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KIND WILLIAM AND
THE WATER SPRITE
There once lived a
poor weaver, whose wife died a few years after their marriage. He was
now alone in the world except for their child, who was a very quick and
industrious little lad, and, moreover, of such an obliging disposition
that he gained the nickname of Kind William.
On his seventh birthday his father gave him a little net with a long
handle, and with this Kind William betook himself to a shallow part of
the river to fish. After wandering on for some time, he found a quiet
pool dammed in by stones, and here he dipped for the minnows that darted
about in the clear brown water. At the first and second casts he caught
nothing, but with the third he landed no less than twenty-one little
fishes, and such minnows he had never seen, for as they leaped and
struggled in the net they shone with alternate tints of green and gold.
He was gazing at them with wonder and delight, when a voice behind him
cried, in piteous tones--
"Oh, my little sisters! Oh, my little sisters!"
Kind William turned round, and saw, sitting on a rock that stood out of
the stream, a young girl weeping bitterly. She had a very pretty face,
and abundant yellow hair of marvellous length, and of such uncommon
brightness that even in the shade it shone like gold. She was dressed in
grass green, and from her knees downwards she was hidden by the clumps
of fern and rushes that grew by the stream.
"What ails you, my little lass?" said Kind William.
But the maid only wept more bitterly, and wringing her hands, repeated,
"Oh, my little sisters! Oh, my little sisters!" presently adding in the
same tone, "The little fishes! Oh, the little fishes!"
"Dry your eyes, and I will give you half of them," said the good-natured
child; "and if you have no net you shall fish with me this afternoon."
But at this proposal the maid's sobs redoubled, and she prayed and
begged with frantic eagerness that he would throw the fish back into the
river. For some time Kind William would not consent to throw away his
prize, but at last he yielded to her excessive grief, and emptied the
net into the pool, where the glittering fishes were soon lost to sight
under the sand and pebbles.
The girl now laughed and clapped her hands.
"This good deed you shall never rue, Kind William," said she, "and even
now it shall repay you threefold. How many fish did you catch?"
"Twenty-one," said Kind William, not without regret in his tone.
The maid at once began to pull hairs out of her head, and did not stop
till she had counted sixty-three, and laid them together in her fingers.
She then began to wind the lock up into a curl, and it took far longer
to wind than the sixty-three hairs had taken to pull. How long her hair
really was Kind William never could tell, for after it reached her knees
he lost sight of it among the fern; but he began to suspect that she was
no true village maid, but a water sprite, and he heartily wished himself
safe at home.
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