9:28 AM
In his definitive book Explore Phantom Black Dogs, English author and researcher Bob Trubshaw wrote: “The folklore of phantom black dogs is known throughout the British Isles. From the Black Shuck of East Anglia to the Mauthe Dhoog of the Isle of Man there are tales of huge spectral hounds ‘darker than the night sky’ with eyes ‘glowing red as burning coals.’ The phantom black dog
of British and Irish folklore, which often forewarns of death, is part
of a worldwide belief that dogs are sensitive to spirits and the
approach of death, and keep watch over the dead and dying. North
European and Scandinavian myths dating back to the Iron Age depict dogs
as corpse eaters and the guardians of the roads to hell. Medieval folklore includes a variety of ‘Devil dogs’ and spectral hounds.” And while the image that the devil dog
or phantom hound conjures up is that of a sinister beast prowling the
villages and towns of centuries-old England, it is a little known fact
outside of students of the phenomenon that sightings of such creatures continue to surface to this very day.
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