It is said that long before the Dutch drained the marshland in Lincolnshire (UK) known as the Carrs, through which the River Ancholme flows, a race of supernatural creatures lived in the wetlands around places like Brigg, Broughton and Hibaldstow.
The Tiddy Mun dwelt deep down in the green water holes and came out at evening when the mists rose.
When he came out he came creeping like a limping lobelty with long white hair and a beard that was all matted and tangled all sheathed in grey so he could not easily be seen in the dark.
But his whistle could be heard like a peewit laughing into the wind.
He was not wicked like some of the others, but was eerie enough. But on wet seasons when the water rose to the people's doorsteps, the whole family would go out together and, shivering in the darkness, would call:
Tiddy Mun wi'out a name
Tha watter's thruff
And they would call this until the heard the whistling like a peewit across the marsh, and then they'd go home.
Next morning the waters would be down.
But then it was decided to drain the marshes, though the farmers would not have anything to do with it, for what would Tiddy Mun do then?
But ditches were dug and the land got drier and drier and Tiddy Mun grew angry.
Then the cattle began to die, and milk curdled and children pined and died in their mothers' arms. And they didn't know if it was the bogles or Tiddy Mun himself, so they all took a stoup each of water and came to the dyke edge and and poured the water out together chanting:
Tiddy Mun wi'out a name
Here's watter for thee, tak thy spell undone...
.
.
.
And every Full Moon they would go out with the stoups of water to say their rhyme.
While they did this Tiddy Mun stayed for a while longer.
But the land is all drained now and he has gone away.
And the land is empty...
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