As collected by Joseph Jacobs. In "English
Fairy Tales" London 1890
Childe Rowland and his brothers twain Were playing
at the ball, And there was their sister Burd Ellen In the midst,
among them all.
Childe Rowland kicked it with his foot
And caught it with his knee;
At last as he plunged among them all
O'er the church he made it flee.
Burd Ellen round about the aisle
To seek the ball is gone,
But long they waited, and longer still,
And she came not back again.
They sought her east, they sought her west,
They sought her up and down,
And woe were the hearts of those brethren,
For she was not to be found.
So at last her eldest brother went to the Warlock
Merlin and told him all the case, and asked him if he knew where
Burd Ellen was. "The fair Burd Ellen," said the Warlock
Merlin, "must have been carried off by the fairies, because
she went round the church 'wider shins'--the opposite way to the
sun. She is now in the Dark Tower of the King of Elfland; it would
take the boldest knight in Christendom to bring her back."
"If it is possible to bring her back,"
said her brother, "I'll do it, or perish in the attempt."
"Possible it is," said the Warlock Merlin,
"but woe to the man or mother's son that attempts it, if
he is not well taught beforehand what he is to do."
The eldest brother of Burd Ellen was not to be put
off, by any fear of danger, from attempting to get her back, so
he begged the Warlock Merlin to tell him what he should do, and
what he should not do, in going to seek his sister. And after
he had been taught, and had repeated his lesson, he set out for
Elfland.
But long they waited, and longer still, With doubt
and muckle pain, But woe were the hearts of his brethren, For
he came not back again.
Then the second brother got tired and sick of waiting,
and he went to the Warlock Merlin and asked him the same as his
brother. So he set out to find Burd Ellen.
But long they waited, and longer still, With muckle
doubt and pain, And woe were his mother's and brother's heart,
For he came not back again.
And when they had waited and waited a good long
time, Childe Rowland, the youngest of Burd Ellen's brothers, wished
to go, and went to his mother, the good queen, to ask her to let
him go. But she would not at first, for he was the last of her
children she now had, and if he was lost, all would be lost. But
he begged, and he begged, till at last the good queen let him
go, and gave him his father's good brand that never struck in
vain. And as she girt it round his waist, she said the spell that
would give it victory.
So Childe Rowland said good-bye to the good queen,
his mother, and went to the cave of the Warlock Merlin. "Once
more, and but once more," he said to the Warlock, "tell
how man or mother's son may rescue Burd Ellen and her brothers
twain."
"Well, my son," said the Warlock Merlin,
"there are but two things, simple they may seem, but hard
they are to do. One thing to do, and one thing not to do. And
the thing to do is this: after you have entered the land of Fairy,
whoever speaks to you, till you meet the Burd Ellen, you must
out with your father's brand and off with their head. And what
you've not to do is this: bite no bit, and drink no drop, however
hungry or thirsty you be; drink a drop, or bite a bit, while in
Elfland you be and never will you see Middle Earth again."
So Childe Rowland said the two things over and over
again, till he knew them by heart, and he thanked the Warlock
Merlin and went on his way. And he went along, and along, and
along, and still further along, till he came to the horse-herd
of the King of Elfland feeding his horses. These he knew by their
fiery eyes, and knew that he was at last in the land of Fairy.
"Canst thou tell me," said Childe Rowland to the horse-herd,
"where the King of Elfland's Dark Tower is?" "I
cannot tell thee," said the horse-herd, "but go on a
little further and thou wilt come to the cow-herd, and he, maybe,
can tell thee."
Then, without a word more, Childe Rowland drew the
good brand that never struck in vain, and off went the horse-herd's
head, and Childe Rowland went on further, till he came to the
cow-herd, and asked him the same question. "I can't tell
thee," said he, "but go on a little farther, and thou
wilt come to the hen-wife, and she is sure to know." Then
Childe Rowland out with his good brand, that never struck in vain,
and off went the cow-herd's head. And he went on a little further,
till he came to an old woman in a grey cloak, and he asked her
if she knew where the Dark Tower of the King of Elfland was. "Go
on a, little further," said the hen-wife, "till you
come to a round green hill, surrounded with terrace-rings, from
the bottom to the top; go round it three times, widershins, and
each time say:
Open, door! open, door! And let me come in.
and the third time the door will open, and you may
go in." And Childe Rowland was just going on, when he remembered
what he had to do; so he out with the good brand, that never struck
in vain, and off went the hen-wife's head.
Then he went on, and on, and on, till he came to
the round green hill with the terrace-rings from top to bottom,
and he went round it three times, widershins, saying each time:
Open, door! open, door! And let me come in.
And the third time the door did open, and he went
in, and it closed with a click, and Childe Rowland was left in
the dark.
It was not exactly dark, but a kind of twilight
or gloaming. There were neither windows nor candles, and he could
not make out where the twilight came from, if not through the
walls and roof. These were rough arches made of a transparent
rock, incrusted with sheepsilver and rock spar, and other bright
stones. But though it was rock, the air was quite warm, as it
always is in Elfland. So he went through this passage till at
last he came to two wide and high folding-doors which stood ajar.
And when he opened them, there he saw a most wonderful and glorious
sight. A large and spacious hall, so large that it seemed to be
as long, and as broad, as the green hill itself. The roof was
supported by fine pillars, so large and lofty, that the pillars
of a cathedral were as nothing to them. They were all of gold
and silver, with fretted work, and between them and around them,
wreaths of flowers, composed of what do you think? Why, of diamonds
and emeralds, and all manner of precious stones. And the very
key- stones of the arches had for ornaments clusters of diamonds
and rubies, and pearls, and other precious stones. And all these
arches met in the middle of the roof, and just there, hung by
a gold chain, an immense lamp made out of one big pearl hollowed
out and quite transparent. And in the middle of this was a big,
huge carbuncle, which kept spinning round and round, and this
was what gave light by its rays to the whole hall, which seemed
as if the setting sun was shining on it.
The hall was furnished in a manner equally grand,
and at one end of it was a glorious couch of velvet, silk and
gold, and there sate Burd Ellen, combing her golden hair with
a silver comb. And when she saw Childe Rowland she stood up and
said:
"God pity ye, poor luckless fool, What
have ye here to do?
"Hear ye this, my youngest brother,
Why didn't ye bide at home? Had you a hundred thousand lives Ye
couldn't spare any a one.
"But sit ye down; but woe, O, woe, That
ever ye were born,
For come the King of Elfland in, Your fortune is forlorn."
Then they sate down together, and Childe Rowland
told her all that he had done, and she told him how their two
brothers had reached the Dark Tower, but had been enchanted by
the King of Elfland, and lay there entombed as if dead. And then
after they had talked a little longer Childe Rowland began to
feel hungry from his long travels, and told his sister Burd Ellen
how hungry he was and asked for some food, forgetting all about
the Warlock Merlin's warning.
Burd Ellen looked at Childe Rowland sadly, and shook
her head, but she was under a spell, and could not warn him. So
she rose up, and went out, and soon brought back a golden basin
full of bread and milk. Childe Rowland was just going to raise
it to his lips, when he looked at his sister and remembered why
he had come all that way. So he dashed the bowl to the ground,
and said: "Not a sup will I swallow, nor a bit will I bite,
till Burd Ellen is set free."
Just at that moment they heard the noise of some
one approaching, and a loud voice was heard saying:
"Fee, fi, fo, fum,
I smell the blood of a Christian man,
Be he dead, be he living, with my brand,
I'll dash his brains from his brain-pan."
And then the folding-doors of the hall were burst
open, and the King of Elfland rushed in.
"Strike then, Bogle, if thou darest,"
shouted out Childe Rowland, and rushed to meet him with his good
brand that never yet did fail. They fought, and they fought, and
they fought, till Childe Rowland beat the King of Elfland down
on to his knees, and caused him to yield and beg for mercy. "I
grant thee mercy," said Childe Rowland, "release my
sister from thy spells and raise my brothers to life, and let
us all go free, and thou shalt be spared." "I agree,"
said the Elfin King, and rising up he went to a chest from which
he took a phial filled with a blood-red liquor. With this he anointed
the ears, eyelids, nostrils, lips, and finger-tips, of the two
brothers, and they sprang at once into life, and declared that
their souls had been away, but had now returned. The Elfin king
then said some words to Burd Ellen,
and she was disenchanted, and they all four passed out of the
hall, through the long passage, and turned their back on the Dark
Tower, never to return again. And they reached home, and the good
queen, their mother, and Burd Ellen never went round a church
widershins again.