Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Week 11 Storytelling: How the Leprechaun and the Man Came to Live Together

Laughing Leprechaun
Source: openclipart



There once was a man and his wife who had two darling twins. The man and his wife absolutely adored their children, but then one day, something very peculiar happened. While the man was away at work, the wife was home alone with their two children. The wife was in the nursery singing a lullaby to her two precious babies, when all of sudden, there was an abrupt knock on the door.

The knock sounded very urgent, so the wife quickly scurried to the door to see what was the matter. She opened the door and looked out onto the porch, but saw no one there. Then she heard a voice, “Hey, down here.”

She looked down to see a leprechaun standing on her porch! The wife was very much taken aback by the small man standing on her porch. She had always heard the neighbors gossiping about the leprechauns that lurked in the shadows of their quite suburban neighborhood, but had never seen one herself.

Keeping in mind all of the horrible things she had heard about these devilish little pests she hesitantly said, “Is there something I can do for you?”

“Actually, yes there is,” replied the leprechaun. “I was wondering if I could come in and use your restroom?”

“Uhhh…sure,” replied the wife. “Come on in. It is the second door on your right.”

The wife was torn. She had heard so many awful things about the leprechauns, yet she felt it was the wrong to turn away someone based only on the gossip she had heard from other people.

A few minutes had gone by, and the leprechaun still had not come out of the bathroom, so the wife went to check on him. The bathroom door was wide open, but the leprechaun was not in there; panic immediately set in. The wife rushed down the hall to the nursery, and what she saw stunned her.

The leprechaun was standing on the rocking chair whispering something over the twins. The wife screamed. This startled the leprechaun, and he immediately jumped off the chair and ran out of the house.

Just about the time the leprechaun was running out the front door, the man was coming in. “What’s going on here?” he demanded.

Hysterically the wife replied, “That thing! He’s done something to my babies!”

“Now, now, calm down. I’m sure it’s nothing. The babies look fine.”

The wife calmed down. After all, her children did look fine. And as time went on, things were fine, for a little while at least… It had been about six months since the leprechaun had been in their house, when the wife noticed that the children were not growing out of their clothes. She thought this was very peculiar for such young children to not be growing, so she took them to the pediatrician. The pediatrician ruled that the babies had contracted a rare growth-stunting virus.

Knowing exactly how her children had contracted the virus, the wife vowed to herself that she would find that leprechaun, and make him reverse the curse he had put on the babies.

After tirelessly searching for three weeks, the wife was finally able to track down the leprechaun. Turned out, the leprechaun was a very lonely man who desperately desired a family. He hoped that by putting the spell on the babies that the man and his wife would give up the babies and he could raise them as his own.

After a nice long talk, the wife and the leprechaun came to an agreement. She would allow the leprechaun to move in and join their family, so long as he reversed the spell he put on the babies and vowed to never do anything like that ever again. And it was from that day forward that leprechaun and man lived together in harmony.

Author’s Note

In the original story, Brewery of Eggshells, the plot is basically the same. A man and his wife have twins. However, in the original story, the wife gets called over to the neighbor’s house and just sees the leprechaun when she is coming back. Much like in my story, the twins do not grow, so the wife goes to the Wise Man to ask what she should do. The Wise Man tells her what to do, which involved throwing the children into a lake if they spoke of things beyond their knowledge. Of course, this is what happened. The wife threw the children into the lake and the leprechaun in turn rescued the dwarf children, and in return, gave the wife back her children.

I decided to change the intentions of the leprechaun and therefore change the ending of the story. I thought it made it more original and it gave me the opportunity to create my own Celtic Tale.

Bibliography

Book: Celtic Fair Tales
Author: Joseph Jacobs
Year: 1892
Web Source: Un-Textbook

7 comments:

  1. Great storytelling! Before this storytelling, I didn't really think too much about leprechauns. The only things I associated with them were St. Patrick's Day, a pot of gold, and an overuse of green in their wardrobe. You did a great job at describing the main character's emotions and I liked your spin on the original story. It's interesting how even though there were rumors and gossip about the leprechaun being horrible, he turned out to be just a lonely person that wanted love and company.

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  2. So I definitely read this entire thing in a little Irish, leprechaun voice. I didn't read this story but I liked how you made the wife very kind to the leprechaun, despite all of the rumors she had heard. I also liked how both the woman, husband, and children got what they wanted and the sad little lonely leprechaun got a family! I can just imagine walking around the house and seeing your small green housemate walk past you. Love the story!

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  3. This was a great story Shelbi! I like that you were willing to make some small changes to the story, so that you could make it your own. It's too bad that that women didn't listen to the gossip she'd heard. Sometimes rumors are true haha! Nice job! Keep it up!

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  4. I really like what you did with this story. I did not read the Celtic tales unit but kind of wish I had after reading this tale about leprechaun and their little tricks. As soon as you mentioned that the wife had heard rumors about the nasty ways of the leprechaun, I knew there would be some drama going on. I think you did a great job in showing how the leprechaun wanted to keep the children small so he could have a family since him and his wife were lonely. The wife had such a good heart to not only ignore the rumors and let the leprechaun into her home, but then also let him be a part of their family so he was not so lonely. It was a creative way in showing how man and leprechaun came to be friends.

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  5. This is the second re-telling I’ve read of this particular story, but it’s amazing how much yours differs from the one I read last week. Rather than calling the creature some strange name like goblin or “elf of the blue petticoat,” you pretty call the trouble-causing entity for what it was in the story, a Leprechaun. It was a nice alteration making the Leprechaun an ultimately benevolent being in your version, and this story was definitely quite a bit less unsettling than the original.

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  6. Hi again Shelbi,
    I really enjoyed how you changed up the original and made the leprechaun more involved in your version. It made the story conclude a lot better that all the leprechaun wanted to do was raise a family. I am concerned about the wise man from your author's note, whose solution to the growth-stunted babies was to throw them into a lake. Great job!

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  7. Shelbi, this was quite an interesting story! I like your ending just as well though, even though if it was me, I would have probably never allowed this leprechaun to come live with my family! I also like that you explained his intentions by the end though because at about that point in the story I was getting kind of curious and you answered all my questions. Overall, great job!

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