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    Drumcliff and Rosses - Page 2

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    cows and horses died, and an manner of trouble overtook
    him, and finally he himself was led home, and left useless with "his
    head on his knees by the fire to the day of his death."

    A few hundred yards southwards of the northern angle of Rosses is
    another angle having also its cave, though this one is not covered with
    sand. About twenty years ago a brig was wrecked near by, and three or
    four fishermen were put to watch the deserted hulk through the
    darkness. At midnight they saw sitting on a stone at the cave's mouth
    two red-capped fiddlers fiddling with all their might. The men fled. A
    great crowd of villagers rushed down to the cave to see the fiddlers,
    but the creatures had gone.

    To the wise peasant the green hills and woods round him are full of
    never-fading mystery. When the aged countrywoman stands at her door in
    the evening, and, in her own words, "looks at the mountains and thinks
    of the goodness of God," God is all the nearer, because the pagan
    powers are not far: because northward in Ben Bulben, famous for hawks,
    the white square door swings open at sundown, and those wild
    unchristian riders rush forth upon the fields, while southward the
    White Lady, who is doubtless Maive herself, wanders under the broad
    cloud nightcap of Knocknarea. How may she doubt these things, even
    though the priest shakes his head at her? Did not a herd-boy, no long
    while since, see the White Lady? She passed so close that the skirt of
    her dress touched him. "He fell down, and was dead three days." But
    this is merely the small gossip of faerydom--the little stitches that
    join this world and the other.

    One night as I sat eating Mrs. H-----'s soda-bread, her husband told
    me a longish story, much the best of all I heard in Rosses. Many a poor
    man from Fin M'Cool to our own days has had some such adventure to tell
    of, for those creatures, the "good people," love to repeat themselves.
    At any rate the story-tellers do. "In the times when we used to travel
    by the canal," he said, "I was coming down from Dublin. When we came to
    Mullingar the canal ended, and I began to walk, and stiff and fatigued
    I was after the slowness. I had some friends with me, and now and then

    we walked, now and then we rode in a cart. So on till we saw some girls
    milking cows, and stopped to joke with them. After a while we asked
    them for a drink of milk. 'We have nothing to put it in here,' they
    said, 'but come to the house with us.' We went home with them, and sat
    round the fire talking. After a while the others went, and left me,
    loath to stir from the good fire. I asked the girls for something to
    eat. There was a pot on the fire, and they took the meat out and put it
    on a plate, and told
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