The Legand Of
The Jack-O-Lantern
A stingy drunkard of an
Irish blacksmith named Jack had the misfortune to run into the Devil in
a pub, some say on Halloween night. Jack had too much to drink and was
about to fall into the Devil's hands, but managed to trick the Devil by
offering his soul in exchange for one last drink. The Devil turned himself
into a sixpence to pay the bartender, but Jack quickly pocketed him in
his purse. Because Jack had a silver cross in his purse, the Devil could
not change himself back. Jack would not let the Devil go until he promised
not to claim his soul for ten years.
The Devil agreed and ten
years later Jack came across the Devil while walking on a country road.
The Devil wanted to collect, but Jack, thinking quickly, said "I'll go,
but before I go, will you get me an apple from that tree?" The Devil, thinking
he had nothing to lose, jumped on Jack's shoulders to obtain the apple.
Jack pulled out his knife and carved a cross in the trunk of the tree.
This left the Devil in the air, unable to obtain Jack or his soul. Jack
made him promise to never again ask for his soul. Seeing no way out, the
Devil agreed. No one knows how the Devil ever managed to get back down!
When Jack finally died
years later, he was not admitted to Heaven, because of his life of drinking
and being tightfisted and deceitful. When he went to apply for entrance
to Hell, the Devil had to turn him away because he agreed never to take
Jack's soul. "But where can I go?", asked Jack. "Back where you came from!",
replied the Devil. The way back was windy and dark. Jack pleaded with the
Devil to at least provide him a light to find his way. The Devil, as a
final gesture, threw a live coal at Jack straight from the fire of Hell.
To light his way and to keep it from blowing out in the wind, Jack put
it in a turnip he was eating.
Ever since, Jack has been
doomed to wander in darkness with his lantern until "Judgment Day." Jack
of the lantern (Jack o'Lantern) became known as the symbol of a damned
soul