God Bless the Gargoyles

Monday, October 15, 2007

Feeling--stuffed
Reading-- Familiar Stranger by Michele Hauf
Listening to-- nothing

Hello everyone. I dunno why, but this year--as you no doubt couldn't help but notice--I've been in a very Halloweeny mood. Almost every night I've watched a Halloween movie with or without my parents, I've added a doodle a day to my October doodle diary/page and, obviously, almost every entry this month has had something to do with Halloween. Oh, and I've even participated a lil over here, on this year's Halloween blog, hosted as usual by the Soul Food Café's Queen of Horror, Anita Marie. So much Halloween Spirit! It's quite the departure from the last few years, where I've only tried doing 13 Days of Halloween. Instead, I'm obviously doing a WHOLE Month of Halloween! *sheepish chuckle* I guess since I kinda petered out last year my Spirit of Halloween decided to return with a vengeance! But that's ok, I don't mind all that much. *brief smile*


This year, I intend to tell his story, reveal his identity and share how he became the Spirit of Halloween, at least for me. But not today. Today, another creature takes the spotlight, with the help of Lady Gryphon: the Gargoyle.


When we hear the word gargoyle today, we immediately think of frightening or grotesque stone creatures set on top of mansions, museums, old libraries or cathedrals, etc. Supposedly they're there to frighten off evil spirits or anyone who would do mischief or spiteful and malicious things to either the building itself or to the people or things inside. But surprisingly--to me, at least--that isn't their original purpose. No, gargoyles were first made as waterspouts or "drainpipes" to keep the water away from buildings. They were first seen in France around the 13th Century A.D.

The word "gargoyle" derives from the Old French word gargouille, meaning "throat or gullet." The Old French word describes the sound water makes as it mixes with air in the throat. (This is where we get the word gargle from...)

It is believed by some that no two gargoyles are alike, but no one seems to know why. Gargoyles which combine several different animals with each other or with human body parts to make unique creatures or races are also known as chimeras. (This I did not know, and I never thought of the following races or animals in such a way before. But I guess, put in this light, they really are chimeras.) When a human head is seen on a lion's body, this creature is known as a sphinx; on a bird's torso the creature is a siren. Combine the top half of a woman with a fish tail, you get a mermaid. The top half of a man combined with a horse's hind half, you have a centaur. A human head atop a vulture's body, and you have a harpy (another kind of woman/bird mixture); and the satyrs are lil men with goatly hind legs. Others are one-of-a-kind, the Minotaur--half man, half bull--and the Echidna--half woman, half snake, like Melusine--and the true Chimera...a mixture of lion, goat and snake. (Hmm...I thought it was a man's head with a lion's body, bat wings and a scorpion's menacing tail? *shrugs*)

I'll leave you now with a poem written for gargoyles everywhere...




Yesterday
02-09-2012 Thursday 13: Netflix
02-10-2012 Rainbow Crow
02-11-2012 My Crow Project
02-12-2012 Crow: Keeper of All Sacred Law
02-21-2012 My Book List for 2012

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