More Tales of the Ridings

F.W. Moorman
More Tales of the Ridings

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Title: More Tales of the Ridings
Author: Frederic Moorman
Release Date: April 26, 2006 [EBook #18260]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORE
TALES OF THE RIDINGS ***

Produced by David Fawthrop and Alison Bush

More Tales of the Ridings
by
F.W.Moorman, 1872 - 1919

Late Professor of English Language, Leeds University.
Editor of "Yorkshire Dialect Poems"

London, Elkin Mathews, Cork Street 1920

Contents
Melsh Dick Two Letters A Miracle Tales of a grandmother I. The Tree
of Knowledge II. Janet's Cove The Potato and the Pig Coals of Fire

Melsh Dick
Melsh Dick is the last survivor of our woodland divinities. His pedigree
reaches back to the satyrs and dryads of Greek mythology; he claims
kinship with the fauns that haunted the groves of leafy Tibur, and he
lorded it in the green woods of merry England when
The woodweele sang and wold not cease, Sitting upon the spraye, Soe
lowde he wakened Robin Hood In the greenwood where he lay.
But he has long since fallen upon evil days, and it is only in the most
secluded regions of the Pennines, where vestiges of primeval forest still
remain and where modern civilisation has scarcely penetrated, that he is
to be met with to-day. Melsh is a dialect word for unripe, and the
popular belief is that Melsh Dick keeps guard over unripe nuts; while
"Melsh Dick'll catch thee, lad" was formerly a threat used to frighten
children when they went a-nutting in the hazel-shaws. But we may,
perhaps, take a somewhat wider view of this woodland deity and look
upon him as the tutelary genius of all the young life of the forest--the
callow broods of birds, the litters of foxes and squirrels, and the sapling
oaks, hazels, and birches. There was a time when he was looked upon
as a genial fairy, who would bring Yule-logs to the farmers on
Christmas Eve and direct the woodmen in their tasks of planting and

felling; latterly, however, he is said to have grown churlish and
malignant. The reckless felling of young trees for fencing and pit-props
is supposed to have roused his ill-will, and sinister stories have been
told of children who have gone into the woods for acorns or hazel-nuts
and have never been seen again.
It was in the Bowland Forest district, which is watered by the Ribble
and its tributary becks, that I heard the fullest account of Melsh Dick;
and the following story was communicated to me by an old peasant
whose forefathers had for generations been woodmen in Bowland
Forest. The region where he lived is rich in legend, and not far away is
the old market town of Gisburn, where Guy of that ilk fought with
Robin Hood, and where, until the middle of the nineteenth century, a
herd of the wild cattle of England roamed through the park.
"Fowks tell a mak o' tales about witches, barguests, an' sike-like," Owd
Dont began, "but I tak no count o' all their clash; I reckon nowt o' tales
without they belang my awn family. But what I's gannin to tell you is
what I've heerd my mother say, aye scores o' times; so you'll know it's
true. A gradely lass were my mother, an' noan gien to leein', like some
fowks I could name. There's owd lasses nowadays, gie 'em a sup o'
chatter-watter an' a butter-shive, an' they'll tell you tales that would
fotch t' devil out o' his den to hark tul 'em."
After this attack upon the licence of the tea-table, Owd Dont needed a
long draught of March ale to regain his composure. I knew that it was
worse than useless to attempt to hurry him in his narrative. Leisurely at
the start, the pace of his stories quickened considerably as he warmed
to his work, and it was not without reason that he had acquired a
reputation of being the best story-teller on the long settle of the Ring o'
Bells.
"'Twere back-end o' t' yeer," he continued at last, "an' t' lads had gone
into t' woods to gether hesel-nuts an' accorns. There were a two-three
big lads amang 'em, but most on 'em were lile uns, an' yan were lame i'
t' leg. They called him Doed o' Billy's o' Claypit Lane. Well, t' lads had
gotten a seet o' nuts, an' then they
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