Darrell J. Pursiful

Trows

The Faery Folklorist has posted a wonderful introduction to the trows of the Orkney and Shetland Islands. In case you’re not quite up to speed on your trow-lore, the article begins,

According to Saxby and Edmondston’s ‘Home of a Naturalist’ (1888), “This interesting race of supernatural beings is closely allied to the Scandinavian Trolls, but has some very distinctive characteristics of its own. The Trow is not such a mischief-making sprite as the Troll, is more human-like in some respects, and his nature seems cast in a morbid, melancholy mould.”

From there, the article discusses what trows look like, where they live, and the sorts of things they do. There is even a brief but delightful list of trow names culled from Orkney and Shetland folklore.

Jersey Devil Sighting

Yeah, it looks pretty fake. But what photo of a cryptid doesn’t? Though at least the Jersey Devil doesn’t emit the same kind of photo-blurring effect one associates with Bigfoot, for example.

Sunday Inspiration: Goodbye

How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.
—A. A. Milne

Ancient Roman Ghosts: The Least You Need to Know

With Halloween coming up, I thought I’d do a few posts this months on ghosts. Let’s kick things off with the ghosts you’d have been likely to meet in ancient Rome. All of these are the same type of being, namely, the spirits of departed humans. They can be differentiated from one another based on how a person relates to them or possibly the mood they’re in.

Manes

Let’s start with the manes, whose name literally means “the good ones.” This is a pretty generic term for the dead when thought of collectively: those who have gone on to the afterlife. They are always spoken of in the plural.

As the Romans understood it, everyone who dies becomes one of the manes. With respect to their surviving family, however, they might be classed as one of the lares or as di parentes.

Lares and Di Parentes

The lares are almost always mentioned in the plural. They were the ancestral spirits or household gods of the ancient Romans, who borrowed the idea from the Etruscans before them. The Etruscans called these spirits the lassi.

Lares were conceived as the souls of mortals that were somehow attached to their former abodes. They functioned somewhat as “guardian angels” for the surviving members of their families: averting dangers and bestowing blessings. They received acts of worship at a special shrine within the home, where they were especially honored on special days for the family such as a birthday, wedding, anniversary, or departure or return from a journey.

The principal guardian spirit of a household was the lar familiaris, who might perhaps be the first in the line of ancestors (divine or human) or else a spirit that at some point became attached to a particular family to watch over it.

Related to the lares were the di parentes, spirits of one’s immediate ancestors, one’s father or mother, who had passed on. This group might also include the spirit or “genius” of a family member still living on earth.

Lemures or Larvae

The lemures were wandering and vengeful spirits of the dead, also sometimes called larvae, “masks.” They are always described in the plural, but a reconstructed singular Latin form would be *lemur. The primates we know as lemurs were saddled with this name because of their nocturnal habits.

Lemures were associated with fear and darkness. A few days every May were set aside to placate them with a ritual held at midnight, in which the head of each family would toss black beans over his shoulder for the lemures to feast on.

Lares could become lemures if the family didn’t make offerings and prayers in a satisfactory way. So be sure to always leave flowers at the graves of your ancestors, and always have some black bean salsa on hand, just in case!

 

Sunday Inspiration: Seeing Rightly

It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The Hero’s Journey in About a Minute and a Half

If you’ve ever wondered why the protagonists of so many books and movies have similar stories, here’s why:


(H/T: mental_floss)

Folletti: Italian Wind Sprites

Alan Murray-Rust [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Alan Murray-Rust [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons

“Folletto” is  used in Italian as a generic term for any sort of imp, goblin, elf, or the like. There is also, however, a specific kind of Italian faery that is sometimes qualified as a foletto di vento or “wind sprite.” These are actually associated as much with farms as with wind and weather. They are short, agile trickster-figures, able both to fly and to become invisible. They tend to be destructive, mischievous if not outright malevolent.

Folletti  are of ancient origin. They have probably been in the Italian consciousness since Roman times, although there is a bit of controversy over their precise lineage. They seem, in fact, to merge two distinct “portfolios” of activity.

According to some, folletti are a late variation on the Roman di penates, the gods of the pantry thought to guard a household’s food, wine, oil, and other supplies. It is said that folletti may remain on their chosen farm for centuries, protecting it from the worst kind of dangers. They are easily offended, however, so be sure to leave them a bowl of porridge on the front stoop every night if you want to keep the peace.

The other leading theory for the origins of folletti di vento links them to the mythology of the Celts who lived in northern Italy in ancient times. Indeed, folletti are similar in some ways to the spriggans of Cornwall—albeit with a somewhat nicer disposition. Like spriggans, folletti have impressive power over wind and weather. As stated above, they can fly by traveling in whirlwinds. They have also been known to cause rain, snow-storms, and floods, destroying both crops and homes. At other times, they might engage in less harmful activities like curdling milk or tangling horses’ tails.

Folletti sometimes take the form of snakes, hedgehogs, or other creatures with strong connections to the earth. They might use foxes as messengers and spies.

Sunday Inspiration: Story

We are, as a species, addicted to story. Even when the body goes to sleep, the mind stays up all night, telling itself stories.
—Jonathan Gottschall

A Field Guide to Mythological Humanoids

In order to avoid having loads and loads of races in the Into the Wonder series, I’ve devised the following system to evaluate and categorize the entities found in various world mythologies. Mind you, this system won’t work in every fictional universe, so caveat lector!

Contrasted with a run-of-the-mill, plain vanilla human…

  • Does this humanoid display vast magical powers?
    It’s probably a fae (sídhe, elf, jinni, nunnehi, etc.)
    Is it unusually good-looking?
    Definitely a fae!
  • Is this humanoid secretive and crafty?
    It’s probably a dwarf (dvergr, dactyl, etc.).
    Does it live underground?
    Definitely a dwarf!
  • Is this humanoid unusually short?
    It’s probably one of the little people (brownie, kobold, yunwi tsunsdi, etc.).
    Does it try to play tricks on you?
    Could be a little person if the tricks aren’t too mean.
    Does it try to clean your house or do your chores?
    Definitely a little person!
  • Is this humanoid unusually tall?
    It’s probably a giant (slant-eye, stonecoat, ispolini, etc.).
    No other distinctive features like powerful magic or a taste for human flesh?
    Definitely a giant!
  • Does this humanoid want to eat you?
    It’s probably an ogre (Laestrygonian, zimwi, water cannibal, etc.).
    But it’s no bigger than an ordinary human!
    Doesn’t matter, it’s probably an ogre!
  • Does this humanoid want to scare you?
    It’s probably a bogeyman (boggart, hey-hey man, nalusa falaya, etc.).
    There’s no such thing as a bogeyman.
    Tell that to him!
  • Is this humanoid just plain weird?
    It’s probably a troll (jaettertroll, fomor, stallos, etc).
    But I thought trolls were…
    You thought wrong. Trolls are just plain weird.

Sunday Inspiration: Excellence

Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection, we can catch excellence.
—Vince Lombardi

Archives