A two-fer day––female and male water sprites. Though each one can appear in either gender, generally, Korrigans are female and Kelpies are male. Korrigans originated in Breton and are beautiful women with long hair, red flashing eyes, and a penchant for killing their lovers. They may be druidesses killed by Christians because they bear a particular hatred for priests and churches. Their main function is to lure men to their deaths. They can predict the future, change shape, and occasionally […]
Monthly Archives: April 2016
Purported to be the thirteenth child of witchy Mother Leeds, the Jersey Devil emerged as a bouncing kangaroo-shaped, bat-winged baby in 1735 in the in the Leeds Point section of what is now Atlantic County in New Jersey. Before flying up the chimney, the critter killed the midwife. Then it flew circles around the town and finally disappeared into the forest. That’s one version of the legend. Sightings have been reported since then with a lull after a clergyman […]
It’s Monday and what better way to start the workweek than to remind you how much worse things could be. If you lived in Mexico in the fifteenth century, you had about a 1 in 5 chance of winding up as a human sacrifice. Your horrible job may be killing you, but at least it will do it slowly over twenty or thirty years. So you’ve got that going for you. The Aztecs were a fun loving group who enjoyed […]
Hanoko san is a Japanese toilet ghost—one of many such specters, it seems, who haunt bathrooms all around the world. Back in the day, the only creatures lurking in the school bathroom were people skipping class or smoking or both. We were a rowdy lot, but not supernatural in any way. If your elementary school has a girl’s room on the third floor, go to the third stall, and knock three times. If you ask, “are you there, Hanoko san?” […]
The word gargoyle comes from the French word gargouille which means gullet or to gargle. In architecture, gargoyles are grotesque ornaments, which serve as waterspouts. The term gargoyle in architecture refers to any such device—no matter what it depicts. Strictly speaking, the term grotesque in architecture refers to ornaments, which do not serve as water spouts. Gargoyles are supposed to protect the building from evil spirits. In a legend dating back to the 7th century, a nasty dragon named La Gargouille lived […]
A two-fer Day with stories from Celtic and Native America (Iroquois) cultures. Fairy Dogs The Scottish Cu’ Sith—Fairy Dogs– are harbingers of death. They usually remain silent but sometimes bay three times so loudly they can be heard for miles. They are the size of bull calves with paws as big as a man’s hand. They may steal nursing mothers away and take them to the fairy mound or they may transport souls of the dead to the afterlife—whether they […]