Dragon
by
Graig Bakay
Few
creatures of folklore and mythology conjure up the mental
images of the dragon. Also known as wurm, wyrm and firedrake,
these mercurial creatures pervade almost every pantheon
of classical mythology and have become an integral inclusion
of an entire genre of fantasy literature.
Descriptions
of the beast's benevolence vary from the playful Puff (of
Peter Yarrow's song) to the sinister Smaug in J.R.R. Tolkien's
"The Hobbit".
Babylonian
legends portray the Queen of Darkness as a multi-headed dragon
- Tiamat. Walt Disney's Sleeping Beauty features a battle between
Prince Phillip and the evil Maleficent and the Germanic myth
"Die Nibelungen" climaxes
with the battle between Siegfried and the giant Fafnir, who
has transformed himself into a wyrm in an effort to become more
frightening.
Physical characteristics of dragons also vary but several
consistencies are usually present. The beasts are typically
depicted as huge lizards, larger than elephants on average.
Long fangs are generally accepted as are twin horns of varying
length. Western cultures generally include large bat-like
wings giving the dragon the capability of flight.
But
eastern dragons, usually
wingless, use a more magical means of flying. As well, eastern
dragons tend to be more snake-like in nature, albeit with
front and rear legs.
Most
dragons will be covered in scales, although there are some
with a leathery skin. Coloring ranges the entire gamut of
the spectrum but red, green, black and gold appear to be
the most common.
It
is also generally accepted that most dragons are magical
creatures in nature and have the ability to breathe fire
(as a weapon).
Some
dragons may have a modification in this breath weapon (frost,
lightning, gas) but this appears to be purely a fabrication
of fantasy role-playing games and the myths they spawn.
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