The Fairy Mythology

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Cultural Studies, Customs & Traditions, Folklore & Mythology, Popular Culture
Cover of the book The Fairy Mythology by Thomas Keightley, Thomas Keightley
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Thomas Keightley ISBN: 9786051768182
Publisher: Thomas Keightley Publication: July 9, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Thomas Keightley
ISBN: 9786051768182
Publisher: Thomas Keightley
Publication: July 9, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

We find in most countries a popular belief in different classes of beings distinct from men, and from the higher orders of divinities. These beings are usually believed to inhabit, in the caverns of earth, or the depths of the waters, a region of their own. They generally excel mankind in power and in knowledge, and like them are subject to the inevitable laws of death, though after a more prolonged period of existence.
How these classes were first called into existence it is not easy to say; but if, as some assert, all the ancient systems of heathen religion were devised by philosophers for the instruction of rude tribes by appeals to their senses, we might suppose that the minds which peopled the skies with their thousands and tens of thousands of divinities gave birth also to the inhabitants of the field and flood, and that the numerous tales of their exploits and adventures are the production of poetic fiction or rude invention. It may further be observed, that not unfrequently a change of religious faith has invested with dark and malignant attributes beings once the objects of love, confidence, and veneration.
It is not our intention in the following pages to treat of the awful or lovely deities of Olympus, Valhalla, or MerĂ». Our subject is less aspiring; and we confine ourselves to those beings who are our fellow-inhabitants of earth, whose manners we aim to describe, and whose deeds we propose to record. We write of Fairies, Fays, Elves, aut alio quo nomine gaudent.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

We find in most countries a popular belief in different classes of beings distinct from men, and from the higher orders of divinities. These beings are usually believed to inhabit, in the caverns of earth, or the depths of the waters, a region of their own. They generally excel mankind in power and in knowledge, and like them are subject to the inevitable laws of death, though after a more prolonged period of existence.
How these classes were first called into existence it is not easy to say; but if, as some assert, all the ancient systems of heathen religion were devised by philosophers for the instruction of rude tribes by appeals to their senses, we might suppose that the minds which peopled the skies with their thousands and tens of thousands of divinities gave birth also to the inhabitants of the field and flood, and that the numerous tales of their exploits and adventures are the production of poetic fiction or rude invention. It may further be observed, that not unfrequently a change of religious faith has invested with dark and malignant attributes beings once the objects of love, confidence, and veneration.
It is not our intention in the following pages to treat of the awful or lovely deities of Olympus, Valhalla, or MerĂ». Our subject is less aspiring; and we confine ourselves to those beings who are our fellow-inhabitants of earth, whose manners we aim to describe, and whose deeds we propose to record. We write of Fairies, Fays, Elves, aut alio quo nomine gaudent.

More books from Popular Culture

Cover of the book Pink and Blue by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Belgium - Culture Smart! by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Spezie by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book From Pee-wee to Peregrine: Why Tim Burton Still Matters by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Star Trek The Collectibles by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Death Becomes Them by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Music at the Extremes by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Batman by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book My Ears Are Bent by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Evangelicals and the Arts in Fiction by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Transforming Images by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Nani e Folletti: Folklore e leggenda degli esseri fatati by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Japanese and American Horror by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book Cosa pensano gli americani (e perché sono così diversi da noi) by Thomas Keightley
Cover of the book The New French Couture by Thomas Keightley
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy