Púca
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- "Pucca" redirects here. For the internet cartoon, see Pucca Funny Love.
The Púca (also Pooka, Phooka, Phouka, Púka, Pwca in Welsh, pouque in Dgèrnésiais, also Glashtyn, Gruagach) is a creature of Celtic folklore, notably in Ireland and Wales. It is one of the myriad of fairy (faery) folk, and, like many faery folk, is both respected and feared by those who believe in it.
According to legend, the Púca is an adroit shape changer, capable of assuming a variety of terrifying forms. It may appear as an eagle or as a large black goat (its name is a cognate of the early Irish 'poc', 'a male goat' and it lends its name to Puck, the goat-footed satyr made famous in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream), but it most commonly takes the form of a sleek black or white horse with a flowing mane and glowing yellow eyes.
The Púca is considered by many to be the most terrifying of all the creatures of faery. Not the slightest reason is its appearance, but it is its powers that are most feared. It is said to waylay travellers and others about at night, and if it is able to toss them onto its back, it will, at very least, provide them with the ride of their lives, from which they will return forever changed. A similar creature, the Aughisky (Water-horse), will allow itself to be saddled and ridden, but if it is ever taken next to a river or pond, it will carry its hapless rider into the water and rip him to pieces. The Púca has the power of human speech, and has been said to call those it feels have slighted or offended it out of their homes for a ride. If they fail to appear, it will tear down fences, scatter livestock, and create general mayhem.
Certain agricultural traditions surround the Púca. It is a creature associated with Samhain, the third Pagan (Celtic, Wiccan) Harvest Festival, when the last of the crops is brought in. Anything remaining in the fields is considered "puka," or fairy-blasted, and hence inedible. In some locales, reapers leave a small share of the crop, the "púca's share," to placate the hungry creature. Nonetheless, November Day (November 1) is the Púca's day, and the one day of the year when it can be expected to behave civilly.
In some regions, the Púca is spoken of with considerably more respect than fear; if treated with due deference, it may actually be beneficial to those who encounter it. The Púca is a creature of the mountains and hills, and in those regions there are stories of it appearing on November Day and providing prophecies and warnings to those who consult it.
At the beginning of the 21st century, the Púca has succumbed to the enfeeblement which has been the fate of so many other powerful mythological creatures. Contemporary media have reduced it to a harmless, shy, and slightly demented garden-gnomish weevil eater.
In modern times, the word has also been used in Ireland for the hallucinogenic Liberty Cap mushroom (Psilocybe semilanceata). This use is believed to predate the popularisation of the mushroom in the 1970s, and may possibly be of considerable antiquity.
Depictions in popular culture
- Americans are most likely to be familiar with an only slightly mischievous version of the Púca from the stage play and movie Harvey, in which the title character, an invisible six-foot-three-and-a-half-inch rabbit, describes himself as a pooka.
- Pooka is also a character in the classic video game Dig Dug.
- The Pooka is a ghost horse in Crewel Lye, a fantasy novel by Piers Anthony.
- The Pooka is also a type of character in the fae-based White Wolf role-playing game Changeling: The Dreaming.
- Pooka is the name Anastasia gives the mischievous tag-along pup in Fox Animation Studios' Anastasia.
- One of the main characters of Emma Bull's best-known book, War for the Oaks, is a Púca (spelled Phouka in the book, usually).
- Pooka is also the name of a now-defunct British pop duo, Natasha Lea Jones and Sharon Lewis (both of whom are now exploring solo careers). From 1993, they released four albums (Pooka, Spinning, Shift, and Fools Give Birth to Angels) and numerous singles. They have also featured on albums from Orbital.
- "The Pooka MacPhellimey, a member of the devil class", is a main character in Flann O'Brien's classic novel At Swim-Two-Birds.
- A púca appeared briefly in the ghost comedy movie "High Spirits" as a talking white pony.
- In the "Bruce Coville's Book of" anthology series, a story called "The Pooka" appears in the third entry, "Bruce Coville's Book of Ghosts".
- Martyn Turner called a púca into service as the protagonist of a series of newspaper cartoons.