- You have recently read
-
- The Seven Stages of Roostem
- The God of War
- The Traveling Companion
- The Garden of Paradise
- The old woman and her pig
- St. George Of Merrie England
- The ice king and his wonderful grandchild
- The story of the plentiful tablecloth, the avenging wand, the sash that becomes a lake and the terrible helmet
- The Three Citrons: The Story of a Prince Who Climbed the Glass Hill
- The Story of Hok Lee and the Dwarfs
- Clean
The Weird of the Three Arrows
Neville was slain, and his men utterly discomfited.
Having retired one night to his tent to take some rest after so much pain and toil, Sir James Douglas was surprised by the reappearance of the old woman whom he had seen at Linthaughlee.
“This is the feast o’ St. James,” said she, as she approached him. “I said I would see ye again this nicht, an’ I’m as guid’s my word. Hae ye returned the arrows I left wi’ ye to the English wha sent them to the hearts o’ my sons?”
“No,” replied Sir James. “I told ye I did not fight with the bow. Wherefore do ye importune me thus?”
“Give me back the arrows then,” said the woman.
Sir James went to bring the quiver in which he had placed them. On taking them out, he was surprised to find that they were all broken through the middle.
“How has this happened?” said he. “I put these arrows in this quiver entire, and now they are broken.”
“The weird is fulfilled!” cried the old woman, laughing eldrichly, and clapping her hands. “That broken shaft cam’ frae a soldier o’ Richmont’s; that frae ane o’ Cailon’s, and that frae ane o’ Neville’s. They are a’ dead, an’ I am revenged!”
The old woman then departed, scattering, as she went, the broken fragments of the arrows on the floor of the tent.




