The Waif Woman
Transcribed from the 1916 Chatto & Windus edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org

THE WAIF WOMAN

by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON

by

london chatto & windus 1916

london

chatto & windus

p. 2First Edition, October, 1916. Second Edition, October, 1916.

p. 2

p. 3This unpublished story, preserved among Mrs. Stevenson’s papers, is mentioned by Mr. Balfour in his life of Stevenson. Writing of the fables which Stevenson began before he had left England and “attacked again, and from time to time added to their number” in 1893, Mr. Balfour says: “The reference to Odin [Fable XVII] perhaps is due to his reading of the Sagas, which led him to attempt a tale in the  same style, called ‘The Waif Woman.’”

p. 3

p. 5THE WAIF WOMAN A CUE—FROM A SAGA

p. 5

This is a tale of Iceland, the isle of stories, and of a thing that befell in the year of the coming there of Christianity.

In the spring of that year a ship sailed from the South Isles to traffic, and fell becalmed inside Snowfellness. The winds had speeded her; she was the first comer of the year; and the fishers drew alongside to hear the news of the south, and eager folk put out in boats to see the merchandise and make prices. From the doors of the hall on Frodis Water, the house folk saw the ship becalmed and the boats about her, coming and p. 6going; and the merchants from the ship could see the smoke go up and the men and women trooping to their meals in the hall.

p. 6

The goodman of that house was 
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