“At night when the moon shines, and the wind blows, you can
hear a voice say: Tailypo, tailypo, now I’ve got my tailypo.”
Tailypo is a North American
folktale with roots both in Appalachia and the South. There are many versions
of this story.
Johanna and Paul Galdone's version. |
It was late in autumn, and the
old man had not had much luck with his hunting. He prepared a meager meal of
one thin rabbit for himself and his dogs.
Heading for bed, he spots a
strange cat-like creature entering his cabin through a crack in the floor.
It was fat with a dark coat of
fur. Its tail was large and bushy. The man still hungry grabbed a hatchet and
chased the strange creature. He chopped off its tail and then it left the cabin the
way it entered--screaming.
The old man then cooked the
tail and ate it—it tasted so good he does not share it with his dogs. He then
went to bed. Within the hour, he awakens to the sound of a loud thumping. He hears something scratching on the cabin wall.
A shrill voice says,
“Tailypo, tailypo, who has my tailypo?”
He calls his dogs, “Here,
here, here” and opens the cabin’s door. Chaos ensues with the dogs barking
wildly, trying to follow the creature up the wall of the cabin. Their barking
becomes faint as they chase the beast into the swamp.
When the dogs return, Uno is
not with them—the man is unconcerned for his dogs often hunt on their own-- he returns
to his bed as he hears the other two dogs settle down on the porch.
Around midnight he is
awakened once more by a loud thump.
This time the scratching
sound is at the back of his cabin—near where he lay. It sounded like the wood
was being shredded and torn away fiercely.
For the second time, he hears,
“Tailypo, tailypo, who has my tailypo?” His dogs rush around the side of the
cabin barking and growling. He gets up in time to see just Cumptico-Calico
chase the dark figure back into the swamp.
When Cumptico-Calico doesn’t
return-- the man reassures himself that Calico like the other dog was
hungry and had found something else to hunt—exhausted the man goes back to bed.
Just before dawn, he is awakened
for the third time. Now the thumping is at the foot of his bed, and he once more
hears the scratching. He watches as his covers are pulled off. Frightened, the
man dares not look anymore.
He feels the creature jump on
the bed and then it pokes him with its sharp claws as it walks from his feet to his neck.
It then demands loudly,
“Tailypo, tailypo where is my tailypo?” The man unable to move spots its' gleaming yellow eyes.
Several days later, a
neighbor found the old man’s bed shredded to pieces with random bones laying
about. His dogs were never seen again.
They say when the moon shines
bright, one can hear way off in the swamp, “Tailypo, tailypo, now I have my
tailypo.”
Here is a link that lists several
versions of this folktale.
One favorite version of this
story is presented in Johanna Galdone’s picture book entitled, The Tailypo: A Ghost Story. Her tale
leaves so much to the reader’s imagination that it actually is one of the
scariest versions.
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