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Will o the Wisp by Arthur Hughes

The will o' the wisp or ignis fatuus, or in plural form as ignes fatui ("fool's fire(s)") is the phenomenon of ghostly lights sometimes seen at night or in twilight hovering over damp ground in still air, often over bogs. The will o' the wisp is said to recede if approached. Much folklore has attached to the legend, despite possible scientific explanations.


Etymology

The name "Will-o'-the-wisp", or "Will of the wisp" (a wisp is a bundle of burning hay) is very similar to "Jack o' lantern" ("Jack of the Lantern"), and indeed the two terms were originally synonymous. Both refer to an old Celtic folktale, retold in different forms across Ireland, Scotland, and northern England. One version, from Shropshire, recounted by Katherine Mary Briggs in her book A Dictionary of Fairies, refers Will the Smith. Will is a wicked blacksmith who is given a second chance by Saint Peter at the gates to Heaven, but leads such a bad life that he ends up being doomed to wander the Earth. The Devil provides him with a single burning coal with which to warm himself, which he then used to lure foolish travellers into the marshes. (compare Wayland Smith)

The lights are also often referred to as corpse candles, as in the Denham Tracts and by J. R. R. Tolkien, hobby lanterns (another term from the Denham Tracts), or by any of the various names having to do with what one supposes the lights to be (ghosts, elementals, etc.).


History/Beliefs

Among European rural people, especially in Gaelic and Slavic folk cultures, the will o' the wisps is held to be mischievous spirits of the dead or other supernatural beings attempting to lead travellers astray (compare Puck). Sometimes they are believed to be the spirits of unbaptized or stillborn children, flitting between heaven and hell (compare Wilis). Modern occultist elaborations bracket them with the salamander, a type of spirit wholly independent from humans (unlike ghosts, which are presumed to have been humans at some point in the past). They also fit the description of certain types of fairy, which may or may not have originated as human souls.

Finns, Danes and Baltic people amongst some other groups believed will o' the wisp is marking a treasure. Treasure was deep in ground or water, and could be taken only when the fire was there. Sometimes magical tricks were required as well, to uncover the treasure. It was also believed in Finland and other northern countries that midsummer was the best time to search the will o' the wisps (and treasures below them). It was believed that when someone hid treasure in the ground, (s)he made the treasure available only at the midsummer, and set will o' wisp to mark that exact place and time so that (s)he could come to take the treasure back. Finns also believed that the creature guarding the treasure used fire to clean precious metals bright again. Yet another Finnish explanation of will o wisp was that it was a ghost of a dead child.

The Will o' the Wisp can be found in numerous folk tales around the British Isles, and is often a malicious character in the stories. Wirt Sikes in his book British Goblins mentions a Welsh tale about a Will o' the Wisp (Pwca). A peasant travelling home at dusk spots a bright light travelling along ahead of him. Looking closer, he sees that the light is a lantern held by a "dusky little figure" which he follows for several miles. All of a sudden he finds himself standing on the edge of a vast chasm with a roaring torrent of water rushing below him. At that precise moment the lantern carrier leaps across the gap, lifts the light high over its head, lets out a malicious laugh and blows out the light, leaving the poor peasant a long way from home, standing in pitch darkness at the edge of a precipice. This is a fairly common cautionary tale concerning the phenomenon; however, the Ignis Fatuus were not always considered dangerous. There are some tales told about the Will o' the Wisp being guardians of treasure, much like the Irish leprechaun leading those brave enough to follow them to sure riches. Other stories tell of travelers getting lost in the woodland and coming upon a Will o' the Wisp and depending on how they treated the Will o' the Wisp, the spirit would either get them lost further in the woods or guide them out.

A small side note indicates an interesting thought of Will o' the Wisp. One Asian theologist ponders the relation of Will o' the Wisp to that of the foxfire produced from Kitsune, an interesting way of combining mythology of the West with that of the East.


Theories about origin

One possible naturalistic and scientific explanation for such phenomena is that the oxidation of hydrogen phosphide and methane gases produced by the decay of organic material may cause glowing lights to appear in the air. Experiments, for example, done by the Italian chemists Luigi Garlaschelli and Paolo Boschetti, have replicated the lights by adding chemicals to the gasses formed by rotting compounds. Critics claim that this theory does not easily account for reported cases which claim lights bob, swoop, soar upwards or downwards, or move against the wind.

William Corliss writes, in Remarkable Luminous Phenomena in Nature (Sourcebook Project, Glen Arm, MD, 2001:290): "No satisfactory mechanism has been demonstrated whereby gases escaping from marshy areas will spontaneously ignite. Furthermore, most low-level nocturnal lights are cold--not what one would expect from burning methane. Also, no one has explained how clouds of luminous gas can maintain size and shape while engaging in erratic maneouvers over many minutes."

Others believe bioluminescent effects (e.g. honey fungus) cause the light. Other explanations include causes similar to ball lightning.

More recently, under the broader banner of 'Earth Lights', pseudoscientific theories as to how they are produced have been put forward by Professors Derr & Persinger, and Paul Devereux (who, in some circles, is considered the 'authority' on earth lights of various kinds, including ball lightning, St. Elmo's Fire and lights associated with earthquakes). Derr & Persinger put forward the theory that earth lights may be generated by tectonic strain. (NB. These are faults in the earths crust, similar to, indeed including, earthquake faults.) The theory goes that the strain causes heat in the rocks, vaporising the water in them. Piezoelectric rocks such as quartz then produce electricity, which is channeled up through this column of vaporised water, until it reaches the surface - somehow displaying itself in the form of earth lights. This theory would assert that the majority of earth lights are seen over places of tectonic strain. If it is correct, it would explain why such lights often behave in an erratic and even seemingly intelligent manner, often defying the laws of gravity. Paul Devereux's explanation, however, is much broader. He thinks that the link between the lights and the landscape is more tenuous. He says that they are probably related to many things: tectonic strain, weather conditions, local geography, 'ley lines', terrain, water table depth and so forth. This explanation, however, is rejected by most experts as highly unscientific.

Other similar theoretical explanations, however, involving light emanating from naturally occurring electric currents do not involve pseudoscientific elements. Also, electric-based theories more easily account for the claimed seemingly free movement of the lights and claims that the lights react upon the introduction of nearby objects (e.g. humans).

Another theory was put forward claiming these lights are barn owls with luminescent plummage. Hence the posibility of them floating around, reacting to other lights, etc. See A Review of accounts of luminosity in Barn Owls Tyto alba.


Art/Fiction

Literature

In literature, Will o' the wisp often has a metaphorical meaning, describing any hope or goal that leads one on but is impossible to reach, or something one finds sinister and confounding.

Some examples of references in literature are:

  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner describes the Will o'the wisp. The poem was first published in the Lyrical Ballads of 1798.
   "About, about in reel and rout,
      The death-fires danced at night;
   The water, like a witch's oils,
      Burnt green, and blue and white"
  • "The race yearns to adore. Can it adore the simple or venerate the obvious? All mythology and folk lore rise in indignant protest at the thought. The sun gave light, therefore he was not hot gas nor a flame, but a god or a chariot. The "ignus fatuus" deluded men of nights. It was a spirit; nothing so simple as decomposition could serve the need." - The Secret of Victory by George Smith Patton, Jr, written on March 26, 1926.
  • The Flemish poet Willem Elsschot, aka Alfons-Jozef De Ridder, wrote the short story Het dwaallicht ("Will-O'-the-wisp") in 1946.
  • The will o' the wisp makes an appearance in the first chapter of Bram Stoker's Dracula, as the Count, masqarading as his own coach driver, takes Jonathan Harker to his castle in the night:

      "Suddenly, away on our left I saw a faint flickering blue flame. The driver saw it at the same moment... the flame appeared so near the road, that even in the darkness around us I could watch the driver's motions. He went rapidly to where the blue flame arose, it must have been very faint, for it did not seem to illumine the place around it at all, and gathering a few stones, formed them into some device... When he stood between me and the flame he did not obstruct it, for I could see its ghostly flicker all the same. This startled me, but as the effect was only momentary, I took it that my eyes deceived me straining through the darkness."[1]

      "At last Sam could bear it no longer. 'What's all this, Gollum?' he said in a whisper. 'These lights? They're all round us now. Are we trapped? Who are they?'
      Gollum looked up. A dark water was before him, and he was crawling on the ground, this way and that, doubtful of the way. 'Yes, they are all round us,' he whispered. 'The tricksy lights. Candles of corpses, yes, yes. Don't you heed them! Don't look! Don't follow them! Where's the master?'
      Sam looked back and found that Frodo had lagged again. He could not see him. He went some paces back into the darkness, not daring to move far, or to call in more than a hoarse whisper. Suddenly he stumbled against Frodo, who was standing lost in thought, looking at the pale lights. His hands hung stiff at his sides; water and slime were dripping from them.
      'Come, Mr. Frodo!' said Sam. 'Don't look at them! Gollum says we mustn't." -The Passage of the Marshes, The Two Towers
  • A will o' the wisp named Blubb figures in Michael Ende's novel The Neverending Story. It is a messenger that, ironically, gets itself lost in a forest before meeting the tiny, nighthob, and rock chewer(Rock Biter in the film), also messengers from different parts of Fantastica to tell the Childlike Empress about the Nothing.
  • Hinkypunk, the name for a Will o' the wisp in Southwestern England, (probably derived from the Welsh Pwca (Puck)), has achieved fame as a monster in JK Rowling's Harry Potter series. In the books, a hinkypunk is a one-legged, frail-looking creature that appears to be made of smoke. The hinkypunk inhabits bogs and carries a lantern which it uses to lure travellers in the dark. Professor Remus Lupin introduces the creature in the book Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Harry and his classmates face a hinkypunk in their final exam for Defence Against the Dark Arts that year. Though Harry passes by it successfully, Ronald Weasley becomes confused by its misleading directions and sinks into the bog.
  • In Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You, a "field guide" made for the Spiderwick Chronicles, a Will o' the wisp isn't the product of a magical being, but a spherical, magical being, used by elves as a type of decoration.
  • The character Will o' the Wisp in the Spider-Man comic books is named after the phenomenon. He is capable of passing through matter and emitting hypnotizing and blinding blasts of light.


Games

  • Will O' Wisps are monsters in the Dungeons and Dragons game. They use their flickering light to lure the unwary into bogs and other hazards, then feed on their trapped victims' life energies.
  • In the video game Blood Omen: The Legacy Of Kain, the Ignis Fatuus are green fires atop skull lanterns, which lead the way to Vorador's Mansion, deep inside the Termogent Forest swamps.
  • Will O' the Wisp is a card from the game Magic: The Gathering. It's a flying creature (spirit) with a mana cost of one black mana. One black mana will regenerate Will-O'-the-Wisp. Attack/ Defense = 0/1. It was originally printed in the first set and reprinted in the following Core Sets up until 4th Edition. It did not see print again until 9th edition in 2005.
  • Will o' the Wisp and Ignis Fatuus both appear as names for bomb-type monsters (which look like a flying Jack-o'-lantern) in the video game Final Fantasy XI.
  • Will-o-Wisp is an attack that causes Burn status in the video game Pokémon.
  • Ignis Fatuus is a spell in the popular Warcraft III mod Defence of the Ancients which summons a wisp called Ignis Fatuus. Will O' The Wisp is also a spell of that summoned creature.


Other titles

The phenomenon is also known as:

In Britain

  • Billy-wi'-t'-wisp
  • Bob-a-longs
  • Canwll corfe (Wales)
  • Corp[se]-candle (Scotland and northern England; this name comes from lights appearing specifically within graveyards where it was believed the lights were an omen of death or coming tragedy and would mark the route of a future funeral, from the victim's house to the graveyard.)
  • Dead/death-candle
  • Elf-fire
  • Ellylldan (Wales)
  • Fetch candles
  • Fetch lights
  • Foolish fire
  • Friar Rush with a lantern
  • Friars-lanthorn
  • Gealbhan (Scotland, literally tree sparrow)
  • Gyl Burnt-tayl (Old English, flirty female)
  • Hinky-punk
  • Hob-and-his-Lanthorn
  • Hobby lantern
  • Hobbedy lantern
  • Hobbledy's-lantern
  • Hob[by]-lantern
  • Jack-a-lantern
  • Jack-o'-lantern
  • Jack-with-a-lantern
  • Jacky Lantern
  • Jenny-burnt-tail
  • Jenny-wi'-t'-lantern
  • Joan-(in-)the-wad
  • Kit-in-the-candlestick
  • Kitty-candlestick
  • Kitty-wi'-the-wisp
  • Lantern-man
  • Meg o'th' Lantern
  • Merry dancers (Scotland)
  • Nimble men (Scotland)
  • Peg-a/o-lantern
  • Peggy-lantern
  • Peggy wi'th' lantern
  • Pinket
  • Spunkie/Spunky
  • Teine Sith/Tiene Sith or "Fire Faery" (Hebrides, Shetland, and Orkney, literally fire fairy) *Walking fire
  • Will-o'-the-wisp
  • Will-with-the-wisp
  • Will-o'-the-Wykes
  • Willy Wisp.

Non-British

  • Annequin (France)
  • Aarnivalkea (Finland; treasure fire)
  • Dwaallicht (Netherlands; wandering light,luring people deep into peat bogs for no apparent reason)
  • Elbisch Feuer (Germany)
  • Feu follet (France)
  • Feux follets or feu folette (Quebec)
  • Flammerole (France)
  • Furolles (France)
  • Heerwische (Germany)
  • Hitodama (Japan)
  • Huckpoten (Germany)
  • Irrbloss (Sweden)
  • Irrlicht (Germany; derives from irre(n) with several meanings such as crazy, foolish, to get lost and to search and Licht equal to light. It is an evil ghost in German medieval fairy tales apearing as a glowing sphere of light in the dark woods, seducing people to leave the roads and pass into the woods)
  • Irrwisch (Germany)
  • Kitsunebi (Japan)
  • Kolli vai pisaasu - a Tamil term used to describe a ghost (pisaasu) with burning embers (kolli) in its mouth (vai)
  • Liderc (Hungary; a demon that flies at night in the form of fiery light, scattering flames)
  • Liekkio (Finland; flamey, believed to be the ghost of a murdered child)
  • Luz Mala (Argentina and some parts of South America; evil light, believed to be wandering, malevolent ghosts)
  • Lygtemand (Denmark)
  • Lyktgübbe (Scandinavia)
  • Malduguns (Latvia; "falsefire" - believed to show, where money was burried in ancient times - it is said, that the money comes out of the earth after rain to dry itself. Therefore there was a saying "Nauda žāvējas" - "The money's drying itself"- when the light was seen. Also thought to be the Devil himself or one of his minions, who lure unwitting travelers to death)
  • Ruskaly (Russia)
  • Vaett Lys (Norway; literally Vaett's Candle, the Vaett being a kind of goblin believed to dwell in mounds)
  • Virvatuli (Finland; moving fire)


See also


Sources