Once upon a time, when folk were
not so wise as they are nowadays, there lived a farmer and his wife
who had one daughter. And she, being a pretty lass, was courted by
the young squire when he came home from his travels.
Now every evening he would stroll over from the Hall to see her and
stop to supper in the farm-house, and every evening the daughter
would go down into the cellar to draw the cider for supper.
So one evening when she had gone down to draw the cider and had
turned the tap as usual, she happened to look up at the ceiling, and
there she saw a big wooden mallet stuck in one of the beams.
It must have been there for ages and ages, for it was all covered
with cobwebs; but somehow or another she had never noticed it
before, and at once she began thinking how dangerous it was to have
the mallet just there.
"For," thought she, "supposing him and me was married, and supposing
we was to have a son, and supposing he were to grow up to be a man,
and supposing he were to come down to draw cider like as I'm doing,
and supposing the mallet were to fall on his head and kill him, how
dreadful it would be!"
And with that she put down the candle she was carrying and, seating
herself on a cask, began to cry. And she cried and cried and cried.
Now, upstairs, they began to wonder why she was so long drawing the
cider; so after a time her mother went down to the cellar to see
what had come to her, and found her, seated on the cask, crying ever
so hard, and the cider running all over the floor.
"Lawks a mercy me!" cried her mother, "whatever is the matter?"
"O mother!" says she between her sobs, "it's that horrid mallet.
Supposing him and me was married, and supposing we was to have a
son, and supposing he was to grow up to be a man, and supposing he
was to come down to draw cider like as I'm doing, and supposing the
mallet were to fall on his head and kill him, how dreadful it would
be!"
"Dear heart!" said the mother, seating herself beside her daughter
and beginning to cry: "How dreadful it would be!"
So they both sat a-crying.
Now after a time, when they did not come back, the farmer began to
wonder what had happened, and going down to the cellar found them
seated side by side on the cask, crying hard, and the cider running
all over the floor.
"Zounds!" says he, "whatever is the matter?"
"Just look at that horrid mallet up there, father," moaned the
mother. "Supposing our daughter was to marry her sweetheart, and
supposing they was to have a son, and supposing he was to grow to
man's estate, and supposing he was to come down to draw cider like
as we're doing, and supposing that there mallet was to fall on his
head and kill him, how dreadful it would be!"
"Dreadful indeed!" said the father and, seating himself beside his
wife and daughter, started a-crying too.
Now upstairs the young squire wanted his supper; so at last he lost
patience and went down into the cellar to see for himself what they
were all after. And there he found them seated side by side on the
cask a-crying, with their feet all a-wash in cider, for the floor
was fair flooded. So the first thing he did was to run straight and
turn off the tap. Then he said:
"What are you three after, sitting there crying like babies, and
letting good cider run over the floor?"
Then they all three began with one voice, "Look at that horrid
mallet! Supposing you and me/she was married, and supposing we/you
had a son, and supposing he was to grow to man's estate, and
supposing he was to come down here to draw cider like as we be, and
supposing that there mallet was to fall down on his head and kill
him, how dreadful it would be!"
Then the young squire burst out a-laughing, and laughed till he was
tired. But at last he reached up to the old mallet and pulled it
out, and put it safe on the floor. And he shook his head and said,
"I've travelled far and I've travelled fast, but never have I met
with three such sillies as you three. Now I can't marry one of the
three biggest sillies in the world. So I shall start again on my
travels, and if I can find three bigger sillies than you three, then
I'll come back and be married—not otherwise."
So he wished them good-bye and started again on his travels, leaving
them all crying; this time because the marriage was off!
Well, the young man travelled far and he travelled fast, but never
did he find a bigger silly, until one day he came upon an old
woman's cottage that had some grass growing on the thatched roof.
And the old woman was trying her best to cudgel her cow into going
up a ladder to eat the grass. But the poor thing was afraid and
durst not go. Then the old woman tried coaxing, but it wouldn't go.
You never saw such a sight! The cow getting more and more flustered
and obstinate, the old woman getting hotter and hotter.
At last the young squire said, "It would be easier if you went up
the ladder, cut the grass, and threw it down for the cow to eat."
"A likely story that," says the old woman. "A cow can cut grass for
herself. And the foolish thing will be quite safe up there, for I'll
tie a rope round her neck, pass the rope down the chimney, and
fasten t'other end to my wrist, so as when I'm doing my bit o'
washing, she can't fall off the roof without my knowing it. So mind
your own business, young sir."
Well, after a while the old woman coaxed and codgered and bullied
and badgered the cow up the ladder, and when she got it on to the
roof she tied a rope round its neck, passed the rope down the
chimney, and fastened t'other end to her wrist. Then she went about
her bit of washing, and young squire he went on his way.
But he hadn't gone but a bit when he heard the awfullest hullabaloo.
He galloped back, and found that the cow had fallen off the roof and
got strangled by the rope round its neck, while the weight of the
cow had pulled the old woman by her wrist up the chimney, where she
had got stuck half-way and been smothered by the soot!
"That is one bigger silly," quoth the young squire as he journeyed
on. "So now for two more!"
He did not find any, however, till late one night he arrived at a
little inn. And the inn was so full that he had to share a room with
another traveller. Now his room-fellow proved quite a pleasant
fellow, and they forgathered, and each slept well in his bed.
But next morning, when they were dressing, what does the stranger do
but carefully hang his breeches on the knobs of the tallboy!
"What are you doing?" asks young squire.
"I'm putting on my breeches," says the stranger; and with that he
goes to the other end of the room, takes a little run, and tried to
jump into the breeches.
But he didn't succeed, so he took another run and another try, and
another and another and another, until he got quite hot and
flustered, as the old woman had got over her cow that wouldn't go up
the ladder. And all the time young squire was laughing fit to split,
for never in his life did he see anything so comical.
Then the stranger stopped a while and mopped his face with his
handkerchief, for he was all in a sweat. "It's very well laughing,"
says he, "but breeches are the most awkwardest things to get into
that ever were. It takes me the best part of an hour every morning
before I get them on. How do you manage yours?"
Then young squire showed him, as well as he could for laughing, how
to put on his breeches, and the stranger was ever so grateful and
said he never should have thought of that way.
"So that," quoth young squire to himself, "is a second bigger
silly." But he travelled far and he travelled fast without finding
the third, until one bright night when the moon was shining right
overhead he came upon a village. And outside the village was a pond,
and round about the pond was a great crowd of villagers. And some
had got rakes, and some had got pitchforks, and some had got brooms.
And they were as busy as busy, shouting out, and raking, and
forking, and sweeping away at the pond.
"What is the matter?" cried young squire, jumping off his horse to
help. "Has any one fallen in?"
"Aye! Matter enough," says they. "Can't 'ee see moon's fallen into
the pond, an' we can't get her out nohow."
And with that they set to again raking, and forking, and sweeping
away. Then the young squire burst out laughing, told them they were
fools for their pains, and bade them look up over their heads where
the moon was riding broad and full. But they wouldn't, and they
wouldn't believe that what they saw in the water was only a
reflection. And when he insisted they began to abuse him roundly and
threaten to duck him in the pond. So he got on his horse again as
quickly as he could, leaving them raking, and forking, and sweeping
away; and for all we know they may be at it yet!
But the young squire said to himself, "There are many more sillies
in this world than I thought for; so I'll just go back and marry the
farmer's daughter. She is no sillier than the rest."
So they were married, and if they didn't live happy ever after, that
has nothing to do with the story of the three sillies.