The Lady of the Lake eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Lady of the Lake.

The Lady of the Lake eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Lady of the Lake.

345.  All is glistening show.  “No fact respecting Fairy-land seems to be better ascertained than the fantastic and illusory nature of their apparent pleasure and splendour.  It has been already noticed in the former quotations from Dr. Grahame’s entertaining volume, and may be confirmed by the following Highland tradition:—­’A woman, whose new-born child had been conveyed by them into their secret abodes, was also carried thither herself, to remain, however, only until she should suckle her infant.  She one day, during this period, observed the Shi’ichs busily employed in mixing various ingredients in a boiling caldron, and as soon as the composition was prepared, she remarked that they all carefully anointed their eyes with it, laying the remainder aside for future use.  In a moment when they were all absent, she also attempted to anoint her eyes with the precious drug, but had time to apply it to one eye only, when the Daoine Shi’ returned.  But with that eye she was henceforth enabled to see everything as it really passed in their secret abodes; she saw every object, not as she hitherto had done, in deceptive splendour and elegance, but in its genuine colours and form.  The gaudy ornaments of the apartment were reduced to the walls of a gloomy cavern.  Soon after, having discharged her office, she was dismissed to her own home.  Still, however, she retained the faculty of seeing, with her medicated eye, everything that was done, anywhere in her presence, by the deceptive art of the order.  One day, amidst a throng of people, she chanced to observe the Shi’ich, or man of peace, in whose possession she had left her child, though to every other eye invisible.  Prompted by maternal affection, she inadvertently accosted him, and began to inquire after the welfare of her child.  The man of peace, astonished at being thus recognized by one of mortal race, demanded how she had been enabled to discover him.  Awed by the terrible frown of his countenance, she acknowledged what she had done.  He spat in her eye, and extinguished it for ever.’

“It is very remarkable that this story, translated by Dr. Grahame from popular Gaelic tradition, is to be found in the Otia Imperialia of Gervase of Tilbury. [FN #10] A work of great interest might be compiled upon the original of popular fiction, and the transmission of similar tales from age to age, and from country to country.  The mythology of one period would then appear to pass into the romance of the next century, and that into the nursery tale of the subsequent ages.  Such an investigation, while it went greatly to diminish our ideas of the richness of human invention, would also show that these fictions, however wild and childish, possess such charms for the populace as enable them to penetrate into countries unconnected by manners and language, and having no apparent intercourse to afford the means of transmission.  It would carry me far beyond my bounds to produce instances of fable

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The Lady of the Lake from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.