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Tehi Tegi

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Editor's Notes:
Sophia Morrison
Manx Fairy Tales
David Nutt, London
1911
Isle Of Man
Tehi Tegi: fairy bride, longing, loss, divided worlds, sorrow.
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a

Tehi Tegi

Long hundreds of years ago there was a witch in the island who made
herself the finest and cleverest-looking young woman in it. Her like
for beauty was never before seen in this mortal world. When she
went out walking or riding the very birds of the air would forget
to sing for looking at her, and her sweet voice would tempt them off
the trees to listen to her. Even the animals would stand still till
she went by, for her beauty cast a spell on them. And as for the men,
the poor creatures, they flocked from all sides of the island to woo
her, and when they had once looked on her face they never wanted to
leave her. They forgot everything else in the world--all sorrow and
care, home and country, till at last everything in the island came
to a standstill because the men followed wherever this young witch
chose to lead them. Their haggards were empty, for they neither
ploughed nor sowed, and their houses tholthans, for they neither
built nor mended. They cut no turf and pulled no ling for fires. Their
fields were covered with stones, so that the cattle died for want of
pasture, and their gardens were full of weeds. There was a strange
stillness throughout the island--no children's voices were to be heard
anywhere. The witch only laughed to see what her beauty had done, and
she kept all the men near her by making each think that himself might
be the chosen one. If one asked her to marry him she would answer,
'An' maybe I will,' and then she would say the same to the next. So
they spent their days in pleasuring themselves. When she had made
slaves of the men of the island in this way, she said one day:

'Saddle me my horse, for I've a mind to ride.'

So they brought her milk-white horse shod with shoes of gold, with bit
of gold and bridle set with jewels, with saddle of mother-of-pearl
and saddle-cloth of blue. Tehi Tegi mounted, and the waves of her
golden hair flowed down over her dress of shining white.

'I'm going,' said she, 'to the country for the day, and you can follow
me on foot if you like.'

She rode and took her way under shady trees and through grassy lanes,
where blue-bells and primroses grew as thick as the grass, and the
hedges were yellow with gorse. She went on by fields, covered with
stones, which were once fine corn land; and on she went at the head of
them by lonely little tholthans whose roofs had sunk in on the hearth,
and then by spots where houses once had been, now marked by jenny
nettles and an old tramman tree. Her way mounted upwards among hills
shining in the May sunlight, and through gills where little streams
ran down between banks covered with fern and briar and many a flower,
to the blue sea.

At last they found themselves at the side of a bright swift river,
and she put a spell on it and made it seem shallow and as smooth and
clear as glass, so that the little stones at the bottom were barely
covered. Then, when they were all beginning to wade through it, she
took off the spell and the water rushed over their heads and swallowed
up the six hundred poor lovers. With that she made a bat of herself
and rose up in the air and flew out of sight. Her milk-white horse
turned into a perkin, plunged to the bottom of the stream, and swam
away out to sea and was never more seen.

From that time the wise men of the island made their women go on
foot and follow their husbands wherever they should lead, so that no
such accident should happen again. If by chance a woman went first,
anyone who saw her cried out 'Tehi Tegi! Tehi Tegi!'

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