In the 12th century, in a rural English village, a young boy and his sister were found by reapers working their fields at harvest time. The children had green skin, their clothes were made from unfamiliar materials, and their speech was unintelligible to the reapers.
They were taken in by a local farmer, where they seemed to be starving, but wouldn’t eat until they were eventually offered beans, which they devoured and survived on for months. The boy became sick and died, while the girl remained in good health and eventually lost her green-tinged skin.
She gradually learned how to speak English and was later married to a man in Norfolk. After she learned how to speak English, she relayed the story of their origins, saying that she and her brother came from a strange underground land which she called the Land of Saint Martin. In it there was no sun, but a perpetual twilight. Like them, all the inhabitants of St. Martin’s Land lived underground were green like them. The girl explained that she and her brother were looking after their father’s flock when they came upon a cave. They wandered through the darkness for a long time until, following the sound of bells, they came out the other side, entering into bright sunlight, which they found startling. It was then that they were found by the reapers.
The story of the green children of Woolpit has remained a mystery over the centuries. Were these children lost or abandoned migrants? Were they from inner earth? Could they have been aliens from another planet? Were they interdimensional beings? Jessica was tasked with the coordinate remote viewing target of “The Green Children of Woolpit,” and discusses the data here.
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