This is a truly fascinating document: a collection of folk mythology collected by a Protestant priest in the 1600s. It reminds me of Dermot MacManus’ The Middle Kingdom, but with even more of curiosity and open-mindedness. Kirk really can’t say for sure if the fairies are real but he sure sounds like he thinks they are; he writes about them the way an anthropologist might, not a folklorist.
Some of the things I learned about for the first time:
The concept of a coimimechd or co-walker, like a guardian angel
‘[...] wounded at home when the astral bodies are stricken elsewhere (as the strings of a second harp tuned to a unison sound though only one be struck);’
‘With their weapons they also gon, or pierce, cows or other animals, usually said to be elf-shot, whose purest substance (if they die) these subterraneans take to live on, viz. the aerial and ethereal parts [...]’
‘The same knot is oft cast on a thread by sportful people when a party is marrying, and before the minister, which ties up the man from all benevolence to his bride, till they be loosed [...]’
‘Lychnobious: he that instead of the day useth the night and liveth as it were by the candle light.’
This is a lovely spell, I think:
‘As the wind turns about the hillock, thy evil turn from thee (O Allex, or such), a third part on this man, a third part on that woman, a third on waters, a third on woods, a third on the brown harts of the forest, and a third on the grey stones.’
There should have been more documentation of spells, methinks.
The writing is extremely dense for modern eyes – I flew through Marina Warner’s introduction but the text itself required a lot of me. Interesting, considering how low the literacy rates were at the time of writing, how closely he expected you to attend to each sentence!
He’s also quite wry:
‘[The Scottish-Irish] set about few actions all the year over without some charm or superstitious rite interwoven, which hath no visible natural connection with the affair about which ‘tis made to further it. Yet herein they have been taught of old, to keep them in an implicit obedience, still busy and yet still ignorant, every age transmitting such supposed-profitable folly and reckoning it a greater piaculum to neglect such, than to transgress God’s most holy and undoubted commandments. This is the secret.’
Some random Other People quotes I loved:
Yeats: ‘The lake is not burdened by its swan, the steed by its bridle, or a man by the soul that is in him.’
Isaiah 30.9-10: ‘This is a rebellious people, which say to the seers see not; and to the prophets, prophesy not unto us right things but smooth things.’
Overall a great resource for any fantasy-writer.