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A Spaewife, spae-wife or Spey-wife is a Scottish term for a fortune-telling woman. Spae is derived from the Old Norse spá, meaning prophesy. The term was used as the title for several fictional works: Robert Louis Stevenson's poem "The Spaewife"; John Galt's historical romance The Spaewife: A Tale of the Scottish Chronicles; and Paul Peppergrass's The Spaewife, or, The Queen's Secret. It has nothing to do with the Spey, a river in Scotland.
Melvilles interpretation According to F. Melville's The Book of Faeries (2002), a Spae Wife is also a type of elf. No taller than a human finger, fairy spae wives are usually dressed in the clothes of a peasant. However, when properly summoned, the attire changes from common to magnificent: blue cloak with a gem-lined collar and black lambskin hood lined with catskin, calfskin boots, and catskin gloves. Like human spae wives, they can also predict the future, through runes, tea leaves and signs generated by natural phenomena, and are good healers. They are said to be descended from the erectors of the standing stones. | ||||||||
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