Online Encyclopedia

BARGUEST BARGHEST

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 399 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARGUEST

BARGHEST  or BARGEST, the name given in the north of England, especially in
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Yorkshire, to a monstrous goblin-
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dog with huge teeth and claws, The spectre-
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hound under various names is familiar in folk-lore . The Demon of Tedworth, the Black Dog of Winchester and the Padfoot of Wakefield all shared the characteristics of the Barghest of York . In Wales its
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counter-
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part was Gwyllgi, "the Dog of Darkness," a frightful apparition of a mastiff with baleful breath and blazing red eyes . In
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Lancashire the spectre-hound is called Trash or Striker . In Cambridge-
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shire and on the Norfolk coast it is known as Shuck or Shock . In the Isle of Man it is styled Mauthe Doug . It is mentioned by
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Sir Walter Scott in " The
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Lay of the Last
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Minstrel " For he was speechless, ghastly, wan Like him of whom the story ran Who spoke the spectre hound in Man."A Welsh variant is the Cwn Annuls, or "
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dogs of hell." The barghest was essentially a nocturnal spectre, and its appearance was regarded as a portent of
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death . Its Welsh form is confined to the sea-coast parishes, and on the Norfolk coast the creature is supposed to be amphibious, coming out of the sea by
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night and travelling about the lonely lanes . The derivation of the word barghest is disputed . " Ghost " in the north of England is pronounced " guest," and the name is thought to be burh-ghest, "
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town-ghost." Others explain it as German Berg-geest, " mountain demon," or Bar-geest, " bear-demon," in allusion to its alleged appearance at times as a bear . The barghest has a kinsman in the Rongeur d'Os of Norman
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folklore . A belief in the spectre-hound still lingers in the wild parts of the north country of England, and in Nidderdale, Yorkshire, nurses frighten children with its name .

See Wirt Sikes,

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British Goblins (188o) ; Notes and Queries, first series, ii . 51; Joseph Ritson, Fairy Tales (Lond . 1831), p . 58; Lancashire Folklore (1867); Joseph Lucas, Studies in Nidderdale (Pateley
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Bridge, 1882) .

End of Article: BARGUEST BARGHEST
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BARGES
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RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM (1788-1845)

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