
THE GOLD OF FAIRNILEE - By Andrew Lang
WHUPPITY STOORIE’S SONG IN THIS TALE IS BY THE AUTHOR’S FRIEND, F. De Q. M.
THE GOLD OF FAIRNILEE
CHAPTER I.—The Old House
CHAPTER II.—How Randal’s Father Came Home
CHAPTER III.—How Jean was brought to Fairnlee
CHAPTER IV.—Randal and Jean.
CHAPTER V.—The Good Folk
CHAPTER VI.—The Wishing Well
CHAPTER VII.—Where is Randal?
In the ruined walls of Fairnilee, a once‑grand Scotch house now swallowed by ivy and wind, the story opens with a nostalgic letter to a distant sister. The narrator recalls childhood digs for hidden treasure in the Camp of Rink, and hints that the land itself is alive with fairy folk as well as the legendary bunyip. The crumbling manor, perched above the whispering Tweed, offers a vivid backdrop where history and myth intertwine, inviting listeners to imagine what riches might still linger beneath its stones.
The tale centers on Randal, a young boy raised by his widowed mother and a loyal household staff in a world of shepherds, salmon‑filled ponds, and looming pine forests. When his father rides off to battle and later returns as a ghostly, broken specter, Randal confronts a sudden, unsettling vision that sets his quest in motion. As he watches the spectral rider disappear, a mixture of fear and curiosity drives him toward the elusive gold his ancestors once sought.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (75K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-06-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1844–1912
Best remembered for gathering fairy tales into the much-loved "Color Fairy Books," this Scottish writer also moved easily between poetry, criticism, history, translation, and folklore. His work helped bring old stories to new readers and still shapes how many people first meet classic tales.
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