Hungry grass
Patch of cursed grass in Irish mythology
In Irish mythology, hungry grass (Irish: féar gortach; also known as fairy grass) is a patch of cursed grass. Anyone walking on it was doomed to perpetual and insatiable hunger.
Harvey suggests that the hungry grass is cursed by the proximity of an unshriven corpse (the fear gorta).[1] William Carleton's stories suggest that faeries plant the hungry grass.[2] According to Harvey, this myth may relate to beliefs formed in the Great Famine of the 1840s.[1] In Margaret McDougall's letters, the phrase "hungry grass" is - by analogy to the myth - used to describe hunger pains.[3]
See also
- Hungry ghost
- Briza
References
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Fairies in folklore
Classifications of fairies
- Celtic sacred trees
- Changeling
- Elfshot
- Fairy godmother
- Fairy-lock
- Fairy painting
- Fairy riding
- Fairy tale
- Familiar
- Genius loci
- Household deity
- Hungry grass
- Nature spirit
- Tutelary deity
- Water spirit
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- See also
- Category
- List of beings referred to as fairies
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