Transfixus Sed Non Mortuus

Here I Stand, Pierced and Transfixed

Browsing Posts tagged fairy tales

(This fairy tale is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License)

There once was a young girl by the name of Myriad. She was a wonderful wonder to behold with shimmering red hair that sparkled like hot coals of a cooling fire. Blue were her eyes, and oh, so radiant a blue were her eyes that a glance from her could bring light to the darkest heart and was a balm for the most forlorn soul. She was the youngest of twenty children, and she herself was a shepherdess at the edge of the Great Forest.

When she was a little girl, she had fallen into the lair of Will O’ Wisp and had made a friend of that ghastly creature. That alone is a great proof of her amazing abilities to bring light where there is dark.

This particular instance I am about to relate happened when she had seen twelve summers, and at that time, it was a fine fall in the Great Forest. The leaves of the trees had turned a thousand shades of orange, red, brown, and yellow. Some of the leaves had even fallen to the ground below, draping the forest floor in a thousand pretty colors. Seeing all this, Myriad decided to go for a walk to view all the splendid colors as soon as her chores were done.

She got the sheep in the pen and was about to head out when her father, the ever-loving man that he was, told her to bring a shawl in case the air cooled quickly (as it often does in the great forest). She ran back into the cottage, grabbed her shawl, and off she trod into the forest.

She admired how the sun shimmered among the reds and yellows. The light was broken into tiny pinpoints of light as it was filtered through the boughs and leaves above her. Feeling quite merry, she began to hum a little tune that was fresh in her mind. She had traveled along in this manner for only short while before she came upon the ogre of Gallowpeak.

For those who don’t know, the ogre of Gallowpeak was one of the most ornery and spiteful creatures one could meet in all the Great Forest! To make matters worse, as soon as the ogre set his eyes upon poor Myriad, a tiny piece of his heart that was still left for loving fell in love with Myriad! Oh, imagine a creature that had lived for hundreds of years falling in love with a girl not yet thirteen! Of course, the ogre of Gallowpeak had no shame or honor.

Irregardless of the impropriety of such a thing, the ogre cast a hard eye upon her and demanded that she be his bride that very day. Myriad looked up at the powerful creature who could toss her like a rag doll from one end of the forest to the other if he so chose. But aside from being a gentle and beautiful soul, Myriad also had a strong bit of wit on which to rely. In truth, wit is often all anyone can rely on when outnumbered or overpowered.

Myriad took stock of the situation and ever so gently, she spoke, “Gentle lord, I have no dowry or trappings for such a thing as a wedding.”

“I care not,” replied the ogre.

“Well, you must understand that it is the law of the land that all my older sisters be married before I. We cannot have any spinsters in my family.”

“I care not for your laws or your family. I care for you alone,” the ogre boomed.

Myriad replied, “Then if you care for me, then give me a fortnight to prepare for a wedding.”

At this, she had the ogre. For on one hand, he wanted Myriad to love him, but on the other hand, he wanted her for his wife that very day. He decided on a compromise of seven days. At the end of seven days, she would be at the top of Gallowpeak mountain for the marriage, or the ogre would come and find her. He had said the word “find” with a tremor of ominousness in his voice, and Myriad did not want to know what he would do when he “found” her. One thing that she did know was that she had to find some way of stopping the wedding.

Myriad ran home and told her father what had happened. The father knew that even if he should gather a hundred men, that would not be enough to fight such a one as the ogre of Gallowpeak. Myriad, for her part did not know what to do either. She had been able to postpone the wedding, but she knew that unless she left the Great Forest and never returned, the ogre would find her. Yet, even if she did leave, then his anger would flow to her family and to the gentle countryside that she had grown to love. That, she could not abide.

At last, she happened upon an idea. As I mentioned before, she had become friends with no other than Will O’ Wisp. She was surprised at herself that she hadn’t thought of it before. Surely the powerful lord of the swamp would have some idea for stopping this marriage!

Immediately, she ran to the domain of Will ‘O Wisp. Once inside his domain, she found him asleep. He awoke with a frightful start at Myriad’s hurried awakening, and though Myriad had grown to love Will ‘O Wisp as a brother, even she was frightened at his unearthly waking. Though she didn’t show it, she grew even more frightened after she told him her sorry tale, for his anger could barely be contained. The baleful orange eyes of Will O’ Wisp were filled with an unearthly fire, and his thin lips were set in snarl after snarl as she relayed her tale of woe.

When Myriad completed her story, Will O’ Wisp stood there towering over her, shaking in anger. At last, Will O’ Wisp spoke, “I will rend him limb from limb. I will chop him in a thousand pieces with my swamp axe, and scatter him over the Ocean of the East. I will…”, but Myriad stopped him in mid-sentence.

She cried, “Oh, you mustn’t! I have no love for Gallowpeak, but I cannot have him destroyed on my account!”

At that, Will O’ Wisp looked shocked and stared at Myriad for a long while. Then, he laughed his cold, strange laugh. “There are things inside you that I will never understand,” he replied. “If that is what you wish, than I shall acquiesce. What would you have me do?”

“I just don’t want to marry him. That’s all. I wish him no ill will.” Myriad replied.

Will O’ Wisp stood there thoughtfully for a long moment. Perhaps he stood there for two long moments. While he was doing so, Myriad put her shawl over her head. At that, old Will O’ Wisp remembered something he hadn’t thought in many a year. An old witch of the grey shawl had told him a secret that he had kept for a long time.

“There is an old saying that if you can grab an ogre at the knee for seconds three times three, he must grant you one request. If it is in his power, he must obey. However, if you loose your hand before those nine seconds are complete, he has power over your name and you must grant him one request, and obey it. I think we both know what he would ask of you should you fail.”

Myriad shuddered. Nevertheless, she plucked up her courage and said, “Then that is what I must do.”

Will O’ Wisp then told her that when she goes up the mountain in seven days’ time, she must walk right up to the ogre as he sits on his stone throne. By gently putting her hand on his knee, he might not notice her plan. He told her that he would disguise himself and be near her to protect her when the time came. He also told her that the ogre of Gallowpeak has a group of spies at his command, and to tell this plan to no one. In fact, she should not visit Will O’ Wisp again till after this whole ordeal was behind her.

In order to fool the ogre, Myriad acted as if she were going to get married. Her mother cleaned up her best dress, and she made sure that her whole family would attend the wedding. Of her plan, she told them nothing. They were sorrowful for her going away, and the ogre’s spies saw this, and indeed, those wretched spies were satisfied that she was preparing for the wedding.

The seventh day came all too soon, and Myriad and her family began the trek up Gallowpeak mountain. There were three tens of people all told, but no one seemed like they wanted to speak. It was a sombre trek indeed. For her part, Myriad was scared that she would fail, so she too was very sombre and quiet. She also was worried because she hadn’t seen Will O’ Wisp at all in that sombre company. At last they reached the giant stone gates of Gallowpeak. The gates swung open and the thirty people went inside.

When Myriad was presented in the hall of Gallowpeak, she took her place next to the ogre. There was a small bench adjacent to his stone throne on which she sat. As soon as she sat down, she reached her hand for the ogre’s knee. The ogre, on seeing this thought that she was seeking to hold his hand.

“Aren’t you the forward one?” he cried. Then he clasped her hand tightly, and called for the guests to take their seats around the hall, and for the entertainment to be brought out. Myriad’s face grew pale as she realized that she might not be able to grab the ogre’s knee without him noticing. A group of dancers came out, and they all performed magnificently. However, in her present condition of consternation, poor Myriad could not enjoy it. Yet, she certainly did pretend she enjoyed it every time the ogre cast his eyes upon her, though every second seemed interminable and her heart thudded in her chest as she thought that her plan would fail.

One of the dancers in the troop stood out for her poise, rhythm, and speed. She was leaping to and fro like a stag. From one end of the hall to the other, she danced. The others soon stopped in amazement. The musicians continued to play, and the dancer whirled and gazed on the ogre all the while. The ogre let loose Myriad’s hand and began to clap along with the music. Myriad’s heart grew light again with a tiny sprig of hope. That sprig of hope bloomed in Myriad’s heart as she let her hand drop to his knee. Her father didn’t know what to think when he saw her on what he thought was such good terms with Gallowpeak. Little did he know the reason for her impropriety.

On seeing Myriad drop her hand, the dancer danced all the faster and more wildly. The ogre paid no attention to the hand that held his knee fast. A few seconds passed, and the dancer made an amazing spin that surprised all there. The ogre was laughing and clapping to the tune’s time as six seconds wore on. At the count of seven, the dancer accidentally slipped and fell. The music jarred to a halt and the hall was silent at the count of eight seconds. At that instant, the ogre glanced down and seeing a hand on his knee, he gave a fearful knowing glance at Myriad and tried to pull it away. But he had seen too late for nine seconds had passed!

The ogre knew that the three times three seconds had passed, and a sharp cry of pain escaped the ogre’s lips and pierced the silent hall with a mournful echo. He lept away from Myriad in one bound as if to run away. But as he tried to take another step, it was as if he hit a large wall, though nothing visible stood in his way. He slowly turned back to Myriad and dejectedly asked, “What is your request?”

“I cannot marry you,” Myriad simply said.

“That is not a request. Ask and I must grant whatever you ask if it be within my power,” the giant replied all the more dejectedly.

At this, Myriad paused to think. She must word her request so that there would be no loopholes for the ogre to cause trouble for her later. At this, the dancer who had danced spectacularly went up to Myriad. She whispered something in Myriad’s ear. At this Myriad smiled.

Myriad said in a loud voice, “My request is that you follow my commands in all things from this moment until the end of your days.”

The ogre hung his ugly head and said, “Your request is granted.”

During this exchange, Myriad’s family had been very confused about everything that was taking place, but when the ogre said those words, the hall echoed with a gasp and then a cheer of twenty and nine voices at once. They didn’t understand how Myriad had done what she had done, but they were ecstatic!

Myriad said, “My first command to you is that if you seek a wife, you find one who has lived at least as long as you have. It is most unseemly for an ogre such as yourself to be traipsing around with a child like me.”

The ogre meekly shook his head, while Myriad’s father nodded sagely in agreement.

Myriad spoke again. “I also command you to practice being kind to everyone. I know that there is much good in you. You must have some higher feelings than you know. Your love for me, though unrequited, is proof of that.”

The ogre again nodded his head.

Myriad spoke a third time. “To show you that I owe you no ill will, I command you to come to my cottage for supper this very evening.”

At this, Myriad’s family gasped again in surprise. There was still much to fear in looking at that giant of an ogre standing before them. Myriad’s father did not nod so sagely as he had at her first command, but if he was displeased, he didn’t show it.

Myriad made sure to speak to the dancer and invite her to dinner as well. After all this, the family strode out of the hall, through the stone gates, and down the mountain with Myriad, the ogre, and the dancer trailing behind. In fact, before the thirty and two reached the cottage, the three stragglers seemed to be on the noble and good terms of friendship.

The dinner that night was a bit tense at first on account of various fears of both the family members and the ogre. The ogre didn’t know how to behave at a dinner table, but Myriad and her siblings were patient teachers of etiquette. For the family’s part, there was still a lot of fear of such a powerful creature in their large, but meager cottage. However, after everyone had eaten, a few songs were sung and some stories were told. Soon, the ogre found something inside him that had never existed before (or if it had existed, it had been a very long time). He found himself feeling feelings of warmth, gratitude, and friendship. He began to sing along with the songs and tell a few yarns of his own. All this warmth and feeling of belonging he had never experienced before, and his ugly face became a little less hard as he began to smile and laugh along with the family.

It came out in the course of the night that the amazing dancer had been none other than Will O’ Wisp. At this, the ogre grew angry for having been fooled, but Will O’ Wisp whispered some things to the ogre that at first made him more agitated, and they whispered together for a while longer until Will O’ Wisp had set the ogre quite at ease. The rest of the evening went by in a blink of a happy eye.

I dare say that once again, young Myriad had made a friend out of someone who heretofore was incapable of such relationships. As the years passed, through Myriad’s gentle guidance, the ogre grew ever more gentle and kind to all around. He took a female ogre to be his queen, and she too became as gentle as Gallowpeak himself. His spies became farmers, blacksmiths, and other tradesmen. His dark and stony mountain became a park of sorts, and people from far and wide would travel to that mountainside and marvel at how it now bloomed with rare and beautiful flowers where only harsh and jagged rocks had once laid claim. It became a destination for picnickers, and all these, the ogre accepted quite gracefully and majestically. Thanks to Myriad, he came to be known as the gentle ogre of Gallowpeak.

So ends the story of how Myriad met the ogre of Gallowspeak.

(This fairy tale is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License)

There is a difference between this world and the world of the Faery, but it is not immediately perceptible. Everything that is here is there, but the things that are there are better than those that are here. All things that are bright are there brighter. There is more gold in the sun and more silver in the moon of that land. There is more scent in the flowers, more savour in the fruit. There is more comeliness in the men and more tenderness in the women. Everything in Faery is better by this one wonderful degree, and it is by this betterness you will that you are there if you should ever happen to get there.
~Irish Fairy Tales by James Stephens

Once, when the sun was far younger than it is today, there lived a little girl whose hair was as a cooling red fire. She had the most laughing eyes of brightest blue. Myriad was her name, and she was the youngest of twenty children borne to a shepherd family at the edge of the Great Forest. Though she was one of twenty children, she was her mother’s favorite and her father often doted on her as if she were the only child.

It so happened on a certain day that a terrible storm blustered in, bringing a dust storm unlike anything the shepherd family had ever seen before or since. It was as if a desert had been picked up and dumped tumbling and bumbling into the Great Forest. In their haste to try to protect the sheep and keep them together, they lost track of little Myriad.

When the storm had passed and the dust had settled, Myriad was nowhere to be found. They called for her in every holler, canyon, and hill. They searched tirelessly for hours and hours, thinking that perhaps their own little Myriad had died. Their mourning filled the vale upon which their house stood and everywhere they went, echoing to the very tops of the mountains.

But lo, their own Myriad was not dead at all. In fact, she was less than a stone’s throw away. For when the winds and dust came a-blowing down upon the vale, she grew afraid and ran from it. In her haste, she hadn’t paid attention and had tripped and fell headlong into a bog. Unbeknownst to her, she had fallen into the land of Will O’ Wisp!

When she awoke, there was no blue sky above. Instead, a dull brownish grey was above her. It was as if she were in a slightly translucent cave, for some light did indeed come through, though it was filtered and murky like the bottom of a lake. She was very confused and unsure of where she was.

Glancing out of the corner of her eye, she saw a figure striding towards her from the right. Tattered were his garments, and his feet were shoeless, though that was not the most interesting thing about him. He had a glow like a flickering candle that enveloped his whole being, and his face was covered in wraps of wide black cloth, leaving two orange-red eyes peering through. His stride was silent, but he seemed to cover far more ground than a normal man, and within a few seconds he had gone from thirty feet away to towering over the little girl.

He stood motionless with his pale and baleful orange eyes seeming to dig deep into Myriad’s consciousness. She was a brave little girl, and simply held his gaze for a moment.

After a few more moments of silence, she asked, “Where am I?”

He responded in a sweeping motion of his long thin arms. “Don’t you know who I am, little girl?” When she shook her head, he said, “I am Will O’ Wisp, the best and oldest trickster the world has ever seen! You’ve entered my domain.”

Myriad didn’t seem bothered by this. With a little curtsey, she said, “My name is Myriad. Pleased to meet you Mr. Wisp.”

Will stared at her for a few moments. Though he was half-phantom, it seems that even he had a soft spot in his heart for the polite and gentle-hearted girl. “Normally when a stranger violates my sacred domain, I do rather unpleasant things to him. In your case, however, I will make an exception…on ONE CONDITION.”

“What condition is that?”

“Whenever you pass this way again, you must stop for tea. To be honest, it gets a bit lonely around here. Even when I lead strangers to my domain, they just don’t know how to be as pleasant as you have been. They’re always a bunch of blubbering fearful dunderheads. I’d rather just kill them outright.” At this, Myriad’s eyes grew wide. Will continued, “Well, it’s not like I kill every single man who crosses my path.”

Myriad exclaimed, “You shouldn’t kill any men!”

Will said, “I have my reputation to keep up! But we digress. Do we have a deal? Will you come see old Will every time you pass by my home?”

Myriad said, “You scare me a little…” But after a long pause, she acquiesced.

So, she said her goodbyes to Will O’ Wisp, and he showed her the exit to his world as well as how to return. Then, Myriad left the bog and headed for home. When she finally reached her home, she found the entire house empty. So, she patiently waited till nightfall, but neither her siblings nor her parents appeared. So, she curled up in her bed and fell fast sleep.

Very early the next morning, she heard voices outside the door. The door slammed open, and one by one, her siblings appeared, followed by her own mother and father. They had been awake for two days relentlessly searching for Myriad, and when Myriad appeared before them, they could not believe their eyes. Such joy has never been seen before that day!

When her family heard her marvelous story, they could not believe it. Nonetheless, Myriad did keep her promise to Will O’ Wisp and visited him whenever she passed that way. They grew to become very good friends, and though no one has ever been able to change his devilish demeanor completely, she was a good influence on him.

And so ends the story of how Myriad met Will O’ Wisp!

(This fairy tale is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License)

So, you want to hear me tell of the great Macrion, my young one?
Well, the best place to start a story like that is at the beginning. So, lay your head back, and listen closely…This is the story of Macrion, the only mortal to ever inhabit a fairy’s body:

It was the year of the “Summer to Remember,” where magic was thick as a lightning storm and it was easy to cross between the otherworld and ours. The harvest was in and it was a good one. Though many people were poor, there was enough wood for the winter. Round about Sahmain, one poor couple gave birth to a child, their firstborn son. He was born extremely strong for his size and with a full head of golden hair. They named him Macrion.

The fairies of the mountain took note of Macrion, and knew this child was special. The king of the fairies at that time was named Carniron. He and his attendants hatched a plan to bring the child to their world and then raise the child as a slave (on account of his strength and beauty). They sent for an ancient fairy who had been banished to a lonely cave many centuries before. This fairy’s name was Colmech, and he had once been high king of all fairies.

Someday, I may tell you Colmech’s sad and lonely story, just know that he was a wise and good fairy. He had a gentle heart towards mortals, but like all fairies, he was a trickster.

Carniron, the king, changed Colmech’s sentence from banishment to “death as a changeling.” Though the king had no right to do this without consulting the high king of the fairies, he had much fairy strength. With all his fairy power, he began to change the withered old Colmech into an exact likeness of the young and beautiful baby Macrion.

When the change had been completed, a large group of trooping fairies bundled old Colmech up, and brought him to the humble abode of the poor couple. They stole into the cottage in the night, and quickly exchanged the sleeping baby Macriron for the fairy baby Colmech.

As soon as the trooping fairies were gone, Colmech began screaming at the top of his lungs. The poor parents rushed to the cribside, and saw what looked to be their own little baby crying and screaming. Once the babe saw that they had come, he stopped immediately. Then, to their own surprise, he spoke to them. “Quickly, you babais, there is only a little time to save your son.”

With only a few words of explanation, the baby Colmech told them that he was not their son, but a fairy likeness of Macrion instead. Then he told them of Carniron, and his plans for their son.

“The only way that your son can be saved from the clutches of Carniron is to have our hearts switched. I shall go into his body taking my sentence of “death by changeling” with me, and he shall go into this one. However, because this body is dying while I speak to you, he may still die if his heart is not strong. But if he lives, he shall be one of the greatest heroes of all the land. You can do nothing, and your son is sure to live in my world if we do nothing, but he shall be a slave to Carniron. The choice is yours. Do you wish to proceed?”

Colmech began to cough and his little body began to quiver and wither, since he was nearing death. The two parents looked at each other, not knowing whether to trust what the changeling had told them. At last, they consented, even though they had never heard of a changeling helping a mortal.

To Macrion’s father, Colmech said, “There is a root of a oak tree which grows thirty paces from your door. The root runs to the north and is raised an inch above the sod. Go quickly and chop out a piece the size of your finger, and bring it back to me.”

To Macrion’s mother, Colmech said, “Boil some water, and then go find the lowest needle of the tall pine just outside your door. Quickly now, for there is but a little time left.”

While they were doing these tasks, Colmech was busy as well. For even though he was like a newborn babe with an unsteady head and fatter cheeks than muscles, he crawled slowly around his crib as if he were looking for something. At last, he found a tiny golden hair from Macrion’s scalp. He clutched it in his fat little fingers, and whispered a strange charm of the Tuatha De.

When Macrion’s father was back with his piece of root and the mother with her pine needle, Colmech told him his plans.

“For your trust in me, I have given a spell of protection for Macrion should he live: Neither arrow, sword, nor fire shall harm him. Neither dances, drink, nor women shall charm him. But he will find happiness and joy in the woods and the water. Never leave him alone with any king’s daughter.

With that, Colmech told them to put the items they had gathered into the boiling pot of water. Clutching tightly to the strand of hair, Colmech whispered some more words over the pot and said aloud, “Dip me in the pot three times, and three times only. No matter what I say, struggle, or try to do, hold tight to me. Then lay me in the crib and cover me with a blanket. Do not remove the blanket till morning.”

They did as was requested of them. After the first dip, the baby struggled fiercely. After the second, he cried aloud in a voice like a wolf. After the third, he was silent and still. They laid him in the crib and waited. There was no movement from beneath the blanket. After what seemed like a very long time, they began to curse themselves, believing that they had been duped by the fairy, and may have killed their own son by drowning him in that pot of water.

As they were struggling to console each other, day broke through the eastern window and shone on the crib. There was a large flash of light, and lo, there was now some movement beneath the covers. They removed the blanket to find their very own Macrion with a smile and happy eyes as only a newborn can have. Macrion was still very sick for a long time on account of the fairy body, but his heart was strong, and as you know, he survived to become one of the greatest heroes of all time.

Some say he was such a great hero on account of his changeling body, others say it was old Colmech’s protection spell. Still others say he was destined for greatness from the beginning, even before the fairies got involved. I don’t know which of these is true, but I do know many stories of Macrion’s great deeds. Perhaps tomorrow, I will tell you another story. But for now, go to sleep and rest easy, my young one.

(This story is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License)