Afanc - (Welsh Rhy, Celtic
Folklore.) A Welsh water demon who haunted a pool in the river
Conway, and dragged down all living things into its depth. He was at
length captured through the treachery of a girl whom he loved, and dragged
ashore by oxen. The Deluge in Welsh folk-lore is connected with a
monstrous crocodile called Afanc i Llyn
Banshee - The
banshee is known both in Ireland and Scotland. In Scotland she is
sometimes called the Little Washer at the Ford, or the Little Washer of
Sorrow. She can be heard wailing by the riverside as she washes the
clothes of the man destined for death. If a mortal can seize and hold
her, she must tell the name of the doomed man, and also grant three
wishes. She is no beauty, for she has only one nostril, a large,
starting out front tooth and web feet. The Irish banshee only wails for
the members of the death of someone very great or holy. The banshee has
long, streaming hair and a grey cloak over a green dress. Her eyes are
fiery red from continually weeping. In the Highlands of Scotland the
word Banshi means only a fairy Woman and is chiefly used for the
fairies who marry mortals.
Baobhan Sith - (Highland.
D. Mackenzie, Scottish Folk Lore and Folk Life.) Malignant,
blood-sucking spirits, who sometimes appeared as hoodie crows or ravens,
but generally as beautiful girls, with long. trailing, green dresses
hiding their deer's hooves.
Barguest -
(Yorkshire. Henderson.) A creature of something the same kind as the
bogy beast. It sometimes appears in a human form, but generally as an
animal. In the fishing villages, a barguest funeral is the presage of
death. the barguest in whatever form has eyes like burning coals; it has
generally claws, horns and a tail, and is girdled with a clanking chain.
Billy Blind - (F.
Child, English and Scottish Ballads (New York, 1957), Vol. l.) A
friendly domestic spirit of the Border Country, chiefly mentioned in
ballads. He wears a bandage over his eyes. Auld Hoodie and Robin Hood
are perhaps only different names for the same spirit. Billy Blind's
chief function seems to be to give good advice. It was he who advised
and helped Burd Isobel in the Ballad of Young Bekie, and it was
the Billy Blind whose advice cured the young wife bewitched by her
mother-in-law.
Black Annis - (Leicestershire.
C. J. Billson, Country Folk Lore, Leicestershire.) A malignant
hag with a blue face and only one eye, very like the Cailleach Bheur in
character. Her cave was in the Dane Hills, but has been filled up. She
devoured lambs and young children.
Black Dogs - The
black dog is large - about the size of a young calf - black and shaggy,
with fiery eyes. It does no harm if left alone; but anyone who speaks to
it or touches it is struck senseless and dies soon thereafter. There are
stories of the black dog from all over the country. One haunted the
guard-room of Peel castle in Man. There are stories about it in
Buckinghamshire. Hertford, Cambridge, Suffolk, Lancashire, Dorset, and
Devon. There is a very good and full account of black dogs in English
Fairy and Folk Tales. In the seventeenth century a pamphlet of Luke
Hulton's described and attempted to explain the Black Dog of Newgate.
Blue Men of the Minch - (Highland.
D. Mackenzie, Scottish Folk Lore and Folk Life.) These men belong
to the Minch, and particularly haunt the strait between Long Island and
the Shiant Islands. They are a malignant kind of mermen, but they are
blue all over. They come swimming out to seize and wreck ships that
enter the strait; but a ready tongue, and particularly a facility in
rhyming, will baffle them. They have no power over the captain who can
answer them quickly and keep the last word. Beyond their activities as
wreckers they conjure up storms by their restlessness. The weather is
only fine when they are asleep. The islanders think they are fallen
angels like the fairies and the Merry Dancers, as the Aurora
Borealis is called there.
Bodach -(Highland.
J. G. Campbell, Witchcraft and Second Sight in the Highlands and
Islands of Scotland.) The Scottish form of a Bugbear or Bug-a-boo.
He comes down the chimney to fetch naughty children.
Boggart -A
North Country Spirit. (Henderson, Folklore of the Northern Counties.)
He is like a mischievous type of brownie. He is exactly the same as the
poltergeist in his activities and habits.
Bogle -The
Scottish version of the Yorkshire boggart, though perhaps less
exclusively domestic in his habits.
Bogy beast -A
general name boggarts, brashes, grants, and mischievous spirits. Widely
distributed.
Brash -See
Skriker
Brollochan -(J.
F. Campbell, Popular Tales of the Western Highlands.) Brollochan is
Gaelic for a shapeless thing. and it probably something like Reginald
Scot's Boneless. There is a story of one, the child of a Fuath, told by
Campbell. It is something the same plot as Ainsel.
Brownie -The
best known of the industrious domestic hobgoblins. The brownie's land is
over all the North of England and up into the highlands of Scotland. The
brownie is small, ragged and shaggy. Some say he has a nose so small as
to be hardly more than two nostrils. He is willing to do all odd jobs
about a house, but sometimes he untidies what he has been left to tidy.
There are several stories of brownies riding to fetch the nurse for
their mistress. The brownie can accept no payment, and the surest way to
drive him away is to leave him a suit of clothes. Bread and milk and
other dainties can be left unobtrusively, but even they must not be
openly offered. The Cornish Browney is of the same nature. His special
office is to get the bees to settle. When the bees swarm the housewife
beats a tin, and calls out: 'Browney! Browney!' until the brownie comes
invisibly to take charge.
Brown Men of the Muirs -(Border
Country. Henderson, Folklore of the Northern Counties.) A sprite
of the moors, who guards the wild life, but is malignant and dangerous
to man.
Buccas or Knockers -(Cornish.
Hunt, Popular Romances of the West of England.) These are the
spirits of the mines, something like the German Kobolds. They are said
to be the spirits of the Jews who once worked the tin mines, and who are
not allowed to rest because of their wicked practices. They are,
however, friendly to the miners, and knock to warn them of disaster, and
also show what seams are likely to be profitable.
Bug-a-boo, Bugbear, Boggle-bo
- There is a great variety of names for
this bogle, which is generally used to frighten children into good
behaviour.
Bwbachod - The
Welsh Brownie People. (W. Sikes, British Goblins (London 1880).)
They are friendly and industrious, but they dislike dissenters and
teetotalers. Sikes gives an amusing story of a bwbach and his quarrel
with a Methodist minister.
Cailleach Bheur -(The
Blue Hag.) (Highland. D. Mackenzie, Scottish Folk Lore and Folk Life.) A
giant hag who seems to typify winter, for she goes about smiting the
earth with her staff so that it grows hard. When spring comes and she is
conquered, she flings her staff in disgust into a whin bush or under a
holly tree, where grass never grows. She is the patroness of deer and
wild boars. Many hills are associated with her, particularly Ben Nevis
and Schiehallion. Her general appearance is terrible and hideous, but in
some stories she changes at times into a beautiful maiden. There is a
version of the Wife of Bath's Tale told of her, and she is also the
villainess of a story rather like Nix Nought Nothing. At times she turns
into a sea serpent. Particulars are given of her Mackenzie's Scottish
Folk Lore and Folk Life and she is mentioned in Campbell's Tales
of the Western Highlands.
Cauld Lad of Hilton - A
brownie haunting Hilton Castle who is definitely described as a ghost,
and yet was laid, as brownies are always laid, by the present of a cloak
and hood
Ca Sith - (The
Fairy Dog.) (Highland.) This is a great dog, as large as a bullock with
a dark green coat. He is very like the English Black Dog.
Cluricane -(Crofton
Croker, Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland.) Another
name for the leprechaun.
Daoine Sidhe - (Irish.)
These are the Heroic Fairies of Ireland, very like the Highland Sleeth
Ma. May Eve - Beltane - and November Eve - Samhain - are their great
festivals. On Beltane they revel, and - the door being open from
fairyland to the mortal world that night - they often steal away
beautiful mortals as their brides. On Samhain they dance with the
ghosts. They live under the fairy hills, offerings of milk are set out
for them, and in all ways they partake of the fairy nature. Some say
that they are the fallen angels who were too good for hell and some say
that they are the remnants of the heroic Daanan race.
Devil's Dandy Dogs -(Cornish,
Hunt, Popular Romances of the West of England.) A pack of black
hounds, fire-breathing and with fiery eyes, which the devil leads over
lonely moors on tempestuous nights. They will tear any living man to
pieces but they can be held off by the power of prayer.
Dobie -(Border
Country. Henderson, Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) A rather
clownish and foolish brownie. The dobie is sometimes invoked as the
guardian of hidden treasure; but those who can get him prefer the
cannier brownie as less likely to be outwitted. Ghosts are called dobies
in Yorkshire.
Dracae - Water
spirits. (English. Gervase of Tilbury.) It was their custom to entice
women to the water by appearing as wooden dishes floating down the
stream. When a woman took hold of one it would resume its proper shape
and drag her down into the water to nurse its children. Gervase of
Tilbury tells a story of the Dracae and a magic ointment which is very
like the Somerset story of the Fairy Midwife.
Elves - The
Anglo-Saxon word for spirits of any kind, which later became specialized
creatures very like the Scandinavian light elves. Sir Walter Scott, in
his Demonology and Witchcraft, describes elves as 'Sprites of a
coarser sort, more laborious vocation and more malignant temper and in
all respects less propitious to humanity than the Fairies'. This,
however, applies only to Scottish elves, and the little Scandinavians
light elves who looked after flowers, and whose chief faults were
mischief and volatility, fit the general conception better. In Orkney
and Shetland flint arrow-heads are called elf shot, and are said to be
fired by the trows, so that trow and elf seem synonymous terms with
them.
Fetch - A
common term for a double or wraith. When seen by daylight it portends no
harm, but at night is is a certain death portent.
Fuath - (Highland.
J. G. Campbell, etc.) The general name for a Nature spirit, often a
water fairy and malignant. Urisks were sometimes called Fuaths. The
Brollachan was the child of a Fuath.
Gabriel Ratchets - (Northern
Counties. E. M. Wright, Rustic Speech and Folk-Lore.) The Gabriel
Ratchets are like the Wisht Hounds except that they hunt high in the
air. and can be heard yelping overhead on stormy nights. To hear them is
a presage of death. Some say that they are the souls of unchristened
children, who can find no rest.
Ganconer or Gacanagh - (The
Love-Talker.) (Irish. E. M. Wright, Rustic Speech and Folklore.)
The Love-Talker strolls along lonely valleys with a pipe in his mouth,
and makes love to young girls, who afterwards pine and die for him. In a
story quoted in Irish Fairy and Folk Tales the Ganconers appear
in mumbers, live in a city under a lough, hurl and play together, and
steal human cattle, leaving only a stock behind, just like ordinary
trooping fairies.
Glaistig -(Highland.
D. Mackenzie, Scottish Folk-Lore and Folk Life.) The Glaistig is
a female fairy, generally half-woman, half-goat, but sometimes described
as a little, stout woman, clothed ion green. She is a spirit of mixed
characteristics, and seems, indeed, to be all fairies in little. She is
supposed to be fond of children and the guardian of domestic animals.
Milk is poured out to her, and she does something of a brownie's work
about the house. She is specially kind, too, to old people and the
feeble-minded. On the other hand she has darker qualities; there are
stories of her misleading and slaying travellers. If the traveller named
the weapon he had against her she could make it powerless; but if he
only described it he could overcome her. The Glaistig seems partly a
water spirit. She might often be seen sitting by a stream, where she
would beg to be carried across. She could be caught and set to work
something like a kelpie.
Grant - (English.)
A demon, mentioned by Giraldus Cambrensis, very like the Picktree Brag.
He is a yearling colt in shape, but goes on his hind legs and has fiery
eyes. He is a town spirit, and runs down the middle of the street at
midday or just after sundown, so that all the dogs run out barking. His
appearance is a warning of danger. Some people connect him with Grendel,
whom Beowulf killed; but Grendel was a sea monster.
Gwragedd Annwm -(Welsh.
Sikes, British Goblins.) Lake maidens, not unlike Malory's Lady
of the Lake. They are beautiful, and not so dangerous as the mermaids
and nixies. They often wedded mortals.
Habitrot -(Scottish
Border. Henderson, Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) The
Spinning-Wheel Fairy. A shirt made by a Habitrot was considered
effacious against illness. Habitrot, though very ugly, was friendly to
mankind.
Hedley Kow -(Northumbrian.
Henderson. Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) A kind of bogy
beast that haunted the village of of Hedley. Its great amusement was to
transform itself into one shape after another so as to bewilder whoever
picked it up; but, like most spirits of its kind, it was fond of turning
itself into a horse. Once it assumed the likeness of a pair of young
girls, and led two young men into a bog. It is rare for a spirit to be
able to make a double appearance.
Hob or Hobthruth -
(Yorkshire and Durham. Henderson. Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.)
A brownie with most of the usual brownie characteristics, but a
specialist in whooping cough. Children with whooping cough used to be
brought to Hobhole in Brunswick Bay to be cured by Hob. The parents
would call; 'Hobhole Hob! Hobhole Hob! My bairn's got kincough. Tak't
off! Tak't off!' Like other brownies he is driven away by a present of
clothes.
Jenny Greenteeth -(Lancashire.
Henderson. Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) A malignant water
fairy. She drags people down into the water and drowns them. Her
presence is indicated by a green scum on the water.
Kelpie -
(Scottish.) A malignant water spirit, which is generally seen in the
form of a young horse, but sometimes appears like a handsome young man.
A kelpie's great object is to induce mortals to mount on its back and
plunge with them into deep water, where it devours them. A man who can
throw a bridle over the kelpie's head, however, has it in his power, and
can force it to work for him.
Mara - An
old English name for a demon, which survives with us in Night-mare
and Mare's Nest. In Anglo-Saxon the echo was called the Wood-Mare.
In Wales at Twelfth Night the boys used to carry round a horse's skull
decked with ribbons, which they called Mari Lwyd.
Maug Moulach or Hairy Meg -(Highland.
Grant Stewart, Highland Superstitions and Amusements.) A spirit
something between a brownie and a banshee. She haunts the
Tullochgorm and gives warning of the approaching death of any of the
Grants. She also does brownie work. Maug Vulucht, a spirit very like
her, once haunted a Highland household with a companion Brownie Clod.
Mermaid - The
mermaid is a much more sinister character than the mild roane, though harmless
mermaids have been known. Her appearance and habits are well known to
everyone from Scotland to Cornwall. It was considered a certain type of
omen of shipwreck for a ship to sight a mermaid. The mermaids sometimes
penetrated into rivers and sea lochs as the story of the Mermaid
of Knockdolian shows. In Suffolk, indeed, they are said to haunt
ponds as well as rivers. Like many other fairies the mermaids have a
great desire for human children. In the folk-lore of a good many
countries the mermaids and other water fairies are supposed to be very
anxious to gain a human soul. Their lives are long, but when they die
they perish utterly.
Merrows -
(Crofton Croker, Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland.)
The merrows are the Irish mer-people. Like the roane they live on dry
land and under the sea, and need an enchantment to make them able to
pass through the water. The merrows' charm lies in their red caps. The
merrows' women are very beautiful, but the men have long red noses,
green teeth and hair and short finny arms.
Muryans - (Hunt,
Popular Romances of the West of England.) The muryans are the
dwindling fairies of Cornwall. Long ago they were of more than human
size, but for some crime they committed they were condemned to dwindle
year by year, til they turned into ants and so perished.
Nuckelavee -
(Scottish. Scottish Fairy Tales and Folk Tales.) A horrible
monster who came out of the sea, half-man and half-horse, with a breath
like pestilence and no skin on its body. The only security from it was
that it could not face running water.
Old Lady of the Elder Tree - (Lincolnshire.
County Folk-Lore, Lincolnshire.) A tree spirit rather like Hans
Anderson's Elder Flower Mother.
Padfoot - (Yorkshire.
Henderson. Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) A demon dog that
haunts lonely lanes near Leeds.
Peg o'Nell - (Mrs.
Gutch, County Folk-Lore, North Riding of Yorkshire.) The Spirit
of the Ribble. She is said to be the ghost of a servant girl from Waddow
Hall who was drowned in the river. She is supposed to demand a life
every seven years.
Peg Powler -
(County Folk-Lore, North Riding of Yorkshire.) The Spirit of the
Tees. She has long green hair, and is insatiable for human life. The
frothy foam on the high reaches of the Tees is called Peg Powler's suds.
People of Peace -(Tales
of the Western Highlands.) This is the Highland name for the
fairies, corresponding to the Lowland "Good Neighbours". They
are much like them in character. Campbell's story of the Woman of
Peace and the Kettle is characteristic.
Picktree Brag - (Henderson,
Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) This is a Durham version of
the bogy beast. It appears in various forms, sometimes as a horse,
sometimes as a calf or dick ass, sometimes as a naked man without a
head. It plays all the usual tricks of the bogy beast.
Pixies or Pisgies -(Devonshire
and Cornwall.) These are small trooping fairies of which many stories
are told by Hunt and Mrs. Bray. There are occasional stories of the
brownie type told of them. The white moths that come out in twilight are
called pisgies in parts of Cornwall, and are regarded by some as fairies
and by others departed souls. In parts, too, they say that pixies are
the spirits of unbaptized children.
Pooka or Phooka - (Irish.)
The Irish Puck is in many ways like the Dunnie or Brag. He is in
appearance like a wild, shaggy colt, hung with chains. He generally
haunts wild places, but in one story, though still keeping his animal
form, he works like a brownie, and is stopped in his career of usefulness
in the same way by the present of a coat. In this story, like the Cauld
Lad, he is said to be the ghost of a servant.
Portunes - (English.)
These are a strange kind of fairy reported by Gervase of Tilbury and not
surviving in any modern folklore. They came in troops into farmhouses at
night, and, after working, rested themselves at the fire and cooked
frogs for their supper. They were very tiny, with wrinkled faces and patched
coats. It was their nature to do good, not harm. Their only mischievous
trick was that of misleading horsemen.
Pwca - (Welsh.
Sikes. British Goblins.) The Welsh Puck is much the same
character as in England and Ireland. He likes his nightly bowl of milk,
but does not seem to work for it as the bwbachod do. He is specially
fond of misleading night wanderers.
Rawhead and Bloody Bones - (Yorkshire,
Lancashire, and Lincolnshire. County Folk-Lore.) A malignant pond
spirit who dragged children down into ponds and old marl pits. Sometimes
called Tommy Rawhead.
Redcap -(Border
Country. Henderson, Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) A
malignant spirit who haunts old peel towers and places where deeds of
violence have been done. He is like a squat old man. with grim, long
nailed hands and a red cap, dyed in blood. It is dangerous to try and
sleep in any ruined castle that he haunts, for if he can he will re-dip
his cap in human blood. He can driven off by words of Scripture or the
sight of a cross-handled sword. In other places he is less sinister.
There is, for instance, a redcap who haunts Grandtully Castle in
Pertshire, who is rather lucky than unlucky.
Roane - (The
Highland mermen. Grant Stewart, Highland Superstitions and Amusements.)
These mermen are distinguished from others by travelling through the sea
in the form of seals. In the depths of the sea caves they come to air
again, and there, and on land, they cast off the seal skins which are
necessary to carry them through water. The roane are peculiarly mild
un-revengeful fairies of deep domestic affections, as the stories of Fisherman
and the Merman and the Seal Catcher's Adventure show. The
Shetlanders call the roane sea trows, but their character is
substantially the same.
Seely Court -
(Lowland Scots.) Seely means blessed, and this name stands for the comparatively
virtuous heroic fairies. The malignant fairies and demons were sometimes
called the Unseely Court.
Silky - (Northern
Counties. Henderson, Folk-Lore of the Northern Counties.) A name
for a white lady. The Silky of Black Heddon in Norhtumberland had one
close resemblance to a brownie. If she found things below stairs untidy
at night she would tidy them, but if they had been tidied she flung them
about. She was dressed in dazzling silks, and went about near the house,
swinging herself in her Silky's Chair - the crossed branches of an old
tree which overhangs a waterfall - riding sometimes behind horsemen or
stopping them by standing in front of their horses. But on the whole she
belonged more to the class of ghosts than of brownies, for she was laid
by the discovery of treasure, which must have been troubling her.
Skriker - (Yorkshire
and Lancashire. Hartland, English Fairy and Folk Tales.) A death
portent. Sometimes it is called a brash, from the padding on its feet.
It sometimes wanders invisibly in the woods, giving fearful shrieks, and
at others it takes the form of like Padfoot, a large dog with huge feet
and saucer eyes.
Spriggans - (Cornish.
Hunt, Popular Romances of the West of England.) Some say the
Spriggans are the ghosts of the giants. They haunt old cromlechs and
standing stones and guard their buried treasure. They are grotesque in
shape, with the power of swelling from small intro monstrous size. For
all commotion and disturbances in the air, mysterious destruction of
buildings or cattle, loss of children or substitution of changelings,
the spriggans may be blamed.
Tom Tit Tot -
(Suffolk.) The English Rumplestiskin. He is described as a black thing
with a long tail, and sometimes as animpet. Tom-Tit, or Tut or a Tut-gut
is a Lincolnshire name for a hobgoblin.
Trwtyn-Tratyn -The
Welsh Tom Tit Tot. (Clodd, Tom Tit Tot.)
Tylwyth Teg, or Fair Family -
(Welsh.) It is difficult to get a clear
picture of the Tylwyth Teg. The name is very much used and for differing
types of fairies. They are sometimes described as of mortal or more than
mortal size, dressed chiefly in white. They live on an invisible island;
they ride about and reward cleanliness with gifts of money; they dance
in fairy rings, and mortals joining them are made invisible and carried
off forever, unless they are rescued before cockcrow. Others wear rayed
clothes of green and yellow, are small and thieving, particularly of
milk and children. Unlike many fairies the Tylwyth Teg are golden haired
and will only show themselves to fair-haired people. The usual brownie
story is also told about them. They are very friendly with goats whose
beards they comb on Thursdays.
Urisk -
(Highland. Grahame, Picturesque Descriptions of Perthshire, G.
Henderson, The Norse Influence in Celtic Scotland, etc.) A kind
of rough brownie, half-human and half-goat, very lucky to have about the
house, who herded cattle and worked on farms. He haunted lonely
waterfalls, but would often crave human company, and follow terrified
travellers at night, with out, however, doing them any harm. The Urisks
lived solitary in recesses of the hills, but they would meet at stated
times for solemn assemblies; a corrie near Loch Katrine was their
favorite meeting place.
Werewolves -The
earlier attitude to the werewolf is more tolerant than that towards the loup-garou
in seventeenth century France. Giraldus Cambrensis has a story of a
priest called to shrive a dying woman in wolf form. It was thought in
Ireland to be a curse that might fall on any man for a certain number of
years. In the medieval romance of William and the Werewolf the
wolf is a good character, and the victim of enchantment.
Whuppity Stoorie -
(Scottish. Chambers, Popular Rhymes of Scotland.) The name is
apparently taken from the circular scud of dust upon which fairies are
supposed to ride. It was the name of a Scottish Tom Tit Tot fairy, and
also of the fairy on one version of the Habitrot story.
Will o' the Wisp -This
is the commonest of the many popular names for the ignis fatuus.
It is sometimes described as the soul of a wicked man, but more
generally as a kind of pixy.