Observations placeholder
Scotland, Arran - Donald Macalastair flies with the fairies
Identifier
013974
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
A description of the experience
ALEXANDER CARMICHAEL, Hon. LL.D. of the University of Edinburgh; author of Carmina Gadelica.
Donald Macalastair, seventy-nine years of age, crofter, Druim-a-ghinnir, Arran, told me, in the year 1895, the following story in Gaelic:--
'The fairies were dwelling in the knoll, and they had a near neighbour who used to visit them in their home. The man used to observe the ways of the fairies and to do as they did. The fairies took a journey upon them to go to Ireland, and the man took upon him to go with them. Every single fairy of them caught a ragwort and went astride it, and they were pell-mell, every knee of them across the Irish Ocean in an instant, and across the Irish Ocean was the man after them, astride a ragwort like one of themselves. A little wee tiny fairy shouted and asked were they all ready, and all the others replied that they were, and the little fairy called out:--
My king at my head,
Going across in my haste,
On the crests of the waves,
To Ireland.
"Follow me," said the king of the fairies, and away they went across the Irish Ocean, every mother's son of them astride his ragwort. Macuga (Cook) did not know on earth how he would return to his native land, but he leapt upon the ragwort as he saw the fairies do, and he called as he heard them call, and in an instant he was back in Arran. But he had got enough of the fairies on this trip itself, and he never went with them again.'
The source of the experience
CelticConcepts, symbols and science items
Concepts
FairySymbols
FairyScience Items
Activities and commonsteps
Activities
Overloads
Visiting telluric hot spotsSuppressions
Inherited genesLiving in a stone built house
Ragwort - Jacobaea vulgaris, Senecio jacobaea