Page:A book of folk-lore (1913).djvu/27
Mrs. Crowe, in her Nightside of Nature, tells a couple of stories which she heard from a ‘dignitary of the Church,’ born in Wales. A female relative of his started early in the morning, attended by her father’s servant. When she had reached half way, where she expected to meet the servant of the friend she was about to visit, she dismissed the man who had accompanied her so far. The fellow had not long left her before she saw a light approach her, moving about three feet above the soil. She turned her horse out of the bridle-road, along which it advanced, to allow it to pass, but to her dismay, just as it came opposite her, it halted and remained flickering before her for about half an hour, and only vanished as she heard steps of the servant’s horse, as he trotted up to meet and conduct her to her friend. On reaching the house of her friend she related what she had seen. A few days later that very servant who