Tale type The tale is classified in the
Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index as ATU 313, "The Magic Flight". According to Neil Philip, tale type ATU 313 is very popular among
African-American narrators. The tale also has the episode of
The Forgotten Fiancé (AaTh 313C), albeit in fragmentary form. English folklorist
Katherine Mary Briggs, in her
Dictionary of British Folk-Tales, listed the tale as belonging to tale type ATU 313, "The Girl as Helper in the Hero's Flight" (another name for the tale type).
Motifs W. W. Newell suspected that the name "Featherflight" was a reminiscence of the avian nature of the heroine: a
swan maiden. In the more common narrative sequence, the hero, on his way to a giant's house, meets the bird-maidens bathing in a lake and steals their garments. He also noted the resemblance of the episode of the heroine's reflection on the fountain with Italian tales where a slave or servant mistakes the heroine's face for her own, a trait that appears in tale type ATU 408, "The Love for Three Oranges", but also in some variants of type ATU 313, "The Magic Flight", in the sequence of "
The Forgotten Fiancée". Newell also noticed the incident of the priest blessing the couple could be explained by other variants: in a Basque tale, the fairy maiden cannot enter the church for her marriage until she is baptised.
Relation to other tales W. W. Newell supported the idea that the tale type, also known as "Girl as helper in the hero's flight", was the basis for
William Shakespeare's
The Tempest. Psychoanalyst
Hanns Sachs, in his book
The Creative Unconscious, seemed to concur with the statement that Shakespeare's play contained "an old and genuine fairy-tale". ==See also==