Friday, October 30, 2009
Will-o’-the-What?
A Halloween story about vocabulary by Debbie Nevins
Yesterday I wrote about word mix-ups. Thinking a word means one thing only to find out it means another—and that you’ve been using it incorrectly for years. I hope you remember what puce means. And if you don’t, go back and read the preceding entry.
With Halloween coming on, I was thinking about words that mean ghost or spirit and I thought, will-o’-the-wisp! Now, that is a magnificent word! (Yes, yes, it’s a glomming together of four words, will of the wisp, but it is a word.) A will-o’-the-wisp, I thought, is a fleeting spirit or being (Will?) that you can never quite see because it/he is always just outside your peripheral vision, hiding in the … um … wisp? So, I looked up will-o’-the-wisp in the dictionary and found this definition:
1: IGNIS FATUUS 2: a delusive or elusive goal
Huh? Ignis what? Quickly I turned to ignis fatuus and found it to be
1: a light that sometimes appears in the night over marshy ground and is often attributable to the combustion of gas from decomposed organic matter 2: a deceptive goal or hope
Hmmm. Man, when I’m wrong, I’m really, really wrong. Or was I? This is where it gets interesting.
Have you ever heard of UFO sightings? People see unexplained lights in the sky and think aliens are coming to abduct us all? Sometimes those lights are explained away as “swamp gas.” I happen to own several acres of swamp in western Connecticut and I have never seen strange lights or aliens or glowing gases hovering above it, but I guess such a phenomenon does exist.
That flickering, ghostly light is called will-o’-the-wisp. Not because of its scientific explanation, but because of its folkloric explanation.
Now let’s travel back in time to the British Isles—where Halloween itself originated—and find that those ghostly lights are thought to be spirits of the dead, wandering the earth, leading foolish travelers into harm’s way. Unable to enter either heaven or hell, the angry spirits appear as vaguely visible figures holding lanterns, guiding hapless travelers through the dark. Or so the traveler thinks—until he falls off a cliff or into a chasm and is never heard from again. (Suddenly the number 2 definition of will-o’-the-wisp makes sense, too, doesn’t it?)
Ah, and what did those ancient Brits call that mysterious Lantern Man? There are many variations, but in some places, he was called Will of the Wisp. (A wisp is a bundle of straw lit on fire to serve as a torch.) In other parts of the country, he is called Jacky Lantern. Or Jack-a-Lantern.
Aha! Will-o’-the-wisp has a Halloween connection after all! If you explore the folklore behind both Jacky Lantern and will-o’-the-wisp, you will find some fascinating stories! Here are two links to get you started.
www.inamidst.com/lights/wisp/
http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/folklore/will-o-the-wisp.html
And it all began because I wasn’t sure about the meaning of a word! Happy Halloween!
Posted by
Bryon
on 10/30/2009
11:20 AM
Please Note:
This blog is moderated, therefore your comment won't appear until the moderator accepts it.
Name
E-mail
Remember Me
Comment (HTML not allowed)
Enter the code shown (prevents robots):
Subscribe Now!
Esther Friesner - Author Interview
Best Poe Contest Ever!
HAMLET
CE News Blog
Absynthe Muse
Creative Writing for Teens
Frodo's Notebook
imbee
In This Place
Interactive Writer's Models
Merlyn's Pen
Miss Erin - A Teenaged Book Blogger
NaNoWriMo's Young Writers Program
Poetry Slam Inc.
Poets.org
Springfield Library's Teen Site
Stone Soup
Teen Ink
Teen Link
Teen Reads
The Writer's Almanac
Urban Word
Wordsmiths
Write On!
Writing Fix
YPulse!
Young Writers Project
Young Writer's Society
November, 2009
October, 2009
September, 2009
August, 2009
July, 2009
June, 2009
May, 2009
April, 2009
March, 2009
February, 2009
January, 2009
December, 2008
November, 2008
October, 2008
September, 2008
August, 2008
July, 2008
June, 2008
May, 2008
April, 2008
March, 2008
February, 2008
January, 2008
December, 2007
November, 2007
October, 2007
September, 2007
August, 2007
July, 2007
June, 2007
May, 2007
April, 2007
March, 2007
February, 2007
January, 2007
December, 2006
November, 2006
October, 2006
September, 2006
August, 2006
July, 2006
June, 2006
May, 2006
April, 2006
March, 2006
February, 2006
January, 2006
December, 2005
November, 2005
October, 2005
September, 2005