Paranormal Entity Checklist (3)

--compiled by Ric Carter

goto notes   "Listen to the children of the night, how they sing!" --Dracula

Forsooth, another continuation of the ENTITY list! This glossary is a work-in-progress and is rather limited in coverage; but with some more research, I'll expand this beyond all bounds. Enjoy.

PS: be sure to see the accompanying notes & resources page.
AND other materials about the paranormal are on my GO! page.


LITTLE PEOPLE
from A Field Guide to the Little People
by Nancy Arrowsmith and George Moore

Light Elves

"Light Elves are masters of shape-changing and can treavel through the four known dimensions. Their beauty is often evanescent, like that of the butterfly. They are among the best-natured Little People, but are unfortunately less often seen that the Dark or Dusky elves."   —Nancy Arrowsmith

* Alven (Dutch)
* Dames Vertes (E. France)
* Ellefolk (Danish) or Elfor (Swedish)
* Fylgiar (Iceland)
* Sidhe ['shee'] or Daoine Sidhe (Irish)
* Will-o'-the-Wisp (N. Europe)
* Wind Folletti (Italy)
* White Ladies: Fainen, Weisse Frauen, Sibille (N. Europe)

Dark Elves

"Dark Elves, like caterpillars, make their homes in the earth and their skin reflects its colours: grey, brown, red and black. They occasionally live in human houses, but always prefer dark corners and only appear at noon or late at night."   —Nancy Arrowsmith

* Church Grims (English); Kyrkobrims (Swedish); Kirkonwäki (Finnish), Kirkegrims (Danish)
* Erdluitle [Earth-folk] (Swiss)
  - Härdmandlene, Gotwergi, Heidenmanndli, Bergmanli, Guriuz (male)
  - Erdbibberli, Heidenweibchen, Erdweibchen, Herdweibchen (female)
* Erdluitle Chrügeli [changlings] (Swiss)
* Knockers: Coblynau (Wales)
  - Schact-Zwergen [shaft-dwarfs] (Austria)
  - Berg-Mönche [mountain-monks] (Germany)
  - Meister Hämmerlinge [master-hammerlings] (Germany)
  - Gommes (France)
  - Black Dwarfs (Scotland)
* Korred or Korrs (Celtic)
* Red Caps: Redcombes, Bloody Caps, Dunters or Powries (Scottish)
* Stille Volk [quiet-folk] (N. Germany): Kepetz, Querxe, Böhlers-Männchen, Malienitza, Zinselmännchen, Krosnyata, Kaukas, Onnerbänkissen
  - Karlä (Lithuanian)
  - Unners-Boes-Töi or Untüeg (Danish)
* Stille Volk Kielkröpfe [changelings] (N. Germany]
* Wichtln [house-sprites] (S. Germany, Austria)
  - Wights (English)
  - Vaettir (Iceland, Norway)
  - Vattar (Faroe Is)

Dusky Elves

"The Dusky Elves are by far the most numerous. They are tied to their environment and their life is defined by laws of time, space and place. Because of these limitations, they can be more easily recognized by humans... One can compare them to the butterfly in its chrysalid stage, a pupa bound by silken threads to its environment. Dusky Elves take great pains to shield themselves from foreigh interference and rarely travel far from their native tree, herb, brook, mound or pond."   —Nancy Arrowsmith

Fées; Domoviye; Vazily, Bagany and Banniki; Fir Bolg; Sleigh Beggey and Tylwyth Teg; Norggen, Orculli and Fänkenmannikins; River Women; Nixen and River Men; Folletti and Incubi; Mound Folk; Mer-Women, Mer-Men; Hobgoblins; Night-Elves; Callicantzaroi; Lutins; Pixies; Kobolde; Leshiye and Lisunki; People of Peace; Barabao; Pamarindo; Klabautermannikins and Kabkoutermannikins; Salvanaq and Aguane; English Fairies; Serván; Nissen and Tomtrå; Giane; Seal People: Sea Trows and Roane; Laúru; Roosters, Snakes and Basiliscs; Moss People; Tree Elves; Vodyaniye; Linchetti; Rusalky; Brownies; Bwciod; Skogsrå or Wood Trolls; Kornböcke and Hausböcke; Moerae; Duende; Seligen Fräulein; Follets; Fountain Women; Poltersprites; Vily; Portunes; Leprechuans; Sirens; Monacielli; Poleviki and Poludnitsy; Drakes; Asrai; Glashans and Shopiltees; Heinzelmännchen and Hütchen; Fate; Hey-Hey Men; Salvanelli; Gwagged Annwn; Goat People; Massarioli; Nereides
(to be completed soon)


Non-European
* Chickcharnies (Bahamas)
* Dhin’dherri-dha’pen and Dhi’lumi (Queensland)
* 'Hobbits' (Indonesia)
* Menehene or Menehune (Hawaii)
* 'Negritos' (New Guinea)
* Plains Devils (US Nat.Am)
* Rock People, Laurel People, and Dogwood People (Cherokee)
* Stick People (Yakama)


DEFINITIONS
from The Devil's Dictionary
by Ambrose Bierce

BASILISK:
The cockatrice. A sort of serpent hatched form the egg of a cock. The basilisk had a bad eye, and its glance was fatal. Many infidels deny this creature's existence, but Semprello Aurator saw and handled one that had been blinded by lightning as a punishment for having fatally gazed on a lady of rank whom Jupiter loved. Juno afterward restored the reptile's sight and hid it in a cave. Nothing is so well attested by the ancients as the existence of the basilisk, but the cocks have stopped laying.


FAIRY:
A creature, variously fashioned and endowed, that formerly inhabited the meadows and forests. It was nocturnal in its habits, and somewhat addicted to dancing and the theft of children. The fairies are now believed by naturalist to be extinct, though a clergyman of the Church of England saw three near Colchester as lately as 1855, while passing through a park after dining with the lord of the manor. The sight greatly staggered him, and he was so affected that his account of it was incoherent. In the year 1807 a troop of fairies visited a wood near Aix and carried off the daughter of a peasant, who had been seen to enter it with a bundle of clothing. The son of a wealthy bourgeois disappeared about the same time, but afterward returned. He had seen the abduction been in pursuit of the fairies. Justinian Gaux, a writer of the fourteenth century, avers that so great is the fairies' power of transformation that he saw one change itself into two opposing armies and fight a battle with great slaughter, and that the next day, after it had resumed its original shape and gone away, there were seven hundred bodies of the slain which the villagers had to bury. He does not say if any of the wounded recovered. In the time of Henry III, of England, a law was made which prescribed the death penalty for "Kyllynge, wowndynge, or mamynge" a fairy, and it was universally respected.


spirit

GHOST:
The outward and visible sign of an inward fear.

He saw a ghost.
It occupied – that dismal thing! –
The path that he was following.
Before he'd time to stop and fly,
An earthquake trifled with the eye
That saw a ghost.
He fell as fall the early good;
Unmoved that awful vision stood.
The stars that danced before his ken
He wildly brushed away, and then
He saw a post.

Jared Macphester

Accounting for the uncommon behavior of ghosts, Heine mentions somebody's ingenious theory to the effect that they are as much afraid of us as we of them. Not quite, if I may judge from such tables of comparative speed as I am able to compile from memories of my own experience.

There is one insuperable obstacle to a belief in ghosts. A ghost never comes naked: he appears either in a winding-sheet or "in his habit as he lived." To believe in him, then, is to believe that not only have the dead the power to make themselves visible after there is nothing left of them, but that the same power inheres in textile fabrics. Supposing the products of the loom to have this ability, what object would they have in exercising it? And why does not the apparition of a suit of clothes sometimes walk abroad without a ghost in it? These be riddles of significance. They reach away down and get a convulsive grip on the very tap-root of this flourishing faith.


GHOUL:
A demon addicted to the reprehensible habit of devouring the dead. The existence of ghouls has been disputed by that class of controversialists who are more concerned to deprive the world of comforting beliefs than to give it anything good in their place. In 1640 Father Secchi saw one in a cemetery near Florence and frightened it away with the sign of the cross. He describes it as gifted with many heads an an uncommon allowance of limbs, and he saw it in more than one place at a time. The good man was coming away from dinner at the time and explains that if he had not been "heavy with eating" he would have seized the demon at all hazards. Atholston relates that a ghoul was caught by some sturdy peasants in a churchyard at Sudbury and ducked in a horsepond. (He appears to think that so distinguished a criminal should have been ducked in a tank of rosewater.) The water turned at once to blood "and so contynues unto ys daye." The pond has since been bled with a ditch.

As late as the beginning of the fourteenth century a ghoul was cornered in the crypt of the cathedral at Amiens and the whole population surrounded the place. Twenty armed men with a priest at their head, bearing a crucifix, entered and captured the ghoul, which, thinking to escape by the stratagem, had transformed itself to the semblance of a well known citizen, but was nevertheless hanged, drawn and quartered in the midst of hideous popular orgies. The citizen whose shape the demon had assumed was so affected by the sinister occurrence that he never again showed himself in Amiens and his fate remains a mystery.


GNOME:
In North-European mythology, a dwarfish imp inhabiting the interior parts of the earth and having special custody of mineral treasures. Bjorsen, who died in 1765, says gnomes were common enough in the southern parts of Sweden in his boyhood, and he frequently saw them scampering on the hills in the evening twilight. Ludwig Binkerhoof saw three as recently as 1792, in the Black Forest, and Sneddeker avers that in 1803 they drove a party of miners out of a Silesian mine. Basing our computations upon data supplied by these statements, we find that the gnomes were probably extinct as early as 1764.


HYDRA:
A kind of animal that the ancients catalogued under many heads.


INCUBUS:
One of a race of highly improper demons who, though probably not wholly extinct, may be said to have seen their best nights. For a complete account of incubi and succubi, including incubae and succubae, see the Liber Demonorum of Protassus (Paris, 1328), which contains much curious information that would be out of place in a dictionary intended as a text-book for the public schools.

Victor Hugo relates that in the Channel Islands Satan himself -- tempted more than elsewhere by the beauty of the women, doubtless -- sometimes plays at incubus, greatly to the inconvenience and alarm of the good dames who wish to be loyal to their marriage vows, generally speaking. A certain lady applied to the parish priest to learn how they might, in the dark, distinguish the hardy intruder from their husbands. The holy man said they must feel his brow for horns; but Hugo is ungallant enough to hint a doubt of the efficacy of the test.


SALAMANDER:
Originally a reptile inhabiting fire; later, an anthropomorphous immortal, but still a pyrophile. Salamanders are now believed to be extinct, the last one of which we have an account having been seen in Carcassonne by the Abbe Belloc, who exorcised it with a bucket of holy water.


SATAN:
One of the Creator's lamentable mistakes, repented in sashcloth and axes. Being instated as an archangel, Satan made himself multifariously objectionable and was finally expelled from Heaven. Halfway in his descent he paused, bent his head in thought a moment and at last went back. "There is one favor that I should like to ask," said he.

"Name it."

"Man, I understand, is about to be created. He will need laws."

"What, wretch! you his appointed adversary, charged from the dawn of eternity with hatred of his soul -- you ask for the right to make his laws?"

"Pardon; what I have to ask is that he be permitted to make them himself."

It was so ordered.


SATYR:
One of the few characters of the Grecian mythology accorded recognition in the Hebrew. (Leviticus, xvii, 7.) The satyr was at first a member of the dissolute community acknowledging a loose allegiance with Dionysius, but underwent many transformations and improvements. Not infrequently he is confounded with the faun, a later and decenter creation of the Romans, who was less like a man and more like a goat.


SIREN:
One of several musical prodigies famous for a vain attempt to dissuade Odysseus from a life on the ocean wave. Figuratively, any lady of splendid promise, dissembled purpose and disappointing performance.


SORCERY:
The ancient prototype and forerunner of political influence. It was, however, deemed less respectable and sometimes was punished by torture and death. Augustine Nicholas relates that a poor peasant who had been accused of sorcery was put to the torture to compel a confession. After enduring a few gentle agonies the suffering simpleton admitted his guilt, but naively asked his tormentors if it were not possible to be a sorcerer without knowing it.


SPOOKER:
A writer whose imagination concerns itself with supernatural phenomena, especially in the doings of spooks. One of the most illustrious spookers of our time is Mr. William D. Howells, who introduces a well-credentialed reader to as respectable and mannerly a company of spooks as one could wish to meet. To the terror that invests the chairman of a district school board, the Howells ghost adds something of the mystery enveloping a farmer from another township.


SYLPH:
An immaterial but visible being that inhabited the air when the air was an element and before it was fatally polluted with factory smoke, sewer gas and similar products of civilization. Sylphs were allied to gnomes, nymphs and salamanders, which dwelt, respectively, in earth, water and fire, all now insalubrious. Sylphs, like fowls of the air, were male and female, to no purpose, apparently, for if they had progeny they must have nested in accessible places, none of the chicks having ever been seen.


WEREWOLF:
A wolf that was once, or is sometimes, a man. All werewolves are of evil disposition, having assumed a bestial form to gratify a bestial appetite, but some, transformed by sorcery, are as humane and is consistent with an acquired taste for human flesh.

Some Bavarian peasants having caught a wolf one evening, tied it to a post by the tail and went to bed. The next morning nothing was there! Greatly perplexed, they consulted the local priest, who told them that their captive was undoubtedly a werewolf and had resumed its human for during the night. "The next time that you take a wolf," the good man said, "see that you chain it by the leg, and in the morning you will find a Lutheran."


WITCH:
(1) Any ugly and repulsive old woman, in a wicked league with the devil. (2) A beautiful and attractive young woman, in wickedness a league beyond the devil.



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