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Guenʹdolen (3 syl.)

.

A fairy whose mother was a human being. One day King Arthur wandered into the valley of St. John, when a fairy palace rose to view, and a train of ladies conducted him to their queen. King Arthur and Guenʹdolen fell in love with each other, and the fruit of their illicit love was a daughter named Gyneth. After the lapse of three months Arthur left Guenʹdolen, and the deserted fair one offered him a parting cup. As Arthur raised the cup a drop of the contents fell on his horse, and so burnt it that the horse leaped twenty feet high, and then ran in mad career up the hills till it was exhausted. Arthur dashed the cup on the ground, the contents burnt up everything they touched, the fairy palace vanished, and Guenʹdolen was never more seen. This tale is told by Sir Walter Scott in The Bridal of Triermain. It is called Lyulph’s Tale, from canto i. 10 to canto ii. 28. (See Gyneth.)

“Her mother was of human birth,

Her sire a Genie of the earth,

In days of old deemed to preside

Oʹer lover’s wiles and beauty’s pride.”


Bridal of Triermain, ii. 3.

 

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

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Guards of the Pole
Guarinos (Admiral)
Gubbings
Gudgeon
Gudrun
Gudule
Guebres or Ghebers [Fire-Worshippers]
Guelder Rose
Guelpho
Guelphs and Ghibellines
Guendolen
Guendolœna
Guenever
Guerilla
Guerino Meschino [the Wretched]
Guess (I)
Guest
Gueux
Gugner
Gui
Guiderius