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The costume
for the Queen of the Fairies was inspired by an old ballad - "Tam Lin"
This fairy tale has been told and retold. What
follows is one interpretation.
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This
story is actually of Scottish origin and, as with many of the great old ballads, it has faery mischief,
romance and enchantment all rolled into one. So, dim the lights, gather around the hearth and imagine
that you can hear the tinkling bells of faery bridles....
Long ago, there lived a fair young maiden who was the daughter of an earl.
Her name was Janet and she lived in a grey castle beside the forest of Carterhaugh in Selkirk,
Scotland.
One day, she realized that she was bored to tears with sewing in her bower or
playing silly games with the ladies of her father's house. So, she set off to explore the
forest.
It was a magical setting. The sunlight shone through the trees and beneath
her feet, the forest floor was covered with bluebells and briar roses. Impulsively, she
stretched our her hand and plucked a white rose. No sooner had she done this when a young
man suddenly appeared on the path before her.
Softly, he spoke. "I am the guardian of
these woods, sent here to make certain no one disturbs their peace - who are you to pluck
the roses of Carterhaugh and wander here without my leave?"
"I meant no harm," Janet
answered. The young man smiled, as one who has not smiled for a long time, and plucked a red
rose that had grown beside the white one. "Ah, but I would willingly give all the roses of
Carterhaugh to one so lovely as yourself," he said.
Taking his rose, Janet shyly asked
him who he was. "My name is Tam Lin," the young man replied. "I have heard of you! You are an
elfin knight," cried Janet and in fear she cast the flower away. "There is no cause for alarm,
fair Janet," said Tam Lin. "For though men call me an elfin knight, I was born a mortal child,
just as you were. Here, let us sit together and I will tell you my story.
'My father and
mother died when I was but an infant and so my grandfather took me to live with him. Years later,
when we were hunting in these very woods, a cold, strange wind came up from the north and blew
through every leaf. I became very sleepy and began to lag far behind my hunting companions. Finally,
I fell from the horse and fell into a deep, dreamless sleep. When I woke up, I found myself in
the faery land, for the Faery Queen had come and stolen me away as I slept."
Tam Lin paused
as he thought of that green enchanted land. "Ever since then," he continued, "I have been bound fast
by the spell the Faery Queen put upon me. In the daytime, I guard the woods of Carterhaugh, and at
night I must return to her kingdom. O, Janet, I long to return to my mortal life and wish with all
my heart that I could be rid of my enchantment!"
He spoke with such great sorrow that Janet
cried out: "Is there no way this spell can be broken?" Tam Lin caught her hands in his and said:
"Tonight is the feast of Samhain, and only on this night of all nights, is there a chance to win
me back to mortal life.
"Tell me what I should do to help you," implored Janet, "for
I want to win you back with all my heart."
Tam Lin explained what she must do. "On
Samhain, the faery folk ride abroad, and I ride with them."When midnight comes, you must
go to the crossroads and wait for the faery troop to ride by. As the first company approaches,
stay still and let them pass. As the second company draws near, let them pass too. I shall be
in the third company, riding a coal-black steed and wearing a gold circlet on my brow. You must
then run to me, Janet, pull me from my horse, and throw your arms about me. And no matter what
spells the Faery Queen casts upon us, you must hold me fast and not let me go. That is the only
way to win me back to earth." Janet promised she would be there. With that, the young man smiled
and disappeared.
A little after midnight, Janet hurried to the crossroads and waited in the
shadow of the thorn hedge. The ditches gleamed in the moonlight, the thorn bushes cast strange shapes
upon the ground, and the trees rustled their branches eerily above her. Faintly on the wind, she heard
the sound of bridles tinkling and she knew the faery troops were on the move.
Shivering, she
drew her cloak around her and peered into the darkness. First, she saw the gleam of silver harness,
then the white blaze on the forehead of the lead horse. Soon, all the faery troop came into sight,
their pale faces upturned to the moonlight, and their flowing tresses windswept behind them as they
rode.
As the first company passed her, she spotted the Faery Queen herself, mounted on a
milk-white steed. She stayed perfectly still until they had passed her; nor did she move when
the second company went by. But, among the third company, she saw the coal-black horse that bore
Tam Lin, and the gleam of the gold circlet around his brow. Janet ran from the shadow of the thorn
hedge and seized his bridle. She then pulled him to the ground and clasped him in her
arms.
Immediately, the cry went up: "Tam Lin is away!" The Faery Queen's white
horse reared and she pulled him to a halt. Turning, she cast her
mesmerizing emerald eyes toward Janet and Tam Lin. As Janet held Tam Lin fast,
the Faery Queen put a spell upon them. Tam Lin shrank and became a small, scaly
lizard which Janet clutched to her breast. Janet then felt a slithering sensation
through her fingers. The lizard had become a cold, slippery snake which she gripped
tightly, even as it coiled around her neck. Suddenly, a searing pain ran through her
hands. The snake had been turned into a red-hot cinder. Tears of agony ran down her
cheeks, but still, Janet held on to Tam Lin and would not let him go.
At last,
the Faery Queen knew that she had lost Tam Lin because of the steadfast love of a mortal
woman. She then shaped him in Janet's arms in his own form - as naked as the day he was
born. In triumph, Janet covered Tam Lin with her cloak.
As the faery host prepared
to ride once more, a slender ghostly hand came forth to lead Tam Lin's white steed away.
Janet and Tam Lin heard the voice of the Faery Queen raised in a bitter lament:
"The
fairest knight in all my company is lost to the world of mortals. Farewell, Tam Lin! Had I
but known that an earthly woman would win you with her love, I would have taken out your
heart of flesh and put in a heart of stone. And had I known that fair Janet was coming to
Carterhaugh, I would have taken out your two grey eyes and put in two of wood."
As
she spoke, a faint dawn light could be seen on the horizon. With an unearthly cry, the faery
raiders spurred on their horses and vanished with the night. As the sound of their bridle bells
died away, Tam Lin gently caught hold of one of Janet's poor blistered hands, and together they
returned to the castle.
There, it is said, her father blessed their union and they lived a long
and happy life together. But they never forgot how they first met.
Always, on Samhain, Tam
Lin would take Janet for a walk through the woods, pluck for her a red, red rose and plant
hundreds of soothing kisses on the brutally scarred hands that had saved him.
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This
elegant gown of silk and English netting is in four parts. The under
dress is a tissue thin champaign gold silk, gently crinkled and edged in golden glitter. Over
that and of the same
shape is hand painted English netting in shades of gold, copper and melon, scalloped at the
hem and edged with gold glitter.
The incredibly delicate moss green silk chiffon over gown has been beaded in a random pattern.
The final top layer of matching green silk has been lavishly beaded and decorated with delicate
tracings of gold
and copper glitter, “gold” round glass beads and has tiny golden “bells” along the scalloped hem.
Both the under and over dress trail to the back in a train. Each sleeve has a pleated silk
under layer and a beautifully embellished moss green silk over sleeve.
The sleeve is banded to the upper arm with lacing and drapes in gentle folds across the
forearm. Delicate golden thread shoulder straps cross her shoulders.
Her necklace, bracelets and earrings were created using gold and copper wire, glass beads and glitter
drops. Her crown is a combination of golden filigree, twisted vines, fall leaves, golden
bells and gold glass beads. She carries a small gilded gourd that actually opens and wears a golden horn on
her hip. Dainty beaded golden slippers complete the costume.
Her wired, double
crystal wings are singed and glittered and may be slightly posed. They are permanently
attached to her back.
Sydney Chase - has been completely repainted. She has golden flecked green eyes, shadowed in soft browns, feathered russet brows, soft natural peach lips, gently reshaped "Fae" ears, partially braided deep mahogany red hair with three shades of golden highlights, applied lashes and a natural manicure and pedicure. Delicate body art designs in bronze, copper, gold and green were added to her upper arms and shoulders
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