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The Welsh Fairy Book
1907

by W. Jenkyn Thomas


More E-texts
The Welsh Fairy Book
• Preface - The Welsh Fairy Book
• Notes on Welsh Prounciation
• The Lady of the Lake
• Arthur in the Cave
• The Curse of Pantannas
• The Drowning of the Bottom Hundred
• Elidyr's Sojurn in Fairy-Land
• Lowri Dafydd Earns a Purse of Gold
• The Llanfabon Changeling
• Why the Red Dragon is the Emblem of Wales
• Llyn Cwm Llwch
• The Adventures of Three Farmers
• Cadwaladr and His Goat
• The Fairy Wife
• Einion and the Lady of the Greenwood
• The Green Isles of the Ocean
• March's Ears
• The Fairy Harp
• Guto Bach and the Fairies
• Ianto's Chase
• The Stray Cow
• Bala Lake
• The Forbidden Fountain
• Tudor Ap Einion
• Fairy Walking Stick
• Dick the Fiddler's Money
• A Strange Otter
• Fairy Ointment
• Pergrin and the Mermaiden
• The Cave of the Young Men of Snowdonia
• Einion and the Fair Family
• St Collen and the King of the Fairy
• Helig's Hollow
• Owen Goes A-Wooing
• The Fairy Reward
• Why Deunant has the Front Door in the Back
• Getting Rid of the Fairies
• The Mantle of Kings' Beards
• Pedws Ffowk and St Elian's Well
• Magic Music
• Sili go Dwt
• Another Changeling
• A Fairy Borrowing
• Treasure Seeking
• The Richest Man
• St Beuno and the Curlew
• The Cat Witches
• The Swallowed Court
• What Marged Rolant Saw
• Ned Puw's Farewell
• Pennard Castle
• The Man with the Green Weeds
• Goronwy Tudor and the Witches of Llanddona
• Robin's Return
• The Harper's Gratuity
• Six and Four are Ten
• Envy Burns Itself
• The Bride from the Red Lake
• A Fairy Dog
• Grace's Well
• The Fairy Password
• St Winifred's Well
• Ancients of the World
• Nansi Llywd and the Dog of Darkness
• An Adventure in the Big Bog
• The Pwca of the Trwyn
• John Gethin and the Candle
• Fetching a Halter
• Dai Sion's Homecoming
• Melangell's Lambs
• Syfaddon Lake
• The Power of St Tegla's Well
• The Men of Ardudwy
• The Parti-Coloured Cow
• Striking a Corpse Candle
• Hu Gadarn
• The Devil's Bridge
• The Martyred Hound
• Twm of the Fair Lies
• Black Robin
• Llyn Llech Owen
• A Ghostly Rehersal
• A Phantom Funeral
• Why the Robin's Breast is Red
 
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Dick the Fiddler's Money

DICK the Fiddler used to spend on drink all the money he earned by playing at merrymakings, weddings and fairs. After a week’s fuddle at Darowen he was one night wending his way home to his wife and children. He had to go through Fairy Green Lane, just above the farm-stead of Cefn Cloddiau, and when he came to it he felt nervous. To banish fear he tuned his beloved instrument, and as he walked along he played his favourite air, "The Crow’s Black Wing." When he passed the greensward where the fairies used to revel he felt his fiddle suddenly becoming very heavy, and he heard a rattling and a tinkling inside it. This continued until he reached Llwybr Scriw Riw, his home. When he entered the cottage he had to listen to harsher music than he was wont to extract from his fiddle, to wit, the angry voice of his wife, who, justly angered at his absence, began to lecture and scold him. He was called names which he richly deserved: idler, fool, drunken sot, and so forth. "How is it possible," asked his wife, "for me to beg enough for myself and half a houseful of children nearly naked, while you go about the country spending on drink the little money you earn? The landlord came here this morning, and said that if you do not pay him the rent which has long been overdue he will turn us all out, and what are we to do then? I am sure you have spent all your earnings as usual on beer, and that you haven’t got a ha’penny in your pocket." "Hush, hush, my good woman," said Dick, "see what’s in my old fiddle." She obeyed, shook it, and out tumbled a number of bright new five-shilling pieces, more than enough to pay the rent. She promptly put the money away in a safe place, and asked him how he had come into possession of it, and he told her.

The following day he went to Llanidloes to pay his rent. His landlord was more than surprised to find that Dick had come, not to beg for mercy, as he had done several times before, but to discharge his debt. He gave him a receipt, and thirsty Dick betook himself to the "Unicorn" to sample Betty Brunt’s ale before returning home. He had not consumed more than a trifle of half-a-dozen glasses when in came his landlord in a state of great excitement. "Where did you get the money you gave me?" he asked. "Why, what’s the matter with it?" asked Dick. "It has turned into cockleshells," said the landlord. "Well, it was all right when I gave it you, and here is the receipt," said Dick, flourishing the document triumphantly. "Somebody must have bewitched the coins." He vouchsafed no further explanation, and even when he was gloriously drunk, as he finished up the evening by becoming, no one was able to pump any information out of him as to the origin of the money he had given the landlord.


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