bevanthomas, to literature
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"Lest the awe should dwell
And turn your frolic to fret,
You shall look on my power at the helping hour,
But then you shall forget!
Lest limbs be reddened and rent,
I spring the trap that is set.
As I loose the snare, you may glimpse me there,
For surely you shall forget!"

  • Kenneth Grahame, "Wind in the Willows"
    🎨 Arthur Rackham

bevanthomas, to poetry
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

"Sing no more ditties, sing no more
Of dumps so dull and heavy.
The fraud of men was ever so
Since summer first was leafy.
Then sigh not so, but let them go,
And be you blithe and bonny,
Converting all your sounds of woe
Into hey, nonny, nonny."

  • William Shakespeare, "Much Ado About Nothing"

bevanthomas, to folklore
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"What wilt thou have, Hans My Hedgehog?"

"Father,” [Hans] said, “bring me bagpipes, then go to the forge and get the rooster shod, and then I will ride away, and never come back."

The father was delighted that he was going to be rid of [Hans].

  • The Brothers Grimm, "Grimms' Fairy Tales"

bevanthomas, to literature
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"The snow lay thin and apologetic over the world. That wide grey sweep was the lawn, with the straggling trees of the orchard still dark beyond.... All the broad sky was grey, full of more snow that refused to fall. There was no colour anywhere."

  • Susan Cooper, "The Dark Is Rising"

bevanthomas, to folklore
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In the Middle Ages, many Christian Scandinavians believed that the Norse gods had actually been humans from Troy who had fled their burning city and immigrated to Scandinavia, where they had used magic to make the locals believe that they were gods.

bevanthomas, to folklore
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To drink from the Well of Wisdom, the Norse god Odin had to give one of his eyes to Mimir, the Well's guardian. In some versions, this is simply a general sacrifice, but in others it's a trade - the eye gives Mimir Odin's knowledge just as the drink gives Odin Mimir's.
🎨 Emil Doepler

bevanthomas, to folklore
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The Welsh hero Lleu was cursed by his mother to never have a human wife, so the wizard Gwydion used flowers from the oak, broom, and meadowsweet to create a wife for Lleu called Blodeuwedd ("Flower-Faced"). However, Blodeuwedd fell in love with another man....
🎨 Jenny Dolfen

bevanthomas, to 13thFloor
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Sometimes C. S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia feature walking trees and other times feature dryads. As the two never interact with each other, it's unclear what their relationship is or if they're actually the same species. However, the art depicts them as very different. Possibly Narnian walking trees are shapeshifted dryads.
🎨 Pauline Baynes

bevanthomas, to literature
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

"No beast so fierce but knows some touch of pity."

"But I know none, and therefore am no beast."

-William Shakespeare, "Richard III" (Act 1, Scene 2)

bevanthomas, (edited ) to folklore
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In Welsh folklore, the youth Culhwch requests that his uncle, King Arthur, help him find the maiden Olwen but first cut Culhwch's hair. A man's first adult haircut was an important rite of passage among the ancient Welsh, often performed by a respected male relative.
🎨 Alfred Frederick

bevanthomas, to literature
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"Scientific people," proceeded the Time Traveller, after the pause required for the proper assimilation of this, "know very well that Time is only a kind of Space.... That line, therefore, we must conclude, was along the Time Dimension."

  • H. G. Wells, "The Time Machine"

bevanthomas, (edited ) to fantasy
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"We tend to think about non-human intelligences in two distinct categories which we label 'scientific' and 'supernatural.' ... But the very moment we are compelled to recognize a creature in either class as real, the distinction begins to get blurred."

  • C.S. Lewis, "Perelandra"
    🎨 Matthäus Merian

bevanthomas, to 13thFloor
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Welsh folk saying: "Guinevere, daughter of Ogrfan the Giant / Bad when little, worse when great."

Was her father simply a tall man and Guinevere got worse-tempered as she got older, or did King Arthur's wife have giant blood and grew in size when angry?

🎨 Howard Pyle

bevanthomas, to folklore
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When Gawain, King Arthur's nephew, chopped the head off the Green Knight at New Year's as part of a "game," the Green Knight picked up his head and told Gawain to meet him next New Year's to get his own head chopped off. Many scholars have debated this symbolism.

bevanthomas, to folklore
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

The Irish hero Cú Chulainn suffered from the ríastrad, a battle frenzy in which his body transformed, such as one eye getting sucked into his head while the other dangled down his cheek, his feet facing backwards, or the skin pulled back from his lips and cheeks.
🎨 Massimo Belardinelli

bevanthomas, to literature
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

Though in Shakespeare, Cordelia dies before her father King Lear, in the original British legend she outlives him and becomes Britain's ruler. Cordelia is a warrior queen, leading armies. Sadly, she is overthrown by her two nephews, who resent being ruled by a woman.

bevanthomas, to 13thFloor
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The al-mi'raj from medieval Arabic literature resembles a yellow hare with a black horn. It's so fierce that most other animals flee from it. The inhabitants of an island in the Indian Ocean gave Alexander the Great an al-mi'raj to repay him for slaying a dragon.

bevanthomas, (edited ) to literature
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"He that hath a beard is more than a youth, and he that hath no beard is less than a man; and he that is more than a youth is not for me, and he that is less than a man, I am not for him."

  • William Shakespeare, "Much Ado about Nothing" (Act 2, Scene 1)

bevanthomas, to 13thFloor
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"When they got home, the Rat made a bright fire in the parlour, and planted the Mole in an armchair in front of it, having fetched down a dressing gown and slippers for him, and told him river stories till suppertime."

  • Kenneth Grahame, "The Wind in the Willows"
    🎨 E. H. Shepard

bevanthomas, (edited ) to 13thFloor
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

"I felt myself mysteriously drawn towards him.... I'll try a pagan friend since Christian kindness has proved but hollow courtesy.... [He asked] whether we were again to be bedfellows. I told him yes, whereat I thought he looked pleased."

  • Herman Melville, "Moby Dick"
    🎨 Rockwell Kent

bevanthomas, to 13thFloor
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In Sinbad's fifth voyage in the "Arabian Nights," he discovers the City of the Apes, whose inhabitants spend each night in boats off-shore while their town is abandoned to man-eating apes. Sinbad convinces these apes to pluck fruit for him, which he then sells, recouping his fortune.

bevanthomas, (edited ) to 13thFloor
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

Ja'far ibn Yahya was historically vizier of the caliph Harun al-Rashid, famous as a patron of science. He's a cunning hero in several Arabian Nights tales, though modern media ironically often uses his name for evil sorcerers, such as the one in Disney's "Aladdin."
🎨 Abul Hasan Ghaffari

bevanthomas, to literature
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

"My birthday began with the water birds
And the birds of the winged trees flying my name
Above the farms and the white horses.
And I rose in rainy autumn,
And walked abroad in a shower of all my days."

  • Dylan Thomas, "A Poem in October"

bevanthomas, (edited ) to cymru
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

"Though thou get this, there is yet that which thou wilt not get. It is not possible to hunt the boar Trwyth without Gwyn, the son of Nudd, whom God has placed over all the devils in Annwn, lest they should destroy the present race."

  • "Culhwch & Olwen" (Welsh legend)

bevanthomas, to random
@bevanthomas@mstdn.ca avatar

Many of the prophecies of the British mystic Myrddin Wyllt (the inspiration for Merlin) are monologs told to his only friend - a wild piglet he fed and befriended while living in the wilderness. Geoffrey of Monmouth changed the piglet to a wolf when he wrote Myrddin's biography.

bevanthomas,
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