Showing posts with label folklore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folklore. Show all posts

Friday, July 26, 2019

The ToiBox of Serials 1.2: Heart of the Golden Stag

Over on my personal blog, The ToiBox of Words, I’ve experimented with short fiction quite a bit. I’ve entered many blog writing contests and sometimes, just played around with it. In most cases, I’ve found myself expanding the stories I started on my blog and turning them into something more. All the stories in this series will be a product of what I started on my blog and then later added to in private. I will be sharing these stories in parts and encourage readers to leave positive or critical feedback (rude comments will be deleted). Perhaps, one day I’ll publish another personal anthology with these. Enjoy.



Side note: This story has never actually appeared on the ToiBox blog but was derived from a contest I entered and did not win. Still, the submission process was a good learning experience for me. This story is a retelling/reimagining with a twist. 


Heart of the Golden Stag, part 2
Read part 1 here.
The giggles and snaps of children playing in the alley below jolted Jamie’s body forward as dream and reality collided. Jamie rushed to the window, heart pounding and sweat dripping from her bushy unkempt brow. Below, little boys kicked a can back and forth between them as Jamie fought back tears. What a sad and stupid girl I can be sometimes. Shrugging her shoulders, she reached into the worn pockets of her men’s trousers to pull out a coin.
Tossing it down to the boys below, she called out in a gruff, “Bread and tea, young ones.”
The smaller of the two boys caught the coin, as usual, and then pulled the other along before replying, “Right away, Mr. Jaime. Be up soon.”
With the boys off to fetch her breakfast, Jamie quickly attended to her daily costuming. First, a few snips of hair along her forehead and at the nape of her neck. Then, a quick wash followed by fresh linen wraps to bind her breasts.
After chatting with the boys over tea, Jamie went to polishing her shoes with the intention of mulling over the day’s objectives. She’d lined up three marks the day before and was due for a good payday, yet her mind kept drifting back to her childhood. With her seventeenth birthday approaching, Jamie was plagued by nightmares and daydreams of the day she left home to become a boy.
She and her twin brother were turning twelve. Her older sister was a weeping doll, all dressed and made-up, in the corner sobbing through handkerchiefs as her stern and wrinkled betrothed pressed his hands upon her shoulder in mock-sympathy. Jamie watched the spectacle with dread, knowing that would be her fate upon her fifteenth birthday while her brother sniggered. He’d be heading off to the academy soon, to be educated and learn a trade.
Face warmed by the flickering candles, Jaime kept her eyes closed even after her brother blew out the flames as smoke wrapped around her head. She couldn’t bring herself to open her eyes and say goodbye to her childhood. From here on, her days would be filled with learning all the ways a wife should keep a husband happy. If that was love, Jamie wanted no part of it, yet she hoped there was more to it. She hoped to find an unconventional man not bound by Northern traditions.
With the snap of her father’s fingers, Jamie popped her eyes open to see him holding tightly onto the belt resting around his waist. Knowing he wouldn’t dare punish her in front of company, and on her birthday no less, Jamie seized the moment and ran into the woods, calling for a game of hide-and-seek. Only, she never hid.
Jamie grabbed the bundle she’d concealed days before and continued to run. She kept running until there was no chance of being able to turn back. 
To be continued...
Heart of the Golden Stag 2018 Copyright © Toinette J. Thomas 


Find out more about me, my work, and my inspiration at the following links:


Amazon | Goodreads The ToiBox of Words | YouTube | See a list of my other posts here.

Monday, June 10, 2019

The ToiBox of Serials 1: Heart of the Golden Stag

Over on my personal blog, The ToiBox of Words, I’ve experimented with short fiction quite a bit. I’ve entered many blog writing contests and sometimes, just played around with it. In most cases, I’ve found myself expanding the stories I started on my blog and turning them into something more. All the stories in this series will be a product of what I started on my blog and then later added to in private. I will be sharing these stories in parts and encourage readers to leave positive or critical feedback (rude comments will be deleted). Perhaps, one day I’ll publish another personal anthology with these. Enjoy.



Side note: This story has never actually appeared on the ToiBox blog but was derived from a contest I entered and did not win. Still, the submission process was a good learning experience for me. This story is a retelling/reimagining with a twist. 


Heart of the Golden Stag, part 1
     Rosy morning light shone down and warmed the dark olive flesh of a thin arm before it retreated beneath a blanket of golden hair. Shimmering in the pink light, the hair rippled as the body beneath wiggled and stretched awake. Soon, Aaron sat up with a wide yawn as he craned his neck to turn away, shielding his eyes from the glare. With a short sigh, Aaron flipped the long strands of hair over his shoulders before heading toward the washbasin.

     After washing and dressing, Aaron tip-toed around the confined quarters of his room, in the convent’s tower, to seek out his most prized, and secret, treasure. Wrapped tightly with blankets, Aaron pulled the bundle from underneath his bed and quietly revealed the cold and clear metallic glint of the looking glass.

     Staring at the feminine reflection before him, Aaron scrunched his nose before pulling his golden locks away from his shoulders to expose the boy disguised within. Aaron recalled the day the nuns first told him why he had to grow his hair long and wear girl’s clothing. Sister Norman sat the young Aaron in the middle of an expansive ivory hide and told him the story of his birth.

     It was the first night of the Twilight Moon, a full fall moon that rises in the East just as the sun is setting in the West, causing the sky to turn violet and allowing both the sun and moon to shine in unison for one enchanted hour. The Ivory Doe, the goddess of the North Woods, burst through the forest into our garden and pleaded with its eyes for us to conceal it. In the distance, the horns and treads of hunters could be heard and felt as they drew near. We hurried the large creature into our shed and then spread our numbers in all directions to throw-off the hunters’ tracking dogs. I alone remained; I was there when the Ivory Doe gave birth to her son, a golden fawn unlike any I’d ever seen.

     The mother stared into my eyes and called me forward. I placed my hand upon her antlers as her son fed at her teat. Mentally, she conveyed her story. Chased for months by the hunters seeking her magic. Being with child, she conserved her magic instead of using it to dispel the hunters. As her life began to reach its end, she wanted to make sure that her son would live. She impressed upon me that until her child reached full maturity, he was at risk of having his magic stolen. Should he live to see that day, he would become invulnerable and powerful. If he should find a human worthy of his love, he would grant them a great blessing. With her last pained breath, the Ivory Doe enveloped her fawn in white light and then faded away, leaving behind an infant boy, wrapped in her preserved hide.

     Hearing his name being called from elsewhere in the convent, Aaron quickly concealed his mirror and rushed off to assist the sisters. All these years, they had been so good to him, helping him to remain hidden and teaching him what they could of the Ivory Does. As Aaron’s eighteenth birthday drew near, his toes and fingers constantly tingled with anticipation as magic pulsed through his body. Aaron longed to love the nuns as they loved him, but their shelter had confined him and suppressed the transformation he yearned for.
To be continued...
Heart of the Golden Stag 2018 Copyright © Toinette J. Thomas 


Find out more about me, my work, and my inspiration at the following links:


Amazon | Goodreads The ToiBox of Words | YouTube | See a list of my other posts here.

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Mythology and Folklore: Part 2 by Erika M Szabo

The World Tree (Világfa)

By Erika M Szabo

Today, I'm going to continue my blog series: Mythology and Folklore.
If interested, you can read Part One here:
https://asmallgangofauthors.blogspot.com/2018/04/mythology-and-folklore-part-one-by.html

In Hungarian myth, the world is divided into three spheres: the first is the Upper World (Felső világ), the home of the gods; the second is the Middle World (Középső világ) or the world we know, and finally the underworld (Alsó világ).

In the center of the world stands a tall tree: the World Tree /Tree of Life (Világfa/Életfa). Its foliage is the Upper World, and the Turul bird dwells on top of it. The Middle World is located at its trunk and the underworld is around its roots. In some stories, the tree bears fruit: the golden apples.

Upper World
The gods and the good souls live in the Upper World. Gods have the same rank, although the most important figure of them is Isten (Hungarian for "God"). They control the world, shape the fate of humans, observe the Middle World from the sky.
Istenanya "Mother God", also known as Boldogasszony "Blessed Lady", literally meaning "happy woman".
Hadúr "warlord".

The Sun and the Moon are also located in the Upper World. The sky was thought to be a big tent held up by the Tree of Life. The several holes in it are the stars. The Sun, Moon, and symbols of the cosmic word, are known from Hungarian grave findings from the period of Hungarian conquest.

Middle World
The Middle World is shared among humans and many mythological creatures; the latter are often supernatural. There are ghosts of the forests and waters, who are ordered to scare humans. They have different names in different places. There are females, for example, the sellő (mermaid), which lives in water and has a human torso with the tail of a fish.
The wind is controlled by an old lady called Szélanya (Wind Mother).
The Sárkány (dragon) is a frightening beast: he is the enemy of many heroes in fairy tales, symbolizing the psychical inner struggle of the hero.The Sárkány usually has 1-7 heads.
The lidérc is a ghostly, mysterious creature with several different appearances, its works are always malicious.
The manók (elves/goblins) and the törpék (dwarfs) are foxy beings living in woods or under the ground.
Óriások (giants) live in the mountains. They have both good and bad qualities.
Favorite creatures are the tündérek (fairies), who are beautiful young virgins or female creatures (often depicted either as personified purity and innocence or as playful and foxy). They aid humans, who sometimes can ask three wishes from them.
Their opposites are the bábák, who are equated with catty old witches. (Bába means "midwife" in modern Hungarian, and originally they were wise old women, later equated with witches as Christianity became widespread.)
Underworld
The Underworld is the place of bad souls (this includes evil spirits and the souls of dead people who were cruel and evil in their lives) and the home of Ördög, creator of everything bad for humans: for example, annoying animals such as fleas, lice, and flies.
Courtesy of Wikipedia and several Hungarian websites

Next time maybe I'll introduce you to a few famous Hungarian foods such as gulyas, stuffed cabbage, and donut, which is far better than the Dunkin kind. Or, maybe I'll tell you more about Hungarian mythology and folklore.

If you like fantasy and children's books, visit me on my website
http://www.authorerikamszabo.com


COMMENTS

Erika M Szabo via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
A little bit of mythology
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Ruth de Jauregui

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Wow, the more you share, the more I realize how little I know of mythology outside of the Roman and Greek. Thank you so much, that was fascinating!
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We would need hundred lifetimes to learn the mythology and folklore of every nation :)

Mary Schmidt

7 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Sounds fantastic!
 
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Rebecca Tran via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Erika Szabo tells readers about the three levels of the world in Hungarian Mythology on Our Author Gang.
 
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Joe Bonadonna via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today on A Small Gang of Authors, Erika M. Szabo​ talks more about mythology and folklore, and "The World Tree."
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Joe Bonadonna

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Fantastic, Erika! What great research, too. Another post that's right up my other-worldly alley.
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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Erika M. Szabo​ shares the mythology and folklore of Hungary. This is fascinating stuff, totally different than the familiar mythology of the Romans and Greeks -- check it out!
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Nikki McDonagh shared this via Google+

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Nikki McDonagh

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Fabulous post. I love reading about mythology and folklore, especially when I don't know anything about them.
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Chris Weigand

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Fun stuff. Thanks for sharing.
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Chris Weigand via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
A little more Hungarian mythology with Erika.
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Toi Thomas via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today, Erika M Szabo, breaks down the basics of the hierarchy of Hungarian mythology, including The World Tree and tons of creatures.
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Mary Anne Yarde

8 months ago (edited)  -  Shared publicly
 
Such a wonderfully informative post. Thanks for sharing, Erika!
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