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Fairy Tales
Water Fairies
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The Dracae are a sort of
water-spirits who inveigle women and children into the recesses which they
inhabit, beneath lakes and rivers, by floating past them, on the surface
of the water, in the shape of gold rings or cups. The women thus seized
are employed as nurses, and after seven years are permitted to revisit
earth. Gervase of Tilbury mentions one woman in particular who had been
allured by observing a wooden dish, or cup, float by her, while she was
washing clothes in the river. Being seized as soon as she reached the
depths, she was conducted into one of the subterranean recesses, which she
described as very magnificent, and employed as nurse to one of the brood
of the hag who had allured her. During her residence in this capacity,
having accidentally touched one of her eyes with an ointment of serpent’s
grease, she perceived, at her return to the world, that she had acquired
the faculty of seeing the Dracae, when they intermingle themselves
with men. Of this power she was, however, deprived by the touch of her
ghostly mistress, whom she had one day incautiously addressed. It is a
curious fact that this story, in almost all its parts, is Current in both
the Highlands and Lowlands of Scotland, with no other variation than the
substitution of Fairies for Dracae, and the cavern of a hill for that of a
river. Indeed many of the vulgar account it extremely dangerous to touch
anything which they may happen to find without saining (blessing) it, the
snares of the enemy being notorious and well-attested. A poor woman of
Teviotdale having been fortunate enough, as she thought herself, to find a
wooden beetle, at the very time when she needed such an implement, seized
it without pronouncing a proper blessing, and, carrying it home, laid it
above her bed to be ready for employment in the morning. At midnight the
window of her cottage opened, and a loud voice was heard calling up some
one within by a strange and uncouth name. The terrified cottager
ejaculated a prayer, which, we may suppose, ensured her personal safety;
while the enchanted implement of housewifery, tumbling from the bedstead,
departed by the window with no small noise and precipitation. |
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