Read Folklore of Lincolnshire Online
Authors: Susanna O'Neill
Then drainers began to disappear and word was that the Tiddy Mun had drowned them. More workers were brought in and they too were drowned, but after a while it wasn’t just the Dutch drainers that were vanishing, the Tiddy Mun was angry with everyone for destroying his home. Children and animals succumbed to illness, crops failed and life started to go wrong for everyone. After much discussion the people agreed some water must be returned if the Tiddy Mun was to be appeased and so the locals took pans of water out on the night of the new moon and offered them to him, asking for a truce. They waited in silence for a long time until eventually they heard his screeching laugh and they knew they had forged a pact. For many years after this night, the local people offered the Tiddy Mun water at every new moon and peace was maintained.
Adrian Gray says that the Tiddy People were a race of strange creatures that lived in the wet and marshy areas. He agrees that they were very small, like children, or even babies, but with long thin arms and large feet. They reputedly had long noses and wide mouths with long tongues. Instead of grey, he believed they wore green coats, hence the nickname ‘greencoaties’, often with a yellow bonnet. The Tiddy Mun was similar to a tribal chief and Adrian Gray recounts a rhyme people apparently chanted in the Fen areas:
Tiddy Mun wi’out a name
White he’ad, walking la’ame
While the watter te’ems the Fen
Tiddy Mun’ll harm nane.
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The Tiddy People were very useful for everyday life. It was they who would pinch the buds on the trees in spring to make them open and would paint the colours on the flowers every year. Farmers would leave small gifts for them so their crops would not be harmed and people thought it an honour if the Tiddy People came into their houses to warm themselves by the fire. They have hardly ever been seen though, since the draining of the Fens and all the trouble with the Dutch workers, so where they have found a suitable home is a mystery.
Will-o-the-Wisps, or Will-o-the-Wykes in Lincolnshire, also known as Jack-o-Lanterns, corpse candles or
ignis fatuus
in Latin, translating as ‘foolish fire’, are mysterious, ghostly wisps or lanterns of light, seen hovering over marshy lands, usually at twilight. Myth tells of strange fairies or ghosts of the dead creating these torches, although some scientific theories explain them as gases, produced by the organic decay in the wetlands, causing a glowing light. Of course, with such an eerie phenomenon, stories of these peculiar lights abound throughout folk lore, usually including legends of people being lured off the main path, following the lights, and never being seen again. The Lincolnshire Fens were one such place where these ethereal lights were seen, and warnings to stay away from them were whispered throughout communities.
These stories make similar appearances in many cultures around the globe. It has been said that in some Australian Aboriginal tribes, these eerie sightings were believed to be the spirits of lost or stillborn children. They called them the ‘min-mim’ and they were feared as dangerous creatures. Variations of the Tiddy Mun story in Lincolnshire say that when the people called to the Tiddy Mun appealing for mercy, they heard the wailings and whimpering of babies in the air and some even felt the cold embraces of their dead children, whom the Tiddy Mun had taken.
A stream found between Brigg and Wrawby, possibly where the Shag Foal was seen.
The Shag Foal is another beast that haunts Lincolnshire, leading travellers off the beaten path and into the marshes and bogs with its eyes blazing like beacons.
Some say it is one and the same as the Will-o-the-Wisps, others say it is a creature akin to a rough-coated donkey or foal. The unsuspecting travellers follow the lights of its eyes and then become stuck in the bogs, whereupon the creature shows itself with a hideous laugh, half human half animal. One well-known sighting of the Shag Foal was near a stream between Wrawby and Brigg. This beast was known as the Lackey Causey Calf and tried to lead people into the stream.
Folklorists Westwood and Simpson also mention the Lackey Causey Calf, claiming it is sometimes purported as being headless. They say that it is known as a shag-foal, as it has the appearance of a baby foal whose ‘fuzz is giving way to its adult horsehair, hence the tatters’.
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They believe these beasts could have been seen as petty demons during the Middle Ages and quote from the poet John Clare from 1821, who stated that it was a common myth in certain villages that the Devil sometimes appeared in the form of a ‘shagg’d foal’.
Daniel Codd explains that nearer Scunthorpe, the creature is known as the Tatter Foal and lives in the marshlands around the area, tempting travellers and children into the bogs to be lost forever.
Apparently, human bones were found near the place where the Brigg sighting was reported and Westwood and Simpson quote Mabel Peacock, who believed it was possible that some of these creatures could have been the spirits of murder or suicide victims who had come back in the shape of an animal. Perhaps this is the reason these tortured souls wish to lead others astray, into the treacherous marshland.
Codd also mentions the legend of the sinister Dead Hand; this is the tale of a severed, bloody hand which grabs at passing travellers, pulling them into the swamps.
Polly Howat also mentions this legend when she retells the tale of poor Long Tom Pattison, whose foolhardy bravery led him to venture into the wetlands when no one else would go. He meant to show his superstitious friends that the bogs were not full of the evil things they believed lurked there, by volunteering to walk around them alone the following night.
Everyone tried to dissuade him, even his own mother, but these warnings only fuelled his desire to prove them wrong. He took his mother’s lantern and ventured out into the marshes, followed at some safe distance by a group of young lads who wanted to watch what would happen to him. As Tom neared the bogs, a chill wind rose and blew out his lantern and then all the evil things that lived in the wetlands began to rise and close in around him. The group following could no longer see Tom, but could hear his shouts as he fought with the horrors surrounding him. They got closer and eventually could see Tom’s face, looking pale as death, and they saw that he was being dragged further into the marshes by a ‘hand without a body, known as the Dead Hand’.
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The boys fled in terror and although search parties were dispatched at first light, Tom was not to be found.
In her despair, his poor mother began to lose her mind and one evening, over a month later, she was seen running from the marshes calling for help. She led the crowd, which had quickly gathered, back into the bogs and they discovered her son sitting there, with his feet in the water. He was aged beyond his years and was
gibbering some nonsense and pointing at horrors only he could see. The other hand, the one that had been grasped by the Dead Hand, was missing and all that was left was a ‘ragged stump’.
Tom never told what had happened to him but acted like a madman, always muttering to himself with wild eyes and every evening running out into the marshes again. The unfortunate boy and his mother were both found dead within the year; he was lying in his mother’s lap, his expression one full of horror and torture, hers a look of contentment as she had at last found her boy. Both mother and son haunted those marshes ever after, along with the Dead Hand, contributing to the very stories Tom had hoped to dispel.
Adrian Gray says that even up until a few generations ago, the Lincolnshire Carrs were still very isolated places where strangers hardly ever ventured: ‘…they [the Carrs] were once dank, inhospitable and even rather frightening. They were home to all manner of unpleasant creatures, among which boggarts and bogles were the least pleasant of all.’
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Some believed prayers and secret chants would help protect them from these beasts and some even smeared blood around their doors. The word was that putting bread and salt out would please them and even help the success of their crop. The worst time was during the winter, when everything was dead and there was not much work to do. Bogles – naturally mischievous sprites – without any diversions, turned their attention to the people inhabiting the area. The locals obviously wished for the speedy arrival of spring to distract the bogles once more, and each day they would stand at their doors looking for the rising of the Green Mist which was said to signal the beginning of spring.
Legend tells of one particular family who were much troubled by the bogles one winter. The young daughter had become very sick and although doctors and priests had been called, the girl said the only thing that could save her was the arrival of the Green Mist. Every day, mother and daughter would wait at the door for the Green Mist to come and every day the ground was still hard with winter frost. The girl was convinced that if only she could live to see the cowslips bloom, she would die content with the arrival of summer. Her mother chided her for such words, saying she was tempting the wicked bogles to destroy her dreams with such suggestions.
The next day as she opened the curtains, the mother rejoiced at seeing the Green Mist. She carried her daughter out into the garden, and at the bottom by the gate the girl spied some small cowslips growing. Each day after that, the girl seemed to grow steadily stronger and when she was strong enough to go out, she would visit the cowslips every day and dance around them.
The healthy bloom that now filled her cheeks attracted the attention of a young man who passed by her gate every day. He saw how she loved the cowslips and one day, wishing to capture her heart, he picked some of the dainty flowers and offered them to her.
Her face, however, was a picture of horror. She turned quite white and, grasping the flowers from his hand, she flew inside and went straight to bed. Her mother
found her very ill and called the doctor, but it seemed nothing could be done. The poor girl died within a few hours, still holding onto the flowers her sweetheart had offered her. Her mother was inconsolable; in her heart she knew her daughter’s death was because of the unwitting challenge she had given the bogles.
Daniel Codd relates a legend told by folklorist Mrs Balfour from the late 1800s, about more mischief that the bogles of Lincolnshire caused in the Fens.
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It is said that all manner of hideous creatures, including bogles, lived in the Fens and it was the task of the moon to chase away all the evils that lurked in the shadows, shining her light into the dark corners of the world. One night she decided to go and visit the sinister Fens and, wrapping herself in a black cloak, she made her way out into the dark, wet Carrs. She saw all the beasts and creatures she usually scared away; witches, boggarts, Will-o-the-Wisps and the souls of the dead rising from their watery graves. She wandered warily past but stepped on a loose stone and nearly fell in the marsh. She reached out to grasp a nearby tree to steady herself, but as soon as she touched it, the tree, Black Snag, stretched out its branches and wrapped her in its wooden embrace. She was terrified, unable to move and powerless to help as a poor lost traveller stumbled through the Fens. The stranger was lured off the dark path by the eerie, flickering lights of the Will-o-the-Wisp and disappeared into the dark. The moon struggled to free herself, knowing the traveller would surely meet a grisly end alone in the dark Fens, and as she struggled her cloak became loose and some of her tremendous light shone out. The light lit up the Fens as far as the eye could see and the moon saw the traveller realise his mistake and find the path again, moving safely on his way. The tree shifted and the cloak fell back over the moon, again hiding the light, but all the bogles and other evil creatures had seen it and became aware of her presence. When they realised she was trapped, they rejoiced and planned how to ensnare her forever. If her light never shone again they would be free to roam the marshes every night with nothing to fear. The creatures all gathered together and carried the moon to one of the deep pools. The dead pushed her down and then the others rolled a huge boulder over her to trap her under the water forever.
The people who lived round about watched apprehensively from their windows as there was no sight of the moon for the next few nights. They knew that without the light of the moon they were in great danger from the perils that lurked in the dark marshes, and it wasn’t long before the bogles grew bolder and began to approach people’s houses. The locals reverted to all the old ways of keeping them at bay; throwing out salt, wiping blood on the doors, placing a button on the window sill, but still no moon appeared.
One night some locals were gathered in the pub, all postulating on what could possibly have happened to the moon, when one man stepped forward and gave his opinion. He told them how he had been coming home across the Fens one night and had got lost in the dark. He explained how there had been a sudden bright light that had shown him the right path home and had saved his life. He said that he thought it had been the moon and that it was still there, trapped
in the Fens. The men decided to go and try to free the moon. The traveller told them to look for the landmarks he remembered – a boulder shaped like a large coffin, a cross and a candle.