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THE ELIZABETHAN FAIRIES

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182 <strong>THE</strong> <strong>FAIRIES</strong> OF SHAKESPEARE<br />

mischievous and dangerous beings they were believed to<br />

be, with occasional and erratic lapses into beneficence<br />

and the bestowal of good fortune; instead, they become,<br />

in actuality, the Good Neighbours which, in flattery and<br />

in fear, they had been dubbed by mortals trembling be-<br />

fore the idea of their advent. Every aspect of their<br />

wickedness and every sign of their devilish connection is<br />

omitted from their portrait,42 and the period of their<br />

earthly materialization is devoted to making the world<br />

happier and more beautiful,43 without any of the usual<br />

impositions of taboos and without any of the usual de-<br />

mand for worship or payment.<br />

They do not appear from underground or from hell to<br />

inspire fear. They travel from the farthest steppe of<br />

India 44 to insure for the king of Athens and his bride<br />

joy and prosperity, a future of faithful love and fortunate<br />

Notwithstanding their past of spitefulness and ma-<br />

licious meddling, they cannot now bear the slightest dis-<br />

turbance of tfie peace, but, at the sound of vituperation<br />

between Oberon and Titania,<br />

imparted an entire new cast of character to the beings whom he has<br />

evoked from its bosom, purposely omitting the darker shades of their<br />

character, and, whilst throwing round them a flood of light, playful,<br />

yet exquisitely soft and tender, endowing them with the moral at-<br />

tributes of purity and benevolence. In fact, he not only dismisses al-<br />

together the fairies of a malignant nature, but clothes the milder yet<br />

mixed tribe of his predecessors with a more fascinating sportiveness,<br />

and with a much larger share of unalloyed goodness. . . .<br />

This love of virtue, and abhorrence of sin, were, as attributes of the<br />

Fairies, in a great measure, if not altogether, the gifts of Shakspeare."<br />

Drake, Shak. and His Times, pp. 502 and 505.<br />

42 111, 2, 1. 388.<br />

43 v, 2, 1. 30.<br />

44 11, 2, 1. 10.<br />

46 11, 2, 1. 14.

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