Lady Of The Lake

Discuss age old myths here. Are they facts or are they fiction?

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LADYSILVERMOONGODDESS32
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Lady Of The Lake

Post by LADYSILVERMOONGODDESS32 » Wed Jun 10, 2009 9:21 pm

The Lady of the Lake
This mysterious female gave Arthur his sword, Excalibur. She stole Lancelot when he was a child and cured him when he went mad. She may be a Celtic lake divinity in origin, perhaps of the same kind as the Gwagged Annwn - lake fairies in modern Welsh folklore. In Ulrich, the fairy who raised Lancelot is the mother of Mabuz. As Mabuz is probably identical with the Celtic god Mabon, it would seem that the fairy must be Morgan Le Fay who was, earlier, Mabon's mother. Matrona. A lady of the lake, perhaps a different one, was killed by Balin.  
Vivien, the probable Lady of the Lake enchanted Merlin and imprisoned him forever.


Vivien may very well have been the Lady of the Lake in the Arthurian Legends and stories. Vivien, sometimes called Nineve, Nimue, Niniane, etc., is best known as the woman who sealed Merlin in a cave or a tree. Despite foreseeing his fate, Merlin was unable to prevent being captivated and captured by the woman Richard Wilbur has called "a creature to bewitch a sorcerer." Vivien is an ambiguous character. In Malory, for example, even though Nyneve, who is one of the Ladies of the Lake, deprives Arthur of Merlin's service, she rescues him twice, first by saving him from Accolon who has been given Excalibur by Morgan le Fay to use against Arthur, and then by preventing him from donning the destructive cloak sent to him by Morgan. She also uses her enchantments to punish Ettarde for her mistreatment of Pelleas. In the end she and Pelleas "lovede togedyrs duryng their lyfe."



The character is ambiguous even in her earliest appearances. In the French Vulgate Estoire de Merlin, she loves the enchanter and seals him in a beautiful tower, magically constructed, so that she can keep him always for herself. She visits him regularly and grants her love to him. In the continuation to the Vulgate Merlin, known as the Suite du Merlin, the relationship is very different. When Merlin shows her a tomb of two lovers, magically sealed, she enchants him and has him cast into the tomb on top of the two lovers, whereupon she reseals the tomb and Merlin dies a slow death. Tennyson turns Vivien into the epitome of evil. Though borrowing much from Tennyson, Edwin Arlington Robinson, in the poem, Merlin, makes Merlin's "captivity" voluntary, and his Vivian is less of an enchantress than an interesting woman whom Merlin truly loves.

sunmystic
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Post by sunmystic » Wed Aug 26, 2009 8:18 pm

I am not sure about the lady, but I do know about the "Lake". The lake contained "heavy water" high in tritium and it also had a high calcium carbonate content.

When the metals that Arthur's sword was forged from were hardened/tempered in it, the edges were nuclear and would cut anything.

What is not known is what metals the sword was forged from. :)

Those kinds of waters also have healing qualities that are at this point unexplored by science. Science in today's world uses these kinds of waters (without the calcium carbonate) to create nuclear bombs and cool nuclear reactors. :)

Love,

sunny

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DragonKnight
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Post by DragonKnight » Fri Sep 04, 2009 7:16 am

Arhh pirates

sunmystic
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Post by sunmystic » Thu Sep 17, 2009 9:12 pm

DragonKnight wrote:Arhh pirates
:)

love,

sunmystic

marlena
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interesting

Post by marlena » Sun Jun 12, 2011 10:38 pm

could she have been a mermaid/human hybrid?
Blessings and love,
Marlena

TheToadMan
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hmm...

Post by TheToadMan » Tue May 14, 2013 5:56 pm

Fresh water wisdom... mmmm mmmm mmmm..... I think of earthen wisdom of life.

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