British Goblins: Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions. Wirt Sikes. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Wirt Sikes
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4057664103109
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at least they are not mere idle nonsense, and they have a good and sufficient reason for being in the world; we may continue to respect them. The wit who observed that the final cause of fairy legends is ‘to afford sport for people who ruthlessly track them to their origin,’[1] expressed a grave truth in jocular form. Since one can no longer rest in peace with one’s ignorance, it is a comfort to the lover of fairy legends to find that he need not sweep them into the grate as so much rubbish; on the contrary they become even more enchanting in the crucible of science than they were in their old character.

      FOOTNOTE:

      II.

      In olde dayes of the Kyng Arthour, …

       Al was this lond fulfilled of fayrie; …

       I speke of many hundrid yer ago;

       But now can no man see non elves mo.

      Dryden held it, two hundred years later, and said of the fairies:

      I speak of ancient times, for now the swain

       Returning late may pass the woods in vain,

       And never hope to see the nightly train.

      In all later days, other authors have written the same sort of thing; it is not thus now, say they, but it was recently thus. The truth, probably, is that if you will but sink down to the level of common life, of ignorant life, especially in rural neighbourhoods, there you will find the same old beliefs prevailing, in about the same degree to which they have ever prevailed, within the past five hundred years. To sink to this level successfully, one must become a living unit in that life, as I have done in Wales and elsewhere, from time to time. Then one will hear the truth from, or at least the true sentiments of, the class he seeks to know. The practice of every generation in thus relegating fairy belief to a date just previous to its own does not apply, however, to superstitious beliefs in general; for, concerning many such beliefs, their greater or less prevalence at certain dates (as in the history of witchcraft) is matter of well-ascertained fact. I confine the argument, for the present, strictly to the domain of faerie. In this domain, the prevalent belief in Wales may be said to rest with the ignorant, to be strongest in rural and mining districts, to be childlike and poetic, and to relate to anywhere except the spot where the speaker dwells—as to the next parish, to the next county, to the distant mountains, or to the shadow-land of Gwerddonau Llion, the green meadows of the sea.

      FOOTNOTES:

      III.

      FOOTNOTES:

      IV.

      The sovereign of the fairies, and their especial guardian and protector, was one Gwyn ap Nudd. He was also ruler over the goblin tribe in general. His name often occurs in ancient Welsh