Don't go near the water:
The Tale of Jenny Greenteeth
If your path takes you
near a riverbed or across
a stream, you’d best look
out for Jenny Greenteeth.
A water witch of greenish
tinge with frog-like,
yellow eyes as big as
two lamps, Jenny dwells
beneath the river’s surface,
darting like a fish across
the muddy bottoms, and
feeding upon the misfortunate
who stumble and drown
in her waters.
Tales of Jenny Greenteeth
abound in Britain, where
she is also known as Wicked
Jenny, Peg O’Nell, and
Peg Powler. In Ireland
and Germany she appears
as a beautiful woman in
a white gown, and is called
respectively Bean-Fionn
and die Weisse Frau. Although
her visage is changed,
she is still the same
dreaded Jenny Greenteeth,
haunting river banks and
dragging her victims to
their untimely deaths.
The moral of all Jenny
Greenteeth stories is
to stay away from rivers
and lakes, and it is thought
that she was the imagined
creation of mothers who
wanted to warn their children
away from the water’s
edge with frightening
tales. Her stories may
have also derived from
duckweed, an aqueous plant
that wraps its tendrils
around one’s leg and traps
them under water.
While most stories paint
Jenny Greenteeth in morbid,
unredeeming tones, some
tales show a somewhat
tender--albeit mislleading--side
to the Greentoothed Woman.
In these accounts she
uses her long bony arms
to embrace her victims,
stroking them with her
sharp fingernails until
they fall into a deep
sleep whereupon she devours
them. Sailors of the past
called Jenny Greenteeth
the Sea Hag and believed
that she sang as she neared
her victims:
"Come into the water,
love,
Dance beneath the waves,
Where dwell the bones
of sailor-lads
Inside my saffron cave."
~S.E. Schlosser
Upon hearing
the sad melody, sailors
had one last chance to
turn back before she would
strike. Sailors who disregarded
the warning would never
be seen again.
Superstitions
regarding water have been
passed down over centuries,
and we may take part in
some of these customs
without even knowing their
origins. For instance,
throwing coins into a
well in exchange for a
wish resembles the custom
begun thousands of years
ago, when people tossed
offerings into the wells
to appease the gods and
ensure the continuance
of the water. The Tweed
River in Scotland was
said to be subdued by
one casting salt over
its waters with nets.
There is a tradition of
decorating wells with
pictures of flowers that
may have Victorian origins,
or may even trace back
to the days of the Black
Death. Some villages credited
their escape to their
sweet water, and to this
day they dress their wells
to protect it.
There is
no protection, though,
against the wicked Greentoothed
Woman once you are within
her grasp. Like the tale
of Jenny Greenteeth, all
these superstitions are
messages used by our ancestors
to warn us against the
danger of water.
About the Author:
This article was written
by Robin Daniels. Robin
is a mystic and contributes
to Mystical Creatures
http://www.mystical-creatures.com
and Fantasy Gifts http://www.fantasy-gifts.net
.
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