“There came a strange
wight to our town en’,
An’ the
fient a body did him ken;
He twirled na’
lang, but he glided ben,
Wi’ a weary,
dreary hum.
His face did glow like the
glow o’ the West,
When the drumly
cloud had it half o’ercast;
Or the struggling moon when
she’s sair distrest.
O, Sirs! it was
Aiken-Drum.”
Did you ever hear how a Brownie came
to our village of Blednock, and was frightened away
again by a silly young wife, who thought she was cleverer
than anyone else, but who did us the worst turn that
she ever did anybody in her life, when she made the
queer, funny, useful little man disappear?
Well, it was one November evening,
in the gloaming, just when the milking was done, and
before the bairns were put to bed, and everyone was
standing on their doorsteps, having a crack about the
bad harvest, and the turnips, and what chances there
were of good prices for the stirks at the Martinmas
Fair, when the queerest humming noise started down
by the river.
It came nearer and nearer, and everyone
stopped their clavers and began to look down the
road. And, ’deed, it was no wonder that
they stared, for there, coming up the middle of the
highway, was the strangest, most frightsome-looking
creature that human eyes had ever seen.
He looked like a little wee, wee man,
and yet he looked almost like a beast, for he was
covered with hair from head to foot, and he wore no
clothing except a little kilt of green rashes which
hung round his waist. His hair was matted, and
his head hung forward on his breast, and he had a
long blue beard, which almost touched the ground.
His legs were twisted, and knocked
together as he walked, and his arms were so long that
his hands trailed in the mud.
He seemed to be humming something
over and over again, and, as he came near us we could
just make out the words, “Hae ye wark for Aiken-Drum?”
Eh, but I can tell you the folk were
scared. If it had been the Evil One himself who
had come to our quiet little village, I doubt if he
would have caused more stir. The bairns screamed,
and hid their faces in their mothers’ gown-tails;
while the lassies, idle huzzies that they were, threw
down the pails of milk, which should have been in the
milkhouse long ago, if they had not been so busy gossiping;
and the very dogs crept in behind their masters, whining,
and hiding their tails between their legs. The
grown men, who should have known better, and who were
not frightened to look the wee man in the face, laughed
and hooted at him.
“Did ye ever see such eyes?” cried one.
“His mouth is so big, he could swallow the moon,”
said another.
“Hech, sirs, but did ye ever see such a creature?”
cried a third.
And still the poor little man went
slowly up the street, crying wistfully, “Hae
ye wark for Aiken-Drum? Any wark for Aiken-Drum?”
Some of us tried to speak to him,
but our tongues seemed to be tied, and the words died
away on our lips, and we could only stand and watch
him with frightened glances, as if we were bewitched.
Old Grannie Duncan, the oldest, and
the kindest woman in the village, was the first to
come to her senses. “He may be a ghost,
or a bogle, or a wraith,” she said; “or
he may only be a harmless Brownie. It is beyond
me to say; but this I know, that if he be an evil spirit,
he will not dare to look on the Holy Book.”
And with that she ran into her cottage, and brought
out the great leather-bound Bible which aye lay on
her little table by the window.
She stood on the road, and held it
out, right in front of the creature, but he took no
more heed of it than if it had been an old song-book,
and went slowly on, with his weary cry for work.
“He’s just a Brownie,”
cried Grannie Duncan in triumph, “a simple,
kindly Brownie. I’ve heard tell of such
folk before, and many a long day’s work will
they do for the people who treat them well.”
Gathering courage from her words,
we all crowded round the wee man, and now that we
were close to him, we saw that his hairy face was kind
and gentle, and his tiny eyes had a merry twinkle
in them.
“Save us, and help us, creature!”
said an old man reprovingly, “but can ye no
speak, and tell us what ye want, and where ye come
from?”
For answer the Brownie looked all
round him, and gave such a groan, that we scattered
and ran in all directions, and it was full five minutes
before we could pluck up our courage and go close to
him again.
But Grannie Duncan stood her ground,
like a brave old woman that she was, and it was to
her that the creature spoke.
“I cannot tell thee from whence
I come,” he said. “’Tis a nameless
land, and ’tis very different from this land
of thine. For there we all learn to serve, while
here everyone wishes to be served. And when there
is no work for us to do at home, then we sometimes
set out to visit thy land, to see if there is any
work which we may do there. I must seem strange
to human eyes, that I know; but if thou wilt, I will
stay in this place awhile. I need not that any
should wait on me, for I seek neither wages, nor clothes,
nor bedding. All I ask for is the corner of a
barn to sleep in, and a cogful of brose set down on
the floor at bedtime; and if no one meddles with me,
I will be ready to help anyone who needs me. I’ll
gather your sheep betimes on the hill; I’ll take
in your harvest by moonlight. I’ll sing
the bairns to sleep in their cradles, and, though I
doubt you’ll not believe it, you’ll find
that the babes will love me. I’ll kirn
your kirns for you, goodwives, and I’ll bake
your bread on a busy day; while, as for the men folk,
they may find me useful when there is corn to thrash,
or untamed colts in the stables, or when the waters
are out in flood.”
No one quite knew what to say in answer
to the creature’s strange request. It was
an unheard-of thing for anyone to come and offer their
services for nothing, and the men began to whisper
among themselves, and to say that it was not canny,
and ’twere better to have nothing to do with
him.
But up spoke old Grannie Duncan again.
“’Tis but a Brownie, I tell you,”
she repeated, “a poor, harmless Brownie, and
many a story have I heard in my young days about the
work that a Brownie can do, if he be well treated
and let alone. Have we not been complaining all
summer about bad times, and scant wages, and a lack
of workmen to work the work? And now, when a
workman comes ready to your hand, ye will have none
of him, just because he is not bonnie to look on.”
Still the men hesitated, and the silly
young wenches screwed their faces, and pulled their
mouths. “But, Grannie,” cried they,
“that is all very well, but if we keep such
a creature in our village, no one will come near it,
and then what shall we do for sweethearts?”
“Shame on ye,” cried Grannie
impatiently, “and on all you men for encouraging
the silly things in their whimsies. It’s
time that ye were thinking o’ other things than
bonnie faces and sweethearts. ’Handsome
is that handsome does,’ is a good old saying;
and what about the corn that stands rotting in the
fields, an’ it past Hallowe’en already?
I’ve heard that a Brownie can stack a whole
ten-acre field in a single night.”
That settled the matter. The
miller offered the creature the corner of his barn
to sleep in, and Grannie promised to boil the cogful
of brose, and send her grandchild, wee Jeannie, down
with it every evening, and then we all said good-night,
and went into our houses, looking over our shoulders
as we did so, for fear that the strange little man
was following us.
But if we were afraid of him that
night, we had a very different song to sing before
a week was over. Whatever he was, or wherever
he came from, he was the most wonderful worker that
men had ever known. And the strange thing was
that he did most of it at night. He had the corn
safe into the stackyards, and the stacks thatched,
in the clap of a hand, as the old folk say.
The village became the talk of the
countryside, and folk came from all parts to see if
they could catch a glimpse of our queer, hairy little
visitor; but they were always unsuccessful, for he
was never to be seen when one looked for him.
One might go into the miller’s barn twenty times
a day, and twenty times a day find nothing but a heap
of straw; and although the cog of brose was aye empty
in the morning, no one knew when he came home, or
when he supped it.
But wherever there was work to be
done, whether it was a sickly bairn to be sung to,
or a house to be tidied up; a kirn that would not kirn,
or a batch of bread that would not rise; a flock of
sheep to be gathered together on a stormy night, or
a bundle to be carried home by some weary labourer;
Aiken-Drum, as we learned to call him, always got to
know of it, and appeared in the nick of time.
It looked as if we had all got wishing-caps, for we
had just to wish, and the work was done.
Many a time, some poor mother, who
had been up with a crying babe all night, would sit
down with it in her lap, in front of the fire, in the
morning, and fall fast asleep, and when she awoke,
she would find that Aiken-Drum had paid her a visit,
for the floor would be washed, and the dishes too,
and the fire made up, and the kettle put on to boil;
but the little man would have slipped away, as if
he were frightened of being thanked.
The bairns were the only ones who
ever saw him idle, and oh, how they loved him!
In the gloaming, or when the school was out, one could
see them away down in some corner by the burn-side,
crowding round the little dark brown figure, with
its kilt of rushes, and one would hear the sound of
wondrous low sweet singing, for he knew all the songs
that the little ones loved.
So by and by the name of Aiken-Drum
came to be a household word amongst us, and although
we so seldom saw him near at hand, we loved him like
one of our ain folk.
And he might have been here still,
had it not been for a silly, senseless young wife
who thought she knew better than everyone else, and
who took some idle notion into her empty head that
it was not right to make the little man work, and
give him no wage.
She dinned this into our heads,
morning, noon, and night, and she would not believe
us when we told her that Aiken-Drum worked for love,
and love only.
Poor thing, she could not understand
anyone doing that, so she made up her mind that she,
at least, would do what was right, and set us all an
example.
“She did not mean any harm,”
she said afterwards, when the miller took her to task
for it; but although she might not mean to do any harm,
she did plenty, as senseless folk are apt to do when
they cannot bear to take other people’s advice,
for she took a pair of her husband’s old, mouldy,
worn-out breeches, and laid them down one night beside
the cogful of brose.
By my faith, if the village folk had
not remembered so well what Aiken-Drum had said about
wanting no wages, they would have found something
better to give him than a pair of worn-out breeks.
Be that as it may, the long and the
short of it was, that the dear wee man’s feelings
were hurt because we would not take his services for
nothing, and he vanished in the night, as Brownies
are apt to do, so Grannie Duncan says, if anyone tries
to pay them, and we have never seen him from that
day to this, although the bairns declare that they
sometimes hear him singing down by the mill, as they
pass it in the gloaming, on their way home from school.