“Yes, my son; I seed it—that is I dreamed I seed it—coming just out o’ the farm-house door, then through the yard, and over the foot-plank at the bottom o’ the orchard, when it went flarin’ up the meadows straight towards the ferry. Though ye can’t see that from the hill, I dreamed I did; an’ seed the candle go on to the chapel an’ into the buryin’ ground. That woked me.”
“What nonsense, mother! A ridiklous superstition! I thought you’d left all that sort o’ stuff behind, in the mountains o’ Montgomery, or Pembrokeshire, where the thing comes from, as I’ve heerd you say.”
“No, my son; it’s not stuff, nor superstition neyther; though English people say that to put slur upon us Welsh. Your father before ye believed in the Canwyll Corph, and wi’ more reason ought I, your mother. I never told you, Jack, but the night before your father died I seed it go past our own door, and on to the graveyard o’ the church where he now lies. Sure as we stand here there be some one doomed in the house o’ Evan Morgan. There be only three in the family. I do hope it an’t her as ye might some day be wantin’ me to call daughter.”
“Mother! You’ll drive me mad! I tell ye it’s all nonsense. Mary Morgan be at this moment healthy and strong—most as much as myself. If the dead candle ye’ve been dreamin’ about we’re all o’ it true, it couldn’t be a burnin’ for her. More like for Mrs Morgan, who’s half daft by believing in church candles and such things—enough to turn her crazy, if it doesn’t kill her outright. As for you, my dear mother, don’t let the dream bother you the least bit. An’ ye mustn’t be feeling lonely, as I shan’t be long gone. I’ll be back by ten sure.”
Saying which, he sets his straw hat jauntily on his thick curly hair, gives his guernsey a straightening twitch, and, with a last cheering look and encouraging word to his mother, steps out into the night.
Left alone, she feels lonely withal, and more than ever afraid. Instead of sitting down to her needle, or making to remove the tea-things, she goes to the door, and there stays, standing on its threshold and peering into the darkness—for it is a pitch dark night—she sees, or fancies, a light moving across the meadows, as if it came from Farmer Morgan’s house, and going in the direction of Rugg’s Ferry. While she continues gazing, it twice crosses the Wye, by reason of the river’s bend.
As no mortal hand could thus carry it, surely it is the canwyll corph!