This English fairy tale will remind you in equal parts of
Cinderella and King Lear. A rich father
orders his daughters to tell him how much they love him. (Never a wise thing
to do.) When his youngest daughter gives him an answer he finds unacceptable, he banishes her from
his house. Now destitute and homeless,
she walks away into a fen, weaves herself a cloak and cap of rushes to hide her grand clothing and
finds unpaid work as a scullery maid in another great house. Since she refuses to tell them her own name, they
call her Cap o’ Rushes.
After this, the story conforms for a while pretty much to
the Cinderella type, although apart from being unpaid she’s not badly
treated: the other kitchen maids behave to her in quite a friendly manner.
Evening after evening they try unsuccessfully to get her to come along with
them to watch the grand people dancing. Cap o’ Rushes has her own fish to fry, though, and her eventual marriage is less an end in itself than an opportunity to teach her arrogant father a lesson. In this she succeeds, and the story ends touchingly in forgiveness
and reconciliation.
The tale seems to have first appeared in the Suffolk Notes and Queries of The Ipswich Journal. It was contributed
by one A.W.T. along with the note: ‘Told by an old Servant to the Writer when a
Child’. I have not found a date for this, but it was republished in Longman’s Magazine, Feb. 1889 and in Folk-Lore, Vol I, no III, September
1890.
Well, there was once a very rich gentleman and he’d three
daughters, and he thought to see how fond they was of him. So he says to the
first, ‘How much d’you love me, my dear?’
‘Why,’ she
says, ‘as I love my life.’
‘That’s
good,’ says he. So he says to the second, ‘How much do you love me, my dear?’
‘Why,’ she
says, ‘better nor all the world.’
‘That’s good’
says he, so he says to the third, ‘How much do you love me, my dear?’
‘Why, I love
you as fresh meat loves salt,’ says she.
Well, he
were that angry. ‘You don’t love me at all,’ says he, ‘and in my house you stay
no longer.’ So he drove her out there and then and shut the door on her.
Well she
went away, and on and on till she came to a fen, and there she gathered a lot
of rushes and made them into a cloak, with a kind o’ hood, to cover her from
head to foot and to hide her fine clothes. And then she went on and on till she
came to a great house.
‘Do you want
a maid?’ says she.
‘No we
don’t,’ says they.
‘I hain’t
nowhere to go,’ says she, ‘and I’d ask no wages and do any kind of work,’ says
she.
‘Well,’ says
they, ‘if you like to wash the pots and scrape the saucepans, you may stay.’
So she
stayed there and washed the pots and scraped the saucepans and did all the
dirty work, and because she gave no name they called her ‘Cap o’ Rushes’.
Now one day there was to be a great dance a little way off,
and the servants was let to go and look at the grand people. Cap o Rushes said
she was too tired to go, so she stayed home. But when they was gone she offed
with her cap o’ rushes and cleaned herself, and went to the dance. No one there
was so finely dressed as she.
Well who
should be there but her master’s son, and what should he do but fall in love
with her the minute he set eyes on her? He wouldn’t dance with anyone else. But
before the dance was done, Cap o’ Rushes she slipped off and away she went home.
And when the other maids was back she was framin’ to be asleep with her cap o’
rushes on.
Next morning
they says to her, ‘You did miss a sight, Cap o’ Rushes!’
‘What sight
was that?’ says she.
‘Why, the
beautifullest lady you ever see dressed right gay and gallant. The young
master, he never took his eyes off her.’
‘I should
ha’ liked to have seen that!’ says Cap o’ Rushes.
‘Well
there’s to be another dance this evening, and perhaps she’ll be there.’
But come the
evening, Cap o’ Rushes said she was too tired to go with them. Howsumdever,
when they was gone she offed with her cap o’ rushes and cleaned herself, and
away she went to the dance.
The master’s
son had been reckoning on seeing her, and he danced with no one else and never
took his eyes off her. But before the dance was over she slipped off and home
she went, and when the maids came back she framed to be asleep with her cap o’
rushes on.
Next day
they says to her again, ‘Well, Cap o’ Rushes, you should ha’ been there to see
the lady. There she was again, gay and gallant, and the young master he never
took his eyes off her.’
‘Well,
there,’ says she, ‘I should ha’ liked to ha’ seen her!’
‘Well,’ says
they, ‘there’s a dance again this evening, and you must go with us, for she’s
sure to be there.’
But come
this evening, Cap o’ Rushes said she was too tired to go, and do what they
would she stayed at home. But when they was gone she offed with her cap o’
rushes and cleaned herself, and away she went to the dance.
The master’s
son was rarely glad when he saw her. He danced with none but her and never took
his eyes off her. When she wouldn’t tell him her name or where she came from,
he gave her a ring and told her that if he didn’t see her again, he should die.
But afore the dance was over she slipped off and home she went, and when the
maids came home she was framing to be asleep with her cap o’ rushes on.
So the next
day they says to her, ‘There, Cap o’ Rushes, you didn’t come last night, and
now you won’t see the lady, for there’s no more dances.’
‘Well, I
should ha’ rarely liked to ha’ seen her,’ says she.
The master’s son he tried every way to find out where the
lady was gone, but ask where he might and go where he might, he never heard
nothing about her. And he got worse and worse for the love of her, till he had
to keep to his bed.
‘Make some
gruel for the young master,’ they says to the cook, ‘he’s dying for love of the
lady.’ The cook, she set about making it, when Cap o’ Rushes came in.
‘What are
you doin’?’ says she.
‘I’m going
to make some gruel for the young master,’ says the cook, ‘for he’s dying for
love of the lady.’
‘Let me make
it,’ says Cap o’ Rushes.
Well the
cook wouldn’t let her at first, but at last she said yes, and Cap o’ Rushes
made the gruel. And when she had made it she slipped the ring into it on the
sly before the cook took it upstairs. The young man, he drank it, and he saw
the ring at the bottom.
‘Send for
the cook!’ says he. So up she comes.
‘Who made
this gruel?’ says he.
‘I did,’
says the cook, for she were frightened. And he looked at her.
‘No you
didn’t,’ says he. ‘Say who did it, and you shan’t be harmed.’
‘Well then,
‘twas Cap o’ Rushes,’ says she.
‘Send Cap o’
Rushes here,’ says he. So Cap o’ Rushes came.
‘Did you
make my gruel?’ says he.
‘Yes, I
did,’ says she.
‘Where did
you get this ring?’ says he.
‘From him as
gave it me,’ says she.
‘Who are
you, then?’ says the young man.
‘I’ll show
you,’ says she, and she offed with her cap o’ rushes and there she was in her
beautiful clothes.
Well, the
master’s son got well very soon, and they was to be married in a little time.
It was to be a very grand wedding, and everyone was asked, far and near. And
Cap o’ Rushes’ father was asked. But she never told nobody who she was.
But before
the wedding she went to the cook, and says she:
‘I want you
to dress every dish without a mite of salt.’
‘That’ll be
rarely tasty,’ says the cook.
‘That don’t
signify,’ says she.
‘Very well,’
says the cook.
Well, the
wedding day came, and they was married. And after they was married, all the
company sat down to their vittles. When they began to eat the meat, that was so
tasteless they couldn’t eat it. But Cap o’ Rushes’ father he tried first one dish and then another, and then he burst
out crying.
‘What is the
matter?’ said the master’s son to him.
‘Oh!’ says
he, ‘I had a daughter. And I asked her how much she loved me. And she said, “As
much as fresh meat loves salt.” And I turned her from my door, for I thought
she didn’t love me. And now I see she loved me best of all. And she may be dead
for aught I know.’
‘No, father,
here she is!’ said Cap o’ Rushes. And she goes up to him and puts her arms
around him.
Cap o' Rushes by John Batten
Cap o' Rushes by Arthur Rackham
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