







N I G H T B R I N G E R . S E
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BLACK DOG
Pedestrians of Celtic or Gaelic descent should never venture along lonely roads without a companion. A walkmate will not necessarily ward off the black dog, which is sometimes visible to one of a pair but not the other, but he or she may bestow some measure of protection. The ideal companion is a descendant of Ean MacEndroe of Loch Ewe. In the year of Culloden, MacEndroe rescued a fairy entangled in a bramble bush and she gave to him and all his descendants, even to the seventh son of a seventh son, perpetual immunity from the power of the black dog.
Black dog sightings were once restricted to Scotland and Ireland, but widespread emigration from those nations has attracted the black dog to many parts of the world. Descriptions are vague because those who see the dog are seized by such a chill desponency and despair, generally progressing to a decline of all their vital faculties, that they have little interest in defining the experience.
Some say the creature is no larger than a Labrador: others that it is as big as a calf or 'as stout as a kelpie'. All agree that it moves in utter silence, without the panting and claw-clicking which accompanies most canine progression. If the person whom it follows utters some nervous comment, the dog takes no notice.
Members of Clan MacLartin have particular reason to fear the black dog. In appearance foretells death on a dunghill. The last member of the clan to see the black dog was Lord Jamie MacLartin in 1715. A few days after it followed him, English dragoons hanged Lord Jamie at Arbroath and threw his body on a dunghill.
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