"The Erlking, or Lord Herne, is a wyldfae. He is the Lord of the goblins, and a peer to the Faerie Queens. He first appears in Dead Beat."@en . . . . . . . . . . . "The Erlk\u00F6nig (Erlking) is depicted in a number of German poems and ballads as a malevolent creature who haunts forests and carries off travellers to their deaths. The name may be an 18th-century mistranslation of the original Danish word elverkonge, \"elf-king\". The character is most famous as the antagonist in Goethe's poem Der Erlk\u00F6nig and Schubert's musical adaptation of the same name."@en . . "Lord Herne"@en . "Male"@en . "The Erlk\u00F6nig (Erlking) is depicted in a number of German poems and ballads as a malevolent creature who haunts forests and carries off travellers to their deaths. The name may be an 18th-century mistranslation of the original Danish word elverkonge, \"elf-king\". The character is most famous as the antagonist in Goethe's poem Der Erlk\u00F6nig and Schubert's musical adaptation of the same name."@en . . "Lord of the goblins"@en . . . . "7"^^ . . "Erlking"@en . "The Erlking, or Lord Herne, is a wyldfae. He is the Lord of the goblins, and a peer to the Faerie Queens. He first appears in Dead Beat."@en .