The Wicklow Weird Winged Thing
We don’t get
a lot of winged weirdies in Ireland. So I was almost giddy when I came across
the following story, which appeared in The Wicklow People of 14 July 1900
[originally published in Truth magazine – date unknown].
Truth Says –
A lady, who says that she has been a regular of Truth for many years, reports
to me a most mysterious occurrence at Dublin of which she was recently an eye
witness, and which she felt it her duty to reveal:
On a Sunday
evening, at about twenty minutes to six o’clock, witness was sitting in a
window overlooking a broad and much frequented thoroughfare. The evening was
beautifully calm, with a light silvery haze in the air, and a few fleecy clouds
in the sky, when she observed far up in the sky a black spot. Its shape was
irregular, and it remained motionless. The writer fixed her eyes on it, and
never removed them for fully five and twenty minutes, when to her surprise [She
must have been surprised – Ed Truth] there swooped down from out of the black
spot an immense Thing, with wings spread, which seemed about 25 feet from tip
to tip. Flapping these wings slowly, it moved in a northerly direction over the
city, and was lost to sight. In the meantime the black spot wholly disappeared.
Weeks passed,
and although the writer often watched for the strange visitant she saw nothing
more. On the evening of last Trinity Sunday, however, when sitting in the same
window, at precisely the same hour as before there was the same black spot in
the same place in the sky, motionless. The writer again fixed her eyes on it
for about the same space of time as before, when down came the enormous Thing
as before, out of the Spot. It sailed away slowly, this time in the direction
of Bray, County Wicklow.
NB – The
wings were of a creamy colour, no feathers were visible, nor did there appear
any thing like a body with them.
I think I may
say, without boasting, this is one of the most remarkable experiences of this
kind ever reported to the editor of a newspaper, unless in the Sea Serpent
season. When I first read it I felt for the moment like the poet in Mr
Gilbert’s ballad, who
Couldn’t help
thinking
The man had
been drinking
But on
looking back, and seeing that the lady had been a regular reader of Truth for
many years, I at once dismissed this theory. That being so and my correspondent
having enclosed her name “as a guarantee of good faith,” the question at once
arises whether the “strange visitant” is of a natural or supernatural
character. It may be a portent connected with the war in South Africa or the
Boxer outbreak. It may have something to do with the re-union of the Irish
Party, or the Crisis in the Church. Which it may be I leave to wiser heads than
mine to explain, though I cannot help remarking that the appearance of the
phenomenon on Trinity Sunday is significant. At the same time, should anyone in
the neighbourhood of Bray, Co. Wicklow, notice a pair of featherless wings
flapping about overhead without a body, my advice is “Do not hesitate to
shoot.”
My giddiness
was short lived, however. It seems that, shortly after the original article
appeared, a “Dublin contemporary” wrote to the magazine with his – annoyingly plausible
– theory.
My readers
will doubtless have fresh in their memories the strange experience of the
Dublin lady, who on a recent Sunday afternoon beheld in the sky a mysterious
Thing, consisting of a pair of wings without a body, which evolved itself out
of a Black Spot in the firmament, and, swooping over the city, flapped off on
its featherless pinions in the direction of Bray, Co Wicklow. A Dublin
contemporary furnishes a very rationalistic explanation of the phenomena. It
seems that on several Sunday afternoons someone has been flying a big kite over
Dublin. As the kite attained a great altitude, it presented the appearance of a
black spot, motionless in the sky, and when it was hauled down it might have
assumed, to an imaginative eye, the appearance of a winged Thing, flapping away
in the distance. For the sake of the lady who had the vision, I trust that this
may be the correct interpretation. Things might easily have been worse.
As always, if
anyone can add to this story, or has other Irish winged weirdie stories to
share, please get in touch.
Sources:
The Wicklow
People, 14 July 1900
The Wrexham
Advertiser, 21 July 1900
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