Folk Lore to Faerie Lore |
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Faerie World Amy Brown's Discovery"The World of Faerie dances, Beyond and yet, near. It is there in the eyes For in the blink of the eye, Thus, it is and has been
Folklore is filled with Faerie, fairies of all sorts and descriptions, as diverse as the people, cultures and countries from whence they came. Faerie Lore is woven of this same fabric, reflecting the heritage, hopes, beliefs, customs and characteristics of the humans, who believe in and create them mirroring their histories and traditions in the process.
Later,
fey was anglicized into fairy, its more common name in the thirteenth
century.
Folklorists have tried to explain the coming of fairies by theorizing these diverse yet, contradictory explanations for and definitions of them. The Maybe they were these and maybe they were that theories. They are as follows: Mythological: Faeries are bred of the pagan Celtic divinities. Or are descendents of the Spirits, Gods and Goddesses of various Nations Mythologies. Hades and or Purgatory: Faeries are the souls of the dead and unforgiven still awaiting judgment day when then, they may be reunited with their bodies and are sent to heaven or hell. Or faeries are fallen angels sent from heaven to this other world trying to attain redemption and their place back in heaven. Or they are the souls of those who upon death, were not good enough to be angels and enter heaven, nor bad enough to be condemned to hell. Hence, this is their Hades, their purgatory, their other world created for this purpose, neither here nor there. Fairy mounds and burial sites adds to the power of this theory. Pigmy: Faeries are memories of a now, extinct prehistoric Mongolian race driven out of Great Britain and parts of Europe by the Celts. Druid: Faeries are a folk memory of the Druids born of their religion and its magical powers. Naturalistic: Faeries are part of the ancient belief in Nature Spirits. Dryads and Nymphs and Sprites Psychological: Faries are part of the animistic spirit and are universally recognized as belonging to the doctrine of the soul. They are renderings of the soul living in astral world. Actual: Faeries are members of a supernatural race. They are real and not imaginary. [All these theories are chronicled in Beatrice Phillpotts "The Fairy Companion" published by Barnes and Noble. It is an excellent book and worthy of your attention.] No
matter what theory you chose to consider, I think in the end, we are
left with this, faerie is the realm humans create to let themselves
wonder and dream. It cannot hurt us in reality, but it can inspire us
and it can fulfill our need to believe in a place and spirits beyond
ourselves, as well. WE want there to be more than what we see. We want
to be able to effect change. We want to feel the power of belonging
somewhere, to someone, at sometime whether it be a family, or a cause,
for when we are there we become the faerie, the hero or heroine and we
exert control over our destinies, a control we do not always feel we
exert in our own, very real world .
Fairies may reside on the astral plane, unseen by man or in the etheric state, seen, but as semi transparent, beings of lightness in the real world. There is conflicting data as to their invisibility capabilities. Some claim they move in the blink of an eye and hence, are undetected by man. Others say they change from astral to ethetic at their will or they shape shift taking on forms of both kinds, human or animal and they interact with us in this way. Then there are those who claim they may only be seen at specific times and places, like when we enter a fairy ring or fairy mound. Given the more current definition of Faerie, including all manor of the fantastic being, it is easy to see the breadth and scope of Faerie would be as diverse and contradictory as the individual's, who conceive them. However, it is folk lore, once again, which weaves these individual beliefs into a kind of collective consciousness, reflecting the oral tradition, history and beliefs of the majority in a designated culture and society. Copyright Linda A Copp a.k.a. Lady LaMythica 1970 to 2017©
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Linda A. Copp
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