- Likho
Likho, liho (Russian: Лихо, _be. лі́ха, _pl. licho) is an embodiment of evil fate and misfortune in
Slavic mythology , a creature with one eye, usually (but not always) depicted as an old, skinny woman in black (Лихо одноглазое, One-eyed Likho) or as an evil malegoblin of forests; it is a small and ugly creatureFact|date=August 2007. It is not a member of the Slavic pantheon, it is a personage offairy tale s, some of which contain traces of theOdyssey 's episode withPolyphemus cyclops ."Likho" is not a real
proper name , but a noun meaning bad luck in modern Russian ("Don't wake likho while it's quiet"proverb ), similar to Polish (sayings "Cicho! Licho nie śpi" -"Quiet! Licho does not sleep", "Licho wie" -"Licho knows" = only licho knows – nobody knows). In old Russian the root meant "excessive", "too much" with pejorative connotations. Compare to Russian "lishniy" - one in excess. The word is likely to be related to Indo-European "leikw" meaning something to remain, to leave. The derived adjective "likhoy" can be used to describe someone who is a bit too daring or brave. In Czech, "lichý" means odd (number), idle, vain. In Polish, "lichy" means shoddy, poor, flimsy. InBelarusian language , "ліхі" means bad, evil (like in prayer), odd (side of clothing).There are several basic versions of tales how a person meets with Likho, with different morals of the tale.
*A person eventually cheats Likho as in the Odyssey.
*A person cheats Likho, runs away (with Likho chasing him), sees a useful thing, grabs it, the person's hand sticks to it and they have to cut off their hand.
*Likho cheats a person and rides on his neck. The person wants to drown Likho, jumps into a river, drowns himself, but Likho floats out, to chase other victims.
*Likho is received or passed to another person with a gift.Within the framework of
superstition s, Likho was supposed to come and eat a person. In particular, this was used to scare small children.Recently, some Slavic neopagans attempt to "retrofit" Likho into the Slavic Pantheon.
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