Fairy Playing
![]() Andre Rieu: Radio City Hall Live in New York List Price: Sale Price: $11.89 You save: $0.04 (%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Moulin Rouge, Vol. 2 [Music from the Motion Picture] List Price: Sale Price: $4.56 You save: $3.41 (43%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Appalachia Waltz / Ma, Meyer, O'Connor Sale Price: $35.49 Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Tangled (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo) List Price: Sale Price: $18.99 You save: $21.00 (53%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Muppet Classic Theater [VHS] Sale Price: $48.98 Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Florene Fairies n Fantasy - 3 Angels Playing Instruments - Light Switch Covers - 2 plug outlet cover List Price: Sale Price: $13.95 You save: $2.00 (13%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Florene Fairies n Fantasy - 3 Angels Playing Instruments - Light Switch Covers - single toggle switch List Price: Sale Price: $11.75 You save: $2.00 (15%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() Renderly Yours Fantasy - Garden Elf And Fairy Playing With Magic Bubbles - Light Switch Covers - single toggle switch List Price: Sale Price: $11.75 You save: $2.00 (15%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
![]() August Rush List Price: Sale Price: $2.84 You save: $3.13 (52%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days |
Fairy Tail opening 4 with lyrics (not mirrored) "RPG ~Rockin' Playing Game" by SuG
Why Do Fairies Have Wings?
None of the books suggest that fairies have wings like dragonflies or butterflies. The wee-folk of Celtic mythology are generally thought to be the size of small children or dwarfs, rather than the size of insects as they are thought of today.They also tend to be suitably disproportionate, like chunky hobbits or dwarfs rather than the tiny but perfect adult fairies in modern storybooks. It is likely that these modern depictions of fairies sprang more from the minds of individual humans than any specific culture or mythology.
For almost as long as people have been seeing fairies, people have been writing about them. The countries of the world have a wide variety of myths and legends, but the "little people" crop up in a great many of them. Into more modern times, we have Spenser's "The Fairie Queen", and Shakespeare's "A Midsummers Night's Dream" in Elizabethan times, both of which did much to cement the modern conception of what a "fairy" is.
A wide variety of cultures believe in fairies similar to the Celtic version, and some cultures see fairies as the animistic spirits of nature. None of these fairies bear much resemblance to the modern fairies and if they had wings, it is a detail that is usually left out. Spencer's fairies were like the Celtic version, Shakespeare's were like a combination of tall elegant elves and the wee-folk, but it was not until the Victorian era that fairies were established as little winged beings.
Thomas Croker (1789-1854) in his collection of Irish Fairy Tales, described fairies as being "a few inches high, airy and almost transparent in body; so delicate in their form that a dew drop, when they chance to dance on it, trembles, indeed, but never breaks."
One of the first of these "delicate" fairies to impinge on popular consciousness was probably Tinkerbell in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan. Around that time, there was also a large amount of sentimental art, creating cutesy portrayals of fairies and cherubs. There was also a large fuss made about the fairy photographs taken by two young girls in England at Cottingsley. These photographs sparked a world-wide debate that did much to "fix" the image of the small, winged, fairy in the public mind, and if you ask any group of people, there'll no doubt be someone who remembers seeing the pictures at some time. The Victorians had a soft spot for the "cute", and much of the modern conception of the little delicate, insect size fairy came from them.
Disney also has a part to play from the 1950s onward, pushing the sanitised Tinkerbell as a sort of happy go-lucky nature sprite, making fairies happy and unthreatening, reinforced even more by having Julia Roberts play her in the live action version.
From these images people have come to see fairies as a happy, positive, image... a far cry from the baby-stealing wee folk of Celtic mythology from which they derived.
William Meikle is a Scottish fantasy writer, with seven novels published in the States. He is available for all freelance writing work. Contact him and read some free fiction at his web site http://www.williammeikle.com
About the Author







Eligible for free shipping!![Moulin Rouge, Vol. 2 [Music from the Motion Picture]](http://www.darwins-theory.com/media/images/i/610qq3eGYpL._SL75_.jpg)


![Muppet Classic Theater [VHS]](http://www.darwins-theory.com/media/images/i/51H95VG5GVL._SL75_.jpg)









