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The Legend Of: La Llorona
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The Legend Of: La Llorona

While her roots are deep in , the legend has adapted as it spread:

: She is famously heard wailing, "¡Ay, mis hijos!" (Oh, my children!) near bodies of water at night. 2. Appearance & Characteristics The Legend of La Llorona

: She typically appears as a tall, thin apparition dressed in a flowing white gown or rebozo (shawl). While her roots are deep in , the

The most common version of the tale tells of a beautiful young woman named who marries a wealthy man. After years of neglect and his eventual infidelity, Maria is consumed by a fit of uncontrollable rage and drowning her two children in a river. Realizing what she has done, she is overcome with grief and either drowns herself or dies of sorrow on the riverbank. The most common version of the tale tells

: Her spirit is condemned to wander the earth, eternally searching for her lost children.

: In some versions, she can appear as a beautiful woman to lure solitary men, only to reveal a skeletal face or a horse's head upon closer contact.