#Airisu: The Crow and the Witch

Butterfly Omen (Sumika POV): Part 9
#Wss366 Keen #TimeTravelAuthors Butterfly Effect

I dreamed that I was in the garden performing dogeza, although I didn't know why. Above me, a man doused me with water, while the #keening wind froze my sodden clothes to my body. I wanted to cry out, but I knew he would beat me if I did.

Then, I saw a water iris reflected in the spreading pool around me. The purple of its flower called to me in my mother’s voice. A sound almost forgotten. But now I could hear her singing the bamboo song. The words spoke of the coming dawn, when the sun would drive away the rain.

Hope took the form of a butterfly. The hurricane of its wings would sweep me away from this cursed life.

[End Chapter 2]

#TootFic #MicroFiction #NMFic #Fantasy #UrbanFantasy #MythPunk

Banshees

A banshee (Bean si in Modern Irish & ben side, in Old Irish, meaning “woman of the fairy mound,” or “fairy woman”) is a female spirit in Irish folklore who heralds the death of a family member. She usually does this by screaming, wailing, shrieking, or keening. Keening is a traditional form of vocal lament for the dead in the Gaelic Celtic tradition. This is known to have taken place in Ireland & Scotland.

Banshees are strongly associated with specific Irish families. The belief is that the banshee is a family spirit attached to a particular lineage. Her mournful wail/cry is heard only by family members as a warning of an imminent death.

Another of the banshee characteristics is their unwavering attachment to certain Gaelic families such as the O’Neills, O’Brians, O’Connors, O’Grady, & Kavanaghs, among others. Some traditions hold that the banshee is the ghost. This is perhaps a mother of a famous poet/singer from the family who died tragically. In this sense, she’s an ancestral spirit tied to the bloodline & the land.

She appears or is heard only to mourn & warn the family of an impending death. Often before anyone has received news of it. This direct, specific role makes her an inherently familiar guardian or omen for that clan/family.

They aren’t family pets, the banshees presence is a known, if terrifying, part of the family’s history & destiny, linking her fate to theirs across generations.

A banshee is an autonomous entity, a powerful fairy-woman (bean sidhe) or ghost, isn’t under the control of any living person.

Sometimes she has long streaming hair, which she may be seen combing, with some legends specifying she can only be keen while combing her hair. She wears a gray cloak over a green dress. Her eyes are red from continual weeping. She’s sometimes dressed in white with red hair & a ghastly complexion.

In Ireland & parts of Scotland, a traditional part of mourning is the keening woman (bean chaointe), who wails a lament. This keening woman may be a professional, in some cases. The best Keeners would be in high demand.

Irish legends talks about a lament being sung by a fairy woman, or banshee. She would sing it when a family member died or was about to die. Even if the person had died far away & news of their death hasn’t come yet. In those cases, her wailing would be the 1st warning the household had of the death.

The banshee is also a predictor of death. If someone is about to enter a situation where it’s unlikely they’ll come out alive, she’ll warn people by screaming/wailing. This gives rise to the banshee also being known as a wailing woman. The banshee was also linked with the death coach. The banshee is said to either summon the death coach with her keening or travel in tandem with it.

When several banshees show up at 1 time, it usually indicates the death of someone holy or great. The story sometimes tells that the woman (though called a fairy) was a ghost. She’s often a specific murdered woman, or a man who passed away in childbirth.

In some parts of Leinster, she’s referred to as the bean chaointe or ban nigheachain (“little washerwoman”) or nigheag na h-ath (“little washer at the ford”). She’s seen washing bloodstained clothes or armor of those who are about to die.

In Welsh folklore, there’s also a similar being known as the cyhyraeth. The cyhyraeth gives a disembodied moaning voice before the person’s passing.

Some sources suggest that the banshees Laments only the descendants of pure Milesian stock of Ireland. The Milesians were the final race to settle in Ireland. The original belief appears to be associated with a number of ancient Irish families. According to tradition, a banshee wouldn’t lament or visit someone of Saxon or Norman descent or those who came to Ireland later.

Most, not all, of the last names associated with banshees have the “O” or “Mc/Mac” prefix. That means people with the last names of Goidelic origin. This means a family native to the Insular Celtic lands. Rather than those of the Norse, Anglo-Saxon, or Norman.

There are some exceptions to the banshee lore. A banshee may lament a person who’s been gifted with music & song.

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#AngloSaxon #BanNigheachain #Banshees #BeanChaointe #BeanNighe #BeanSi #beanSidhe #BenSide #Celtic #Cyhyraeth #DeathCoach #Gaelic #Goidelic #InsularCeltic #Ireland #IrishFolklore #Kavanaghs #keening #KeeningWoman #Milesian #ModernIrish #Norman #Norse #OBrians #OConnors #OGrady #ONeills #OldIrish #Poet #Saxon #Scotland #ScottishFolklore #Singer #WelshFolklore

New Friends Fest '25 @ Lithuanian House

Lithuanian House, Friday, August 1 at 05:00 PM EDT

NEW FRIENDS FEST '25

featuring On the Might of Princes / Snowing / Beau Navire / The Saddest Landscape / Rolo Tomassi + 32 more...

all ages, $167.95 for weekend pass (single day tickets T.B.A.), discounted "locals only" passes available at Emissions Record Shop

https://www.newfriendsdiy.com/event-details-registration/new-friends-fest-2025

https://toronto.askapunk.net/event/new-friends-fest-25-lithuanian-house

New Friends Fest '25 | NFDIY

Three days of music, friendship, and DIY

NFDIY

'Lament: A Celebration': a Cambridge Group for Irish Studies day-long symposium on 3 May marking the 250th anniversary of the Irish poem 'Caoineadh Airt Uí Laoghaire' / 'Lament for Art O'Leary'.

Speakers include Prof Angela Bourke, and poets Martina Evans and Paul Muldoon. In-person and online via zoom. Free, but registration required. Full details and registration tabs for both online and in-person attendance here:

https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/events/CGIS-Lament/index.htm

#Irish #Gaelige #keening #poetry #CelticStudies

Cambridge Group for Irish Studies - Lament, A Celebration of the Tradition of Irish Keen