The Old Man at the White House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Old Man at the White House is an English folktale from Yorkshire published by Sidney Oldall Addy in 1897.

A little girl named Sally receives a pair of yellow gloves from her mother. Despite her mother warning her not to lose them, she ends up losing one of the gloves. After searching for the glove among the people of the village, Sally goes to ask an old man who lives in a white house and who knows everything about everyone. The man has her glove, but he gives it to her on the condition that she does not tell anyone where she found it, otherwise he will come to get her in her bed at midnight. At home, Sally's mother, who had learned that she had lost the glove, manages to get her to tell her where she found it, and then she locks all the doors and windows. Nonetheless, at midnight Sally begins to hear the man outside her door who gradually tells her he is going up the stairs and finally enters her room to get her.

Publication

Addy published the tale in December 1897 on volume 8 of Folk-Lore, by The Folklore Society. The story was told to him by C.R. Hirst, an eighteen year old from Sheffield.[1][2]

Variations

Adaptations

Notes

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI