Povitruli can be attributed to the demonological characters of the so-called "lower mythology" (as well as rusalki, mavki), which is characterized by stability and has remained almost unchanged until now, because it was less influenced by Christianity than "higher" (belief in the main gods).
The next time, on the advice of the old shepherd, he hid in the moss in the same place and stole the wings of his beloved.
One day the man was gone, and the povitrulya stole back her wings, although the old shepherd advised him to burn them on the pyre.
Since the Povitrulya has the ability to move through the air thanks to its wings, for the lyrical hero of Pachovsky's poem "Red rose, white lily..." it is the embodiment of the spirit of the native land.
In the poem "My Lucy, the heart is sick" an antinomy between Rusalka and Povitrulya is created, where the Rusalka is the embodiment of female attractiveness, temptation that brings disappointment, and the air is a symbol of creativity, inspiration, one of the guises of the Muse:[3] Goldwing Povitrulya She removed the haze from her eyes, I looked into her face - But you, my princess, In the summer, wings are equal to me,