Tradition / Region: Croatian Mythology
Alternative names: Mother of Lightning
Category: Insect
The Myth
The Golden Bee was a supernatural storm-being that lived inside a cavern of clouds above the Unknown Sea. She controlled thunder and lightning, filling the sky with flashing fire and roaring storms whenever she moved. Her cavern was the third and most dangerous of the great cloud caverns.
The Golden Bee appeared during the journey of Plunk’s wife as she crossed the sea searching for the magical Bass with the golden fin. To reach the Unknown Sea, she first passed the cavern of the Mother of All Snakes, who stirred the sea and raised the waves, and then the cavern of the Mother of All Birds, who created storms by beating her enormous wings. Beyond them waited the Golden Bee.
Inside the third cavern, thunder rolled endlessly and lightning burst through the clouds as the Golden Bee flew before the entrance. Terrified but determined, the woman ripped off her loose white sleeve and threw it over the Bee, trapping her. The moment the Golden Bee was captured, the thunder stopped and the lightning vanished.
While trapped, the Golden Bee pleaded to be released and offered the woman a reward. Looking across the sea, the woman saw the silver boat of the Dawn-Maiden gliding over crimson waters with her lost child seated beside her holding a golden apple. The Golden Bee promised to reveal how the woman could reach her child and live happily with him again if she would set her free.
The woman refused because she still needed to continue through the cavern toward the Unknown Sea to save her husband. Keeping the Golden Bee trapped, she safely passed through the storm cavern and continued her journey across the dark waters.
Sources
Brlić-Mažuranić, I. (1924). Croatian tales of long ago (F. S. Copeland, Trans.). New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company.