Fairy path

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In the folklore of the Celtic cultures a fairy path, ‘passage’, ‘avenue’ or ‘pass’ is a route taken by these supernatural beings, usually in a straight line and between sites of traditional significance, such as fairy forts or raths (a class of circular earthwork dating from the Iron Age), “airy” (eerie) mountains and hills, thorn bushes, springs, lakes, rock outcrops, and Stone Age monuments. Ley lines and spirit paths, such as with corpse roads, have some similarities with these fairy paths. A fairy ring is also a path used by fairies, but in a circle, for dancing, as described by poet W.B.Yeats, "...the fairies dance in a place apart, Shaking their milk-white feet in a ring,..." [1]

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[edit] Fairy paths and dwellings

In Ireland, Brittany and other Celtic lands, there were fairy paths that while being invisible nevertheless had such perceived geographical reality in the minds of the country people that building practices were adapted to ensure they were not obstructed. A significant number of the characteristics of fairy paths are shared in common with ley lines. In Many parts of Britain the round barrows were the traditional homes of the fairies and were avoided by the country folk. Such places were Fairy Toot in Somerset, Elf Howe barrow near Folkton, Yorkshire and a round barrow at Beedon in Berkshire. Cornwall was and is a stronghold of fairy lore and they are said to dance on Carn Gluze, near St Just in Penwith.[2]

[edit] Feng shui

There are similarities between fairy paths and the beliefs underpinning Chinese feng shui landscape divination, in which homes and ancestral tombs had to be protected from straight roads or other linear landscape features, because troublesome spirits traveled along them and would bring bad luck. The goal of feng shui as practiced today is to situate the human built environment on spots with good chi. The "perfect spot" is a location and an axis in time. Some areas are not suitable for human settlement and should be left in their natural state, being potential or actual anima locus.

[edit] The consequences of blocking fairy paths

A Fairy Ring of mushrooms
A Fairy Ring of mushrooms

In Ireland, people who had illnesses or other misfortune, or who suffered poltergeist activity, were said to live in houses that were “in the way” or in a “contrary place”, obstructing a fairy path. An example is that of a family in which four children sickened and died, leaving the doctors baffled. The fifth child sickened and was near death, only to make a sudden and full recovery. The father told the doctor that he had consulted a wise woman who informed him that his new house extension blocked a fairy path between two fairy forts, whereupon he demolished it and his child became healthy again.[3]

Fairies of the meadow, by Nils Blommér
Fairies of the meadow, by Nils Blommér

An example of this fairy path straightness is provided by an account concerning a croft (now a cattle shed) at Knockeencreen, Brosna, County Kerry. In an interview in the 1980s, the last human occupant told of the troubles his grandfather had experienced there, with his cattle periodically and inexplicably dying. The front door is exactly opposite the back door. The grandfather was informed by a passing gypsy that the dwelling stands on a fairy path running between two hills. The gypsy advised the grandfather to keep the doors slightly ajar at night to allow the fairies free passage. The advice was heeded and the problem ceased. It so happens that the building is indeed on a straight line drawn between two local hilltops, and is, moreover, at one end of a long, straight track.[4][5]

The fairies processed from Rath Ringlestown in Ireland every night and parents brought their children in before the fairies were due to pass. The path passed round several bushes which were left undisturbed by the locals. A man who cut down one bush could not get it to burn and sickened and died within a short while as a supposed consequence of his actions. The route also passed between two mud-wall houses and a man who was out at the wrong time was found dead; the fairies shaving taken him for getting in the way of the procession.[6] A traditional folk tale from the Southern Shore of Newfoundland, Canada, concerns a young married couple who discovered that they had built their house on a path used by the good people, and the steps that couple take to rid themselves of fairy mischief. It seems therefore that the fairy folk had emigrated together with their human counterparts or had been in Canada from time immemorial.[7]

Home-owners have knocked corners from houses because the corner blocked the fairy path,[8] and cottages have been built with the front and back doors in line, so that the owners could, in need, leave them both open and let the fairies troop through all night.[9]

It was believed that a house built on a fairy path would suffer from midnight noises or supernatural manifestations. Ill-luck in the form of sick farm animals or personal illness could be the result and one remedy was to build small fires in several places along the fairy path, using fire from the blessed fire of Saint John's Eve that was lit every year at sunset on 23 June.[10]

If you are Peter Pan, you don't need to worry about blocking a fairy path in Neverland. In the novel Peter and Wendy, the version of James Barrie's famous Peter Pan stories that was published in 1911, after Peter Pan and the lost boys built a house for Wendy on Neverland, he stays up late that night to guard her from the pirates, but then the story says: "After a time he fell asleep, and some unsteady fairies had to climb over him on their way home. Any of the other boys obstructing the fairy path at night they would have mischiefed, but they just tweaked Peter's nose and passed on." [11]

[edit] Detecting fairy paths and overcoming their influence

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Some builders used to use a technique to see if the planned construction was going to be on a fairy path; they would map out the floor plan in the earth and place a pile of stones at each corner and leave it overnight, if the stones were undisturbed it was safe to build, otherwise the work would not continue. There is another theme that states if one's house is on a fairy path, one must leave the doors and windows open at night, front and back, to allow fairies to pass through. Builders were also advised against using white quartz in their stonework, as it is said to be a fairy stone.[12]

As stated, Gypsies or 'wise women' were thought to be able to advise home builders of the existence of fairy paths, however in most folk-tales they are only consulted after the event and as a result of disturbances, bad luck, etc.

A building placed on a fairy path would be demolished by the fairly folk, at least twice, often remaining standing however on the third attempt.[13]

[edit] Walking along fairy paths

Paths that the fairies travel along are usually stated as being best avoided, however they also had certain benefits to humans, such as with 'trods' in the West of England. These are a straight-line fairy path in the grass of a field with a different shade of green to the rest. People with rheumatism sought relief by walking along these tracks, though animals avoid them. Great danger was still very much associated with using these paths at times when a supernatural procession might be using them. Fairy rings have certain elements in common with this phenomenon and were seen as 'gateways' into the realm of supernatural beings.[14]

The Tylwyth teg of Wales have paths on which it is death for a mortal to walk.[15]

The Breton Ankou, who is king of the dead, and his subjects have their own particular paths along which they process.[16]

[edit] Being 'pixie led'

Many tales exist of mischievous spirits of the dead or other supernatural beings such as pixies attempting to lead travelers astray so that the hapless traveler becomes hopelessly lost, even when they are on familiar territory.[17][12] In Devon folklore this is known as being 'pixie led.'

[edit] Underwater fairy paths

Irish fairy paths also exist under water, reminiscent of causeways in marshes at sacred sites and those to crannogs and other islands. These paths, only used by the fairy folk, ran from one island to another and were paved with coral, making them and their travelers visible to fishermen in their boats above.[18]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Skelton, Robin (1990). Earth, Air, Fire, Water. Arkana, Penguin Group, p 181. 
  2. ^ Bord, Janet & Colin (1973) Mysterious Britain. Pub. Garnstone Press. ISBN 0-85511-180-1 P. 70.
  3. ^ Bord, Janet and Colin (1976). The Secret Country. Pub. Paul Elek, London. ISBN 0-236-40048-7. P. 38.
  4. ^ Where the Leylines led
  5. ^ Wentz, W. Y. (1911). The Fairy-faith in Celtic Countries. Reprinted. Colin Smythe (1981). ISBN 0-901072-51-8. P. 33.
  6. ^ Wentz, W. Y. (1911). The Fairy-faith in Celtic Countries. Reprinted. Colin Smythe (1981). ISBN 0-901072-51-8. P. 33.
  7. ^ Newfoudland Fairy Path.
  8. ^ Silver, Carole B. (1999) Strange and Secret Peoples: Fairies and Victorian Consciousness. Oxford University Press. p.47 ISBN 0-19-512100-6
  9. ^ Lenihan, Eddie and Green, Carolyn Eve (2004) Meeting The Other Crowd: The Fairy Stories of Hidden Ireland. p.146-7 ISBN 1-58542-206-1
  10. ^ Bord, Janet and Colin (1976). The Secret Country. Pub. Paul Elek, London. ISBN 0-236-40048-7. P. 26 - 27.
  11. ^ J.M.Barrie, Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens and Peter and Wendy, Oxford Press, 1999, page 132
  12. ^ a b Maljonic's Fairy Paths
  13. ^ Wentz, W. Y. (1911). The Fairy-faith in Celtic Countries. Reprinted. Colin Smythe (1981). ISBN 0-901072-51-8. P. 67.
  14. ^ Pennick, Nigel (1996). Celtic Sacred Landscapes. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-01666-6. P. 132.
  15. ^ Wentz, W. Y. (1911). The Fairy-faith in Celtic Countries. Reprinted. Colin Smythe (1981). ISBN 0-901072-51-8. P. 150.
  16. ^ Wentz, W. Y. (1911). The Fairy-faith in Celtic Countries. Reprinted. Colin Smythe (1981). ISBN 0-901072-51-8. P. 218.
  17. ^ Coxhead, J. R. W. (1959). Devon Traditions and Fairy-tales. Pub. Raleigh Press. P. 50
  18. ^ Pennick, Nigel (1996). Celtic Sacred Landscapes. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-01666-6. P. 133.

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