Stumpy's Brae - An Ulster-Scots Ghost Story.

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  • čas přidán 23. 10. 2018
  • Please click on the Closed Caption button for English subtitles!
    Set in rural Ulster in the 1700's, this drama is an Ulster-Scots paranormal horror based on the Ulster-Scots poem by Cecil Francis Alexander.
    The Legend Of Stumpy's Brae:
    Heard ye no tell o' Stumpy's Brae?
    Sit doon, sit doon, young freen',
    I'll mak your flesh to creep this night
    and your hair to stan' on end.
    I mind it well in my young days
    The story it was rife,
    There lived in a lonely cottage
    A farmer and his wife.
    They sat all alone in the bright fire light
    Wan blessed Autumn night,
    The hedge without, the stones within,
    Were streaked wi' the bright moonlight.
    The boys and girls had a' gone doon a wee
    To the old blacksmith's wake,
    There passed one by the winda' sma',
    And he gied the door a shake.
    The auld man got up and opened the door,
    And after he'd spoken a bit,
    A pedlar man stept into the floor and tumbled doon the pack he bore,
    A right heavy pack was it.
    "Guid bless us a" cried the auld man wi' a smile,
    "But ye're in the thrivin' trade",
    "Aye, I have travelled mony a mile
    An' plenty I have made."
    The two sat on in the bright fire light,
    The pedler had gone to his rest.
    The devil he came to the auld man’s ear,
    And slip’t intil his breast.
    He looked at his wife across the fire
    She was as bad as he,
    "Could we no murder this man the nacht?"
    "Aye could we rightly," quo’ she.
    He lifted his pick without a word,
    It stood behind the door,
    And as he pressed in the sleeper stirred,
    But he never wakened more.
    "He’s deid!" cried the auld man coming back,
    "What’s to do wi’ the corpse, me dear?"
    "Oh, bury him snug in his ane wee pack.
    Never mind the loss o' the sack. I’ve taken out the gear."
    "The corpse's too long by two guid span,
    Oh! What’ll we do?" quo’ he.
    Says she - "Ye're a doting, unthinkin' oul man,
    Just snick him off at the knee."
    They shortened the corpse, and they packed him tight
    Wi’ his legs in a pickle o’ hay,
    Over the burn in the bright moonlight
    They carried him up to the Brae.
    They shovelled a hole right speedily
    And they laid him on his back,
    "A right guid pair are ye" quo’ the Pedlar,
    Sitting boldly up in his pack.
    "Ye thought ye’d lay me snugly here
    Where none should know my station
    But I’ll haunt ye far, and I’ll haunt ye near
    Father and son, wi' terror and fear, till the nineteenth generation.
    They sat all alone the very next night,
    When the wee bit dog began to cower
    And they knew by the pale blue fire-light,
    That the Evil One had power.
    It had just struck nine o’ the clock,
    That hour when the man lay dead,
    When there came to the outer door a knock,
    And a heavy, heavy tread.
    The auld wife’s heid swam roun' and roun',
    The auld man's blood did freeze,
    ‘Twas not like a natural sound, but like someone
    stumping over the ground
    On the banes o’ his raw bare knees.
    And in through the door like a sough of air,
    And he stumped and he stumped around the twa’
    Wi’ his bloody heid, and his knee bones bare
    As he died that night awa.
    The wife’s black locks ere morn grew white,
    They say, as mountain snows.
    The man was as straight as a rush that night
    But he crooked when the next morn he rose.
    And every night as the clock struck nine,
    The hour they did the sin,
    The wee dog began to whine
    An' the ghost came clatterin’ in.
    And stump, stump, stump to his ploys again
    Over the taps o' the stools and chairs,
    Ye’d surely hae thought it was ten weemen and men
    Dancin' all in pairs.
    A’ night, there was a fearful flood,
    Three days the skies had poured
    And the tap wi' foam and the bottom wi' mud,
    The burn in fury roared.
    Quo’ she, "Guid man ye needne turn sae pale
    In the dim fire light
    The stumpy cannae cross the burn
    He’ll naw be here the nacht."
    "For it’s ower the bank, it's ower the brae,
    It's ower the meadow rig."
    "Aye", said the ghost comin' clattering in a gied the auld wife a bat on the chin,
    "But I cam' roun by the brig".
    They sold their gear and across the sea,
    To a foreign land they went
    But sure what can flee
    from his appointed punishment?
    The ship swam over the ocean clear,
    Wi’ the help o’ the Western breeze
    But the very first sound they heard on the wide, smooth deck
    Was the thumpin’ o’ them twa bare knees.
    Out in the wild woods of Americay
    Where their weary feet they set,
    But Stumpy was there first they say, and haunted them to
    Their dying day, And he haunts their children yet.
    Now that's the story o’ Stumpy’s Brae
    And the murderer’s fearful fate.
    Young friend, your face is turned that way,
    This night you'll gang that gate.
    Ye’ll ken it well, through the few fir trees
    The house where they were wont to dwell
    If ye meet any there as daylight flees,
    Stumping about on the banes o’ his knees,
    It’ll just be Stumpy himsel’.
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Komentáře • 29

  • @huub1989
    @huub1989 Před 3 lety +3

    I loved this....echoes of my grandparents from Tyrone and Derry.

  • @David-lu4gq
    @David-lu4gq Před 5 lety +3

    Good wee story from our little island. It should be re-broadcast by the BBC some time.

  • @VickieV1333
    @VickieV1333 Před 4 lety +2

    Excellent story!

  • @sandydonally5556
    @sandydonally5556 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent story I really enjoyed it. The Blue Ridge Mountains are not in Tennessee. I live in Tennessee near Knoxville. We have the Smoky Mountains. North Carolina has the Blue Ridge.

  • @KoolT
    @KoolT Před rokem

    Gave me a chill.

  • @Timberdoodle197
    @Timberdoodle197 Před rokem

    This story is from the st Johnston area of donegal a great ulster Scots tale

  • @suzannekosic4088
    @suzannekosic4088 Před rokem

    PS: I’m born and raised in South Carolina.

  • @KoolT
    @KoolT Před rokem

    2:10 ghost

  • @pathfinderfergusfilms6630

    Braw...

  • @memyselfandi1512
    @memyselfandi1512 Před rokem +1

    You'd best not promote that Ulster was a myth not after giving his hand to gain land aye those dirty little brits
    I am McNeil of Barra

  • @kevobrien7366
    @kevobrien7366 Před 4 lety +4

    Sweet Jesus. This is a language?

    • @SpiderkillersInc
      @SpiderkillersInc Před 4 lety +5

      Ireland has a different accent for every village.

    • @VickieV1333
      @VickieV1333 Před 4 lety +1

      Kev O’Brien Closed captions helped...

    • @huub1989
      @huub1989 Před 3 lety +2

      Kev O’Brien yes, it’s one that I recognize being descended from Ulster Scots stock. Elements of it survive across the communities in Northern Ireland and border counties. You’ll hear it in the Finn Valley in Donegal.

    • @o-o2399
      @o-o2399 Před 3 lety

      @@huub1989 lol no

    • @carolineainenibhreithimh7652
      @carolineainenibhreithimh7652 Před 3 lety +2

      Im from south donegal and yes, this is what northern donegal sounds like

  • @johnquinn6351
    @johnquinn6351 Před 5 lety +3

    Ulster Ireland. God gave Ireland 32 counties England drove the Irish out and gave the land to the scots what happened to thou shall not steal. Or covet thy neighbors goods. .?

    • @stevenvarner9806
      @stevenvarner9806 Před 5 lety +5

      Well, that's pretty seriously racist of you.

    • @caolanfeely4317
      @caolanfeely4317 Před 5 lety

      Straight White British Protestant yous showed up in the 11th century yous didn’t have Much either and we had a system in place

    • @David-lu4gq
      @David-lu4gq Před 5 lety +1

      @@stevenvarner9806 What part is Racist? A bit lecturing with the religious flavour, but not Racist at all.

    • @foolofhearts8126
      @foolofhearts8126 Před 4 lety +3

      Straight White British Protestant good gods not you again, you realise most scots are celts as well? Northeasterners (me and my kin) are Pictish, the westerners are Gaelic and the southwesterners who settled Northern Ireland were Brythonic by descent, only the borders are anglish.

    • @o-o2399
      @o-o2399 Před 3 lety

      @@caolanfeely4317 12 th century