Yeats' FAIRY AND FOLK
TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY
THE TROOPING FAIRIES
The Irish word for fairy is sheehogue [sidheóg],
a diminutive of "shee" in banshee. Fairies are deenee shee [daoine sidhe]
(fairy people).
Who are they? "Fallen angels who were not good enough to be saved, nor bad
enough to be lost," say the peasantry. "The gods of the earth," says the Book of
Armagh. "The gods of pagan Ireland," say the Irish antiquarians, "the Tuatha De
Danān, who, when no longer worshipped and fed with offerings, dwindled away in
the popular imagination, and now are only a few spans high."
And they will tell you, in proof, that the names of fairy chiefs are the
names of old Danān heroes, and the places where they especially gather
together, Danān burying-places, and that the Tuath De Danān used
also to be called the slooa-shee [sheagh sidhe] (the fairy host),
or Marcra shee (the fairy cavalcade).
On the other hand, there is much evidence to prove them fallen angels.
Witness the nature of the creatures, their caprice, their way of being good to
the good and evil to the evil, having every charm but conscience--consistency.
Beings so quickly offended that you must not speak much about them at all, and
never call them anything but the "gentry", or else daoine maithe, which
in English means good people, yet so easily pleased, they will do their best to
keep misfortune away from you, if you leave a little milk for them on the
window-sill over night. On the whole, the popular
belief tells us most about them, telling us how they fell, and yet were not
lost, because their evil was wholly without malice.
Are they "the gods of the earth"? Perhaps! Many poets, and all mystic and
occult writers, in all ages and countries, have declared that behind the visible
are chains on chains of conscious beings, who are not of heaven but of the
earth, who have no inherent form but change according to their whim, or the mind
that sees them. You cannot lift your hand without influencing and being
influenced by hoards. The visible world is merely their skin. In dreams we go
amongst them, and play with them, and combat with them. They are, perhaps, human
souls in the crucible--these creatures of whim.
Do not think the fairies are always little. Everything is capricious about
them, even their size. They seem to take what size or shape pleases them. Their
chief occupations are feasting, fighting, and making love, and playing the most
beautiful music. They have only one industrious person amongst them, the
lepra-caun--the shoemaker. Perhaps they wear their shoes out with
dancing. Near the village of Ballisodare is a little woman who lived amongst
them seven years. When she came home she had no toes--she had danced them
off.
They have three great festivals in the year--May Eve, Midsummer Eve, November
Eve. On May Eve, every seventh year, they fight all round, but mostly on the
"Plain-a-Bawn" (wherever that is), for the harvest, for the best ears of grain
belong to them. An old man told me he saw them fight once; they tore the thatch
off a house in the midst of it all. Had anyone else been near they would merely
have seen a great wind whirling everything into the air as it passed. When the
wind makes the straws and leaves whirl as it passes, that is the fairies, and
the peasantry take off their hats and say, "God bless them".
On Midsummer Eve, when the bonfires are lighted on every hill in honour of
St. John, the fairies are at their gayest, and sometimes steal away beautiful
mortals to be their brides.
On November Eve they are at their gloomiest, for according to the old Gaelic
reckoning, this is the first night of winter. This night they dance with the
ghosts, and the pooka is abroad, and witches make their spells, and girls
set a table with food in the name of the devil, that the fetch of their future
lover may come through the window and eat of the food. After November Eve the
blackberries are no longer wholesome, for the pooka has spoiled them.
When they are angry they paralyse men and cattle with their fairy darts.
When they are gay they sing. Many a poor girl has heard them, and pined away
and died, for love of that singing. Plenty of the old beautiful tunes of Ireland
are only their music, caught up by eavesdroppers. No wise peasant would hum "The
Pretty Girl milking the Cow" near a fairy rath, for they are jealous, and do not
like to hear their songs on clumsy mortal lips. Carolan, the last of the Irish
bards, slept on a rath, and ever after the fairy tunes ran in his head, and made
him the great man he was.
Do they die? Blake saw a fairy's funeral; but in Ireland we say they are
immortal.
 
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![Aran Islanders, J. Synge [1898] (public domain photograph)](irishwmn.jpg) |