The Horned Women
[30]
RICH woman sat up late one night carding and preparing wool,
while all the family and servants were asleep Suddenly a
knock was given at the door, and a voice called, "Open!
open!"
"Who is there?" said the woman of the house.
"I am the Witch of one Horn," was answered.
The mistress, supposing that one of her neighbours had
called and required assistance, opened the door, and a woman
entered, having in her hand a pair of wool-carders, and
bearing a horn on her forehead, as if growing there. She sat
down by the fire in silence, and began to card
[31] the wool with
violent haste. Suddenly she paused, and said aloud: "Where
are the women? they delay too long."
Then a second knock came to the door, and a voice called as
before, "Open! open!"
The mistress felt herself obliged to rise and open to the
call, and immediately a second witch entered, having two
horns on her forehead, and in her hand a wheel for spinning
wool.
Give me place," she said; "I am the Witch of the two horns,"
and she began to spin as quick as lightning.
And so the knocks went on, and the call was heard, and the
witches entered, until at last twelve women sat round the
fire—the first with one horn, the last with twelve horns.
And they carded the thread, and turned their spinning-wheels,
and wound and wove, all singing together an ancient
rhyme, but no word did they speak to the mistress of the
house. Strange to hear, and frightful to look upon, were
these twelve women, with their horns and their wheels; and
the mistress felt near to death, and she tried to rise that
she might call for help, but she could not move, nor could
she utter a word or a cry, for the spell of the witches was
upon her.
Then one of them called to her in Irish, and said, "Rise,
woman, and make us a cake."
Then the mistress searched for a vessel to bring water from
the well that she might mix the meal and make the cake, but
she could find none.
And they said to her, "Take a sieve and bring water in it."
[32] And she took the sieve and went to the well; but the water
poured from it, and she could fetch none for the cake, and
she sat down by the well and wept.
Then a voice came by her and said, "Take yellow clay and
moss, and bind them together, and plaster the sieve so that
it will hold."
This she did, and the sieve held the water for the cake; and
the voice said again:
"Return, and when thou comest to the north angle of the
house, cry aloud three times and say, 'The mountain of the
Fenian women and the sky over it is all on fire.' "
And she did so.
When the witches inside heard the call, a great and terrible
cry broke from their lips, and they rushed forth with wild
lamentations and shrieks, and fled away to Slievenamon,
where was their chief abode. But the Spirit of the Well bade
the mistress of the house to enter and prepare her home
against the enchantments of the witches if they returned
again.
And first, to break their spells, she sprinkled the water in
which she had washed her child's feet, the feet-water,
outside the door on the threshold; secondly, she took the
cake which in her absence the witches had made of meal mixed
with the blood drawn from the sleeping family, and she broke
the cake in bits, and placed a bit in the mouth of each
sleeper, and they were restored; and she took the cloth they
had woven, and placed it half in and half out of the chest
with the padlock; and lastly, she secured the door with a
great crossbeam fastened in the jambs, so that the witches
could not enter, and having done these things she waited.
[33] Not long were the witches in coming back, and they raged and
called for vengeance.
"Open! open!" they screamed; "open, feet-water!"
"I cannot," said the feet-water; "I am scattered on the
ground, and my path is down to the Lough."
"Open, open, wood and trees and beam!" they cried to the
door.
"I cannot," said the door, "for the beam is fixed in the
jambs and I have no power to move."
"Open, open, cake that we have made and mingled with blood!"
they cried again.
"I cannot," said the cake, "for I am broken and bruised, and
my blood is on the lips of the sleeping children."
Then the witches rushed through the air with great cries,
and fled back to Slievenamon, uttering strange curses on the
Spirit of the Well, who had wished their ruin; but the woman
and the house were left in peace, and a mantle dropped by
one of the witches in her flight was kept hung up by the
mistress in memory of that night; and this mantle was kept
by the same family from generation to generation for five
hundred years after.
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