THE STORY.
It commenced, so I calculate, about
the year 2000 B.C., or, to be more precise for
figures are not the strong point of the old chroniclers when
King Heremon ruled over Ireland and Harbundia was
Queen of the White Ladies of Brittany, the fairy Malvina
being her favourite attendant. It is with Malvina
that this story is chiefly concerned. Various
quite pleasant happenings are recorded to her credit.
The White Ladies belonged to the “good people,”
and, on the whole, lived up to their reputation.
But in Malvina, side by side with much that is commendable,
there appears to have existed a most reprehensible
spirit of mischief, displaying itself in pranks that,
excusable, or at all events understandable, in, say,
a pixy or a pigwidgeon, strike one as altogether unworthy
of a well-principled White Lady, posing as the friend
and benefactress of mankind. For merely refusing
to dance with her at midnight, by the shores
of a mountain lake; neither the time nor the place
calculated to appeal to an elderly gentleman, suffering
possibly from rheumatism she on one occasion
transformed an eminently respectable proprietor of
tin mines into a nightingale, necessitating a change
of habits that to a business man must have been singularly
irritating. On another occasion a quite important
queen, having had the misfortune to quarrel with Malvina
over some absurd point of etiquette in connection
with a lizard, seems, on waking the next morning,
to have found herself changed into what one judges,
from the somewhat vague description afforded by the
ancient chroniclers, to have been a sort of vegetable
marrow.
Such changes, according to the Professor,
who is prepared to maintain that evidence of an historical
nature exists sufficient to prove that the White Ladies
formed at one time an actual living community, must
be taken in an allegorical sense. Just as modern
lunatics believe themselves to be china vases or poll-parrots,
and think and behave as such, so it must have been
easy, the Professor argues, for beings of superior
intelligence to have exerted hypnotic influence upon
the superstitious savages by whom they were surrounded,
and who, intellectually considered, could have been
little more than children.
“Take Nebuchadnezzar.”
I am still quoting the Professor. “Nowadays
we should put him into a strait-waistcoat. Had
he lived in Northern Europe instead of Southern Asia,
legend would have told us how some Kobold or Stromkarl
had turned him into a composite amalgamation of a
serpent, a cat and a kangaroo.” Be that
as it may, this passion for change in other
people seems to have grown upon Malvina
until she must have become little short of a public
nuisance, and eventually it landed her in trouble.
The incident is unique in the annals
of the White Ladies, and the chroniclers dwell upon
it with evident satisfaction. It came about
through the betrothal of King Heremon’s only
son, Prince Gerbot, to the Princess Berchta of Normandy.
Malvina seems to have said nothing, but to have bided
her time. The White Ladies of Brittany, it must
be remembered, were not fairies pure and simple.
Under certain conditions they were capable of becoming
women, and this fact, one takes it, must have exerted
a disturbing influence upon their relationships with
eligible male mortals. Prince Gerbot may not
have been altogether blameless. Young men in
those sadly unenlightened days may not, in their dealings
with ladies, white or otherwise, have always been the
soul of discretion and propriety. One would like
to think the best of her.
But even the best is indefensible.
On the day appointed for the wedding she seems to
have surpassed herself. Into what particular
shape or form she altered the wretched Prince Gerbot;
or into what shape or form she persuaded him that
he had been altered, it really, so far as the moral
responsibility of Malvina is concerned, seems to be
immaterial; the chronicle does not state: evidently
something too indelicate for a self-respecting chronicler
to even hint at. As, judging from other passages
in the book, squeamishness does not seem to have been
the author’s literary failing, the sensitive
reader can feel only grateful for the omission.
It would have been altogether too harrowing.
It had, of course, from Malvina’s
point of view, the desired effect. The Princess
Berchta appears to have given one look and then to
have fallen fainting into the arms of her attendants.
The marriage was postponed indefinitely, and Malvina,
one sadly suspects, chortled. Her triumph was
short-lived.
Unfortunately for her, King Heremon
had always been a patron of the arts and science of
his period. Among his friends were to be reckoned
magicians, genii, the Nine Korrigans or Fays of Brittany all
sorts of parties capable of exerting influence, and,
as events proved, only too willing. Ambassadors
waited upon Queen Harbundia; and Harbundia, even had
she wished, as on many previous occasions, to stand
by her favourite, had no alternative. The fairy
Malvina was called upon to return to Prince Gerbot
his proper body and all therein contained.
She flatly refused. A self-willed,
obstinate fairy, suffering from swelled head.
And then there was that personal note. Merely
that he should marry the Princess Berchta! She
would see King Heremon, and Anniamus, in his silly
old wizard’s robe, and the Fays of Brittany,
and all the rest of them ! A really nice
White Lady may not have cared to finish the sentence,
even to herself. One imagines the flash of the
fairy eye, the stamp of the fairy foot. What could
they do to her, any of them, with all their clacking
of tongues and their wagging of heads? She, an
immortal fairy! She would change Prince Gerbot
back at a time of her own choosing. Let them
attend to their own tricks and leave her to mind hers.
One pictures long walks and talks between the distracted
Harbundia and her refractory favourite appeals
to reason, to sentiment: “For my sake.”
“Don’t you see?” “After all,
dear, and even if he did.”
It seems to have ended by Harbundia
losing all patience. One thing there was she
could do that Malvina seems either not to have known
of or not to have anticipated. A solemn meeting
of the White Ladies was convened for the night of
the midsummer moon. The place of meeting is
described by the ancient chroniclers with more than
their usual exactitude. It was on the land that
the magician Kalyb had, ages ago, raised up above
all Brittany to form the grave of King Taramis.
The “Sea of the Seven Islands” lay to
the north. One guesses it to be the ridge formed
by the Arree Mountains. “The Lady of the
Fountain” appears to have been present, suggesting
the deep green pool from which the river D’Argent
takes its source. Roughly speaking, one would
place it halfway between the modern towns of Morlaix
and Callac. Pedestrians, even of the present
day, speak of the still loneliness of that high plateau,
treeless, houseless, with no sign of human hand there
but that high, towering monolith round which the shrill
winds moan incessantly. There, possibly on some
broken fragment of those great grey stones, Queen
Harbundia sat in judgment. And the judgment
was and from it there was no appeal that
the fairy Malvina should be cast out from among the
community of the White Ladies of Brittany. Over
the face of the earth she should wander, alone and
unforgiven. Solemnly from the book of the roll-call
of the White Ladies the name of Malvina was struck
out for ever.
The blow must have fallen upon Malvina
as heavily as it was unexpected. Without a word,
without one backward look, she seems to have departed.
One pictures the white, frozen face, the wide-open,
unseeing eyes, the trembling, uncertain steps, the
groping hands, the deathlike silence clinging like
grave-clothes round about her.
From that night the fairy Malvina
disappears from the book of the chroniclers of the
White Ladies of Brittany, from legend and from folklore
whatsoever. She does not appear again in history
till the year A.D. 1914.