Unsolved:Each-uisge
The each-uisge (gd, literally "water horse") is a water spirit in Irish and Scottish folklore, spelled as the each-uisce (anglicized as aughisky or ech-ushkya) in Ireland and cabbyl-ushtey on the Isle of Man. It usually takes the form of a horse, and is similar to the kelpie but far more vicious.
Folklore
Description and attributes
The each-uisge, a supernatural water horse found in the Scottish Highlands, has been described as "perhaps the fiercest and most dangerous of all the water-horses" by the folklorist Katharine Briggs.[1] Often mistaken for the kelpie (which inhabits streams and rivers), the each-uisge lives in the sea, sea lochs, and fresh water lochs.[1] The each-uisge is a shape-shifter, disguising itself as a fine horse, pony, a handsome man or an enormous bird such as a boobrie.[1] If, while in horse form, a man mounts it, he is only safe as long as the each-uisge is ridden in the interior of land. However, the merest glimpse or smell of water means the beginning of the end for the rider, for the each-uisge's skin becomes adhesive and the creature immediately goes to the deepest part of the loch with its victim. After the victim has drowned, the each-uisge tears them apart and devours the entire body except for the liver, which floats to the surface.[1]
In its human form it is said to appear as a handsome man, and can be recognised as a mythological creature only by the water weeds[2] or profuse sand and mud in its hair.[3] Because of this, people in the Highlands were often wary of lone animals and strangers by the water's edge, near where the each-uisge was reputed to live.
Cnoc-na-Bèist ("Hillock of the Monster") is the name of a knoll on the Isle of Lewis where an each-uisge was slain by the brother of a woman it tried to seduce, by the freshwater Loch a’ Mhuileinn ("Loch of the Mill").[3]
Along with its human victims, cattle and sheep were also often prey to the each-uisge, and it could be lured out of the water by the smell of roasted meat. One story from John McKay's More West Highland Tales runs thus:
A blacksmith from Raasay lost his daughter to the each-uisge. In revenge the blacksmith and his son made a set of large hooks, in a forge they set up by the loch side. They then roasted a sheep and heated the hooks until they were red hot. At last a great mist appeared from the water and the each-uisge rose from the depths and seized the sheep. The blacksmith and his son rammed the red-hot hooks into its flesh and after a short struggle killed it. In the morning there was nothing left of the creature apart from a jelly-like substance.
The Scottish folklorist John Gregorson Campbell ,recorded numerous tales and traditions concerning the Each-uisge. In one account a man who was about to be carried by the water horse into the loch was able to save himself by placing both feet on either side of a narrow gateway the horse was running through, thereby wrenching himself off its back through sheer force. A boy who had touched the horse with his finger and gotten stuck was able to save himself by cutting it off. A Highland freebooter encountered a water horse in its human form and fired his gun at it twice with no effect, but when he loaded it with a coin made of silver and fired again the man retreated and plunged back into the loch. The each-uisge is unpredictable. It has been known to venture forth on land and attack solitary individuals, while in other accounts it will allow itself to be used as farm labour until its owner gets on its back and is carried into the loch. In their predatory hunger water horses may even turn on their own kind if the scent of a previous human rider is strong enough on the monster's body.[4]
Affleck Gray records two each-uisge tales relating to the River Spey in the Cairngorms. The An t-Each Ban was a white water-horse, which despite not being the usual black colour was otherwise "traditional", seeking out travellers on stormy nights in equine form, and leaping with its victims into deep pools. The yellow horse of the Spey was an even more unusual colour and its preferred victims were married couples. Gray also notes that highland each-uisges "appear to have been richly caparisoned", and that if a woman could get ahold of the rich bridles and replace it with a cow shackle then she would have power over the each uisge for the rest of her life and that the bridle would bring her good fortune.[5]
Water horses and women
The each-uisge also has a particular desire for human women. Campbell states that "any woman upon whom it set its mark was certain at last to become its victim." A young woman herding cattle encountered a water horse in the form of a handsome young man who laid his head in her lap and fell asleep. When he stretched himself she discovered that he had horse's hooves and quietly made her escape (in variations of the tale she finds the presence of water weeds or sand in his hair). In another account a water horse in human shape came to a woman's house where she was alone and attempted to court her, but all he got for his unwanted advances was boiling water hurled between his legs. He ran from the house roaring in pain. In a third tale a father and his three sons conspired to kill a water horse that came to the house to see the daughter. When they grabbed the young man he reverted to his equine form and would have carried them into the loch, but in the struggle they managed to slay him with their dirks. Despite its amorous tendencies, however, the each-uisge is just as likely to simply devour women in the same manner as its male victims.[4]
Maned man of Ireland
The Irish beast-man with a horse-like mane, which stooped when walking, and could not surely demonstrate the ability to comprehend speech, was an item of Irish Mirabilia, discussed the Old Norse Konungs skuggsjá (Speculum Regale or "the King's Mirror", written in Norway about 1250)[7][8] Celticist Kuno Meyer thought this may have been a version of the "half-ox man" related by Giraldus[6] (cf. Gir. II.21[9]). William Sayers (1985) thought it may be connected to the Irish water horse (each uisge) despite lack of connection with water.[lower-alpha 1]
Variants
The aughisky or Irish water horse is similar in many respects to the Scottish version. It sometimes comes out of the water to gallop on land and, despite the danger, if the aughisky can be caught and tamed then it will make the finest of steeds provided it is not allowed to glimpse the ocean.[11]
The cabyll-ushtey (or cabbyl-ushtey), the Manx water horse, sometimes confused or conflated with the glashtyn, is just as ravenous as the each-uisge though there are not as many tales told about it. One of them recounts how a cabbyl-ushtey emerged from the Awin Dhoo (Black River) and devoured a farmer's cow, then later it took his teenaged daughter.[12]
Explantory notes
- ↑ Sayers in turn offers comparisons with the Germanic analogues, i.e. nix, English nicker, Swedish bäckahästen and hints at reminiscence to the "Wild Man of the Woods motif".[10]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Briggs, Katharine (1976). An Encyclopedia of Fairies, Hobgoblins, Brownies, Boogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books. pp. 115–16. ISBN 0-394-73467-X.
- ↑ Varner, Gary R. (2007), Creatures in the Mist: Little People, Wild Men and Spirit Beings around the World: A Study in Comparative Mythology, Algora, p. 24, ISBN 978-0-87586-545-4
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 MacPhail, Malcolm (1896). "Folklore from the Hebrides". Folklore 7 (4): 400–04. doi:10.1080/0015587X.1896.9720386. https://zenodo.org/record/2393304.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Campbell, John Gregorson (1900). Superstitions of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. Glasgow: James MacLehose and Sons. pp. 203–15.
- ↑ Gray, Affleck (1987). Legends of the Cairngorms. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing. pp. 41–42. ISBN 1851580670.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Meyer, Kuno (1910). "The Irish Mirabilia in the Norse Speculum Regale". Ériu IV: 8. https://www.google.com/books/edition/%C3%89riu/72DwAAAAMAAJ?gbpv=1&pg=RA2-PA8.; paper reprinted from Folklore: a fully peer-reviewed international journal of folklore (1894) 5:307 (299–316)
- ↑ Abridgement of translation by Kuno Meyer:
There also happens in this land.. men have caught in a wood a certain animal, of which no man could say whether it was a man or a beast, because men have not heard speech from it.. hair grew all over its body.. [and] a mane as on a horse, etc.–Speculum Regale, Chapter: Irish Mirabilia §13, tr. Meyer[6]
- ↑ Larson, Laurence Marcellus, ed. (1917), "X. The Natural Wonders of Ireland", The King's Mirror: (Speculum Regalae - Konungs Skuggsjá), Library of Scandinavian literature 15, Twayne Publishers, p. 110, https://books.google.com/books?id=kvA9AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA110, "It once happened in that country (and this seems indeed strange) that a living creature was caught in the forest as to which no one could say definitely whether it was a man or some other animal; for no one could get a word from it or be sure that it understood human speech. It had the human shape, however, in every detail, both as to hands and face and feet; but the entire body was covered with hair as the beasts are, and down the back it had a long coarse mane like that of a horse, which fell to both sides and trailed along the ground when the creature stooped in walking."
- ↑ Wright, Thomas tr. (1863) The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensisp.85
- ↑ Sayers, William (Spring 1985). "Konungs skuggsjá: Irish Marvels and the King's Justice". Scandinavian Studies 57 (2): 157. https://books.google.com/books?id=rjdnzKa94LQC&q=berggeist.
- ↑ Yeats, William Butler (1888). Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry. London: Walter Scott. p. 94.
- ↑ Gill, W. Walter (1929). A Manx Scrapbook Arrowsmith. Ch. 4.
Template:Celtic mythology (Scottish)
