Saturday, April 18, 2026 · 天火 · tianmu.org
Neopagan
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Texts
A Book of Folklore — Sabine Baring-GouldA Book of Folklore — Sabine Baring-Gould's study of the origins and layers of British folk belief, tracing the pagan substrata beneath Christian popular religion: spirits, sacrifice, death customs, pixies, skulls, and birth rites (1913).A Peep at the Pixies — Anna Eliza BrayA Peep at the Pixies or Legends of the West by Anna Eliza Bray (1854) — traditional Devonshire legends of the pixies, the Small People, and the fairy folk of the West Country, drawn from oral tradition and the author's earlier Traditions of Devonshire.Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland — Lady WildeAncient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland — Lady Francesca Speranza Wilde's 1887 compendium of Irish folk belief: the fairy faith, banshees, changelings, the evil eye, charms and cures, death omens, spirit lore, and the living supernatural world of nineteenth-century Ireland.Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches — Charles G. LelandA foundational text of modern Neopaganism, purportedly containing the sacred traditions of Italian witchcraft passed down through the centuries.Barddas — Iolo MorganwgBarddas — The Welsh bardic theology compiled by Iolo Morganwg (Edward Williams): the Druidic doctrine of Annwn, Abred, Gwynvyd, and Ceugant; the nature of God and creation; the transmigration of souls; the Ogham alphabet; the Bardic Triads; and the full system of Welsh Druidic cosmology.Beside the Fire — Douglas HydeBeside the Fire — Douglas Hyde's collection of Irish Gaelic folk stories, translated and annotated, the founding text of the Irish folklore movement (London, 1910, 2nd ed.).British Goblins — Wirt SikesBritish Goblins: Welsh Folk-lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends and Traditions — Wirt Sikes' 1880 survey: the complete folklore of Wales — the Tylwyth Teg, the Pwca, Cambrian giants, enchanted islands, phantom funerals, corpse candles, and the fairy faith of the Welsh people.Carmina Gadelica — Alexander CarmichaelCarmina Gadelica — Alexander Carmichael's 1900 collection of Scottish Gaelic hymns, prayers, incantations, and blessings from the Highlands and Islands: invocations, seasons, labor blessings, love charms, protective charms, and the living sacred tradition of the Gàidhealtachd.Celtic Fairy Tales — Joseph JacobsCeltic Fairy Tales — Joseph Jacobs' two-volume collection (1892, 1894): 46 stories from Irish, Scottish, Welsh and Breton tradition, from Connla and the Fairy Maiden to The Children of Lir.Celtic Folklore, Welsh and Manx — John RhysCeltic Folklore, Welsh and Manx — John Rhys' 1901 scholarly collection: the folklore of Wales and the Isle of Man gathered from oral tradition, with detailed comparative analysis of Celtic mythology, folk customs, fairy belief, and the survival of ancient religion.Celtic Myth and Legend — Charles SquireCeltic Myth and Legend — Charles Squire's 1905 survey of Celtic mythology: the gods and heroes of Ireland, Wales, and Britain — from the Tuatha Dé Danann and the Irish mythological cycle through Arthur, Merlin, and the legendary history of Britain.Celtic Wonder Tales — Ella YoungCeltic Wonder Tales — Ella Young's retellings of fourteen Irish myths and legends, from the shaping of the Earth by the Tuatha Dé Danann to the tale of Conary Mór, illustrated by Maud Gonne (1910).Cuchulain of MuirthemneCuchulain of Muirthemne — the story of the Red Branch champion, the Hound of Ulster, retold by Lady Augusta Gregory with a preface by W. B. Yeats (1902)Cuchulain of Muirthemne — Lady GregoryCuchulain of Muirthemne — Lady Gregory's 1902 retelling of the Ulster Cycle: the deeds of Cú Chulainn, the Táin Bó Cúailnge (Cattle Raid of Cooley), the tragic duel with Ferdiad, the fate of Deirdre and the Sons of Uisna, and the great heroes of the Red Branch.Daemonology, with Newes from Scotland — King James the FirstA royal treatise on demons, witchcraft, and the supernatural by King James I of England, paired with a sensational account of the North Berwick witch trials.Early British Trackways — Alfred WatkinsEarly British Trackways by Alfred Watkins (1922) — Watkins's original presentation of the ley line theory, arguing that ancient British sites (moats, mounds, camps, prehistoric standing stones, churches) are aligned in straight lines called leys, representing prehistoric trackways across the landscape.English Fairy and Folk Tales — Sidney Edwin HartlandEnglish Fairy and Other Folk Tales edited by Sidney Edwin Hartland (1890) — a wide-ranging collection of English folk tales organized by type (fairy encounters, changeling stories, bogies, witches, giants, ghosts) with scholarly attention to the underlying belief systems.English Fairy Tales — Joseph JacobsEnglish Fairy Tales collected by Joseph Jacobs (1890) — 43 classic English tales including Jack and the Beanstalk, Tom Thumb, Jack the Giant-Killer, Dick Whittington, and the Three Bears, drawn from oral tradition and early printed sources.English Gipsies and Their Language — Charles Godfrey LelandEnglish Gipsies and Their Language by Charles Godfrey Leland (1874) — a study of the Romani people in England, their society, customs, language (the Romany dialect), and oral tradition, by the American folklorist who learned Romany and lived among Gypsy communities.Etruscan Roman Remains in Popular Tradition — Charles Godfrey LelandA field study of Tuscan folk magic and its connections to ancient Etruscan and Roman pagan religion, by the author of Aradia.Fairies — Gertrude M. FauldingFairies — Gertrude M. Faulding's essay: a meditative survey of fairy belief in English and Celtic tradition, drawing on Shakespeare, Drayton, Herrick, and the folk tradition to characterize the nature and world of the fairy folk.Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry — W.B. YeatsFairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry edited by W.B. Yeats (1888) — Yeats's first published book, an anthology of Irish folklore organized by creature type (fairies, leprechauns, banshees, death omens, witches, giants), drawing on Croker, Lover, Lady Wilde, and oral tradition.Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland — Thomas Crofton CrokerFairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland — Thomas Crofton Croker's 1825 collection: the first systematic record of Irish fairy belief, including the Cluricaune, Banshee, Merrow, Phouka, and the fairy changeling tradition.Folk Tales of Brittany — Elsie MassonFolk Tales of Brittany — Elsie Masson's 1929 collection of Breton folk tales: stories from the farmhouses and pardons of Brittany, drawn from the Barzaz-Breize, Emile Souvestre's Le Foyer Breton, and the collection of Abbé François Cadic.Folk-Lore of the Isle of Man — A.W. MooreFolk-Lore of the Isle of Man — A.W. Moore's 1891 survey: the folklore, mythology, and traditions of the Isle of Man — the fairies (Ferrishyn), the Buggane, the Phynodderree, Norse survivals, water-horses, witchcraft, and the unique cultural fusion of Manx folk tradition.Folk-lore of the North-East of Scotland — Walter GregorNotes on the Folk-Lore of the North-East of Scotland — Walter Gregor's 1881 systematic survey for the Folk-Lore Society: birth, childhood, marriage, death, witchcraft, fairies, the evil eye, weather signs, and folk medicine from Aberdeenshire and surrounding counties.From Ritual to Romance — Jessie WestonFrom Ritual to Romance — Jessie Weston's 1920 study of the origins of the Grail legend in pre-Christian vegetation ritual: the Fisher King, the Waste Land, the Grail Castle, and the sacred drama of death and renewal underlying the Arthurian romance tradition.Gods and Fighting Men — Lady GregoryGods and Fighting Men — Lady Gregory's retelling of the great Irish mythological cycles: the Tuatha Dé Danann and the Fianna, with a preface by W.B. Yeats (1904).Gypsy Folk Tales — Francis Hindes GroomGypsy Folk Tales collected by Francis Hindes Groom (1899) — 75 tales from Romani communities across Europe (Turkish, Russian, Hungarian, Transylvanian, Scottish, Welsh Gypsies), many with parallel variants and scholarly apparatus, the foundational English-language Romani folklore collection.Gypsy Sorcery and Fortune Telling — Charles Godfrey LelandA study of Romani magical practices, incantations, and divination methods, drawing parallels with pagan traditions worldwide.Hero-Myths and Legends of the British Race — Maud Isabel EbbuttHero-Myths and Legends of the British Race by Maud Isabel Ebbutt (1910) — heroic narratives from Old English, Norse, and medieval British tradition retold in prose, covering Beowulf, King Horn, Havelok, Guy of Warwick, Hereward the Wake, Robin Hood, and other heroes of British legend.Heroic Romances of Ireland — A.H. LeahyHeroic Romances of Ireland — A.H. Leahy's two-volume translation (1905–1906): the major prose and verse tales of the Ulster Cycle — Bricrend's Feast, The Sick-Bed of Cúchulainn, The Wooing of Emer, The Phantom's Frenzy, and other key texts of the Irish heroic tradition.In the Seven Woods — W.B. YeatsW.B. Yeats's 1903 collection — Irish heroic verse and personal lyrics from the Coole Park years; turning point between early symbolism and the mature plain style.In Wicklow and West Kerry — J.M. SyngeIn Wicklow and West Kerry — J.M. Synge's essays on the Irish countryside and its people: vagrants, tinkers, the people of the glens, and the world of West Kerry (1911, posthumous).Irish Druids and Old Irish Religions — James BonwickA scholarly exploration of Druidism and pre-Christian Irish religion, weaving together mythology, anthropology, and folklore.Irish Fairy Tales — James StephensIrish Fairy Tales — James Stephens's retelling of nine tales from the Irish mythological and Fionn cycles, from the age-shifting voyager Tuan mac Cairill to the boyhood of Fionn mac Cumhaill (1920).Irish Witchcraft and Demonology — St. John D. SeymourA survey of witch persecution in Ireland, together with accounts of poltergeists, ghosts, apparitions, and other paranormal phenomena from Irish historical records.Later Poems — W.B. YeatsYeats's own anthology of his poetry 1894–1921 — The Wind Among the Reeds, Easter 1916, The Second Coming, The Wild Swans at Coole, and the complete arc from symbolism to the great late style.Legendary Fictions of the Irish Celts — Patrick KennedyLegendary Fictions of the Irish Celts — Patrick Kennedy's 1866 comprehensive collection of Irish folk tales and legends: fairy tales, hero tales, legends of the dead, ghost stories, religious legends, and the full range of Irish oral narrative tradition from Wexford and Leinster.Legends and Romances of Brittany — Lewis SpenceLegends and Romances of Brittany — Lewis Spence's comprehensive survey of Breton folklore, myth, and legend: fairies, demons, Arthurian matter, Breton lays, saints' lives, and hero-tales (1917).Legends and Stories of Ireland — Samuel LoverLegends and Stories of Ireland — Samuel Lover's 1831/1834 two-volume collection of Irish folk tales, legends, and sketches: fairy tales, ghost stories, comic narratives, and the full range of Irish popular tradition as recorded in the early nineteenth century.Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft — Sir Walter ScottTen learned and entertaining letters on the history of supernatural belief, from the pen of Scotland's most celebrated novelist.Malleus Maleficarum — Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger, translated by Montague SummersThe most infamous witch-hunting manual in European history, a judicial handbook for the detection, prosecution, and execution of accused witches that fueled centuries of persecution.More Celtic Fairy Tales — Joseph JacobsMore Celtic Fairy Tales — Joseph Jacobs' 1894 continuation: twenty-four tales from Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and Breton tradition — including Connla and the Fairy Maiden, Guleesh, The Well at the World's End, Elidure, and tales of shape-shifting, enchantment, and the hidden world.More English Fairy Tales — Joseph JacobsMore English Fairy Tales collected by Joseph Jacobs (1894) — a second volume of 43 English folk tales including Cap o' Rushes, Mr. Fox, Whittington and His Cat, The Laidly Worm of Spindleston Heugh, and tales from every county of England and Wales.Myths and Folk-lore of Ireland — Jeremiah CurtinMyths and Folk-lore of Ireland — Jeremiah Curtin's 1890 collection of Irish mythological tales: the Tuatha Dé Danann, the Fomorians, hero tales of Fionn and the Fianna, wonder tales, and the Irish mythological cycle recorded from oral tradition.Myths and Legends of the Celtic Race — T.W. RollestonMyths and Legends of the Celtic Race — T.W. Rolleston's comprehensive survey of Celtic mythology and legend, from the origin of the Celts through the Irish and Welsh mythological cycles (1911).On the Study of Celtic Literature — Matthew ArnoldOn the Study of Celtic Literature — Matthew Arnold's influential 1867 lectures on the nature and spirit of Celtic literature and its contribution to English poetry, arguing for a Celtic Chair at Oxford.Pagan Prayers — Marah Ellis RyanA collection of prayers and hymns gathered from non-Christian traditions worldwide, from Aztec and Chaldean to Hindu and Egyptian.Popular Romances of the West of England — Robert HuntThe foundational collection of Cornish folklore — giants, piskies, knockers, mermaids, and local legends from the far West Country. Robert Hunt's third edition, London: Chatto and Windus, 1903.Popular Tales of the West Highlands — J.F. CampbellPopular Tales of the West Highlands — J.F. Campbell's four-volume collection (1860–1862): tales gathered from living Gaelic storytellers across the Scottish Highlands — the foundational archive of Scottish Gaelic oral narrative, including the first published recordings of tales known worldwide.Prolegomena to the Study of Old Welsh Poetry — Edward AnwylEdward Anwyl's scholarly introduction to the problems of interpreting the oldest Welsh poetry — Taliesin, Aneurin, the Gododdin. From Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorian, 1903.Robin Hood and His Adventures — Paul CreswickRobin Hood and His Adventures by Paul Creswick (1917), illustrated by N.C. Wyeth — a complete retelling of the Robin Hood legend from the original ballads, tracing the career of the outlaw of Sherwood Forest from his outlawry to his death at Kirklees Priory.Saints and Wonders — Lady GregorySaints and Wonders — Lady Gregory's retelling of the lives and legends of the Irish saints and the great wonder-voyages, drawn from Irish hagiographic and immrama tradition (1906).Scottish Fairy and Folk Tales — Sir George DouglasScottish Fairy and Folk Tales — Sir George Douglas' 1901 anthology: Scottish fairy tales, legends, and folk narratives from Highland and Lowland tradition — the silkies, the kelpies, Tam Lin, Thomas the Rhymer, and the complete survey of Scottish supernatural folk belief.Sports and Pastimes of the People of England — Joseph StruttThe Sports and Pastimes of the People of England by Joseph Strutt (1801, revised by J. Charles Cox 1903) — the foundational historical survey of English folk games, sports, seasonal festivals, dramatic entertainments, tournaments, and popular recreations from the earliest periods to the early nineteenth century.Stonehenge and Other British Stone Monuments — Norman LockyerStonehenge and Other British Stone Monuments Astronomically Considered by Sir Norman Lockyer (1906) — the influential argument that Stonehenge and other megalithic monuments were aligned to astronomical events, particularly the midsummer sunrise, with implications for the dating of British prehistory.Stonehenge, A Temple Restor'd to the British Druids — William StukeleyStonehenge, A Temple Restor'd to the British Druids by William Stukeley (1740) — the foundational work of Druid studies, arguing that Stonehenge and Avebury were temples built by the ancient Druids, with detailed measurements and engravings; the origin of the modern Druid-Stonehenge connection.Survivals in Belief Among the Celts — George HendersonSurvivals in Belief Among the Celts — George Henderson's 1911 scholarly study of Celtic folk religion, myth, and belief: the otherworld, fairy faith, second sight, the wandering soul, and the Celtic conception of death and the afterlife.Tales of Fairies and the Ghost World — Jeremiah CurtinTales of Fairies and the Ghost World — Jeremiah Curtin's 1895 collection of Irish supernatural tales: fairy encounters, the living dead, ghost stories, and the full range of Irish otherworld belief recorded from Irish-speaking informants in Munster.Tales of the Dartmoor Pixies — William CrossingTales of the Dartmoor Pixies by William Crossing (1890) — folk tales and legends of the pixies of Dartmoor, Devon, collected from local oral tradition by the foremost chronicler of Dartmoor life, covering pixy mischief, pixy stealing, pixy-led travelers, and the relationship between pixies and the human world.The Ancient Irish Goddess of War — W.M. HennesseyThe Ancient Irish Goddess of War — W.M. Hennessey's 1870 study of the Morrigan: the triple war-goddess of ancient Ireland — Morrigan, Badb, and Macha — her appearances in the mythological cycle, the Ulster Cycle, and Cú Chulainn's death, with original Irish texts and translations.The Aran Islands — J.M. SyngeThe Aran Islands — J.M. Synge's account of his visits to the three Aran Islands off the Galway coast, 1898–1901: an immersion in the Irish-speaking world that formed the voice behind all his plays (1907).The Book of Hallowe'en — Ruth Edna KelleyA comprehensive exploration of the pagan roots and folk customs of Halloween, tracing the festival from ancient sun-worship through Celtic Samhain to modern American practice.The Candle of Vision — A.E. (George William Russell)The Candle of Vision — twenty mystical essays on Celtic imagination, earth vision, and the nature of spiritual sight, by A.E. (George William Russell, 1918).The Cattle-Raid of Cooley — Joseph DunnThe central epic of the Ulster Cycle — Queen Medb's war to steal the Brown Bull of Cooley; Cuchulain's single-handed defence of Ulster. Translated by Joseph Dunn from the Old Irish, 1914.The Celtic Twilight — W.B. YeatsThe Celtic Twilight by W.B. Yeats (1893, enlarged 1902) — Yeats's collection of encounters with Irish supernatural tradition, narrating conversations with visionaries, accounts of fairy haunts and ghost places, and the poet's own experiences with the unseen world of County Sligo.The Coming of the Fairies — Arthur Conan DoyleThe Coming of the Fairies by Arthur Conan Doyle (1922) — Doyle's investigation of the Cottingley Fairy photographs, arguing for the genuine existence of fairies and nature spirits, blending Theosophical speculation with earnest analysis of the photographic evidence.The Crock of Gold — James StephensThe Crock of Gold — James Stephens's exuberant Irish prose-poem novel, in which two Philosophers, the god Pan, and Angus Óg of the Tuatha Dé Danann contend for the soul of a young peasant woman (1912).The Destruction of Da Derga's Hostel — Whitley StokesThe Destruction of Dá Derga's Hostel (Togail Bruidne Dá Derga) — Whitley Stokes' translation from Old Irish: the tragic tale of Conaire Mór, the sacred king whose violation of his royal taboos leads to the destruction of the hostel and his death — a masterwork of Old Irish narrative art.The Druid Path — Marah Ellis RyanThe Druid Path — Marah Ellis Ryan's 1917 collection of Celtic prose fiction: six tales of Druid Ireland, the fairy world, and the early Christian encounter with pagan tradition.The Fairy Mythology — Thomas KeightleyThe Fairy Mythology — Thomas Keightley's 1850 comparative survey of fairy lore across European traditions: English, Irish, Scottish, Scandinavian, German, French, Italian, and Oriental fairy belief, their origins, types, and underlying unity.The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries — W.Y. Evans-WentzThe Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries — W.Y. Evans-Wentz's 1911 scholarly investigation: field research across Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Isle of Man, and Cornwall — documenting the living fairy faith as a survival of pre-Christian Celtic religion and consciousness of the dead.The Four Ancient Books of Wales — W.F. SkeneThe Four Ancient Books of Wales — W.F. Skene's 1868 edition and translation: the oldest Welsh poetry — the Black Book of Carmarthen, the Book of Aneurin (Y Gododdin), the Book of Taliesin, and the Red Book of Hergest — the foundational texts of early Welsh literature.The Gardnerian Book of Shadows — Gerald GardnerThe central liturgical text of Wicca, containing rituals, spells, and ceremonial instructions compiled by the tradition's modern founder.The Golden Bough — Sir James George FrazerA monumental study of comparative religion and mythology, tracing the universal pattern of the dying and resurrecting god through cultures worldwide.The Irish Sketch Book — William Makepeace ThackerayThe Irish Sketch Book — William Makepeace Thackeray's 1845 travel memoir of Ireland: Dublin, Wicklow, Killarney, Galway, Limerick, Belfast; social observation, political commentary, and vivid portraits of Irish life in the years before the Great Famine.The King of Ireland's Son — Padraic ColumThe King of Ireland's Son — Padraic Colum's 1916 retelling of Irish folk tales: the quest of the King's son through enchanted forests and fairy palaces, encounters with the Enchanter and the Witch of the Bog, woven into a continuous narrative of Irish folk imagination.The MabinogionThe Mabinogion, the great cycle of Welsh mythology from the Red Book of Hergest, in the classic translation by Lady Charlotte Guest (1877)The Myth of the Birth of the Hero — Otto RankThe Myth of the Birth of the Hero — Otto Rank's 1914 psychoanalytic study: the comparative analysis of hero-birth myths across twenty-three cultures, from Sargon and Moses to Perseus and Romulus, revealing the universal pattern of the exposed and recovered divine child.The Origins of Popular Superstitions and Customs — T. Sharper KnowlsonThe Origins of Popular Superstitions and Customs by T. Sharper Knowlson — a systematic survey of the mythological and psychological roots of common English folk beliefs, customs, and superstitions, tracing their origins from pagan religion through medieval Christianity to Victorian survivals.The Phynodderree — Edward CallowThe Phynodderree and Other Legends of the Isle of Man — Edward Callow's 1882 collection of Manx folklore: the Phynodderree (the fairy exile), the Mooinjer Veggey (Little People), the Lhiannan-shee, Mona's history and legends, ghost stories, and the folk traditions of the Isle of Man.The Poems of Ossian — James MacphersonThe Poems of Ossian — James Macpherson's legendary translations of the Gaelic bard Ossian, including the epics Fingal and Temora, with scholarly apparatus by Hugh Blair (1773/1805 edition).The Prophecies of the Brahan Seer — Alexander MackenzieThe Prophecies of the Brahan Seer — Alexander Mackenzie's 1899 collection of the prophecies of Coinneach Odhar, the 17th-century Highland seer, including the Seaforth prophecy and accounts of second sight.The Religion of the Ancient Celts — J.A. MacCullochThe Religion of the Ancient Celts — J.A. MacCulloch's 1911 scholarly survey: the complete reconstruction of Celtic religion — the gods, druids, human sacrifice, the Otherworld, the cult of the dead, magic and divination, place-names and ritual, and the survival of paganism in folklore.The Science of Fairy Tales — Edwin Sidney HartlandThe Science of Fairy Tales — Edwin Sidney Hartland's 1891 systematic folklore study: the Supernatural Birth and the Swan-Maiden, Changelings, Visits to Fairyland, the Prohibition and the Chain of Events, and the comparative mythology of Celtic and Teutonic folk belief.The Second Battle of Mag Tuired — Whitley StokesThe Second Battle of Mag Tuired (Cath Maige Tuired) — Whitley Stokes' 1891 translation from Old Irish: the mythological battle in which the Tuatha Dé Danann under Lugh defeat the Fomorians — containing the origins of the gods, the magic of Lugh, and the Morrigan's prophecy.The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies — Robert KirkThe Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies — Robert Kirk's 1691 treatise on the fairy world, with Andrew Lang's 1893 scholarly introduction: the most important primary document of Scottish fairy belief.The Veil of Isis, or Mysteries of the Druids — W. Winwood ReadeA romantic mid-Victorian exploration of Druidic religion, reflecting the era's fascination with Celtic antiquity and its imaginative reconstruction of a lost spiritual world.The Voyage of Bran — Kuno MeyerThe Voyage of Bran, Son of Febal — Kuno Meyer's 1895 critical edition and translation of the earliest Irish voyage-tale: the immortal realm of the sea, the Land of Women, and the Mongán cycle.The Welsh Fairy Book — W. Jenkyn ThomasThe Welsh Fairy Book — W. Jenkyn Thomas's 1907 collection of Welsh fairy legends, myths and traditions: 83 stories from the Mabinogion cycles, Arthurian legend, fairy folk, water spirits, and Welsh supernatural tradition.The Witch-Cult in Western Europe — Margaret Alice MurrayA controversial scholarly analysis of witch-trial evidence, arguing for the existence of an organized pre-Christian fertility cult persecuted as witchcraft across medieval and early modern Europe.The Witch-Persecutions — George L. Burr (editor)A collection of translated primary source documents from the European witch trials, providing firsthand accounts of the persecution.Tom Tit Tot — Edward CloddTom Tit Tot — Edward Clodd's study of the Rumpelstiltskin story type (Guessing the Helper's Name) and its folklore significance: a classic of comparative folklore methodology (1898).Traces of the Norse Mythology in the Isle of Man — A.W. MooreTraces of the Norse Mythology in the Isle of Man — A.W. Moore's scholarly essay tracing the survival of Norse mythological beliefs in Manx folk tradition, with illustrative texts from Norse sources (1904).Visions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland — Lady GregoryVisions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland — Lady Gregory's 1920 collection of supernatural lore from County Galway: fairy encounters, the second sight, death omens, ghost stories, cures and herb-women, and the living fairy faith of the west of Ireland.Wonder Tales from Scottish Myth and Legend — Donald A. MacKenzieWonder Tales from Scottish Myth and Legend — Donald A. MacKenzie's 1917 collection of Scottish mythological tales: the goddess Bride, Angus Óg, Fionn MacCumhaill, the Cailleach, Lugh, and the full cycle of Gaelic wonder-tales from Highland tradition.