💾 Archived View for tilde.pink › ~bencollver › books › fae-fables captured on 2022-04-28 at 17:34:22. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2022-03-01)
➡️ Next capture (2022-06-03)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Collected here are various short pieces that caught my fancy at some
point in time. They are arranged alphabetically.
Oocihgeaskw, the Rough-Faced Girl
Threshold of the Door by Félix Martà Ibáñez
The word fairy comes from the Latin fata (fate), which became
"enchantment" in French. So fate and magic are always associated in
traditional tales: and the kind of fairy found in modern Western
story-books, usually for children, is only one form of this
concretized Fate. In Greek and Roman times, there were believed to
be three Fates, which arbitrarily controlled every person's life.
The three gunas, or colored threads (white, red, and black), of India
were said to run through every life as ordained by the Fates. Ovid,
Theocritus, and others wrote of the same colored life-threads in
Greek literature.
Berlin and Kay also found that, in languages with fewer than the
maximum eleven color categories, the colors followed a specific
evolutionary pattern. This pattern is as follows: