The_Yuki_Onna_by_YoshiyukiKatana
In Japanese
folklore there is a well-known legend of a snow woman, who is manifestation of
a Yokai, or spirit, associated with winter and snowstorms. In some variations
of the legend she is the spirit, or ghost, of someone who had tragically
perished in the snow. She has many forms; snow granny, snow hag and sometimes a
young, beautiful woman; but always carries the name Yuki Onna.
On snowy
nights she appears to travellers in the storm as a tall, beautiful woman with
long cascading black hair and blue lips whose eyes can strike terror into the
hearts of mere mortals. Her skin is pale and transparent to the point of being
invisible so that she blends in perfectly with the snow covered landscape. She
is frequently depicted in a white kimono though some illustrations show her
nude, so that only her face and hair stand out in the snowstorm. She floats
across the snow without leaving footprints since, like most ghosts, she has no
feet and when she is threatened she can instantly transform into mist, a snow
flurry or a cloud.
Until the 18th
Century Yuki Onna was portrayed as an evil spirit, but modernization shifted
the emphasis to her ghost-like nature, human origins and her transient beauty.
She would come as an apparition to travellers and lead them astray so they died
of exposure, if she did not use her icy breath to immediately freeze them in
place. In some tales she is content to let her victims die but in others she
drains her victims of their life force like a vampire. Sometimes Yuki Onna
takes on the aspect of a succubus, draining the life out of weak-willed,
unfaithful men through a kiss, or by copulation. She may manifest holding a
child, especially one who is lost in the storm. Parents searching for their
lost children are easy prey as, when they attempt to take the child from her,
they are frozen in place by her touch. In some tales she is aggressive, blowing
down the door of homes with a violent gust of wind and freezing the residents
in their sleep. In most of these tales, however, she is unable to enter the
home unless she has been invited by the residents.
She does
have a softer side and may sometimes succumb to love and maternal instincts.
In a popular
rendition of tale retold by Lafcadio Hearn Yuki-Onna does release a young boy
because of his beauty and age, but not before securing a promise from him: that
he never speaks of her. Unfortunately, in his middle age he does confess the
secret to his wife who then instantly transforms back into the snow woman. She
reviles him for breaking his promise, but once more spares him, this time out
of concern for their children. She does
caution him however, that if he ever mistreats their children she will return
to exact vengeance, and this time will show no mercy. Fortunately for him he is a doting father and
he lives the rest of his life in safety and peace.
katsumi_nakatomi__yuki_onna_by_axel_doi
The End.
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