Many manifestations of the fire of fools

Ball lightning, the subject of yesterday's Weather Eye, is not the only gliding light to cause bemusement

Ball lightning, the subject of yesterday's Weather Eye, is not the only gliding light to cause bemusement. There is another, whose ideal ambience is a mild, wet, autumn night; it is an elusive flame, which when seen wafting in the silent darkness between the gravestones of a lonely churchyard is thought of in ancient folklore as the souls of still-born children, flitting between the upper and the lower worlds - wandering spirits, vainly seeking out a peaceful resting place. It is the dancing light of the ignis fatuus, the foolish flame that "leadeth men up and downe in a circle of absurditie, so they never knowe where they be". It is the will-o'the-wisp.

It has a variety of other names as well. Liam an tSoip they called it here in Ireland; across the water it was sometimes known as "Jack o' Lantern", or by similar names that derive from its behaviour - like "Friar's Lanthorn", "Kit o' the candlestick, or ""Peg a' Lantern"; the origins of "Spunkie", "Gillian burnt-tail", "John in the Wad" and "Dick a' Tuesday" are all lost in local folklore, while "Elf-fire", "Robin Goodfellow" and "Hobgoblin" reflect the supposedly mischievous nature of the apparition.

Will-o'-the-wisps were observed more frequently in centuries gone by than they are now. Mostly seen in bogs and graveyards, they appear as tiny, often brightly-coloured flames a few inches high floating a short distance above the ground. They may seem to dance about, and indeed they are sometimes described as resembling a lantern being carried by a person moving in a zig-zag line. It is assumed in these cases, however, that what really happens is that one flame dies out and another materialises some distance away, giving merely the impression of a rapid movement.

It is believed to be caused by a flammable gas emerging from the ground, which bursts into flame spontaneously as soon as it is exposed to air. Such gases are sometimes a by-product of animal or vegetable decomposition, and the flame they produce on ignition is a kind of chemical luminescence peculiar for its relatively low temperature.

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But no one has yet succeeded in capturing this elusive substance which ignites with such apparent ease. And such a coup de gas, to coin a phrase, is now unlikely, since nowadays a willo'-the-wisp is rarely seen. Some say this is because conditions for its appearance are less ideal; bogs are drained and cultivated, and the ubiquity of artificial light might make it hard to see. But others say it never really happened anyway - that it was indeed the ignis fatuus, the fire of fools.