THE ZIGZAG CLUB AGAIN. SOME
“GHOST” STORIES.
The Academy had opened again.
September again colored the leaves of the old elms
of Yule. The Blue Hills, as lovely as when the
Northmen beheld them nearly nine hundred years ago,
were radiant with the autumn tinges of foliage
and sky, changing from turquoise to sapphire in the
intense twilight, and to purple as the shades of evening
fell.
The boys were back again, all except
the graduating class, some of whom were at Harvard,
Brown, and Yale. Master Lewis was in his old
place, and Mr. Beal was again his assistant.
The Zigzag Club was broken by the
final departure of the graduating class. But
Charlie Leland, William Clifton, and Herman Reed, who
made a journey on the Rhine under the direction of
Mr. Beal, had returned, and they had been active members
of the school society known as the Club.
We should say here, to make the narrative
clear to those who have not read “Zigzag Journeys
in Classic Lands” and “Zigzag Journeys
in the Orient,” that the boys of the Academy
of Yule had been accustomed each year to form a society
for the study of the history, geography, legends,
and household stories of some chosen country, and during
the long summer vacation as many of the society as
could do so, visited, under the direction of their
teachers, the lands about which they had studied.
This society was called the Zigzag Club, because it
aimed to visit historic places without regard to direct
routes of travel. It zigzagged in its travels
from the associations of one historic story to another,
and was influenced by the school text-book or the works
of some pleasing author, rather than the guide-book.
The Zigzag books have been kindly
received; and we may here remark parenthetically
that they do not aim so much to present narratives
of travel as the histories, traditions, romances,
and stories of places. They seek to tell stories
at the places where the events occurred and amid the
associations of the events that still remain.
The Zigzag Club go seeking what is old rather than
what is new, and thus change the past tense of history
to the present tense.
Charlie Leland was seated one day
on the piazza of the Academy, after school, reading
Hawthorne’s “Twice-Told Tales.”
Master Lewis presently took a seat beside him; and
“Gentleman Jo,” whom we introduced to our
readers in “Zigzags in the Occident,”
was resting on the steps near them.
Gentleman Jo was the janitor.
He was a relative of Master Lewis, and a very intelligent
man. He had been somewhat disabled in military
service in the West, and was thus compelled to accept
a situation at Yule that was quite below his intelligence
and personal worth. The boys loved and respected
him, sought his advice often, and sometimes invited
him to meetings of their Society.
“Have you called together the
Club yet?” asked Master Lewis of Charlie, when
the latter had ceased reading.
“We had an informal meeting in my room last
evening.”
“What is your plan of study?”
“We have none as yet,”
said Charlie. “We are to have a meeting
next week for the election of officers, and for literary
exercises we have agreed to relate historic ghost
stories. We asked Tommy Toby to be present,
and he promised to give us for the occasion his version
of ‘St. Dunstan and the Devil and the Six Boy
Kings.’ I hardly know what the story is
about, but the title sounds interesting.”
“What made you choose ghost
stories?” asked Master Lewis, curiously.
“You gave us Irving and Hawthorne
to read in connection with our lessons on American
literature. ‘Rip Van Winkle,’ ‘Sleepy
Hollow,’ and ‘Twice-Told Tales’
turned our thoughts to popular superstitions; and,
as they made me chairman, I thought it an interesting
subject just now to present to the Club.”
“More interesting than profitable,
I am thinking. Still, the subject might be made
instructive and useful as well as amusing.”
“Did you ever see a ghost?”
asked Charlie of Gentleman Jo, after Master Lewis
left them.
“We thought we had one in our
house, when I was living with my sister in Hingham,
before the war. Hingham used to be famous for
its ghost stories; an old house without its ghost
was thought to lack historic tone and finish.”
Gentleman Jo took a story-telling
attitude, and a number of the pupils gathered around
him.
GENTLEMAN JO’S GHOST STORY.
I shall never forget the scene of excitement,
when one morning Biddy, our domestic, entered the
sitting-room, her head bobbing, her hair flying,
and her cap perched upon the top of her head, and
exclaimed: “Wurrah! I have seen a
ghoust, and it’s lave the hoose I must.
Sich a night! I’d niver pass anither
the like of it for the gift o’ the hoose.
Bad kick to ye, an’ the hoose is haunted for
sure.”
“Why, Biddy, what have you seen?”
asked my sister, in alarm.
“Seen? An’ sure I didn’t
see nothin’. I jist shet me eyes and hid
mesilf under the piller. But
it was awful. An’ the way it clanked
its chain! O murther!”
This last remark was rather startling.
Spirits that clank their
chains have a very unenviable reputation.
“Pooh!” said my uncle.
“What you heard was nothing but rats.”
Then,
turning to me, he asked: “Where
is the steel trap?”
“Stolen, I think,” said I.
“I set it day before yesterday, and when
I went to look to it it was gone.”
“An’ will ye be givin’
me the wages?” said Biddy, “afore I bid
ye
good-marnin’?”
“Going?” asked my sister,
in astonishment.
“An’ sure I am,” answered
Biddy. “Ye don’t think I’d be
afther
stayin’ in a house that’s
haunted, do ye?”
In a few minutes I heard the front door
bang, and, looking out, saw
our late domestic, with a budget on each
arm, trudging off as though
her ideas were of a very lively character.
A colored woman, recently from the South,
took Biddy’s place that
very day, and was assigned the same room
in which the latter had
slept.
We had invited company for that evening,
and some of the guests
remained to a very late hour.
The sound of voices subsided as one after
another departed, and we were left quietly chatting
with the few who remained. Suddenly there was
a mysterious movement at one of the back parlor doors,
and we saw two white eyes casting furtive glances
into the room.
“What’s wanted?” demanded
my sister, of the object at the door.
Our new domestic appeared in her night
clothes.
“O missus, I’ve seen de debble,
I done have,” was her first
exclamation.
This, certainly, was not a sight that
we should wish any one to see
in our house, as desirable as a dignified
spectre might have been.
“Pooh!” said my sister.
“What a silly creature! Go back to bed and
to sleep, and do not shame us by appearing
before company in your
night clothes.”
“I don’t keer nothing about
my night clothes,” she replied, with spirit.
“Jes’ go to de room and git de things dat
belong to me, an’ I’ll leave, and never
disturb you nor dis house any more. It’s
dreadful enough to be visited by dead folks, any
way, but when de spirits comes rattling a chain
it’s a dreadful bad sign, you may be sure.”
“What did you see?” asked
I.
“See? I didn’t see nothin’.
’Twas bad enough to hear it. I wouldn’t
hav’ seen it for de world.
I’ll go quick jest as soon as you
gets
de things.”
We made her a bed on a lounge below stairs.
The next morning she
took her bundles and made a speedy exit.
We had a maiden aunt who obtained a livelihood
by visiting her relations. On the morning when
our last domestic left she arrived, bag and baggage,
greatly to our annoyance. We said nothing about
the disturbances to her, but agreed among ourselves
that she should sleep in the haunted chamber.
That night, about twelve o’clock,
the household were awakened by a piercing scream
above stairs. All was silent for a few minutes,
when the house echoed with the startling cry of
“Murder! Mur_der_! MurDER!”
The accent was very strong on the last syllable in
the last two words, as though the particular force
of the exclamation was therein contained.
I hurried to the chamber and asked at
the door what was the matter.
“I have seen an apparatus,”
exclaimed my aunt. “Mur_der_!
Oh, wait a
minute. I’m a dead woman.”
She unlocked the door in a delirious way
and descended to the
sitting-room, where she sat sobbing for
a long time, declaring that
she was a dead woman. She had heard
his chain rattle.
And the next morning she likewise left.
We now felt uneasy ourselves, and wondered
what marvel the following
night would produce. I examined the
room carefully during the day,
but could discover no traces of anything
unusual.
That night we were again awakened by noises
that proceeded from the
same room. They seemed like the footfalls
of a person whose feet
were clad in iron. Then followed
sounds like a scuffle.
I rose, and, taking a light, went to the
chamber with shaky knees and a palpitating heart.
I listened before the door. Presently there was
a movement in the room as of some one dragging a chain.
My courage began to ebb. I was half resolved
to retreat at once, and on the morrow advise the
family to quit the premises.
But my better judgment at last prevailed,
and, opening the door with
a nervous hand, I saw an “apparatus”
indeed.
Our old cat, that I had left accidentally
in the room, had in her
claws a large rat, to whose leg was attached
the missing trap, and
to the trap a short chain.
“I knew the story would end
in that way,” said Charlie. “But that
is not a true colonial ghost story, if it did happen
in old Hingham.”
The sun was going down beyond the
Waltham Hills. The shadows of the maples were
lengthening upon the lawns, and the chirp of the crickets
was heard in the old walls. Charlie seemed quite
dissatisfied with Gentleman Jo’s story.
The latter noticed it.
“My story does not please you?” said Gentleman
Jo.
“No; I am in a different mood to-night.”
Master Lewis smiled.
Just then a quiet old lady, who had
charge of a part of the rooms in the Academy, appeared,
a bunch of keys jingling by her side, much like the
wife of a porter of a lodge in an English castle.
“Grandmother Golden,”
said Charlie, the boys were accustomed to
address the chatty, familiar old lady in this way, “you
have seen ghosts, haven’t you? What is
the most startling thing that ever happened in your
life?”
Grandmother Golden had seated herself
in one of the easy piazza chairs. After a few
minutes she was induced to follow Gentleman Jo in
an old-time story.
GRANDMOTHER GOLDEN’S ONLY GHOST
STORY.
The custom in old times, when a person
died, was for some one to sit in the room and watch
with the dead body in the night, as long as it remained
in the house. A good, pious custom it was, in
my way of thinking, though it is not common now.
Jemmy Robbin was a poor old man.
They used to call him “Auld Robin Gray,”
after the song, and he lived and died alone. His
sister Dorothea Dorothy she was commonly
called took charge of the house after
his death, and she sent for Grandfather Golden to watch
one night with the corpse.
We were just married, grandfather and
I, and he wanted I should watch with him, for company;
and as I could not bear that he should be out of
my sight a minute when I could help it, I consented.
I was young and foolish then, and very fond of grandfather, we
were in our honeymoon, you know.
We didn’t go to the house at a very
early hour of the evening; it
wasn’t customary for the watchers
to go until it was nearly time for
the family to retire.
In the course of the evening there came
to the house a traveller, a
poor Irishman, an old man,
evidently honest, but rather simple, who
asked Dorothy for a lodging.
He said he had travelled far, was hungry,
weary, and footsore, and
if turned away, knew not where he could
go.
It was a stormy night, and the good heart
of Dorothy was touched at
the story of the stranger, so she told
him that he might stay.
After he had warmed himself and eaten
the food she prepared for him, she asked him to
retire, saying that she expected company. Instead
of going with him to show where he was to sleep,
as she ought to have done, she directed him to his
room, furnished him with a light, and bade him good-night.
The Irishman, as I have said, was an old
man and not very clear-headed. Forgetting his
directions, and mistaking the room, he entered the
chamber where lay the body of poor Jemmy Robbin.
In closing the door the light was blown out.
He found there was what seemed to be some other
person in the bed, and, supposing him a live bedfellow,
quietly lay down, covered himself with a counterpane,
and soon fell asleep.
About ten o’clock grandfather and
I entered the room. We just glanced at the
bed. What seemed to be the corpse lay there, as
it should. Then grandfather sat down in an
easy-chair, and I, like a silly hussy, sat down
in his lap.
We were having a nice time, talking about
what we would do and how
happy we should be when we went to housekeeping,
when, all at once,
I heard a snore. It came from the
bed.
“What’s that?” said
I.
“That?” said grandfather.
“Mercy! that was Jemmy Robbin.”
We listened nervously, but heard nothing
more, and at last concluded
that it was the wind that had startled
us. I gave grandfather a
generous kiss, and it calmed his agitation
wonderfully.
We grew cheerful, laughed at our fright,
and were chatting away again as briskly as before,
when there was a noise in bed. We were silent
in a moment. The counterpane certainly moved.
Grandfather’s eyes almost started from his
head. The next instant there was a violent
sneeze.
I jumped as if shot. Grandfather
seemed petrified. He attempted to
ejaculate something, but was scared by
the sound of his own voice.
“Mercy!” says I.
“What was it?” said grandfather.
“Let’s go and call Dorothy,”
said I.
“She would be frightened out of
her senses.”
“I shall die with fright if I hear
anything more,” I said, half dead
already with fear.
Just then a figure started up in the bed.
“And wha and wha and
wha ” mumbled the object, gesticulating.
I sprang for the door, grandfather after
me, and, reaching the bottom of the stairs at one
bound, gave vent to my terrors by a scream, that,
for aught I know, could have been heard a mile distant.
Both of us ran for Dorothy’s room.
There was a sound of feet and a
loud ejaculation of “Holy Peter!
The man is dead!”
“It’s comin’,”
shouted grandfather, and, sure enough, there were
footsteps on the stairs.
“Dorothy! Dorothy!” I
screamed. Dorothy, startled from her sleep,
came rushing to the entry in her night-dress.
“I have seen a ghost, Dorothy,”
said I.
“A what?”
“I have seen the awfullest ”
“It’s comin’,”
said grandfather.
“Holy Peter!” said an object
in the darkness. “There’s a dead man
in
the bed!”
“Why, it’s that Irishman,”
said Dorothy, as she heard the voice.
“What Irishman?” asked I.
“A murdered one?”
“No; he there I
suspect that he mistook his room and went to bed
with poor Jemmy.”
The mystery now became quite clear.
Grandfather looked anything but
pleased, and declared that he would rather
have seen a ghost than to
have been so foolishly frightened.
“Is that all?” asked Charlie.
“That is all,” said Grandmother
Golden. “Just hear the crickets chirp.
Sounds dreadful mournful.”
“I have been twice disappointed,”
said Charlie. “Perhaps, Master Lewis, you
can tell us a story before we go in. Something
fine and historic.”
“In harmony with books you are reading?”
“And the spirit of Nature,” added Charlie.
“How fine that there boy talks,”
said Grandmother Golden. “Get to be a minister
some day, I reckon.”
“How would the True Story of Macbeth
answer?” asked Master Lewis.
“That would be excellent:
Shakspeare. The greatest ghost story ever written.”
“And if you don’t mind,
I’ll just wait and hear that story, too,”
said good-humored Grandmother Golden.
MASTER LEWIS’S STORY OF MACBETH.
More than eight hundred years ago, when
the Roman wall divided England from Scotland, when
the Scots and Picts had become one people, and when
the countries of Northern Europe were disquieted by
the ships of the Danes, there was a king of the Scots,
named Duncan. He was a very old man, and long,
long after he was dead, certain writers discovered
that he was a very good man. He had two sons,
named Malcolm and Donaldbain.
Now, when Duncan was enfeebled by years,
a great fleet of Danes, under the command of Suene,
King of Denmark and Norway, landed an army on the
Scottish coast. Duncan was unable to take the
field against the invaders in person, and his sons
were too young for such a trust. He had a kinsman,
who had proved himself a brave soldier, named Macbeth.
He placed this kinsman at the head of his troops; and
certain writers, long, long after the event, discovered
that this kinsman appointed a relation of his own,
named Banquo, to assist him. Macbeth and Banquo
defeated the Danes in a hard-fought battle, and
then set out for a town called Forres to rest and to
make merry over their victory.
A thane was the governor of a province.
The father of Macbeth was
the thane of Glamis.
There lived at Forres three old women,
whom the people believed to be witches. When
these old women heard that Macbeth was coming to the
place they went out to meet him, and awaited his coming
on a great heath. The first old woman saluted
him on his approach with these words: “All
hail, Macbeth hail to thee, thane of Glamis!”
And the second: “All hail,
Macbeth hail to thee, thane of Cawdor!”
And the third: “All hail, Macbeth thou
shalt be king of Scotland!”
Macbeth was very much astonished at these
salutations; he expected to become thane of Glamis
some day, and he aspired to be king of Scotland,
but he had never anticipated such a disclosure of his
destiny as this. The old women told Banquo that
he would become the father of kings, and then they
vanished, according to Shakspeare, “into the
air.”
Macbeth and Banquo rode on very much elevated
in spirits, when one met them who informed them
that the thane of Glamis was dead. The melancholy
event was not unwelcome to Macbeth; his spirits rose
to a still higher pitch; one thing that the old
women had foretold had speedily come to pass, he
was indeed thane of Glamis.
As Macbeth drew near the town, a glittering
court party came out to welcome the army. They
hailed Macbeth as thane of Cawdor. He was much
surprised at this, and asked the meaning. They
told him that the thane of Cawdor had rebelled,
and that the king had bestowed the province upon
him. Macbeth was immensely delighted at this
intelligence, feeling quite sure that the rest of
the prophecy would come to pass, and that he would
one day wear the diadem.
Now the wife of Macbeth was a very wicked
woman, and the prophecy of the witches quite turned
her head, so that she could think of nothing but
becoming queen. She was much concerned lest the
nature of her husband should prove “too full
of the milk of human kindness” to come to
the “golden round.” So she decided
that should an opportunity offer itself for an interview
with the king, she would somewhat assist in the
fulfilment of the last prophecy.
Then Macbeth made a great feast in the
grand old castle of Inverness, and invited the king.
Lady Macbeth thought this a golden opportunity for
accomplishing the decrees of destiny, and when the
old king arrived she told Macbeth that the time had
come for him to strike boldly for the crown.
As Shakspeare says:
“Macbeth. My
dearest love, Duncan comes here to-night.
Lady M. And when goes
hence?
Macbeth. To-morrow.
Lady M. O never shall
sun that morrow see.”
When this dreadful woman had laid her
plot for the taking off of Duncan, she went to the
banquet-hall and greeted the royal guest with a
face all radiant with smiles, and called him sweet
names, and told him fine stories, and brimmed his
goblet with wine, so that he thought, we doubt not,
that she was the most charming creature in all the
world.
It was a stormy night, that of the banquet;
it rained, it thundered, and the wind made dreadful
noises in the forests, which events, we have noticed
in the stories of the old writers, were apt to occur
in early times when something was about to happen.
We are also informed that the owls hooted, which
seems probable, as owls were quite plenty in those
days.
Duncan was conducted to a chamber, which
had been prepared for him in great state, when the
feast was done. Before retiring he sent to “his
most kind hostess” a large diamond as a present;
he then fell asleep “in measureless content.”
When all was still in the castle Lady
Macbeth told her husband that the hour for the deed
had come. He hesitated, and reminded her of the
consequences if he should fail. She taunted him
as being a coward, and told him to “screw
his courage up to the sticking-place, and he would
not fail.” Then he took his dagger, and,
according to Shakspeare, made a long speech over
it, a speech which, I am sorry to say, stage-struck
boys and girls have been mouthing in a most unearthly
manner ever since the days of Queen Bess.
Macbeth “screwed his courage up
to the sticking-place” indeed, and then and
there was the end of the life of Duncan. When
the deed was done, he put his poniard into the hand
of a sentinel, who was sleeping in the king’s
room, under the influence of wine that Lady Macbeth
had drugged.
When the meal was prepared on the following
morning, Macbeth and his lady pretended to be much
surprised that the old king did not get up.
Macduff, the thane of Fife, who was one of the royal
party, decided at last to go to the king’s
apartment to see if the king was well. He returned
speedily in great excitement, as one may well suppose.
As Shakspeare continues the interesting narrative:
“Macduff. O horror!
horror! horror!
Macbeth. What’s
the matter?
Macd. Confusion now
hath made his masterpiece. Most sacrilegious
murder hath broke ope the
Lord’s anointed temple and stole thence
the life o’ the building.
Macb. What is ’t
you say? the life?”
Macbeth appeared to be greatly shocked
by the event, and, with a great show of fury and
many hot words, he despatched the sentinels of the
king, whom he feigned to believe had done the deed.
Lady Macbeth fell upon the floor, pretending, of
all things in the world for a woman of such mettle,
to faint.
So Macbeth came to the throne. But
he remembered that the weird women had foretold
that Banquo should become the father of kings, which
made him fear for the stability of his throne.
He thought to correct the tables of destiny somewhat,
and so he induced two desperate men to do by Banquo
as he had done by Duncan. The spirit of Banquo
was not quiet like Duncan’s, but haunted him,
and twice appeared to him at a great feast that
he gave to the thanes.
Now Banquo had a son named Fleance, whom
the murderers were instructed to kill, but who,
on the death of his father, eluded his enemies and
fled to France. The story-writers say that the
line of Stuart was descended from this son.
Macbeth, like all wicked people who accomplish
their ends, was very unhappy. He lived in continual
fear lest some of his relations should do by him
as he had done by Duncan and Banquo. He became
so miserable at last that he decided to consult
the witches who had foretold his elevation, to hear
what they would say of the rest of his life.
He found them in a dark cave, in the middle
of which was a caldron boiling. The old women
had put into the pot a toad, the toe of a frog,
the wool of a bat, an adder’s tongue, an owl’s
wing, and many other things, of which you will find
the list in Shakspeare. Now and then they walked
around the pot, repeating a very sensible ditty:
“Double, double, toil
and trouble;
Fire, burn; and, caldron,
bubble.”
They at last called up an apparition,
who said that Macbeth should
never be overcome by his enemies until
Birnam wood should come to
the castle of Dunsinane, the royal residence,
to attack it.
“Macbeth shall never
vanquished be until
Great Birnam wood to high
Dunsinane hill
Shall
come against him.”
Now, Birnam wood was twelve miles from
Dunsinane (pronounced
Dunsnan), and Macbeth thought that the
language was a mystical way
of saying that he always would be exempt
from danger.
Malcolm, the son of Duncan, the rightful
heir to the throne, was a man of spirit, and he
went to England to solicit aid of the good King
Edward the Confessor against Macbeth. Macduff,
having quarrelled with the king, joined Malcolm,
and the English king, thinking favorably of their
cause, sent a great army into Scotland to discrown
Macbeth.
When this army reached Birnam wood, on
its way to Dunsinane, Macduff ordered the men each
to take the bough of a tree, and to hold it before
him as he marched to the attack, that Macbeth might
not be able to discover the number and the strength
of the assailants. Thus Birnam wood came against
Dunsinane. When Macbeth saw the sight his courage
failed him, and he saw that his hour had come.
A battle ensued, in which he was conquered and killed.
Such is the story, and it seems a pity
to spoil so good a story; but
I fear that Shakspeare made his wonderful
plot of much the same
“stuff that dreams are made of.”
Duncan was a grandson of Malcolm II. on
his father’s side, and Macbeth was a grandson
of the same king, though on the side of his mother.
On the death of Malcolm, in 1033, each claimed the
throne. Macbeth, according to rule of Scottish
succession, had the best claim, but Duncan obtained
the power. Macbeth was naturally dissatisfied,
and the insolence of Malcolm, the son of Duncan, who
placed himself at the head of an intriguing party
in Northumberland, changed his dissatisfaction to
resentment, and he slew the king. He once had
a dream, which he deemed remarkable, in which three
old women met him and hailed him as thane of Cromarty,
thane of Moray, and finally as king. Upon this
light basis genius has built one of the most powerful
tales of superstition in the language.
Duncan was slain near Elgin, and not in
the castle of Inverness.
Malcolm avenged his father’s death,
slaying Macbeth at a place
called Lumphanan, and not at Dunsinane,
as recorded in the play.
And then Sir Walter Scott finds that “Banquo
and his son Fleance”
never had any real existence, which leaves
no material out of which
to construct a ghost.
“So there were no witches, after all?”
said Charlie.
“No; no witches.”
“No Banquo?”
“No Banquo.”
“No ghost?”
“No ghost. Banquo never lived.”
“Is that all?” asked Grandmother Golden.
“That is all.”