Corpse Lights - Death Omens

Welsh, English and Irish Believe Phosphorescent Lights Are Portents

© Jill Stefko

Sep 17, 2008
Corpse light, http://www.morguefile.com/archive/?display=197676&
In the 500s, death could come suddenly. According to legend, David, Wales' patron saint, prayed for warnings. Vision revealed death would be foretold by lights.

Corpse Lights can be red, white or blue and are seen indoors and outdoors. They hug the ground, float in the air and hover over places of those about to die. They’re called by various names, including Corpse Candles, Jack-O'-Lantern, ignis fatuus, corposant, fetch-candles and fetch-lights.

Corpse Lights Lore

In Wales, they’re called “canyll corfe.” They bob over the land, stopping at places where death is imminent. A small pale or bluish corpse candle foretells the death of a baby; a big one, death of an adult. Multiple candles divulge the number of people soon to die. Colors vary: red for men, pale blue for women, pale yellow or blue for children. When the lights are approached, they disappear.

In South Hampshire, England, people believed the lights accompanied souls of the dead and extinguished when they left the earth.

Inexplicable Events Involving Corpse Lights

  • In the 1700s, several people who passed Golden Grove in Wales saw three corpse lights glide down the river at various times three weeks in succession. They talked about the phenomena and wondered who the death omen was for. Soon after, three family members of the nobility who lived at Golden Grove died simultaneously in different parts of the country.
  • Jack, a ship’s captain, based in Carmarthenshire, Wales, lived in a rented room while not at sea. One evening, when he was abroad, a man from a neighboring farm saw a dim light in the room. He asked a family member if Jack was home. The answer was no. Others saw the light. A few weeks later, they learned Jack died in Singapore when they saw it.
  • Reverend Mr. Davis’ sexton's wife was in bed and saw a blue corpse candle on her table. Within two or three days, she learned a baby had been stillborn that night. Not long after, she saw another candle. Several days later, a weak baby was brought into their house where he died.
  • Davis and a huntsman were on their way home when they saw a blue candle in a house. Shortly afterwards, the eldest son died.
  • Jane Wyatt was the housekeeper and nanny for widower Baronet Rud's three children in Llangathen, Carmarthen. She saw five corpse candles in the maids’ bed chamber. Not long after, all five died of suffocation while asleep.
  • A group of Welshmen was returning to Barmouth after dark. As they approached the ferry house at Penthryn, they saw a light near the house, which they thought was a bonfire. As they approached, it vanished. They stopped at the house and asked about the bonfire and were told there was none. There were no signs of any fire. When the group told others in Barmouth about the incident, they said they also saw the fire. Some of the old fishermen said the fire was a corpse light. The ferryman drowned a few days later in the place the fire was seen.
  • That winter, Barmouth villagers saw small lights dancing in the air over Borthwyn. Then, all except for one vanished. The lone light went where some boats were moored and lingered over one of them before it disappeared. A couple of days later, the man who owned the boat, fell overboard and drowned while sailing in it.

Paranormal events or coincidences?

Related Articles:

TheHapsburg Dynasty’s Harbingers ofDeath

Spectral Hounds, Legends and a True Account

Sources:

Byways of Ghost-Land, Elliott O’Donnell (William Rider & Sons, 1911)

The Encyclopedia of Ghosts and Spirits, Rosemary Ellen Guiley, (Facts on File, Inc., 1992)


The copyright of the article Corpse Lights - Death Omens in Paranormal is owned by Jill Stefko . Permission to republish Corpse Lights - Death Omens in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


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