otters Posts

The Baby or the Otter

Once upon a time, a mother wondered what to do about her baby.

You see, he’d started out the normal way, but one morning, she had picked him up only to come to the conclusion that he had turned into an otter.  He was all gray and shiny, with long whiskers, and a laugh that sounded, well, like an otter’s.

However, she couldn’t really be sure. He acted, for the most part, like a regular baby, what with the eating and sleeping and throwing things on the floor so she would have to pick them up. So, not knowing what else to do, she took him to see the wise old woman who lived up the hill and ate shoes (or so people said).

The smell of burning rubber and shoelaces was only faint when she arrived. The old woman took one look at the baby.

“Looks like the otters got to him,” she said.

“That’s what I thought!” the woman replied.

But to be sure the otters had taken her own dear baby away and left her one of their own, the wise woman said, there were very specific actions she would need to perform. The wise woman wrote them out for her, then demanded her left shoe in return.

Back at home, the mother got to work on the instructions. She boiled a pot of water. She built a little ship out of paper. And into the ship, she placed the magical ingredients the wise woman had told her about.

If she had done it right, the paper ship would float along, and not disintegrate.
If she had done it right, the otter-baby would get so excited about the boat that he would jump up and shout out in the language of the otters, and betray himself.

The boat floated, and the baby cooed. The boat floated, and the baby gurgled. The boat floated, and the baby went back to sleep.

What a relief! It seemed he wasn’t an otter after all.

The End

Source: A Brewery of Eggshells, Irish folktale

Tam Lin Keeps Secrets

Once upon a time there was a meadow.

In the meadow was a tree.

On the tree there was a branch.

Under the branch there was a well.

Next to the well, there was a flower.

One day, a girl named Janet picked the flower, and someone else became very upset.

You see, this particular meadow was already occupied by the infamous Tam Lin, who, if the stories were to be believed, spent most of his time robbing or seducing anyone who wandered into his home.

He asked Janet not to pick the flowers, and to kindly go home, politely at first, and then not so politely.

But Janet refused. The meadow was really hers, she claimed, as it belonged to her parents.

They argued for a little while, and then Janet went home for dinner. She was surprised to find herself with child.

When she went back to the meadow to confront Tam Lin about it, she couldn’t find him. Until, of course, she picked a flower and he came running out to stop her.

“Oh, that’s my bad,” he said, when she explained the situation. “Did I not explain that picking the flowers gets you pregnant? You may have to watch out for twins now.”

Janet managed to remain calm while explaining to Tam Lin that he had not told her any such thing, and that since a flower couldn’t very well help her raise a baby, he would have to do. Thus, she explained, they would have to start spending a lot more time together.

So they did, and a for a while, things were actually going quite well.

Until the day that what had to be a faery hunt (tiny and elfin on horseback and loaded with weapons) rode by and all flashed some sort of hand signal at Tam Lin.

“What’s that all about?” Janet asked.

“Did I not explain that the Queen of Faerie sort of owns me?” Tam Lin responded.

After Janet indicated that, no, he had not, Tam Lin explained that some time ago, he had fallen from his horse and been captured by Faeries, who gave him the meadow.

It was nearly Halloween at this time, and on the day itself, Janet went to see Tam Lin again. He was dressed very nicely, all in white.

“Did I not explain that I need you to save me tonight?” he asked.

Janet indicated that no, he had not, and he explained that the Faeries wanted to sacrifice him that night, to whatever it is faeries sacrifice their humans to, but that she, as his own true love and sort of the the mother of his child, could save him.

“Is that so?”

It was, he said, and explained: He would be forced to join the faeries as they rode about on their horses. If she intercepted them and dragged Tam Lin from his horse, they would turn him into a variety of creatures — a snake, a lion, a metal rod. As long as he held on, he was hers for keeps.

Janet agreed, somewhat reluctantly. And that night, she met him at the appointed time and place, and waited for the faeries to ride by. When she saw Tam Lin, awkwardly perched atop a very small horse, she pulled him down and held on tight.

Immediately, he was transformed. He became an otter! And he became…an otter. She held on tight anyway, and as the company of faeries rode away, he remained an otter.

At first, she gave him the benefit of the doubt, but when her child came out half otter, she became fairly sure he was keeping something from her.

The End.

Source: Tam Lin, Child’s Ballad #39

Posted by Beatrix Cottonpants in Ballads and tagged with , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,