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THE ELIZABETHAN FAIRIES

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98 APPEARANCE AND CHARACTERISTICS<br />

Issobell Gowdie, familiar with the fairies,<br />

. . . proceidit in hir Confessione, in maner efter following, to wit.<br />

. . . I haid a little horse, and wold say, " HORSE<br />

AND HATTOCK,<br />

IN <strong>THE</strong> DIVELLIS NAME! " And than ve vold flie away, quhair<br />

ve vold, be ewin as strawes wold flie wpon an hie-way. We will<br />

flie lyk strawes quhan we pleas; wild-strawes and corne-strawes<br />

wilbe horses to ws, an ve put thaim betwixt our foot, and say,<br />

HORSE AND HATTOK, IN <strong>THE</strong> DIVELLIS nam! " An quhan any<br />

sies thes strawes in a whirlewind, and doe not sanctifie them selues,<br />

we may shoot them dead at owr pleasour. Any that ar shot be vs,<br />

their sowell will goe to Hevin, bot ther bodies remains with ws,<br />

and will flie as horsis to ws, als small as strawe~.~~~ As late as the last part of the 17th century, according<br />

to Aubrey's Miscellanies, the fairies were still riding<br />

through Scotland preceded by the " noise of a whirl-<br />

wind " and a sound of voices crying " Horse and Hat-<br />

tock! " 14' Even in 1726, the fairy horsemen were heard<br />

in the Manx fields :<br />

As he [a young sailor] was going over a pretty high mountain, he<br />

heard the noise of horses, the hollow of a huntsman, and the finest<br />

horn in the world. . . . but he had not time for much reflection<br />

before they all passed by him, so near that he was able to count<br />

what number there was of them, which he said was thirteen, and<br />

that they were all drest in green, and gallantly mounted. He was<br />

so well pleased with the sight, that he would gladly have follow'd,<br />

could he have kept pace with them; he cross'd the foot-way, how-<br />

ever, that he might see them again, which he did more than once,<br />

and lost not the sound of the horn for some miles. At length, being<br />

arrived at his sister's, he tells her the story, who presently clapped<br />

her hands for joy, that he was come home safe; for, said she, those<br />

you saw were fairies, and 'tis well they did not take you away with<br />

them.<br />

1" Pitcairn, Crim. Trials, Gen. App., pp. 603-604.<br />

149 5th ed., 1890, p. 149.

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