Dancing lady by the canal
Story: Dancing by the canal
In Ayutthaya, on one of the canals, an ankle bell and a loud glyphs came every night of the monk's day. The villagers rumored that it was the spirit of "the mother of the stack," a beautiful but fateful royal woman. She was slandered by her stepmother for adultery because of her jealousy that she was the author of the monk. In fact, she loved the "bastard," a normal boating boy. The stepmother poisoned her and put the body in the water.
Years later, Bing's grandson, who was looking for a fish, found a storm, and took refuge in an abandoned Thai house by the canal in the lightning. He saw a shadow of a long-haired woman sitting back in the window and heard a cold voice calling for Bing. When she knew it was a dump, she wailed in blood, telling the truth that she had been tortured and couldn't go anywhere.
The dump decided to dedicate the charity and bring the matter to the governor until the case was successfully dismantled. The stepmother was executed. Last night before the dump felt. The villagers made big merit by the canal. The mother piled up in a full-fledged dancer costume appeared, smiling at everyone, dancing beautifully for the last time before the body slowly faded into the moonlight.
Since then, there has been no more dancing on the night of the monk, only a small court by the canal called the "Mother's Court" tells the legend to this day.





















































