In many legends, the fairies are prone to kidnapping humans, either as babies, leaving changelings
in their place, or as young men and women. This can be for a time or
forever and may be more or less dangerous to the kidnapped. In the
19th-century child ballad "Lady Isabel and the Elf-Knight", the elf-knight is a Bluebeard figure, and Isabel must trick and kill him to preserve her life.[63] Child ballad "Tam Lin"
reveals that the title character, though living among the fairies and
having fairy powers, was in fact an "earthly knight" and though his life
was pleasant now, he feared that the fairies would pay him as their teind (tithe) to hell.[63]
"Sir Orfeo"
tells how Sir Orfeo's wife was kidnapped by the King of Faerie and only
by trickery and excellent harping ability was he able to win her back. "Sir Degare" narrates the tale of a woman overcome by her fairy lover, who in later versions of the story is unmasked as a mortal. "Thomas the Rhymer" shows Thomas escaping with less difficulty, but he spends seven years in Elfland.[64] Oisín
is harmed not by his stay in Faerie but by his return; when he
dismounts, the three centuries that have passed catch up with him,
reducing him to an aged man.[65] King Herla (O.E. "Herla cyning"), originally a guise of Woden but later Christianised as a king in a tale by Walter Map, was said, by Map, to have visited a dwarf's
underground mansion and returned three centuries later; although only
some of his men crumbled to dust on dismounting, Herla and his men who
did not dismount were trapped on horseback, this being one account of
the origin of the Wild Hunt of European folklore.[66][67]
A common feature of the fairies is the use of magic to disguise appearance. Fairy gold is notoriously unreliable, appearing as gold when paid but soon thereafter revealing itself to be leaves, gorse blossoms, gingerbread cakes, or a variety of other comparatively worthless things.[68]
These illusions are also implicit in the tales of fairy ointment. Many tales from Northern Europe[69][70]
tell of a mortal woman summoned to attend a fairy birth — sometimes
attending a mortal, kidnapped woman's childbed. Invariably, the woman is
given something for the child's eyes, usually an ointment; through
mischance, or sometimes curiosity, she uses it on one or both of her own
eyes. At that point, she sees where she is; one midwife realizes that
she was not attending a great lady in a fine house but her own runaway
maid-servant in a wretched cave. She escapes without making her ability
known but sooner or later betrays that she can see the fairies. She is
invariably blinded in that eye or in both if she used the ointment on
both.[71]
There have been claims by people in the past, like William Blake, to have seen fairy funerals. Allan Cunningham in his Lives of Eminent
British Painters
records that William Blake claimed to have seen a fairy funeral. "'Did
you ever see a fairy's funeral, madam?' said Blake to a lady who
happened to sit next to him. 'Never, sir!' said the lady. 'I have,' said
Blake, 'but not before last night.' And he went on to tell how, in his
garden, he had seen 'a procession of creatures of the size and colour of
green and grey grasshoppers, bearing a body laid out on a rose-leaf,
which they buried with songs, and then disappeared." They are believed
to be an omen of death.
No comments:
Post a Comment