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Jacob Isaacsz Swanenburgh, Jaws of Leviathan, ca1600
Medieval Chronicles: Relics of the supernatural encounters

The source of fairies is amongst the most discussed questions of folklore. In support of their arguments, researchers have turned to a couple of medieval texts, and occasionally to the evidence of place names. But there's room for doubt whether these resources should be regarded as describing fairies in any respect.


Drawing of Geoffrey Chaucer is a photograph
Drawing of Geoffrey Chaucer is a photograph

The fairy tradition in literature begins in the 1380s, with Chaucer and Cower. In their eyes, the fairies are already a vanishing race, partly frightening and partly comic. The implication (particularly in the preamble to The Wife of Bath's Tale) is that people used to believe in fairies, but do not do this anymore. However, Egyptian mythology as a consistent set of beliefs (dance in rings, living in hills, the principle of a queen, etc.) is itself generated by the authors who claim to be documenting its last echoes. Earlier evidence doesn't describe these fairies. Rather, it details encounters with various supernatural beings that were, in retrospect, treated like they were citizens of fairyland. The otherworldly beings that appear in medieval chronicles are a diverse lot. Some of them, like the barrow revelers in William of Newburgh and the maidens found in a wood by Wild Edric, are intentionally left unidentified;such as the maiden in the moor of the carol, their nonhuman standing is indicated by allusion rather than by direct statement. Others are defined by a single strange characteristic, like the color of the Green Children of Wool pit, or the small size of King Herla (a pygmaeus} who rides a goat.


John Dee and Edward Kelley communicating with a spirit
John Dee and Edward Kelley communicating with a spirit

The homunculus is an enigmatic encounter story from Thomas Walsingham was equally diminutive and dressed in red. The otherworldly race who played with the boy Elidurus had their own language (a kind of Greek} and their own superior morals. There is nothing in these scattered references to suggest that the beings concerned are of the same type. All the medieval phrases for spirits were also used, sometimes, for devils. The achievement of fairy authors, from Chaucer to Shakespeare, was to enlarge the indications of an otherworld from the Breton courtly narratives until almost all previous tales of supernatural encounters could be shoehorned into their dominant discourse. Despite Bob Trubshaw's proposal in the accompanying article that Broadly speaking, these Middle English accounts adapt to the Anglo-Saxon categories of elves, dwarfs, and pucks, so appear to represent some continuity of belief there is no systematic mythology of fairies before 1380. There are many unrelated motifs - barrow dwellers, tricksters, little individuals, household guardians - that we know in hindsight will come together to define the fairy kingdom. But this identity is simply not there in the original references. In Old English, the aelfs are just one amongst many otherworldly communities. The Charm for a Sudden Stitch puts them on exactly the same footing as hags and the Aesir, and they have the same role as the Aesir in name compounds - compare Aelfric and Osric. An Anglo-Saxon language of 1100 leaves dryads etc. as types of elves. As Hilda Ellis Davidson revealed in The Road to Hell, the Scandinavian elves are closely assimilated to the Vanir.


By the thirteenth century, the original context of Old English belief had become lost, and people were using the word in a variety of ways. La yam on uses elf to interpret the Romance fades - following a line of thought which was to lead into the elf-fairy equivalence - but other people had other ideas. Robert of Gloucester, explaining which type of being it was that fathered Merlin, says the sky is full of aliens called elves. Here we are on the verge of this diabolical, as we're in Beowulf when the cells have the seed of Cain.


Jacob Isaacsz Swanenburgh, Jaws of Leviathan, ca1600
Jacob Isaacsz Swanenburgh, Jaws of Leviathan, ca1600

Rather, their place is taken by puca, which appears to describe the inhabitants of wells, pits, and barrows. It is tempting to make the medieval pouke as identical with Renaissance Puck, but this is to fall into another retrospective reading. Even in Midsummer Night's Dream, Puck has the look of being moved into fairyland, somewhat awkwardly, from a quite distinct tradition.


Ana Maria Pacheco
Ana Maria Pacheco

The situation is different in northern England, where self is not uncommon and puca is absent. This is also the region where the elf was kept as the regular word for beings in the modern period, the Romance fairy being rejected. This could well be the consequence of Scandinavian influence - the fact that an elf is liable to chemicals with hair rather than being would imply this.



Scandinavian influence is certainly present in these place names that refer to dwarfs. The Anglo-Saxons had no concept of the reorg for a member of a small supernatural race. When we meet with clearly mythical dwarfs in North Country place names, it seems reasonable to suspect Norse influence, as Keightley observed more than a century ago. In a nutshell, the origins of fairy mythology lie not in the distant past, but at the court of Richard II. The creative synthesis that the poets made out of English and French customs was developed in the Tudor period to include tricksters of the Robin Good fellow type as well as the familiar spirits of cunning men, and domestic spirits such as the brownie. As an English language tradition, it managed to dominate and then alter the native sidhe beliefs of Ireland and the Highlands, introducing alien notions such as small size into their narrative.


Death-fires dancing around the becalmed ship, scene from ''The Rime of the Ancient Mariner'' S.T. Co
Death-fires dancing around the becalmed ship, scene from ''The Rime of the Ancient Mariner'' S.T. Co

From the nineteenth century, it had been possible for Anglo-Saxon spirits such as the grima, scucca and others - that had lived outside a quiet rural existence as Church Grim's, Black Shucks, and Hob thrusts - to locate themselves reinterpreted by folklorists (not the folk!) It follows that we can no longer make out what they were like initially. The fairy glamour of the fully developed tradition has tended to obscure our understanding of the very disparate narratives of supernatural encounters which were patched into it.


THE EPISTLE OF POLYCARP TO THE PHILIPPIANS
THE EPISTLE OF POLYCARP TO THE PHILIPPIANS

One of the earliest Christian martyrdom for which an eyewitness account survives is that of Saint Polycarp, the bishop of Smyrna (today known as Izmir, in Turkey). Condemned to die at the stake because he would not recognize the divinity of the Roman emperor, he was put to death in the stadium at Smyrna in a.d. 155, when he was 86 years old. The manner of his death is described in a letter of unquestioned authenticity written by members of the church in Smyrna:



When he had offered up the Amen and finished his prayer, the firemen lighted the fire. And a mighty flame flashing forth, we to whom it was given to see, saw a marvel, yea, and we were preserved that we might relate to the rest what happened. The fire, making the appearance of a vault, like the sail of a vessel filled by the wind, made a wall round about the body of the martyr; and it was there in the midst, not like flesh burning but like gold and silver refined in a furnace. For we perceived such a fragrant smell, as if it were the wafted odor of frankincense or some other precious spice.



So at length the lawless men, seeing that his body could not be consumed by fire, ordered the executioner to go up to him and stab him with a dagger. And when he had done this there came forth a quantity of blood so that it extinguished the fire, and all the multitude marvelled that there should be so great a difference between the unbelievers and the elect.



After Saint Polycarp died the fire was lit again, and his body was cremated.


(Herbert Thurston, The Physical Phenomena of Mysticism, pp.171, 222-23)



Daily Strange's Trikcy Tuesday: A Feeling of Terror and Panic...

Hereward Hubert Lavington Carrington (October 17, 1880 - December 26, 1958) was one of the pioneers of psychical research in the United States, a tireless investigator of telepathy, mediums, poltergeists, and hauntings. He claimed to have “witnessed highly curious and inexplicable phenomena in haunted houses ”on several occasions. He chose the following account as one of the most striking:


Motorists whose cars crashed at this London corner explained that they swerved to avoid a mysterious red bus. It had hurtled toward them, they said, and then suddenly vanished.


On the night of August 13, 1937, a party of seven of us spent the night in a reputed “haunted house,” situated some 50 miles from New York City.... The group consisted of the former occupant [who had rented the house and left before his rental expired, because of the disturbances], two of his friends, two friends of our own, my wife and myself. We also brought with us a dog which had lived in the house while it was occupied, and which, according to reports, had behaved in an extraordinary manner on several occasions.


Hereward Hubert Lavington Carrington (October 17, 1880 - December 26, 1958) was a Jersey-born American parapsychologist and spiritualist, one of the leading figures in the field of psychical research during his lifetime.
Hereward Hubert Lavington Carrington
After having spent years investigating psychical phenomena in England, Dr. Hereward Carington came to the United States in the 1920's to continues his research. It led him to one of the most terrifying ''hauntings'' he ever experienced.

Carrington suggested that the house, which was lit from top to bottom upon their arrival, be explored to make sure that it was not practical jokers, cats, bats, rats, or mice that were causing the disturbances:



Examination of the cellar and the ground floor revealed nothing unusual. On the second floor, however, two or three of us sensed something strange in one of the middle bedrooms. This feeling was quite intangible, but was definitely present, and seemed to be associated with an old bureau standing against one wall....


Walking along the hall, we came to a door which had escaped our attention the first time we had passed it.

''Where does this lead?'' I asked.

''To the servants' quarters,'' Mr. X. replied

''Would you like to go up there?''

''By all means,'' I said, opening the door.

Glancing up, I could see that the top floor was brilliantly lighted, and that a steep flight of stairs lay just ahead of me. Leading the way, with the others close behind me, I ascended the stairs, and made a sharp turn to the right, finding myself confronted by a series of small rooms.



The instant I did so, I felt as though a vital blow had been delivered to my solar plexus. My forehead broke out into profuse perspiration, my head swam, and I had difficulty in swallowing. It was a most extraordinary sensation, definitely physiological, and unlike anything I had ever experienced before. A feeling of terror and panic seized me, and for the moment I had the utmost difficulty in preventing myself from turning and fleeing down the stairs! Vaguely I remember saying aloud:


“Very powerful! Very powerful!” My wife, who was just behind me, had taken a step or two forward. She was just exclaiming, “Oh, what cute little rooms!” when the next moment she was crying, “No! No!” and raced down the steep flight of stairs like a scared rabbit.


Carrington pointed out that both he and his wife were seasoned investigators, “accustomed to psychic manifestations of all kinds,” and that neither had previously experienced a comparable moment of terror. He went downstairs to make sure that his wife was all right and found her sitting on the porch “slowly collecting her scattered faculties.” She reassured him. The group, whose other members had all been strongly affected, then gathered in a circle in one of the bedrooms. The lights were turned out, and they waited, cameras and flashbulbs ready.



After passing an uneventful hour they ascended the stairs again, and“ this time not a sensation of any kind was to be felt! The room seemed absolutely clear of all influences, clean, pure and normal... Even the dog, which had growled and bristled like a cat and refused to be coaxed upstairs on the first occasion, now ran up quite willingly, with its tail wagging.


It was only after Carrington and the others had made their original inspection of the place and experienced their“first violent reactions” that the former tenant told them “a suicide had actually been committed on the upper floor, and that these rooms were thought to be the seat’ of the haunting.”


Source: (Hereward Carrington, Essays in the Occult, pp.19-25)



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