Let's Talk Spooky

47: The Fair Folk

Shauna Taylor Season 1 Episode 47

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Episode Summary

On the night of March fifteenth, eighteen ninety-five, eight people in a small Irish kitchen watched a

man named Michael Cleary set his wife on fire. Not one of them tried to stop him. They all believed the

same thing he did: the woman on the bed wasn't his wife anymore. The fairies had taken her.

In this episode, we use the death of Bridget Cleary as a doorway into something much larger. We trace

fairy belief across five cultures and two centuries —through documented court cases, ethnographic

records, modern road bends, and a billionaire's fall — to ask the splinter-under-the-skin question: why

does almost every culture on Earth, independently, agree that there are beings just adjacent to us, and

That there are rules?

This is fairy folklore as our great-great-grandparents understood it. Not the wings and wishing dust of

the Disney version. Something older. Something stranger.Something a man would burn his wife alive

over, with eight witnesses who agreed he was doing the right thing.

Sources & Further Reading

On Bridget Cleary and Irish changeling cases:

• Angela Bourke, The Burning of Bridget Cleary (1999)— the definitive scholarly account.

• Joan Hoff & Marian Yeates, The Cooper's Wife is Missing: The Trials of Bridget Cleary (2000).

• Carole Silver, Strange and Secret Peoples: Fairies andVictorian Consciousness (1999) — for

documented Welsh and Irish changeling cases.

On Welsh and broader Celtic fairy belief:

• Elias Owen, Welsh Folk-Lore (1896) — first-hand 19th-century ethnography.

• Katharine Briggs, A Dictionary of Fairies (1976) —the standard reference.

• W. Y. Evans-Wentz, The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries (1911).

On Icelandic Huldufólk:

• AP and BBC reporting on the Álftanes case (2013–2015).

Let's Talk Spooky · The Fair Folk · Show Notes 4

• Terry Gunnell, University of Iceland — academic work on Icelandic folk belief.

On Filipino engkanto belief:

• Francisco R. Demetrio, S.J., "The Engkanto Belief: An Essay in Interpretation" (1969).

• Maximo D. Ramos, Creatures of Philippine Lower Mythology (1971).

On the Sean Quinn / Aughrim Wedge Tomb story:

Irish Independent, "Sean Quinn's downfall is fairies' revenge say locals in Cavan" (2011).

• RTÉ, biography excerpt of Sean Quinn (2022).


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