Once upon a time there lived a
girl who was wooed and married by a man she never saw; for he came
a-courting her after nightfall, and when they were married he never
came home till it was dark, and always left before dawn.
Still he was good and kind to her, giving her everything her heart
could desire, so she was well content for a while. But, after a bit,
some of her friends, doubtless full of envy for her good luck, began
to whisper that the unseen husband must have something dreadful the
matter with him which made him averse to being seen.
Now from the very beginning the girl had wondered why her lover did
not come a-courting her as other girls' lovers came, openly and by
day, and though, at first, she paid no heed to her neighbours' nods
and winks, she began at last to think there might be something in
what they said. So she determined to see for herself, and one night
when she heard her husband come into her room, she lit her candle
suddenly and saw him.
And, lo and behold! he was handsome as handsome; beautiful enough to
make every woman in the world fall in love with him on the spot. But
even as she got her glimpse of him, he changed into a big brown bird
which looked at her with eyes full of anger and blame.
"Because you have done this faithless thing," it said, "you will see
me no more, unless for seven long years and a day you serve for me
faithfully."
And she cried with tears and sobs, "I will serve seven times seven
years and a day if you will only come back. Tell me what I am to
do."
Then the bird-husband said, "I will place you in service, and there
you must remain and do good work for seven years and a day, and you
must listen to no man who may seek to beguile you to leave that
service. If you do I will never return."
To this the girl agreed, and the bird, spreading its broad brown
wings, carried her to a big mansion.
"Here they need a laundry-maid," said the bird-husband. "Go in, ask
to see the mistress, and say you will do the work; but remember you
must do it for seven years and a day."
"But I cannot do it for seven days," answered the girl. "I cannot
wash or iron."
"That matters nothing," replied the bird. "All you have to do is to
pluck three feathers from under my wing close to my heart, and these
feathers will do your bidding whatever it may be. You will only have
to put them on your hand, and say, 'By virtue of these three
feathers from over my true love's heart may this be done,' and it
will be done."
So the girl plucked three feathers from under the bird's wing, and
after that the bird flew away.
Then the girl did as she was bidden, and the lady of the house
engaged her for the place. And never was such a quick laundress;
for, see you, she had only to go into the wash-house, bolt the door
and close the shutters, so that no one should see what she was at;
then she would out with the three feathers and say, "By virtue of
these three feathers from over my true love's heart may the copper
be lit, the clothes sorted, washed, boiled, dried, folded, mangled,
ironed," and lo! there they came tumbling on to the table, clean and
white, quite ready to be put away. So her mistress set great store
by her and said there never was such a good laundry-maid. Thus four
years passed and there was no talk of her leaving. But the other
servants grew jealous of her, all the more so, because, being a very
pretty girl, all the men-servants fell in love with her and wanted
to marry her.
But she would have none of them, because she was always waiting and
longing for the day when her bird-husband would come back to her in
man's form.
Now one of the men who wanted her was the stout butler, and one day
as he was coming back from the cider-house he chanced to stop by the
laundry, and he heard a voice say, "By virtue of these three
feathers from over my true love's heart may the copper be lit, the
clothes sorted, boiled, dried, folded, mangled, and ironed."
He thought this very queer, so he peeped through the keyhole. And
there was the girl sitting at her ease in a chair, while all the
clothes came flying to the table ready and fit to put away.
Well, that night he went to the girl and said that if she turned up
her nose at him and his proposal any longer, he would up and tell
the mistress that her fine laundress was nothing but a witch; and
then, even if she were not burnt alive, she would lose her place.
Now the girl was in great distress what to do, since if she were not
faithful to her bird-husband, or if she failed to serve her seven
years and a day in one service, he would alike fail to return; so
she made an excuse by saying she could think of no one who did not
give her enough money to satisfy her.
At this the stout butler laughed. "Money?" said he. "I have seventy
pounds laid by with master. Won't that satisfy thee?"
"Happen it would," she replied.
So the very next night the butler came to her with the seventy
pounds in golden sovereigns, and she held out her apron and took
them, saying she was content; for she had thought of a plan. Now as
they were going upstairs together she stopped and said:
"Mr. Butler, excuse me for a minute. I have left the shutters of the
wash-house open, and I must shut them, or they will be banging all
night and disturb master and missus!"
Now though the butler was stout and beginning to grow old, he was
anxious to seem young and gallant; so he said at once:
"Excuse me, my beauty, you shall not go. I will go and shut them. I
shan't be a moment!"
So off he set, and no sooner had he gone than she out with her three
feathers, and putting them on her hand, said in a hurry:
"By virtue of the three feathers from over my true love's heart may
the shutters never cease banging till morning, and may Mr. Butler's
hands be busy trying to shut them."
And so it happened.
Mr. Butler shut the shutters, but—bru-u-u! there they were hanging
open again. Then he shut them once more, and this time they hit him
on the face as they flew open. Yet he couldn't stop; he had to go
on. So there he was the whole livelong night. Such a cursing, and
banging, and swearing, and shutting, never was, until dawn came,
and, too tired to be really angry, he crept back to his bed,
resolving that come what might he would not tell what had happened
to him and thus get the laugh on him. So he kept his own counsel,
and the girl kept the seventy pounds, and laughed in her sleeve at
her would-be lover.
Now after a time the coachman, a spruce middle-aged man, who had
long wanted to marry the clever, pretty laundry-maid, going to the
pump to get water for his horses overheard her giving orders to the
three feathers, and peeping through the keyhole as the butler had
done, saw her sitting at her ease in a chair while the clothes, all
washed and ironed and mangled, came flying to the table.
So, just as the butler had done, he went to the girl and said, "I
have you now, my pretty. Don't dare to turn up your nose at me, for
if you do I'll tell mistress you are a witch."
Then the girl said quite calmly, "I look on none who has no money."
"If that is all," replied the coachman, "I have forty pounds laid by
with master. That I'll bring and ask for payment to-morrow night."
So when the night came the girl held out her apron for the money,
and as she was going up the stairs she stopped suddenly and said,
"Goody me! I've left my clothes on the line. Stop a bit till I fetch
them in."
Now the coachman was really a very polite fellow, so he said at
once:
"Let me go. It is a cold, windy night and you'll be catching your
death."
So off he went, and the girl out with her feathers and said:
"By virtue of the three feathers from over my true love's heart may
the clothes slash and blow about till dawn, and may Mr. Coachman not
be able to gather them up or take his hand from the job."
And when she had said this she went quietly to bed, for she knew
what would happen. And sure enough it did. Never was such a night as
Mr. Coachman spent with the wet clothes flittering and fluttering
about his ears, and the sheets wrapping him into a bundle, and
tripping him up, while the towels slashed at his legs. But though he
smarted all over he had to go on till dawn came, and then a very
weary, woebegone coachman couldn't even creep away to his bed, for
he had to feed and water his horses! And he, also, kept his own
counsel for fear of the laugh going against him; so the clever
laundry-maid put the forty pounds with the seventy in her box, and
went on with her work gaily. But after a time the footman, who was
quite an honest lad and truly in love, going by the laundry peeped
through the keyhole to get a glimpse of his dearest dear, and what
should he see but her sitting at her ease in a chair, and the
clothes coming all ready folded and ironed on to the table.
Now when he saw this he was greatly troubled. So he went to his
master and drew out all his savings; and then he went to the girl
and told her that he would have to tell the mistress what he had
seen, unless she consented to marry him.
"You see," he said, "I have been with master this while back, and
have saved up this bit, and you have been here this long while back
and must have saved as well. So let us put the two together and make
a home, or else stay on at service as pleases you."
Well, she tried to put him off; but he insisted so much that at last
she said:
"James! there's a dear, run down to the cellar and fetch me a drop
of brandy. You've made me feel so queer!" And when he had gone she
out with her three feathers, and said, "By virtue of the three
feathers from over my true love's heart may James not be able to
pour the brandy straight, except down his throat."
Well! so it happened. Try as he would, James could not get the
brandy into the glass. It splashed a few drops into it, then it
trickled over his hand, and fell on the floor. And so it went on and
on till he grew so tired that he thought he needed a dram himself.
So he tossed off the few drops and began again; but he fared no
better. So he took another little drain, and went on, and on, and
on, till he got quite fuddled. And who should come down into the
cellar but his master to know what the smell of brandy meant!
Now James the footman was truthful as well as honest, so he told the
master how he had come down to get the sick laundry-maid a drop of
brandy, but that his hand had shaken so that he could not pour it
out, and it had fallen on the ground, and that the smell of it had
got to his head.
"A likely tale," said the master, and beat James soundly.
Then the master went to the mistress, his wife, and said: "Send away
that laundry-maid of yours. Something has come over my men. They
have all drawn out their savings as if they were going to be
married, yet they don't leave, and I believe that girl is at the
bottom of it."
But his wife would not hear of the laundry-maid being blamed; she
was the best servant in the house, and worth all the rest of them
put together; it was his men who were at fault. So they quarrelled
over it; but in the end the master gave in, and after this there was
peace, since the mistress bade the girl keep herself to herself, and
none of the men would say ought of what had happened for fear of the
laughter of the other servants.
So it went on until one day when the master was going a-driving, the
coach was at the door, and the footman was standing to hold the
coach open, and the butler on the steps all ready, when who should
pass through the yard, so saucy and bright with a great basket of
clean clothes, but the laundry-maid. And the sight of her was too
much for James, the footman, who began to blub.
"She is a wicked girl," he said. "She got all my savings, and got me
a good thrashing besides."
Then the coachman grew bold. "Did she?" he said. "That was nothing
to what she served me." So he up and told all about the wet clothes
and the awful job he had had the livelong night. Now the butler on
the steps swelled with rage until he nearly burst, and at last he
out with his night of banging shutters.
"And one," he said, "hit me on the nose."
This settled the three men, and they agreed to tell their master the
moment he came out, and get the girl sent about her business. Now
the laundry-maid had sharp ears and had paused behind a door to
listen; so when she heard this she knew she must do something to
stop it. So she out with her three feathers and said, "By virtue of
the three feathers from over my true love's heart may there be
striving as to who suffered most between the men so that they get
into the pond for a ducking."
Well! no sooner had she said the words than the three men began
disputing as to which of them had been served the worst; then James
up and hit the stout butler, giving him a black eye, and the fat
butler fell upon James and pommelled him hard, while the coachman
scrambled from his box and belaboured them both, and the
laundry-maid stood by laughing.
So out comes the master, but none of them would listen, and each
wanted to be heard, and fought, and shoved, and pommelled away until
they shoved each other into the pond, and all got a fine ducking.
Then the master asked the girl what it was all about, and she said:
"They all wanted to tell a story against me because I won't marry
them, and one said his was the best, and the next said his was the
best, so they fell a-quarrelling as to which was the likeliest story
to get me into trouble. But they are well punished, so there is no
need to do more."
Then the master went to his wife and said, "You are right. That
laundry-maid of yours is a very wise girl."
So the butler and the coachman and James had nothing to do but look
sheepish and hold their tongues, and the laundry-maid went on with
her duties without further trouble.
Then when the seven years and a day were over, who should drive up
to the door in a fine gilded coach but the bird-husband restored to
his shape as a handsome young man. And he carried the laundry-maid
off to be his wife again, and her master and mistress were so
pleased at her good fortune that they ordered all the other servants
to stand on the steps and give her good luck. So as she passed the
butler she put a bag with seventy pounds in it into his hand and
said sweetly, "That is to recompense you for shutting the shutters."
And when she passed the coachman she put a bag with forty pounds
into his hand and said, "That is your reward for bringing in the
clothes." But when she passed the footman she gave him a bag with a
hundred pounds in it, and laughed, saying, "That is for the drop of
brandy you never brought me!"
So she drove off with her handsome husband, and lived happy ever
after.