"We don't believe; we fear." Inuit spiritual healer Aua to explorer Knud Rasmussen (some time between 1921-1924).
— A Woman in the Polar Night (1938), by Christiane Ritter, translated by Jane Degras, p. 98.*
— Eve Fisher, Drifts, AHMM (Jan/Feb 2006)
From ghoulies and ghosties
And long-leggedy beasties
And things that go bump in the night,
Good Lord, deliver us!
- Traditional Scots Prayer
Some say that ever 'gainst that season comes
Wherein our Savior's birth is celebrated,
The bird of dawning singeth all night long:
And then, they say, no spirit dare stir abroad;
The nights are wholesome; then no planets strike,
No fairy takes, nor witch hath power to charm,
So hallowed and so gracious is the time.
--Marcellus.
So have I heard and do in part believe it.
--Horatio.
"So says the immortal Shakespeare [Hamlet, act 1, scene 1]; and the truth thereof few nowadays, I hope, will call in question. Grose observes, too, that those born on Christmas Day cannot see spirits; which is another incontrovertible fact.
"What a happiness this must have been seventy or eighty years ago and upwards, to those chosen few who had the good luck to be born on the eve of this festival of all festivals; when the whole earth was so overrun with ghosts, boggles, bloody-bones, spirits, demons, ignis fatui, brownies, bugbears, black dogs, specters, shellycoats, scarecrows, witches, wizards, barguests, Robin-Goodfellows, hags, night-bats, scrags, breaknecks, fantasms, hobgoblins, hobhoulards, boggy-boes, dobbies, hob-thrusts, fetches, kelpies, warlocks, mock-beggars, mum-pokers, Jemmy-burties, urchins, satyrs, pans, fauns, sirens, tritons, centaurs, calcars, nymphs, imps, incubuses, spoorns, men-in-the-oak, hell-wains, fire-drakes, kit-a-can-sticks, Tom-tumblers, melch-dicks, larrs, kitty-witches, hobby-lanthorns, Dick-a-Tuesdays, Elf-fires, Gyl-burnt-tales, knockers, elves, rawheads, Meg-with-the-wads, old-shocks, ouphs, pad-foots, pixies, pictrees, giants, dwarfs, Tom-pokers, tutgots, snapdragons, sprets, spunks, conjurers, thurses, spurns, tantarrabobs, swaithes, tints, tod-lowries, Jack-in-the-Wads, mormos, changelings, redcaps, yeth-hounds, colt-pixies, Tom-thumbs, black-bugs, boggarts, scar-bugs, shag-foals, hodge-pochers, hob-thrushes, bugs, bull-beggars, bygorns, bolls, caddies, bomen, brags, wraiths, waffs, flay-boggarts, fiends, gallytrots, imps, gytrashes, patches, hob-and-lanthorns, gringes, boguests, bonelesses, Peg-powlers, pucks, fays, kidnappers, gallybeggars, hudskins, nickers, madcaps, trolls, robinets, friars' lanthorns, silkies, cauld-lads, death-hearses, goblins, hob-headlesses, bugaboos, kows, or cowes, nickies, nacks [necks], waiths, miffies, buckies, ghouls, sylphs, guests, swarths, freiths, freits, gy-carlins [Gyre-carling], pigmies, chittifaces, nixies, Jinny-burnt-tails, dudmen, hell-hounds, dopple-gangers, boggleboes, bogies, redmen, portunes, grants, hobbits, hobgoblins, brown-men, cowies, dunnies, wirrikows, alholdes, mannikins, follets, korreds, lubberkins, cluricauns, kobolds, leprechauns, kors, mares, korreds, puckles korigans, sylvans, succubuses, blackmen, shadows, banshees, lian-hanshees, clabbernappers, Gabriel-hounds, mawkins, doubles, corpse lights or candles, scrats, mahounds, trows, gnomes, sprites, fates, fiends, sibyls, nicknevins, whitewomen, fairies, thrummy-caps, cutties, and nisses, and apparitions of every shape, make, form, fashion, kind and description, that there was not a village in England that had not its own peculiar ghost.
"Nay, every lone tenement, castle, or mansion-house, which could boast of any antiquity had its bogle, its specter, or its knocker. The churches, churchyards, and crossroads were all haunted. Every green lane had its boulder-stone on which an apparition kept watch at night. Every common had its circle of fairies belonging to it. And there was scarcely a shepherd to be met with who had not seen a spirit!"
The Denham Tracts, edited by James Hardy (SOURCE)**
The earliest depiction of the aurora may have been in Cro-Magnon cave paintings of northern Spain dating to 30,000 BC:
The oldest known written record of the wintertime aurora was in a Chinese legend written around 2600 BC; an autumnal aurora is recorded centuries later, around 2000 BC.
Speaking of the Lights making sound - they do. They really do.

I saw the Northern Lights several years ago in Fairbanks, Alaska. It was on my bucket list and met and exceeded every expectation. I had only seen pictures and I had no idea the lights undulated. I guess I read that somewhere but it really didn't connect until I was there. I long to return there.
ReplyDeleteAlas, no northern lights down here but what a wonderful list of ghouls and goblins!
ReplyDeleteWe have seen the Northern Lights here in South Dakota - and there was a low noise that couldn't be accounted for other than them (we were WAY out in the country, no man made lights at all for miles). Beautiful, just beautiful. Like a curtain rippling in an invisible wind.
ReplyDeleteLove this! "Winter’s a dangerous thing to love. It’s pure and it’s gorgeous and it owns this land. It owns us." As a Canadian, and a 'winter girl' as I like to put it, how could I not? (When you're allergic to bees and wasps, you come to love the safety of winter.) I've seen the sky green with Northern Lights, rippling right over my backyard! (I'm below Toronto, at the 43rd parallel) Lovely post Eve.
ReplyDeleteEve, Melodie took the words right outa my mouth: your passage from "Drifts" is gorgeous. And thanks for the video clip with sound, a thing I never knew about the Northern Lights.
ReplyDeleteI like that quote from "Drifts." I've always been afraid to live in a place where the weather will kill me if the grid goes out - a place it gets extremely cold, or a place it gets extremely hot. Homes in towns as mainstream and well-populated as Burbank, California become quickly uninhabitable in 106, 108 degree weather...the cold is even more insidious as apparently you begin to feel warm and comfortable just as you pass...
ReplyDeleteThank you, Melodie, Liz, and Anna - winter is dangerous. But it has its own beauty. BTW, "Drifts" is one of my favorites of my own writing.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Melodie Cambell. "Drifts is beautiful and Fantastic. I love it. I think it is one of the best things she has ever written. And I am her husbnd. I am Allan Fisher.
DeleteLucky fellow, you! In these horrid times, Allan, I often find myself asking: "I wonder what Eve would say about this." She has an unerring moral compass, even if today it points north. -- Joe
DeleteEve: Has DRIFTS been republished in book form somewhere? I don't have that issue and would love to read it.
ReplyDelete