Saturday, September 21, 2024

Worlds end at the well

  I can't find it now. Maybe it never existed, or it was from somewhere else entirely. But I always associate the image with the Little Golden Book version of Walt Disney's Darby O'Gill and the Little People (from the Darby O'Gill tales by Herminie Templeton Kavanagh).

I must have been six or seven, just before I read The Wind in the Willows and was banished from the world of picture books entirely. I remember the image as the cover of the book, but it may have been a picture inside, or, as I've said, it could be some other book entirely--

darby and the elf king
Not exactly what I had in mind
--or it could be that the original image was twisted and reformed by my imagination over the years. Darby O'Gill was probably in the picture, as well as the tiny king of the fairies. I don't remember. I don't care. What I do remember is that it was deep night, and there was a well, and there was a golden light shining up from the well, where no light should ever have shone, an uncanny light, full of deep magic, and I loved the look of it, the beckoning, and I've been trying to capture that light ever since.

darby cover
Google is not my friend. That search turned up everything but what I was
looking for. And if it was a different book, I have no idea what it might have been, or whether I interpreted the picture wrongly or have misremembered it. Could my memory have transformed a pot of gold into a golden well? Possibly.  It's not really important, is it? What's important is the image of the well, and the light.

     J.R.R. Tolkien wrote a brilliant essay called "On Fairy Stories", in which he argued that real fairy stories are not about fairies, but about the adventures of men on the edge of faerie, as faerie recedes, and the glamor of magic fades, eluding our grasp like a willow-the-wisp. I've found that my favorite fantasy novels fit that bill -- Little, Big, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, The Charwoman's Shadow, The Crock of Gold, The Beginning Place, even The Lord of the Rings, are all about the receding of magic from our lives. 

And the rim of that well, with the uncanny light overbrimming, is at the edge of faerie.

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