VISIT TO
FAIRY LAND.
So, then, you want to hear some stories
about the fairies, do you, little girl? Well,
I must humor you a little, I suppose; though I should
not wonder if my fairy stories were somewhat different
from those you have heard before. But have you
the least idea that there were ever such beings as
the fairies in the world? If you have, let me
tell you, you are quite mistaken. The stories
that have been told about these fairy people are none
of them worthy of belief, though it must be admitted
that millions have believed them. Many of the
men and women who pretended to have seen the fairies,
and who related the stories in the first place, believed
all they said, I have no doubt. But they were
generally ignorant persons, very superstitious, and
easily imposed upon. There are, it is true, invisible
inhabitants in this world. Those who believe the
Bible, can hardly doubt the presence of angels among
us. But angels, as they are represented in the
Scriptures, are a very different class of spirits from
those called fairies, if we may credit what has been
said of this singular race of beings, by those who
pretend to have seen them in fairy land.
Not a great while ago, the people
of England and Scotland were very superstitious.
It is not two centuries since our good forefathers
on that island were burning witches by scores.
At that time, a great many believed in the existence
of fairies, or elves. I have been at some pains
to find out at what time this fairy superstition first
appeared among the Britons. But it seems not
very easy to determine. One thing is certain,
that the belief in some kind of spirits—either
the same with the fairies, under a different name,
or very nearly related to them—dates back
to a very early period in British history—earlier,
probably, than the Christian era.
The fairies are always represented
as very small and very beautiful—generally,
as perfect miniatures of the human form. The color
of their dress is uniformly pure green. It would
seem, according to the accounts of these people, some
five or six hundred years ago, that they were kind,
amiable, excellent neighbors. Indeed, one of the
names they went by was, “the Good Neighbors,”
and another was, “the Men of Peace.”
Still, they used to do some mischief in those days,
if we may believe their historians, who tell us that
the fairies, once in a while, visited the abodes of
men, and carried away captives into their invisible
haunts, under ground. The reason for this kidnapping
of human beings was said to be, that the fairies were
obliged occasionally to pay a tribute of this kind
to their king or queen.
The fairies were not always cunning
enough to keep their victims, after they had caught
them. Sometimes people would come back from fairy
land, and tell all about what they had seen there.
You might suppose that a great deal would be learned
of these strange, invisible creatures, from the men
and women who had been with them and escaped.
Well, so there was. But the worst of it was,
the stories did not hang together very well; and there
were about as many different and contradictory accounts
of fairydom as there were different individuals who
pretended to have made a visit to that country.
However, all seemed to agree that fairy land was a
very merry country. The people there were great
lovers of fun, according to the general testimony,
and used to dance a great deal by moonlight, in the
open air. They are engaged in one of their dances,
you see, in the engraving. Every evening, as
soon as the moon rose, they assembled at some convenient
place, took hold of each other’s hands, usually
in a ring, I think, and then they had a right merry
time of it, you may depend. It did not seem to
make any difference, whether the spot selected for
the dance was on the land or on the sea. Indeed,
they could dance pretty well in the air, without any
thing to stand upon. The assemblies held in the
palaces of the king and queen of the fairies, were,
at times, splendid in the extreme. No poet, in
his most lofty flights of fancy, ever dreamed of such
beauty and splendor as were exhibited at the fairy
court. They rode on milk-white steeds. Their
dresses were of brilliant green, and were rich beyond
conception. When they mingled in the dance, or
moved in procession among the shady groves, or over
the delightful meadows, covered with the fairest of
flowers, music, such as mortal lips cannot utter, floated
on the breeze.
However, these splendors, astonishing
as they were, all vanished in a moment, whenever the
eye of any one gifted with the power of spiritual
communion was turned upon them. Then their treasures
of gold and silver became slate-stones, and their
stately halls were turned into damp caverns.
They themselves, instead of being the beautiful creatures
they were before, became ugly as a hedge-fence.
The king of fairy land was called
Oberon—the queen, Titania.
The king used to wear a crown of jewels on his head,
and he always carried a horn in his hand, which set
every body around him to dancing, whenever he blew
it. Ben Jonson, a poet who flourished a great
many years ago, speaks very respectfully of fairies
and elves, in his poems. In describing the haunts
of his “Sad Shepherd,” he says—
“There, in the stocks of trees,
white fays do dwell,
And span-long elves that dance about
a pool.”
Shakspeare, too, in several of his
plays, makes us quite familiar with the fairy people.
Shakspeare, you are aware, wrote in the time of Elizabeth,
and as late as that period, there were thousands in
England and Scotland in whose creed the existence
of such a race of spirits was a very important article.
It was not long, however, after this, before the superstition
about the fairies—which, at the worst, was
a very foolish affair—began to decline.
But that decline brought a dark night to thousands
of poor, innocent men and women; for then came the
era of witchcraft, and persons of every rank, convicted
of this imaginary crime, were hurried to the scaffold
or the stake.
In the beginning of the seventeenth
century, Dr. Corbett, Bishop of Oxford and Norwich,
wrote a very humorous satire on the fairy superstition,
called “The Fairies’ Farewell, a proper
new ballad to be sung or whistled to the tune of Meadow
Brow.” Perhaps I cannot better take leave
of these very curious imaginary people, than to employ
a couple of stanzas from the bishop’s playful
ballad:
“Witness those rings and roundelays
Of theirs, which yet
remain,
Were footed in Queen Mary’s
days,
On many a grassy plain;
But since of late Elizabeth,
And later James came
in,
They never danced on any heath,
As when the time hath
been.
“By which we note the fairies
Were of the old profession;
Their songs were Ave Marias,
Their dances were processions;
But now, alas! they all are dead,
Or gone beyond the seas,
Or further for religion fled,
Or else they take their ease.”