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The Old Wife
Among
the Highlanders of Scotland the last corn cut at harvest is known
either as the Old Wife (Cailleach) or as the Maiden; on the whole
the former name seems to prevail in the western and the latter
in the central and eastern districts. Of the Maiden we shall speak
presently; here we are dealing with the Old Wife. The following
general account of the custom is given by a careful and well-informed
enquirer, the Rev. J. G. Campbell, minister of the remote Hebridean
island of Tiree:
"The
Harvest Old Wife (a Cailleach).-In harvest, there was a struggle
to escape from being the last done with the shearing, and when
tillage in common existed, instances were known of a ridge being
left unshorn (no person would claim it) because of it being behind
the rest. The fear entertained was that of having the 'famine
of the farm' (gort a bhaile), in the shape of an imaginary old
woman (cailleach), to feed till next harvest. Much emulation and
amusement arose from the fear of this old woman. The first done
made a doll of some blades of corn, which was called the 'old
wife,' and sent it to his nearest neighbour. He in turn, when
ready, passed it to another still less expeditious, and the person
it last remained with had 'the old woman' to keep for that year."
In
the island of Islay the last corn cut goes by the name of the
Old Wife (Cailleach), and when she has done her duty at harvest
she is hung up on the wall and stays there till the time comes
to plough the fields for the next year's crop. Then she is taken
down, and on the first day when the men go to plough she is divided
among them by the mistress of the house. They take her in their
pockets and give her to the horses to eat when they reach the
field. This is supposed to secure good luck for the next harvest,
and is understood to be the proper end of the Old Wife.
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