KensingtonO'beron, king of the fairies, held his royal seat in these
gardens, which were fenced round with spells “interdicted to human
touch;” but not unfrequently his thievish elves would rob the human
mother of her babe, and leave in its stead a sickly changeling of the
elfin race. Once on a time it so fell out that one of the infants
fostered in these gardens was Albion, the son of “Albion's royal
blood;” it was stolen by a fairy named Milkah. When the boy was
nineteen, he fell in love with Kenna, daughter of King Oberon, and
Kenna vowed that none but Albion should ever be her chosen husband.
Oberon heard her when she made this vow, and instantly drove the prince
out of the garden, and married the fairy maid to Azuriel, a fairy of
great beauty and large possessions, to whom Holland Park belonged. In
the meantime. Albion prayed to Neptune for revenge, and the sea-god
commanded the fairy O'riel, whose dominion lay along the banks of the
Thames, to espouse the cause of his lineal offspring. Albion was slain
in the battle by Azuriel, and Neptune in revenge crushed the whole
empire of Oberon. Being immortal, the fairies could not be destroyed,
but they fled from the angry sea-god, some to the hills and some to
the dales, some to the caves and others to river-banks. Kenna alone
remained, and tried to revive her lover by means of the herb moly. No
sooner did the juice of this wondrous herb touch the body than it
turned into a snow-drop. When Wise laid out the grounds for the Prince
of Orange, Kenna planned it “in a morning dream,” and gave her name to
the town and garden. ( Source: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, E. Cobham Brewer, 1894 More on Kensington from Infoplease:
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