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THE ELIZABETHAN FAIRIES

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40 ORIGIN AND NATURE<br />

taile in his breech, eyes like a bason, fanges like a dog, clawes like<br />

a bear, a skinne like a Niger, and a voice roring like a Lion,<br />

whereby we start and are afraid when we hear one cry Bough: and<br />

they have so fraied us with bull-beggers, spirits, witches, urchens,<br />

elves, hags, fairies, satyrs, pans, faunes, sylens, kit with the<br />

cansticke, tritons, centaures, dwarfes, giants, imps, calcars, conjurors,<br />

nymphes, changelings, Incubus, Robin good fellow, the<br />

spoorn, the mare, the man in the oke, the hellwaine, the firedrake,<br />

the puckle, Tom thombe, hob-gobblin, Tom tumbler boneles, and<br />

such other bugs, that we are afraid of our own shad owe^.^^<br />

Among the spirits enumerated in The B~ggbears,~' " the<br />

whyte & red fearye " and " Garret " are to be found,<br />

added by the English adapter and translator of Le<br />

Spiritata of Grazzini to the roll of spirits, both amiable<br />

and ' L yll," of the Italian original. They appear, too, in<br />

the list of wicked spirits in A Mirror for Magistrates,<br />

edition 1578; 69 in The Battle of Alcazar; 60 in A Declaration<br />

of egregious Popish Impostures; 61 in Comus; 62 in<br />

The Faithful Shepherdess; 6S and in Joseph Hall'$<br />

s7 Scot, 1651 ed., p. I 13.<br />

5s Early Plays from the Italian, Bond ed., 1911, 111, 3, p. 117.<br />

59 Haslewood ed., 1815, Vol. 11, p. 121.<br />

60 Geo. Peele, Malone Soc. Rpt., 1907, IV, 2, 1. 1231.<br />

Samuel Harsnet, 1603 ed., p. 134.<br />

62 Milton, Cambridge ed., 1899, 11. 432-437.<br />

63 Fletcher, Darley ed., 1851, I, I<br />

In the plays of Beaumont and Fletcher, with the possible excep-<br />

tion of The Faithful Shepherdess, where the good qualities of the fair-<br />

ies are depicted in most instances, the fairies are always referred to as<br />

beings of the deepest dyed villainy and wickedness.<br />

64 Carmen Funebre Caroli Horni, 1596, Grosart ed., 1879, p. 217,<br />

verse 5 :<br />

" Now shall the wanton Deuils daunce in rings<br />

In euerie mede, and euerie heath hore:<br />

The Eluish Faeries and the Gobelins:

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