As the marketplace was empty, she knocked on the first door and said, "Give me hospitality."
The master of the house told her, "Here is nothing for you," shutting the door in her face.
At the second house, she received the same answer, and the next. No one on the main street would take her in, nor give her one small coin, nor fruit, nor even a crust of bread.
At last, she came to a cottage that had fallen into a wretched aspect, located on the outskirts of town.
When she knocked on the door, a tremulous voice responded, "Who is there?"
"Some have called me Feronia," the little old woman responded.
A thin youth, dressed in little more than rags, opened the door.
The beggar woman said, "Everyone else turned me away without so much as asking me my name."
The thin lad responded, "Come in, buona Vecchiarella."
"Where is your family?"
The boy answered, "My uncle died, not long ago." He rubbed his eyes. "I had no one else."
"Have you no fire?" asked Feronia.
"No fire have I," answered the lad.
"Have you nothing to eat?"
The boy said, "I have part of a loaf of polenta, and it is at your service--as my uncle would say." He set the loaf of course bread on the table. "But the milk of the old nanny goat out back has gone dry."
"Bring some wine, then."
"Wine, I have none."
"Is there none in the cellar?"
"In my uncle's cellar, there are only a dozen empty, cracked old wine jars."
"Look again," said the old woman.
The boy went downstairs to the cellar and oddly, instead of empty broken jars, the boy found all the jars upright, whole, and heavy with wine.
When he came back, the hearth had a fire blazing with a great heap of wood next to it.
"Lad, you are as thin as a shadow," said the little old woman. "Bring me your old goat. I'll cook it to eat."
The boy brought her the goat, which she butchered, cleaned, and prepared in pieces over red-hot coals. When the meat was cooked and ready, they both sat down to table.
The little old woman set a bowl between them and said, "Put all the bones in this bowl and do not leave out one."
The boy did so, for he thought that the woman might make a soup with them later.
While they ate, he talked about his uncle. He talked about the hard-hearted people of the village and their miserly ways. He said how much his uncle had loved to share a glass of wine and meal, and a story or two with travelers. He talked of how things had been hard since his uncle had become ill. He talked so much, because the little old woman said almost nothing, but ate silently.
When she finished eating, the little old woman tied the bones in the skin of the goat and shook it three times. Then, she unbundled the hide and flung both hide and bones out the window.
"I give you three for one," she said.
Then the old woman yawned and murmured, "How weary I am," and suddenly laid down to sleep.
As she snored, the boy banked the fire and cleaned up from the feast. Indeed, it had been quite a feast for him, as he could not remember having eaten so well in a long time. He cleaned quietly so as not to disturb the little, old woman, Feronia, as she slept.
Outside, he heard a bleating.
When the boy glanced out the window, he saw two kid goats and a young nanny goat with her utter full of milk.
Very surprised, he gathered the animals and put them away for the night.
Early before dawn, the old woman arose and woke the boy. She said, "I must go now, but follow me from behind for a little way."
The boy let the nanny goat and two kids out to graze. Then the lad indeed followed her, just as she had bid him. When they reached the main street, he felt the ground beneath his feet tremble.
As the Vecchiarella walked along, the houses of that inhospitable village fell down, one after the other, and all those rich and evil-hearted inhabitants were buried beneath them. Only the old cottage of the youth was untouched.
The old woman turned to him and said, "Return to your home. And do not forget who I am."
Upon returning home, he found a few old, gold coins, on the spot where the little old woman had slept.
In this way, the boy knew Feronia Vecchiarella must be a strega-folletta and that she is kind to those who are liberal with her. Yet, those that give her nothing will suffer for it. It was later said that if any had wronged her, they should seek her pardon at a ruins that was her tomb.
copyright 2007 Myth Woodling
Myth's Notes
Feronia is a Roman Goddess of the woods. She may have been of Etruscan origin. She had care of trees. Her temple stood in a grove, and slaves were set free at her shrine.
Leland, in Etruscan Roman Remains, 1892, stated Feronia survived in Tuscan 19th century folklore as a "strega-folletta"--literally a "witch-faery" or "witch-spirit" who appears as an old woman. Strega = witch. Folletti = many faeries or spirits. Folletto = a single male faery. Folletta = a single female faery.
According to the folklore collected by Leland, this Goddess has become a wandering witch, who demands shelter, food, or alms, punishing those who do not follow the Italian rules of generosity and hospitality. "All who gave her alms were very fortunate and their affairs prospered." (p. 55)
Cautionary tales urging hospitality to strangers and to those less fortunate were a frequent motif in Italian folklore.
A "Vecchiarella", incidentally, is an affectionate or polite term for a "little old woman."