Sunday, April 4, 2010

DragDragons rule!

Dragons Rule!

Hurrah for mythical creatures.  Hurray for the imagination that creates such wonderful stories through books, films, and art.


When I was a child, my father plucked a thorn from a rose stem, stuck the flat side to my head and said, “There, you’re a unicorn.”  What magic there was in those words.  I was four.  Around the same time I saw Sleeping Beauty for the first time.  Though she was the antagonist, I saw the beauty in that animated fire-breathing creature that existed within Malificent’s being.  It seemed that the power of a thorn had transformed mad faerie to dragon.


I’ve loved unicorns and dragons ever since.  When I was in college, I attended a renaissance faire and chanced upon “Lancelot”, a unicorn  (a goat bred with one horn).  He was traveling the  renfest circuit, and making quite a hit with the crowds.  Love at first site.  He trotted over to me and, yes, plopped his head down in my lap and sat contentedly. No laughing out there~seriously.


This week, I am consumed with a sense of wonder for those things the modern world considers mythological.  The Greek and Roman gods, creatures, King Arthur, etc.  I’ve skulked around caves in Cymry (Wales) and Cornwall (England), and can verily imagine such beings and beasts.  Such architectural marvels as exist in some of the most remote areas of the world give me cause to wonder at their creation.


Of course, that leads me to simultaneously marvel a the commonalities in folk tales around the world.  From faerie tales, to pour-quoi tales, there exist many common factors.  Giants, beasts, dragons, angels, sea monsters,  treasures, fey, miracles.  


So, tell me, dear readers, what  creatures do you believe in? What creatures or tales inspire a sense of wonder in you?

4 comments:

  1. Good Morning Sweetie!

    Dragon's are my favorite! But if you'd seen my post on Giants...you might start believing in Dragon's as once being real...not a myth! ;-)

    I love this post and so well told!

    Hugs
    Hawk

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  2. I love your sentiel! And the post. Dragons have always been real to me. I'm not even sure why, but I've believed in them since...well, ever since I can remember.

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  3. Alright, I stand corrected. In the modern (conventional) world, dragons are mythical. However, ancient writings and lore would indicate that the creatures actually existed.
    Personally, I suspect that they are a holdover from the dinosaurs. Consider the possibility of creatures evolving then getting trapped by the ice age, then thawing out. Yep, I bet there were oodles of them hiding out in caves. A few years ago (in China, I believe), paleontologists discovered a fossil of a small dragon. Ooh, and in the Phillipines the other day, I heard there was discovered a six-foot-long lizard (sounds pretty dragonish to me). Can you imagine??
    Imagine the bat. A warm blooded, mammal, with claws and wings, dwelling in caves. An evolutionary descendant of what our ancestors called dragons?
    I read a book years ago about a modern day St. George who was called upon to slay modern day shapeshifting dragons that disguised themselves as humans. A really neat concept, although, I prefer to think of dragons as good-guys, not evil flame-throwing assassins.
    Sorry...I am rambling.
    Thanks to Hawk, and to Vicki for posting. You both are wonderful to check in on me.

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  4. Hey, I'm back!

    OMG I didn't know about the paleontologists discovering a fossil of a small dragon! Or about the Phillipines discovering a six-foot-long lizard...this is wonderful!

    Yes, I do think things may have been much larger back then because the air was purer than it is today and allowed for a healthier growth of all things; plants and animals - so, yes, the bats could have been much larger than todays bats.

    This is an interesting post! I've got to get some of my girls to come over here and check this out!

    Hugs
    Hawk

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