Phoebe and Her Unicorn by Dana Simpson for June 26, 2016
Transcript:
Marigold: That's the planet Venus! Humans call it the "evening star" even though it isn't a star. It is not a unicorn, either. And yet... In our legends, we call it The Unicorn Who Wants To Be BFFs With The Sun. Legend tells of a unicorn named Daisy Shimmering Face, who was consumed with envy of the sun's loveliness... So she resolved to become BESTIES with the sun. Every night, just after sunset, she can be seen chasing after it, shining with all her might. The sun eventually had to block her on social media. Phoebe: How recent is this legend?
Averagemoe over 8 years ago
It could possibly have started millions of years ago, and that last part only happened recently.
Eric Salinas Premium Member over 8 years ago
It is a pretty old legend, Phoebe. My father told me about Daisy Shimmering Face, and his father before that.
jodudeit over 8 years ago
Speaking of Legends, how old does a legendary tale have to be before it is a legend proper? 10 years doesn’t seem long enough, maybe at least 100?
bigcatbusiness over 8 years ago
Unicorns really feel good about themselves to have legends about themselves. Us humans usually use animals like tigers, or sometimes even dragons, to feel ourselves great.
Hello.hello over 8 years ago
Really old, like back when people Tweeted from laptops
Claire Jordan over 8 years ago
According to my tutors at the School of Scottish Studies, a myth is a story which has some kind of teaching purpose, which tells you about life or reinforces your sense of tribal or religious identity. It doesn’t actually have to be fictional – stories of Londoners’ “Blitz spirit” during WW2 are both mostly true and a big part of the mythology by which London describes itself. A legend is just a story, usually a mostly-fictional one. They’re not mutually exclusive – a legend can also be a teaching myth – but a legend can just be “A man called Fred Blogs was killed by a cow under that tree in 1873” whereas a myth has to have some kind of significance. Oh and “urban legends” can be as recent as a year or so old – they only have to be old enough for the story to have spread widely and become widely believed and talked about.
DDrazen over 8 years ago
Dial back the modern trappings and vocabulary and you do have a charming story.
WaitingMan over 8 years ago
I believe he term “BFFS” first appeared in “The Iliad”.
scyphi26 over 8 years ago
Unicorn mythology is so entertaining.
ars731 over 8 years ago
“well, the Sun blocked her on Myspace so it was pretty long ago”
Comic Minister Premium Member over 8 years ago
For that I have no idea Phoebe.
dogday Premium Member over 8 years ago
Beautiful art and lovely tale, buuut, I think Marigold made up that last part.
sjsczurek over 8 years ago
Dana, you should submit this to the Old Farmer’s Almanac!
Averagemoe over 8 years ago
Daisy Shimmering Face sounds like something from the same unicorn name generator as Marigold Celestial Nostrils (changed to Heavenly to avoid confusion). What name did Dana enter that resulted in that?
John W Kennedy Premium Member over 8 years ago
One does wonder whether unicorns have worked out that the Morning Star and the Evening Star are the same thing.
In Tolkien’s universe, the Moon (he) is in love with the Sun (she), and that’s why he keeps getting lost in the sky.
Borg42 over 8 years ago
If you bring a balloon so you can hang out in the upper atmosphere, above the sulfuric acid clouds, it’s actually relatively pleasant. It’s cold up there and there isn’t much oxygen, and you’d probably eventually get skin cancer because there’s no ozone layer, but at the right height you’ll find Earth-normal pressure and nothing corrosive in the atmosphere.
Dana Atnip over 8 years ago
And the sun Unfollowed Daisy on Twitter :-)
Gildomar over 8 years ago
Daisy looks suspiciously like how pre-ascension Celestia is depicted in fan art.
Kark_The_Red_Canadian_Dragon 7 months ago
That unicorn looks strangely like Mari’s sister… :/