Difference between revisions of "Woman in White"
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|text=A folk tale with many variations. The most famous is a Mexican story about La Llorona – the Sobbing Woman. | |text=A folk tale with many variations. The most famous is a Mexican story about La Llorona – the Sobbing Woman. | ||
− | The story takes place long ago when a beautiful Indian princess, Don a Luisa de Loveros , fell in love with a handsome Mexican nobleman named Don Nuna de Montesclaros . The princess loved the nobleman deeply and had two children by him, but Montesclaros refused to marry her. When he finally deserted her and married another woman, Dona Luisa went mad with rage and stabbed her two children. Authorities found her wandering the street, sobbing, her clothes covered in blood. She was charged with infanticide and sent to the gallows. | + | The story takes place long ago when a beautiful Indian princess, Don a Luisa de Loveros, fell in love with a handsome Mexican nobleman named Don Nuna de Montesclaros. The princess loved the nobleman deeply and had two children by him, but Montesclaros refused to marry her. When he finally deserted her and married another woman, Dona Luisa went mad with rage and stabbed her two children. Authorities found her wandering the street, sobbing, her clothes covered in blood. She was charged with infanticide and sent to the gallows. |
Ever since, it is said, the ghost of La Llorona walks the country at night in her bloody dress, crying out for her murdered children. If she finds any child, she's likely to carry it away with her to the nether regions, where her own spirit dwells. | Ever since, it is said, the ghost of La Llorona walks the country at night in her bloody dress, crying out for her murdered children. If she finds any child, she's likely to carry it away with her to the nether regions, where her own spirit dwells. |
Revision as of 13:23, 21 February 2012
A folk tale with many variations. The most famous is a Mexican story about La Llorona – the Sobbing Woman.
The story takes place long ago when a beautiful Indian princess, Don a Luisa de Loveros, fell in love with a handsome Mexican nobleman named Don Nuna de Montesclaros. The princess loved the nobleman deeply and had two children by him, but Montesclaros refused to marry her. When he finally deserted her and married another woman, Dona Luisa went mad with rage and stabbed her two children. Authorities found her wandering the street, sobbing, her clothes covered in blood. She was charged with infanticide and sent to the gallows.
Ever since, it is said, the ghost of La Llorona walks the country at night in her bloody dress, crying out for her murdered children. If she finds any child, she's likely to carry it away with her to the nether regions, where her own spirit dwells.– Pad of Definitions (1.01 Pilot (episode)), Official Website
The Woman in White in "Supernatural"
Apparently, John encountered and took out a Woman in White outside Durant, Oklahoma in 1991. John was of the belief that a Woman in White was the same kind of spirit that the Irish know as bean sidhe, or Banshee. BoM
Another story for a Woman in White is located near Dallas and known as the Ghost of White Rock Lake. The story goes that a driver picks up a hitchhiker in a soaking wet white dress by the side of the road, who either disappears when they pass a cemetary, or who gives an address leading to an abandoned house. BoM
For the pilot episode of Supernatural, the two versions of the Woman in White story were meshed together in the story of Constance Welch. Furthermore, the Constance Welch story draws on the theme of unfaithfullness (or sexual activity), which usually, in teen horror flicks dooms the protagonist to die an untimely death.