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Fairies and Wizards

Webpages concerning "Fairies and Wizards"

A magical, musical, fantasy journey with the firefly to meet fairies, dragons, tribbles, pixies, with stories and poems to delight the youngest and oldest visitor
http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/magic.html
Keywords:
firefly, Ontario, Canadian, Ottawa, firefly productions, kids, autumn, leaves, magic, games, stories, tribbles, wizard, puzzles, shadow, fairies, pixies, dragons, music, fantasy, children

http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/magic.html

THE TOUCH OF KINDNESS is the definitive tale of the Tooth Fairy in story and song. Liz Smith's column called the score "delicious." Children and parents will enjoy the site together. Don't miss it!
http://www.thetouchofkindness.com/
Keywords:
tooth, fairy, child, children, family, teeth, story, book, legend, entertainment, kindness, touch, music, musical

http://www.thetouchofkindness.com/

A magical, musical, fantasy journey with the firefly to meet fairies, dragons, tribbles, pixies, with stories and poems to delight the youngest and oldest visitor
http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/scandal.html
Keywords:
firefly, wizard, games, puzzles, java, magic, shadow, fairies, pixies, dragons, music, fantasy, children

http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/scandal.html

The wizard joins the firefly in a musical journey through ages past to visit with giants, dragons, hobbits, fairies, and creatures from other realms. A family-friendly site for children of all ages.
http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/fairies2.html
Keywords:
The Wandering Wizard, wiz, fairies, fey, giants, dragons, children, kids, stories, poetry, music, flying carpet, flying, birds, magic

http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/fairies2.html

Fairy poems and pictures
http://ah_coo.tripod.com/magic_fairies.htm
Keywords:
nursery rhymes, bedtimes stories, lullabies, Precious Moments, Dreamsicles, fairies, toys, Amazon.com

http://ah_coo.tripod.com/magic_fairies.htm

http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/valley.html
Keywords:
wizard, trolls, creatures, knight, stories, valley, rainbow, magic, children, music, poetry, good, evil

http://members.tripod.com/~f_fly/valley.html

http://members.tripod.com/IdrisO/index.html

http://members.tripod.com/IdrisO/index.html

Award-winning, web-enhanced children's books.
http://www.web-pop.com/totallytrollchooserhtml.html
Keywords:
web-pop, webpop, web pop, readers, web-pop readers, virtual books, e-books, children's books, electronic books, internet books, internet children books, electronic children's books, reading, reading activities, online reading, Stephen Cosgrove, Robin James, Serendipity, value tales, value stories, fantasy stories, stories, books, illustrated children's books, picture books, author, creative, ...

http://www.web-pop.com/totallytrollchooserhtml.html

http://www.short2000.com/oradera/00.html

http://www.short2000.com/oradera/00.html

http://www.enchantedkingdom.co.uk/Stories/DalianTheDwarf.htm

http://www.enchantedkingdom.co.uk/Stories/DalianTheDwarf.htm

http://www.enchantedkingdom.co.uk/Stories/DragonsGreed.htm

http://www.enchantedkingdom.co.uk/Stories/DragonsGreed.htm

http://www.meddybemps.com/10.1.html

http://www.meddybemps.com/10.1.html

http://www.geocities.com/johnny_crowseed/elf/elf.html

http://www.geocities.com/johnny_crowseed/elf/elf.html

http://the-office.com/bedtime-story/crystal.htm

http://the-office.com/bedtime-story/crystal.htm

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new?id=LanYell&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=16&division=div1

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new?id=LanYell&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=16&division=div1

http://hazel.forest.net/whootie/stories/france_fairies.html

http://hazel.forest.net/whootie/stories/france_fairies.html

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new?id=LanYell&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=20&division=div1

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new?id=LanYell&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=20&division=div1

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Wikipedia-Article "Fairies"

For other uses, see fairy (disambiguation).
Take the Fair Face of Woman... by Sophie Anderson
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Take the Fair Face of Woman... by Sophie Anderson

A fairy is a spirit (supernatural being) found in the legends, folklore, and mythology of many cultures. They are generally humanoid in form, though of a higher, spiritual nature and so possessed of preternatural abilities. They are often depicted with wings and an ethereal glow, lithe and beautiful. They are also regarded as aloof, ephemeral, mercurial, puerile and whimsical, among other qualities that place them outside of a human scope and have a tendency to make them associated or confused with other mythological creatures.

Contents

Etymology

The words fay and faerie came to English from French and, ultimately, Latin. (The increasing use of "fey" for "fay" is due to a confusion with "fey", a word derived from Old English and meaning "doomed to die" and related meanings. It has no historical connection with Old French fée or English fay, and is not a plural form of the latter.) The Latin root fata, meaning fate in the sense of one of the Parcae, is an indication that fays have abilities associated with knowledge (foresight) and manipulation (luck, blessing, cursing) of fate, both of which are qualities of faeries in myth.

Fata influenced modern Italian's fata and Spanish's hada, both of which mean fay, and the Old French fée, which gained the meaning "enchanter." By adding the ending -rie, we get féerie, meaning a "state of fée" or "enchantment." This also befits fays, who are known for casting illusions and altering emotions, particularly so as to make themselves alluring, frightening, or unseen.

Modern English inherited the two terms "fay" and "fairy," along with all the associations attached to them. Since the subjects of the words are somewhat alien and ethereal, the terms are often used interchangeably and have well established spellings which are sometimes varied for effect by authors. Common ones include the following:

  • Fay: Fae and Fey (Infrequent historically.)
  • Fairy: Faerie, Fairie, Faery. (Well established historically.)

Other spellings are rarer but do exist.

There is, however, a slight distinction between the two. Properly, "fay" is a noun referring to a specific race of otherworldly beings exercising mystical abilities (either the elves [or equivalent thereof] in mythology or their insect-winged, floral descendents in English folklore), while "faerie" is an adjective meaning "of, like, or associated with fays, their otherworldly home, their activities, and their produced goods and effects." Thus, a leprechaun and a ring of mushrooms are both faerie things (a fairy leprechaun and a fairy ring.)

Nature

The question of a faerie "nature" has been the topic of many a myth or scholarly paper for a very long time. This is partially due to the fact that, by being supernatural and chaotic entities, they are difficult to pin down as being anything in particular and partially due to the fact that humans have yet to answer completely what constitutes the racial ethos of humanity. Consequently, faerie runs amok with creatures that are completely unrelated save that they are mythologic in origin. There is a central archetypal figure behind most of the stories described as a tall, delicate, radiant being of humanoid aspect. Such beings are most often called "the shining ones."

Fairies in literature

William Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream deals extensively with the subject of fairy-folk and their interaction with a group of amateur theatrical players. This work details the spell cast by the mischievous fairy Puck (at the behest of the fairy-king Oberon) on Oberon's wife Titania, who falls in love with the first mortal she casts eyes upon, the unfortunate Bottom, whom Puck has transmogrified into having a donkey's head.

William S. Gilbert liked fairies and wrote several plays about them. The best is the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta Iolanthe which deals with a conflict between fairies and the House of Lords and, among other issues, touches on some of the practical consequences of fairy/human marriages and cross-breeding in a humorous manner.

In his Fairy Folk Tales of Ireland (1892), W. B. Yeats coined the expression "trooping fairies" to refer to those fairies who liked to travel together in groups. This is in contrast to the solitary fairies, such as the banshee, leprechaun, or pooka. Typically Yeat's trooping fairies are compared to the elves of English lore.

Fairies figure prominently in most of Neil Gaiman's works, primarily The Books of Magic and Sandman.

Tad Williams's book War of the Flowers deals extensively with passing over into a modern realm of fairies.

Isaac Asimov includes a short story about fairies in his collection of fantasy tales,Magic. Fairies are imagined to be sentient insectoids, and the lepidoptera forms the ones most often associated with the term, though the protagonist fairy is of the beetle line!

George MacDonald's book Phantastes.

Raymond E. Feist's book, Faerie Tale, is about a small family in modern age meeting up with some of the more darker aspects of fairies, as well as the Fairie Realm itself

The Susanna Clarke novel Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is about a pair of rival magicians who make use of and are subsequently used by "the gentleman with the thistle-down hair" also known as the fairy king of "Lost-Hope".

In the Artemis Fowl series, by Eoin Colfer, Fairies are highly technologically advanced, peaceful beings who live underground, unbeknownst to humans.

Fairies in visual arts

Artists such as Brian Froud, Alan Lee, Myrea Pettit, Ida Rentoul Outhwaite. Cicely Mary Barker, Amy Brown and Peg Maltby have all created beautiful illustrations of fairies.

Conversely, the Victorian painter Richard Dadd was responsible for some paintings of fairy-folk with an altogether more sinister and malign nature. Another notable Victorian painter of fairies was the artist and illustrator Arthur Rackham. Interest in fairy themed art in Britain enjoyed a brief rennaissance following the Cottingley fairies photographs, and a number of artists turned to painting fairy themes.

Fairies in modern popular culture

  • Green Fairy
    Also called La Fée Verte, a nickname for the alcoholic drink absinthe, so named for its green colour and intoxicating and seductive properties. Originally represented as a green woman, later she has been represented as a more traditional green coloured fairy. Kylie Minogue played the green fairy in Baz Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge!.
Kylie Minogue in Moulin Rouge!
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Kylie Minogue in Moulin Rouge!
  • Holly Short
    Main figure in Irish writer Eoin Colfer's stories about Artemis Fowl. In the first book, Artemis Fowl discovers the existence of an underground world of fairies. He kidnaps Captain Holly Short and ransoms her for gold . In the second book they form an alliance to fight the Mafia, and though she won't admit it at first, she slowly becomes friends with Artemis.
  • The Legend of Zelda
    Fairies have been Link's helpers from the very first game. In the beginning they simply replenished his health or revived him and now in the newer games they are life long companions.
  • Shobijin
    In most Mothra films the kaiju is accompanied by two tiny (often twin) priestesses, called the shobijin ("small beauties") by other characters. They have been portrayed by The Peanuts, Pair Bambi, and several non-twin pairs.
  • ZanZarah: The Hidden Portal
    The multi-platform action-adventure game features an array of various elemental fairies which the player can capture and train in the course of the game and use them to fight in fairy duels to advance the plot.

In Debates

A fairly common practice in debate (especialy concering the supernatural) is to state the the oponent's views are akin to beliving in fairies etc.

See also

External links

This article is based on the article "Fairies" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia-Article "Wizards"

For other uses, see Wizard (disambiguation).
Gandalf, from The Lord of the Rings, is  an example of a well-known, traditional literary wizard.
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Gandalf, from The Lord of the Rings, is an example of a well-known, traditional literary wizard.

A wizard is a practitioner of magic, especially in folklore, fantasy fiction, and fantasy role-playing games. In popular use during 16th century England, "wizard' was used to denote a helpful male folk magican, a cunning man as they were usually called. The word does not generally apply to Neopagans, or to stage magicians (or illusionists).

Contents

Etymology

During the 15th century, the term "wizard" referred to "philosopher, sage", from Middle English wysard (from wys "wise" and the -ard suffix also in drunkard etc.) The semantic restriction to "sorcerer, magician" occurred in the 16th century. They have historical roots in the Shamans and the Magi.

Derived Uses

Colloquially, anyone who is especially adept at some obscure or difficult endeavor may be referred to as a wizard. For instance, someone who is particularly skilled with computers might be referred to as a "programming wizard".[1] Wizard is also a slang term for an expert pinball player (cf. The Who's song Pinball Wizard). (However, normal usage applies more specialized superlatives to specific fields of endeavor, thus a musician is more likely to be called a "maestro" than a "wizard").

In MUD games, a wizard is a member of the world-building staff.

Related terms

During the Christianization of Norway, King Olaf Trygvasson had wizards (seidmen) tied up and left on a skerry at ebb.
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During the Christianization of Norway, King Olaf Trygvasson had wizards (seidmen) tied up and left on a skerry at ebb.

In most cases there is little to differentiate a wizard from similar fictional and folkloric practitioners of magic such as an enchanter, a magician, a sorcerer, a necromancer, or a thaumaturgist, but specific authors and works use the names with narrower meanings. When such distinctions are made, sorcerers are more often practitioners of evocations or black magic, and there may be variations on level and type of power associated with each name.

The ever-shifting chaos of fantasy writing has, of course, muddled the meaning of each term, but they should never be stuck with a single meaning, for they change depending upon where they're found.

Dungeons & Dragons Third Edition, for example, distinguishes between the sorcerer and wizard character classes as follows:

  • "Sorcerers create magic the way poets create poems, with inborn talent honed by practice."
  • "Wizards depend on intensive study to create their magic... For a wizard, magic is not a talent but a deliberate rewarding art."

Steve Pemberton's The Times & Life of Lucifer Jones describes the distinction thus: "The difference between a wizard and a sorcerer is comparable to that between, say, a lion and a tiger, but wizards are acutely status-conscious, and to them, it's more like the difference between a lion and a dead kitten."

In Terry Pratchett's Discworld books, "wizard" has essentially the common usage meaning, while a sourcerer is a wizard squared (an eighth son of an eighth son of an eighth son) and is a "source of magic" who can create new spells and is immensely more powerful.

Myths and Legends

Wizards found in old fairy tales and myths include:

Wizards in Fiction

Albus Dumbledore, from the Harry Potter series, is another famous literary wizard.
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Albus Dumbledore, from the Harry Potter series, is another famous literary wizard.

Famous wizards in folklore and fiction include:

"Real-Life" Wizards


In history, there have been several real people who are popularly believed, or who claimed to be, wizards, sorcerers, etc. Examples include:

  • Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa a magician, occult writer, and an alchemist.
  • Aleister Crowley is a controversial figure, the most famous "modern wizard," who is believed to have coined the alternate spelling, "magick."
  • John Dee, whose magical powers were said to come from angels.
  • John Diamond, and his granddaughter, Molly Pitcher, were supposed to have the ability to foretell the future and help (or doom) sailors at sea.
  • Gerald Fitzgerald, the Earl of Desmond, was said to be a shapeshifter wizard, whose spirit is said to still haunt the living.
  • Nicholas Flamel, though he is really more of an alchemist.
  • Michael Scot may have been fictional, though those who claim his reality say he could do amazing feats by conversing with spirits.

References

This article is based on the article "Wizards" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.