itself was glowing 
with colours, gilded and emblazoned. There were footmen  in gay liveries, and 
three-cocked hats, like the coachman’s; but he had a  great wig, like a judge’
s, and their hair was frizzed out and powdered,  and a long thick “pigtail,” 
with a bow to it, hung down the back of  each. 
All these servants were diminutive, and ludicrously out of proportion  with 
the enormous horses of the equipage, and had sharp, sallow features,  and 
small, restless fiery eyes, and faces of cunning and malice that  chilled the 
children. The little coachman was scowling and showing his  white fangs under 
his 
cocked hat, and his little blazing beads of eyes  were quivering with fury in 
their sockets as he whirled his whip round and  round over their heads, till 
the lash of it looked like a streak of fire  in the evening sun, and sounded 
like the cry of a legion of “fillapoueeks”  in the air. 
“Stop the princess on the highway!” cried the coachman, in a piercing  
treble. 
“Stop the princess on the highway!” piped each footman in turn,  scowling 
over his shoulder down on the children, and grinding his keen  teeth. 
The children were so frightened they could only gape and turn white in  their 
panic. But a very sweet voice from the open window of the carriage  reassured 
them, and arrested the attack of the lackeys. 
A beautiful and “very grand-looking” lady was smiling from it on them,  and 
they all felt pleased in the strange light of that smile. 
“The boy with the golden hair, I think,” said the lady, bending her  large 
and wonderfully clear eyes on little Leum. 
The upper sides of the carriage were chiefly of glass, so that the  children 
could see another woman inside, whom they did not like so  well. 
This was a black woman, with a wonderfully long neck, hung round with  many 
strings of large variously-coloured beads, and on her head was a sort  of 
turban of silk striped with all the colours of the rainbow, and fixed  in it 
was a 
golden star. 
This black woman had a face as thin almost as a death’s-head, with high  
cheekbones, and great goggle eyes, the whites of which, as well as her  wide 
range 
of teeth, showed in brilliant contrast with her skin, as she  looked over the 
beautiful lady’s shoulder, and whispered something in her  ear. 
“Yes; the boy with the golden hair, I think,” repeated the lady. 
And her voice sounded sweet as a silver bell in the children s ears,  and her 
smile beguiled them like the light of an enchanted lamp, as she  leaned from 
the window with a look of ineffable fondness on the  golden-haired boy, with 
the large blue eyes; insomuch that little Billy,  looking up, smiled in return 
with a wondering fondness, and when she  stooped down, and stretched her 
jewelled arms towards him, he stretched  his little hands up, and how they 
touched 
the other children did not know;  but, saying, “Come and give me a kiss, my 
darling,” she raised him. And he  seemed to ascend in her small fingers as 
lightly as a feather, and she  held him in her lap and covered him with kisses. 
Nothing daunted, the other children would have been only too happy to  change 
places with their favoured little brother. There was only one thing  that was 
unpleasant, and a little frightened them, and that was the black  woman, who 
stood and stretched forward, in the carriage as before. She  gathered a rich 
silk and gold handkerchief that was in her fingers up to  her lips, and seemed 
to thrust ever so much of it, fold after fold, into  her capacious mouth, as 
they thought to smother her laughter, with which  she seemed convulsed, for she 
was shaking and quivering, as it seemed,  with suppressed merriment; but her 
eyes, which remained uncovered, looked  angrier than they had ever seen eyes 
look before. 
But the lady was so beautiful they looked on her instead, and she  continued 
to caress and kiss the little boy on her knee; and smiling at  the other 
children she held up a large russet apple in her fingers, and  the carriage 
began 
to move slowly on, and with a nod inviting them to take  the fruit, she dropped 
it on the road from the window; it rolled some way  beside the wheels, they 
following, and then she dropped another, and then  another, and so on. And the 
same thing happened to all; forjust as either  of the children who ran beside 
had caught the rolling apple, somehow it  slipt into a hole or ran into a 
ditch, and looking up they saw the lady  drop another from the window, and so 
the 
chase was taken up and continued  till they got, hardly knowing how far they 
had gone, to the old cross-road  that leads to Owney. It seemed that there the 
horses’ hoofs and carriage  wheels rolled up a wonderful dust, which being 
caught in one of those  eddies that whirl the dust up into a column, on the 
calmest day, enveloped  the children for a moment, and passed whirling on 
towards 
Lisnavoura, the  carriage, as they fancied, driving in the centre of it; but 
suddenly it  subsided, the straws and leaves floated to the ground, the dust 
dissipated  itself, but the white horses and the lackeys, the gilded carriage, 
the  lady and their little golden-haired brother were gone. 
At the same moment suddenly the upper rim of the clear setting sun  
disappeared behind the hill of Knockdoula, and it was twilight. Each child  
felt the 
transition like a shock—and the sight of the rounded summit of  Lisnavoura, now 
closely overhanging them, struck them with a new fear. 
They screamed their brother’s name after him, but their cries were lost  in 
the vacant air. At the same time they thought they heard a hollow voice  say, 
close to them, “Go home.” 
Looking round and seeing no one, they were scared, and hand in hand—the  
little girl crying wildly, and the boy white as ashes, from fear, they  trotted 
homeward, at their best speed, to tell, as we have seen, their  strange story. 
Molly Ryan never more saw her darling. But something of the lost little  boy 
was seen by his former playmates. 
Sometimes when their mother was away earning a trifle at hay-making,  and 
Nelly washing the potatoes for their dinner, or “beatling” clothes in  the 
little stream that flows in the hollow close by, they saw the pretty  face of 
little Billy peeping in archly at the door, and smiling silently  at them, and 
as 
they ran to embrace him, with cries of delight, he drew  back, still smiling 
archly, and when they got out into the open day, he  was gone, and they could 
see no trace of him anywhere. 
This happened often, with slight variations in the circumstances of the  
visit. Sometimes he would peep for a longer time, sometimes for a shorter  
time, 
sometimes his little hand would come in, and, with bended finger,  beckon them 
to follow; but always he was smiling with the same arch look  and wary silence—
and always he was gone when they reached the door.  Gradually these visits 
grew less and less frequent, and in about eight  months they ceased altogether, 
and little Billy, irretrievably lost, took  rank in their memories with the 
dead. 
One wintry morning, nearly a year and a half after his disappearance,  their 
mother having set out for Limerick soon after cockcrow, to sell some  fowls at 
the market, the little girl, lying by the side of her elder  sister, who was 
fast asleep, just at the grey of the morning heard the  latch lifted softly, 
and saw little Billy enter and close the door gently  after him. There was 
light enough to see that he was barefoot and ragged,  and looked pale and 
famished. He went straight to the fire, and cowered  over the turf embers, and 
rubbed 
his hands slowly, and seemed to shiver as  he gathered the smouldering turf 
together. 
The little girl clutched her sister in terror and whispered, “Waken,  Nelly, 
waken; here’s Billy come back!” 
Nelly slept soundly on, but the little boy, whose hands were extended  close 
over the coals, turned and looked toward the bed, it seemed to her,  in fear, 
and she saw the glare of the embers reflected on his thin cheek  as he turned 
toward her. He rose and went, on tiptoe, quickly to the door,  in silence, and 
let himself out as softly as he had come in. 
After that, the little boy was never seen any more by any one of his  
kindred. 
“Fairy doctors,” as the dealers in the preternatural, who in such cases  
were called in, are termed, did all that in them lay—but in vain. Father  Tom 
came down, and tried what holier rites could do, but equally without  result. 
So 
little Billy was dead to mother, brother, and sisters; but no  grave received 
him. Others whom affection cherished, lay in holy ground,  in the old church 
yard of Abington, with headstone to mark the spot over  which the survivor 
might kneel and say a kind prayer for the peace of the  departed soul. But 
there 
was no landmark to show where little Billy was  hidden from their loving eyes, 
unless it was in the old hill of  Lisnavoura, that cast its long shadow at 
sunset before the cabin-door; or  that, white and filmy in the moonlight, in 
later years, would occupy his  brother’s gaze as he returned from fair or 
market, 
and draw from him a  sigh and a prayer for the little brother he had lost so 
long ago, and was  never to see  again.





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