History Witch: Uncovering Magical Antiquity
Want to know about real magic from history? This is the place. Here we explore primary texts and historical accounts from the past.
National Unicorn Day
In Scotland it is National Unicorn Day, the day they celebrate the national beast. With the lockdown and everyone staying indoors, they have become plentiful again, so I hear. Thus from medieval Scots history I offer you a tale told by a unicorn (on good authority!) from The Talis of Fyve Bestes (beasts that is, not besties). The executive summary:
“The Unicornis Tale” recounts how, in his youth, a boy named Gundulfus threw a stone and broke a cockerel’s thigh bone. He leaves home to study and returns on the night before he is due to travel to Kent to receive a benefice. His family and friends convince him to stay rather than travel that night, promising that the cock’s crows will wake him in the morning. The cock refuses to crow as an act of revenge and Gundulfus loses his position.
Be kind to animals. Or the unicorn and her friends will smite you.
The Unicornis Tale
Befor this tyme in Kentschire it befell
A bonde thar was, his name I can nocht tell;
Gundulfus was his sonis name I ges,
Of tender age of nyne yeris ald he wes,
And wele he usit for to rys at mornys
To kepe the grange and his faderis cornis
Fra cokis, crawis and uther foulis wyld.
So on a day this litill prety child
Seand thir birdis lukand our the wall,
Toward the grange Gundulfus gois withall,
And with the casting of a litill stone
Of ane litill bird the theis bone
Brokin he has in sounder at a cast,
And sone the fowlis flokit about him fast.
Quhat will ye mar? He was bot slane or schent.
Sore for him wepit all the hennis of Kent…
Read the rest here.
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