Yuki Onna (雪女 , snow woman) is a spirit or yōkai in Japanese folklore. She is a popular figure in Japanese literature, manga, and animation.
She may also go by such names as yuki-musume snow girl, yuki-onago "snow wench", yukijorō "snow harlot", yuki anesa "snow sis'", yuki-omba "snow granny or snow nanny", yukinba "snow hag"(Ehime), yukifuri-baba "snowfall hag"(Nagano).
Appearance
Yuki-onna appears on snowy nights as a tall, beautiful woman with
long black hair and blue lips. Her inhumanly pale or even transparent
skin makes her blend into the snowy landscape (as famously described in Lafcadio Hearn's Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things). She sometimes wears a white kimono, but other legends describe her as nude, with only her face and hair standing out against the snow. Despite her inhuman beauty, her eyes can strike terror into mortals.
She floats across the snow, leaving no footprints (in fact, some tales
say she has no feet, a feature of many Japanese ghosts), and she can transform into a cloud of mist or snow if threatened.
Behavior
Some legends say the Yuki-onna, being associated with winter and snowstorms, is the spirit of someone who perished in the snow.
She is at the same time beautiful and serene, yet ruthless in killing
unsuspecting mortals. Until the 18th century, she was almost uniformly
portrayed as evil. Today, however, stories often color her as more
human, emphasizing her ghost-like nature and ephemeral beauty.
In many stories, Yuki-onna appears to travelers trapped in snowstorms,
and uses her icy breath to leave them as frost-coated corpses. Other
legends say she leads them astray so they simply die of exposure. Other
times, she manifests holding a child. When a well-intentioned soul takes
the "child" from her, they are frozen in place.
Parents searching for lost children are particularly susceptible to
this tactic. Other legends make Yuki-onna much more aggressive. In these
stories, she often invades homes, blowing in the door with a gust of
wind to kill residents in their sleep (some legends require her to be
invited inside first).
What Yuki-onna is after varies from tale to tale. Sometimes she is
simply satisfied to see a victim die. Other times, she is more vampiric, draining her victims' blood or "life force." She occasionally takes on a succubus-like manner, preying on weak-willed men to drain or freeze them through sex or a kiss.
Like the snow and winter weather she represents, Yuki-onna has a
softer side. She sometimes lets would-be victims go for various reasons.
In one popular Yuki-onna legend, for example, she sets a young boy free
because of his beauty and age. She makes him promise never to speak of
her, but later in life, he tells the story to his wife who reveals
herself to be the snow woman. She reviles him for breaking his promise,
but spares him again, this time out of concern for their children (but
if he dares mistreat their children, she will return with no mercy.
Luckily for him, he is a loving father).
In a similar legend, Yuki-onna melts away once her husband discovers
her true nature. In some versions, she chose not to kill him because he
told her, which she did not treat as a broken promise (technically,
Yuki-Onna herself is not a human, and thus did not count). However, she
parts to the afterlife afterward the same way.
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