The Púca: The Shapeshifter of the Irish Night and the Blackberries After Samhain
Ireland's fairy world is a hierarchy of great precision—courtly sídhe at the top, solitary craftsmen and keeners below—and then, outside every ranking, running the night roads on its own errands entirely, comes the Púca . The name may share an ancestry with half the sprites of northern Europe—the English Puck, the Welsh pwca , the Norse púki —but the Irish night-goer outgrew all its cousins in strangeness and in stature. The Púca is the shapeshifter : appearing now as a sleek black horse with sulfur-yellow eyes and a mane like falling night; now as a goat, a hare, an eagle, a great black dog; now—rarest and most unsettling—as a lean old man in rags with animal patience in his face. It comes after dark, in the waning of the year above all; it talks—the Púca is a speaking spirit, with a taste for naming men aloud on empty roads; it spoils the last of the blackberries on the first of November and claims the unharvested fields; and it performs, upon the unwary and the deserving ali...