Showing posts with label A.L. Butcher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A.L. Butcher. Show all posts

Monday, May 3, 2021

Black Dog Myths: Part 1 - Shuck

 Old Shuck

Photo credit: Steve Bidmead from Pixabay 

Britain is a land of myths and legends, from giants and dragons to St George and Headless Horsemen.

Black Dog spectres are nocturnal apparitions, often foretelling deaths and sometimes linked with Satan, although some are protectors. From Grim, Padfoot, Barguest, and Shuck, these nocturnal hounds walk the byways and lanes of Britain. Appearances differ – although they are always large, some have no head, a human-looking head, fiery eyes, chains, or blooded fang; they walk in silence and howl with spine-chilling cries. 

Old Shuck

Variously known as Black Shuck, Old Shuck, Old Shock, or Shuck, a ghostly hound is believed to haunt the coastline and countryside parts of Britain. Documents from the 16th-century record ‘sightings’ of this horrible hound, but records are believed to go back at far as the 12th Century. 

The most notorious reports of Shuck come from Bungay and Blythburn in the county of Suffolk, in England (1577). The great devilish hound is said to have burst through the church doors during a storm, killed a man and child, and causing the steeple to collapse. There are, apparently scorch marks still remaining on the door to this day. He then appeared in a separate church in the village of Bungay, killed some more congregants before disappearing. 

Title page of the account of Rev. Abraham Fleming's account of the appearance of the ghostly black dog "Black Shuck" at the church of Bungay, Suffolk in 1577: "A straunge, and terrible wunder wrought very late in the parish church of Bongay: a town of no great distance from the citie of Norwich, namely the fourth of this August, in ye yeere of our Lord 1577." (Public Domain )

In 1850 Revd Taylor of Ormesby wrote that he’d heard the tale of Shuck from many people in East Norfolk and Cambridgeshire. The great hound was described as ‘a black shaggy dog with fiery eyes, who visits churchyards at night’ (From Lore of the Land – Westwood and Simpson). The dog started at Beeston and walked Overstrand churchyard at twilight and his route crossed what is now Cromer railway station – and a local street was known as Shuck’s Lane. Another preacher heard from an elderly local parishioner that Shuck ran nightly over Coltishall Bridge. A local man had kicked at a large dog acting aggressively, the man’s foot when straight through the dog….

Shuck has now firmly become part of local folklore with manifestations of ‘Old Scarf’, ‘Old Shock’ and the ‘Shucky Dog’. A spectral dog known as Chuff was seen as late as 1980. Old Shock sometimes manifested as a calf, or had the head of a donkey, a goat, or even a ‘shug monkey’.

He is portrayed in many forms – including as a shapeshifting bogey beast. Headless or saucer-eyed creatures are traditional signs of the supernatural, and such beasts often had ‘skeffy’ or shaggy coats.

‘Shuck’ is derived from an Old English word – scucca –meaning fiend, ‘shucky’ is a Norfolk dialect for shaggy.  In Europe, a sixth of all dog demons are black poodles (Patricia Dale Green Dog 1966). Shuck’s ancestry may be hinted at from an account from St Margaret in the late 12th century, called ‘Alde Shuke’ – an unwight who appeared in animal form, and calls himself a ‘bitter beast’.

Some accounts state meeting Shuck means death within a year, oral tradition does not always support this. Shuck and the Black Dog of Bungay myths have merged, out of 74 sightings, only seventeen could be connected with death or misfortune. 

Other accounts have the Black Dogs act as guardians, escorted women along lonely lanes at night.  In 1998 one man recounted having to get out of the road at night due to a huge hound with flaming eyes standing in his way. This prevented him from being run down by a car with no lights.


Written by

A.L. Butcher

British-born A. L. Butcher is an avid reader and creator of worlds, a poet, and a dreamer, a lover of science, natural history, history, and monkeys. Her prose has been described as ‘dark and gritty’ and her poetry as ‘evocative’. She writes with a sure and sometimes erotic sensibility of things that might have been, never were, but could be.


Monday, March 15, 2021

So, You Think You Know The Longest and Weirdest Words?

Longest and weirdest words

Next time you need a password no one else will check you could try one of these:

1) Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis

It’s a ‘contrived’ word – for an unpleasant lung disease usually known as silicosis. (The Oxford Dictionaries define it as "an artificial long word said to mean a lung disease caused by inhaling very fine ash and sand dust" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis

2) Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia

The fear of long words…. Yes, really. (Also known as Sesquipedalophobia – which is hardly a short word.) Healthline

3) Pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism 

The longest uncontrived word (It’s an inherited thyroid disorder.) Wikipedia

Science and medicine have more than their fair share of weighty words.

4) Floccinaucinihilipilification 

The longest unchallenged nontechnical word that not all directories recognize, that including Merriam-Webster. According to alternative sources, floccinaucinihilipilification is the act or habit of describing or regarding something as unimportant, of having no value or being worthless. Oftentimes, it is used in a humorous way or on quiz shows.

5) If you can’t decide what to eat in a restaurant, you could always ask for Lopadotemachoselachogaleokranioleipsanodrimhypotrimmatosilphiokarabomelitokatakechymenokichlepikossyphophattoperisteralektryonoptekephalliokigklopeleiolagoiosiraiobaphetraganopterygon

(English translation of  λοπαδο¬τεμαχο¬σελαχο¬γαλεο¬κρανιο¬λειψανο¬δριμ¬υπο¬τριμματο¬σιλφιο-καραβο¬μελιτο¬κατακεχυ¬μενο¬κιχλ¬επι¬κοσσυφο¬φαττο¬περιστερ¬αλεκτρυον¬οπτο¬κεφαλλιο¬κιγκλο-πελειο¬λαγῳο¬σιραιο¬βαφη¬τραγανο¬πτερύγων)

It's a fictional recipe used by Aristophanes, comprising 16 ingredients including several fish (including rotting shark’s head, meat from various birds and wine. Wikipedia

And finally, if you have 3 hours or so to spare – check out the pronunciation of the chemical name of titin, the largest know protein…it’s 189819 characters.

Next time you go to the pub quiz/online quiz or word game think of the words below.

A word with three lots of double letters

Bookkeeper – has three sets of double letters – O, then K, then E. Also bookkeeping

Unusual words  - try to sneak these into conversation.

Expergefactor – is anything that wakes you up. An alarm clock, a cockerel crowing, the neighbours returning from a night out at 4am…

Zwodder – a drowsy and stupid state of body and mind. If you come back from that late night/early morning after a night of ale-passion (used in the old way to mean suffering not the modern way of lustful) you may suffer zerostomia (dry mouth) and possibly even obdormition (having fallen asleep on your arm). You may feel lucifugous too (‘fleeing the light’), after all the jactating you did in bed. No – it doesn’t mean something rude….

Sesquipedalianism – the tendency to use long words…. I have this.

Words without vowels:

By

Crypt

Fly

Flyby

Glycyl

Gypsy

Hymns

Hmm

Lynx

Myrrh

Myth

My

Nymphs

Nymphly (another usage of nymph-like)

Psst (contained in OED)

Pygmy

Rhythms

Shh

Shy

Shyly

Scry

Shy

Sky

Sync

Try

Trysts

Wry/Wryly

Xyst (a long and open portico in a gymnasium (Greek)

Without y as a substitute vowel-

(These are of Welsh Origin – so don’t count as strictly English words). Welsh uses ‘w’ as a vowel sound

Crwth (a celtic stringed instrument)

https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/crwth

Cwtch (a shed, cuddle or hiding place)

And for a word with ONLY vowels, you could try Euouae – a musical term from medieval times.

Uncopyrightable is an isogram. That is a word that has no repeated letters. Another is Subdermatoglyphic 

If you would like some more weird words check out this link https://www.grammarly.com/blog/14-of-the-longest-words-in-english/

https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/cootch

https://wordfinder.yourdictionary.com/blog/21-english-words-without-vowels/

https://www.thefreedictionary.com/words-without-vowels.htm

https://blog.collinsdictionary.com/language-lovers/the-longest-word-in-the-collins-english-dictionary/

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