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PART TWO: And They Ride, And We Hide
Explicit content warning
12/31/20 • 28 min
Welcome to PART TWO, or another two-part episode of LOST IN THE RABBIT HOLE. In this episode, we cover just some of the variants of The Wild Hunt tales, which come from Europe, but can also be found in some form all over the world.
The Wild Hunt is a tale of a pack of spectral beings riding horses, sometimes flying, late at night. Sometimes there are demon dogs, or other packs of animals. These tales are moral tales, with the riders or hunters presaging something really bad -- war, plague, discord, or even the death of the person who sees the riders.
We see in this episode (both parts) that the frame of the pack of ghost hunters carries across cultures, but with some interesting shifts and detail changes.
PART ONE: focuses on the background of the tale frame; from WODEN/ODIN leading the pack to the HERLE KING, this is an old lore that is still somehow very elastic. Part one includes the history of FRAU BERCHTA , one of the female figures to lead the pack of night riders.
PART TWO: shares other cultures' tales, including THE NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS from Japan, HAWAIIAN NIGHT MARCHERS, the Canadian New Years tale of THE BEWITCHED CANOE, and the Old American West tale of the GHOST RIDERS.
References for Part Two of this episode:
NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS
Elizabeth Lillehoj, in her article “Transfiguration: Man-Made Objects as Demons in Japanese Scrolls” (Asian Folklore Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp 7-34; 1995)
Michael Dylan Foster (Author), Shinonome Kijin (Illustrator), The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese FolkloreMasako Watanabe, Storytelling in Japanese Art
Matthew Meyer's Night Parade of One Hundred DemonsMaria Kitsunebi's blog, HYAKKI YAGYO: THE NIGHT PARADE OF ONE HUNDRED YOKAIAmelia Starling's blog, Tsukumogami: Japan’s Household Spirits, is also really funLA CHASSE-GALARIE
Donovan King, Haunted MontrealHonoré Beaugrand, La chasse galerie: Légendes Canadiennes
THE HAWAIIAN HUAKA'I PO
Martha Warren Beckwith, Hawaiian Mythology
Wounded: A Native True Crime Podcast, Night Marchers: Huaka'i Po'
This is a blog post from the To Hawaii website The Legend of the Nightmarchers
AMERICAN OLD WEST GHOST RIDERS
Fairweather Lewis's blog post on the song Ghost Rider's In The Sky
Welcome to PART TWO, or another two-part episode of LOST IN THE RABBIT HOLE. In this episode, we cover just some of the variants of The Wild Hunt tales, which come from Europe, but can also be found in some form all over the world.
The Wild Hunt is a tale of a pack of spectral beings riding horses, sometimes flying, late at night. Sometimes there are demon dogs, or other packs of animals. These tales are moral tales, with the riders or hunters presaging something really bad -- war, plague, discord, or even the death of the person who sees the riders.
We see in this episode (both parts) that the frame of the pack of ghost hunters carries across cultures, but with some interesting shifts and detail changes.
PART ONE: focuses on the background of the tale frame; from WODEN/ODIN leading the pack to the HERLE KING, this is an old lore that is still somehow very elastic. Part one includes the history of FRAU BERCHTA , one of the female figures to lead the pack of night riders.
PART TWO: shares other cultures' tales, including THE NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS from Japan, HAWAIIAN NIGHT MARCHERS, the Canadian New Years tale of THE BEWITCHED CANOE, and the Old American West tale of the GHOST RIDERS.
References for Part Two of this episode:
NIGHT OF A HUNDRED DEMONS
Elizabeth Lillehoj, in her article “Transfiguration: Man-Made Objects as Demons in Japanese Scrolls” (Asian Folklore Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp 7-34; 1995)
Michael Dylan Foster (Author), Shinonome Kijin (Illustrator), The Book of Yokai: Mysterious Creatures of Japanese FolkloreMasako Watanabe, Storytelling in Japanese Art
Matthew Meyer's Night Parade of One Hundred DemonsMaria Kitsunebi's blog, HYAKKI YAGYO: THE NIGHT PARADE OF ONE HUNDRED YOKAIAmelia Starling's blog, Tsukumogami: Japan’s Household Spirits, is also really funLA CHASSE-GALARIE
Donovan King, Haunted MontrealHonoré Beaugrand, La chasse galerie: Légendes Canadiennes
THE HAWAIIAN HUAKA'I PO
Martha Warren Beckwith, Hawaiian Mythology
Wounded: A Native True Crime Podcast, Night Marchers: Huaka'i Po'
This is a blog post from the To Hawaii website The Legend of the Nightmarchers
AMERICAN OLD WEST GHOST RIDERS
Fairweather Lewis's blog post on the song Ghost Rider's In The Sky
Previous Episode
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PART TWO: Getting Lost, Being Found
Are you ready for PART TWO, where we continue the tale of the abandoned children, "Little Brother and Little Sister", aka Hansel and Gretel?
"Tale Types: Abandoned Children
What’s always so fun about these tales is to see how they are often mash-ups of other sorts of tales, but with a core narrative running through. For many of these abandoned children tales, we have three recurrent patterns:
- the children are lost in some manner in a forest,
- they meet an ogre,
- there’s a “show me how” moment within the tale, and
- the children return home."
Versions Referenced in this episode:
- "Little Brother and Little Sister" aka "Hansel and Gretel" (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, 1812-1840)
- "Ninnillo and Nennella" (Italy, Giambattista Basile, 1635) also here
- "Little Thumb" aka "Hop on my Thumb" (France, Charles Perrault, 1697)
- "Jan and Hanna" (Poland, author unknown, 1863)
- "Finette Cedron" aka Cunning Cinders, (France, Marie-Catherine D'Aulnoy, 1967)
- "Little Earth Cow" (Alsace, Martin Montanus, 1557)
Reference Materials
The Golden Age of Folk and Fairy Tales: From the Brothers Grimm to Andrew Lang by Jack Zipes
The Classic Fairytales, Iona and Peter Opie
The Third Horseman A STORY OF WEATHER, WAR, AND THE FAMINE HISTORY FORGOT By William Rosen
Next Episode

Her Eyes Held all The Mourning of the Darkest Sea
In this episode we wander along the coastlines of many Northern places; these are often stark and lonely places, the people who live there quiet to outsiders, but somehow a tale is always shared around a campfire as the whiskey passes from hand to hand.
The tales of of the SEAL PEOPLE, the special magical selkies sometimes called silkies, sometimes thought to be quite different from the seals you normally see tearing apart your fishing nets. Don't run afoul of these beings or you might rue the day! Legend has it that these are the beings made from the souls of the drowned, those lost at sea, now magically changed.
Join me on this little walk as we share the tale of the Seal People.
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REFERENCES
Episode title is from, "The Selkie Wife's Daughter", Jeannine Hall Gailey. 2006. "Jeannine Hall Gailey's poems have appeared in The Iowa Review, Rattle, Columbia Poetry Review, and other journals. The poem, which is based on selkie legends, first appeared in Becoming the Villainess (Steel Toe Books, 2006). For more information, visit the author's blog."
Tales of the Seal People, Duncan Williamson, 1992; 2019. "A collection of 14 selkie (half-seal half-human creatures) tales from the Orkney and Shetland islands off the northern tip of Scotland which embrace the fantasy, romance and unusual perspective of the Scottish travellers."
On Mermaids, Meroveus, and Melusine; Reading the Irish Seal Woman and Melusine as Origin Legend, Gregory Darwin (August 2015), Folklore Journal issue 126. "‘The Seal Woman’, a migratory legend attested throughout north-western Europe, is commonly associated with particular families in Ireland. A structural reading of this legend reveals similarities with other tales and dynastic origin myths involving supernatural, aquatic female ancestor figures, and identifies similar social functions for such narratives."
David Thomson (2018) The People of the Sea: Celtic Tales of the Seal-folk: "Introduced by Seamus Heaney, The People of the Sea brings to life the legend of the mythical selchies, in beautiful, poetic prose."
Want more selkie tales? Visit Orkneyjar, a website curated by folk enthusiasts and those historically minded. You can read many tales here, some selkie, and find out more just in general about these kinds of stories.
WILDERNESS IRELAND, “Irish Myths & Legends Part 4: The Selkie,” Dawn Rainbolt. This is just a super fun website with stories and little facts and more.
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