Have you ever seen a little ring of mushrooms or toadstools on a green or in the woods? Our ancestors applied mystical and superstition meanings to these strange sights, believing them to be the work of fairies. Even in the 1980s I was told never to enter into a fairy ring if I saw one, in fear of upsetting the tiny creatures who lived there.
Mary Neilson was an orphan who lived with her grandmother near the Scottish town of Falkirk. Her story dates to at least 1847, when neighbours assured a curious visitor that the legend of her tale was true. What happened to Mary later became used as a warning to other children to stay away from fairy rings.
Mary had left the home of her grandmother to pick flowers in the nearby moor, close to a farm called Bentend. She was just seven years old, and on stopping to pick some wildflowers, saw a fairy. The legend goes that the fairy told Mary to come with her.
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| Photo by R. David Cummins on Unsplash |
Mary went with the fairy, who took her to a beautiful waterside, a lake with two swans, whose wings 'glittered in the light'. One approached the fairy while the other went to Mary. They then entered a wood, the light reflecting off the leaves of the trees, reminding the young girl of flashes of silver. Eventually, the fairy told Mary that she would stay with them and be their queen. Mary refused, saying she needed to get back to her grandmother. The fairy said 'refuse not', but Mary wouldn't budge. The fairy took her back to the fairy ring, but is said to have then blinded the young girl 'in revenge'.
A shepherd found Mary crying in the fairy ring, and asked her what was the matter. Saying she couldn't see, he asked where she had come from. Mary told him about her grandmother's house, and he took her there. On the way the girl told him of the story of the swans, the woods and the fairy. Her story was shared in the local community, who asserted that it must have been the fairies that caused blindness because 'her looks were not changed. Her eye was as full of beauty as ever'.
It was said too, that on every seventh anniversary of the fairy appearing (seven being her age at the time of the occurrence) two swans came to low water near Bentend 'and when they fly away they seemed to carry the moonlight on their wings'.
Although the writer who recorded Mary's legend, in the Scottish Journal of Topography, Antiquities, Traditions, stated that it was within living memory in 1847, there is no date given in any of the accounts of the actual event. However it is possible to place Mary's experience to at least 1833. The regular occurrence of the swans at the anniversary states that it happened on each anniversary and so must have been more than 14 years to establish a pattern. Of course, the legend might even be older. Fairy rings have held a superstitious importance for a long time, and, like mermaids, were used to convince children from wandering deep into woods, or towards water, alone.
While I love to believe that there are little fairy-like creatures living in our woods, it is of course possible that Mary invented the story to try to get herself out of trouble. Some species of woodland fungus can cause blindness (which I found after a quick Google search). Bacteria in woodland soil can also have this effect, although I couldn't find out how quickly it takes effect. Is it possible too, that some wild mushrooms, known for their hallucinogenic properties, might have given Mary the idyllic experience she later described? Of the light shining like silver, reflecting on leaves and on the wings of swans, along with the episode and dialogue with the fairy? I'm leaning towards the whole event being led by the dangerous effects of the mushrooms (and the soil) she was around, combined with (likely) having been told to stay away from fairy rings, as was the old custom. If she then ventured out and picked flowers in them (and maybe, in curiosity, some of the mushrooms too), she could have transferred particles of them onto her eyes and into her mouth. She would have been understandably frightened at the loss of her sight. Worried about more repercussions, the story could have been invented to put the blame on someone else, in this case, a malicious fairy. Just an idea.
In any case, this is a valuable piece of history that tells us that fairy ring superstitions were still very active, and believed, in early nineteenth century Falkirk. The Victorian author noted that 7 May 1848 was the next anniversary, and invited the reader to visit Bentend to see if they can see the enchanted swans for themselves. The next anniversary at the time of writing is 7 May 2030 so if you're around, maybe pay a visit - but stay away from any fairy rings!
Source: The Scottish Journal of Topography, Antiquities, Traditions. Volume 1. 1848-1848. Edinburgh, 1848.


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