The Science of Fairy Tales / An Inquiry into Fairy Mythology

by Edwin Sidney Hartland

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[194] Leland, p. 300. Cf. ibid. p. 140, where the maidens are called weasels, and ultimately marry stars. ?Y Cymmrodor,? vol. iv. p. 201. In a tale rendered from the modern Greek by Von Hahn the name Swan-maiden is preserved in the title, though the plumage has disappeared from the text. Stress can hardly be laid upon this, as the title is no part of the tale. Von Hahn, vol. i. p. 131.

[195] ?La Tradition,? March 1889, p. 78, quoting the Abbé Domenech, ?Voyage pittoresque dans les déserts du Nouveau Monde,? p. 214. Mr. Farrer gives the same story from ?Algic Researches? (Farrer, ?Primitive Manners,? p. 256).

[196] Gerv. Tilb. Dec. i. c. 15.

[197] Brauns, p. 138; White, vol. ii. p. 141; Vernaleken, p. 294; Schneller, p. 23; Ortoli, p. 284.

[198] ?The Physicians of Myddfai?Meddygon Myddfai,? translated by John Pughe, Esq., F.R.C.S., and edited by Rev. John Williams ab Ithel, M.A. (1861), p. xxi. ?Cambro-Briton,? vol. ii. p. 315; Sikes, p. 40. Mr. Sikes gives no authority for the third version. I have assumed its genuineness, though I confess Mr. Sikes' methods are not such as to inspire confidence.

[199] Jahn, p. 364, et seqq.; Knoop, pp. 26, 83, 103; Kuhn, pp. 47, 197, 374; Kuhn und Schwartz, pp. 14, 91, 298; Schleicher, p. 93; Thorpe, vol. ii. p. 169, quoting Thiele. Note the suggestion of Pope Gregory's pun in the name of the native land of the nightmare. Elsewhere a child becomes a nightmare who is born on a Sunday and baptized on a Sunday at the same hour, or one at whose baptism some wicked person has secretly muttered in response to one of the priest's questions some wrong words, or ?It shall become a nightmare? (Lemke, p. 42). Similar superstitions attached to somnabulism; see Lecky, ?History of Rationalism,? vol. i. p. 81, note 2.

[200] Jannsen, vol. i. p. 53; Thorpe, vol. iii. p. 70, quoting Afzelius, vol. ii. p. 29, quoting Müllenhoff. It is a common Teutonic belief that knot-holes are attributable to elves (Grimm, ?Teut. Myth.? p. 461).

[201] ?Am Urds-Brunnen,? vol. vi. p. 58.

Transcriber's Note: See Appendix for more details

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CHAPTER XI.

SWAN-MAIDENS (continued).

The incident of the recovery of the bride not found in all the stories ? New Zealand sagas ? Andrianòro ? Mother-right ? The father represented under a forbidding aspect ? Tasks imposed on the hero ? The Buddhist theory of the Grateful Animals ? The feather-robe a symbol of bride's superhuman character ? Mode of capture ? The Taboo ? Dislike of fairies for iron?Utterance of name forbidden ? Other prohibitions ? Fulfilment of fate ? The taboo a mark of progress in civilization ? The divine ancestress ? Totems and Banshees ? Re-appearance of mother to her children ? The lady of the Van Pool an archaic deity.