DOCUMENTED FAIRY SIGHTINGS


Most reports of actual fairy sightings before the 1900’s have basically been stories that have been passed down verbally. After these recounts have been passed along for a generation or two, some tend to change a bit. Detail is either lost or added. It’s only human nature to do so! There have been accounts of fairy sightings from all over the world…not just from Ireland, England , Scotland and Wales. Every culture that has existed has had some sort of account of strange, supernatural entities.



Some of the earliest reports that can be found were in the seventeenth century. It was reported by John Aubrey that a Mr. Hart had been watching a band of fairies dance, and was pinched for doing so! Also around this time, (1662), a woman named Isobel Gowdie from Scotland, who had been accused of being a witch, confessed that she had become friends of the “Little People”. She said the following in a portion of her confession:

“I was in the Downie-hills, and got meat there from the Queen of Faery, more than I could eat. The Queen of Faery is well clothed in white linens, and in white and brown clothes, etc.; and the King of Faery is a fine man, well favoured, and brouad faced, etc. There were elf-bulls ‘rowtting and skoylling’ up and down there, which frightened me.
As for elf arrowheads, the Devil shapes them with his won hand and delivers them to elf-boys, who shape and trim them with a sharp thing like a needle…the Devil gives them to us, each of us so many…We have no bow to shoot with, but jerk them from our thumb-nails. Sometimes we will miss, but if they touch, be it beast, or man, or woman, it will kill, even if they are wearing a coat of mail.” (Quoted in K.M. Briggs, The Anatomy of Puck, 1959)



In 1705, John Beaumont published Treatise of Spirits and mention seeing many different kinds of spirits. One of his descriptions is as follows:

“…being of a brown complexion, and about three foot in stature; they had both black, loose network gowns, tied with a black sash about their middles, and within the network appeared a gown of a golden colour, with somewhat of a light striking through it; their heads were not dressed with topknots, but they had white linen caps on, with lace on them…and over it they had a black loose network hood…”

On another occasion he said that he saw them ‘dance in a ring in the garden, and sin, holding hands round, not facing each other, but their backs turned to the inner part of the circle’. According to the account, he asked them who they were and they told him that ‘they were an order of creatures superior to mankind, and could influence our thoughts, and that their habitation was in the air’. (From An Historical, Physiological, and Theological Treatise of Spirits, by John Beaumont, London, 1705)



Reverend Dr. Edward Williams described what he witnessed at Bodfari, Denbighshire, North Wales, in 1757. He was only seven years old at the time.
“On a fine summer day, (about midsummer) between the hours of 12 at noon and one, my eldest sister and myself, our next neighbour’s children Barbara and Ann Evans, both older than myself, were in a field called Cae Caled near their house, all innocently engaged at play by a hedge under a tree, and not far from the stile next to that house, when one of us observed on the middle of the field a company of—what shall I call them?—beings, neither men, women, nor children, dancing with great briskness. They were full in view less than a hundred yards from us, consisting of about seven or eight couples: we could not well reckon them, owing to the briskness of their motions and the consternation with which we were struck at a sight so unusual. They were clothed in red, a dress not unlike a military uniform, without hats, but their heads tied with handkerchiefs of a reddish colour, sprigged or spotted with yellow, all uniform in this as in habit, all tied behind with the corners hanging down their backs, and white handkerchiefs in their hands held loose by the corners. They appeared of a size somewhat less than our own, but more like dwarfs than children. On the first discovery we began, with no small dread, to question one another as to what they could be, as there were no soldiers in the country, nor was it the time for May dancer, and as they differed much from all the human beings we had ever seen. Thus alarmed we dropped our play, left our station, and made for the stile. Still keeping our eyes upon them we observed one of their company starting from the rest and making towards us with a running pace. I being the youngest was the last at the stile, and, though struck with an inexpressible panic, saw the grim elf just at my heels, having a full and clear, though terrific view of him, with his ancient, swarthy, and grim complexion. I screamed out exceedingly; my sister also and our companions set up a roar, and the former dragged me with violence over the stile on which, at the instant I was disengaged from it, this warlike Lilliputian leaned and stretched himself after me, but came not over. With palpitating hearts and loud cries we ran towards the house, alarmed the family, and told them our trouble. The ment instantly left their dinner, with whom still trembling we went to the place, and made the most solicitous and diligent enquiry in all the neighbourhood, both at that time and after, but never found the least vestige of any circumstance that could contribute to a solution of this remarkable phenomenon. “ (Quoted from Welsh Folk-Lore, by Owen, and other comments about this sighting were found in T.Gwynn Jones, Welsh Folklore and Folk-Custom, first published in 1930 and reissued in 1979 by D.S.Brewer, Cambridge)



LOTS MORE TO COME!!!!!!











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