“But stop,” says
the courteous and prudent reader, “are there
any
such things as ghosts?”
“Any ghostesses!” cries
Superstition, who settled long since in the country,
near a church yard on a “rising ground,”
“any ghostesses! Ay, man, lots on ’em!
Bushels on ’em! Sights on ’em!
Why, there’s one as walks in our parish,
reglar as the clock strikes twelve-and
always the same round, over church-stile, round
the corner, through the gap, into Shorts Spinney,
and so along into our close, where he takes a
drink at the pump-for ye see he died in
liquor, and then arter he squenched hisself, wanishes
into waper.
“Then there’s the ghost
of old Beales, as goes o’ nights and sows tares
in his neighbor’s wheat-I’ve
often seed ’em in seed time. They do
say that Black Ben, the poacher, have riz, and
what’s more, walked slap through all the
squire’s steel traps, without springing on
’em. And then there’s Bet Hawkey as
murdered her own infant-only the poor
little babby hadn’t learned to walk, and so can’t
appear ag’in her.”
THOMAS HOOD, The Grimsby
Ghost.
That dark little room I described
as so convenient during a terrific thunderstorm or
the prowling investigations of a burglar, began after
a while to get mysterious and uncanny, and I disliked,
nay, dreaded to enter it after dark. It was so
still, so black, so empty, so chilly with a sort of
supernatural chill, so silent, that imagination conjured
up sounds such as I had never heard before. I
had been told of an extremely old woman, a great-great-grandmother,
bed-ridden, peevish, and weak-minded, who had occupied
that room for nearly a score of years, apparently
forgotten by fate, and left to drag out a monotonous,
weary existence on not her “mattress grave”
(like the poet Heine), but on an immensely thick feather
bed; only a care, a burden, to her relations.
As twilight came on, I always carefully
closed that door and shut the old lady in to sleep
by herself. For it seemed that she was still there,
still propped up in an imaginary bed, mumbling incoherently
of the past, or moaning out some want, or calling
for some one to bring a light, as she used to.
Once in a while, they told me, she
would regain her strength suddenly and astonish the
family by appearing at the door. When the grand-daughter
was enjoying a Sunday night call from her “intended”
it was rather embarrassing.
I said nothing to my friends about
this unpleasant room. But several were susceptible
to the strange influence. One thought she should
not mind so much if the door swung open, and a portiere
concealed the gloom. So a cheerful cretonne soon
was hung. Then the fancy came that the curtain
stirred and swayed as if some one or something was
groping feebly with ghostly or ghastly fingers behind
it. And one night, when sitting late and alone
over the embers of my open fire, feeling a little
forlorn, I certainly heard moans coming from that direction.
It was not the wind, for, although
it was late October and the breezes were sighing over
summer’s departure, this sound was entirely different
and distinct. Then (and what a shiver ran down
my back!) I remembered hearing that a woman had been
killed by falling down the steep cellar stairs, and
the spot on the left side where she was found unconscious
and bleeding had been pointed out to me. There,
I heard it again! Was it the wraith of the aged
dame or the cries of that unfortunate creature?
Hush! Ellen can’t have fallen down!
I am really scared; the lamp seems
to be burning dim and the last coal has gone out.
Is it some restless spirit, so unhappy that it must
moan out its weary plaint? I ought to be brave
and go at once and look boldly down the cellar stairs
and draw aside that waving portiere.
Oh, dear! If I only had some one to go with me
and hold a light and-there it is-the third time. Courage vanished. It might be
some dreadful tramp hiding and trying to drive me up-stairs, so he could get the
silver, and he would gladly murder me for ten cents-
“Tom,” I cried. “Tom,
come here.” But Tom, my six-footer factotum,
made no response.
I could stand it no longer-the
portiere seemed fairly alive, and I rushed
out to the kitchen where Ellen sat reading the Ledger,
deep in the horrors of The Forsaken Inn. “Ellen,
I’m ashamed, but I’m really frightened.
I do believe somebody is in that horrid dark room,
or in the cellar, and where is Tom?
“Bedad, Miss, and you’ve
frightened the heart right out o’ me. It
might be a ghost, for there are such things (Heaven
help us!), and I’ve seen ’em in this country
and in dear old Ireland, and so has Tom.”
“You’ve seen ghosts?”
“Yes, indeed, Miss, but I’ve
never spoke to any, for you’ve no right to speak
to a ghost, and if you do you will surely die.”
Tom now came in and soon satisfied me that there was
no living thing in the darkness, so I sat down and
listened to Ellen’s experiences with ghosts.
THE FORMER MRS. WILKES.-“Now
this happened in New York city, Miss, in West 28th
Street, and is every word true, for, my dear, I saw
it with my own eyes. I went to bed, about half-past
nine it was this night, and I was lying quietly in
bed, looking up to the ceiling; no light on account
of the mosquitoes, and Maud, the little girl I was
caring for, a romping dear of seven or eight, a motherless
child, had been tossing about restless like, and her
arm was flung over me. All at once I saw a lady
standing by the side of the bed in her night dress
and looking earnestly at the child beyond me.
She then came nearer, took Maud’s arm off me,
and gently straightened her in bed, then stroked her
face, both cheeks-fondly, you know-and
then stood and looked at the child. I said not
a word, but I wasn’t one bit afraid for I thought
it was a living lady. I could tell the color
of her eyes and hair and just how she looked every
way. In the morning I described her to Mrs. Wilkes,
and asked, ‘Is there any strange lady in the
house?’ ‘No, Ellen. Why?’ she
said. Then I said: ’Why, there certainly
was a pleasant-looking lady in my room last night,
in her night dress, and she patted Maud as if she
thought a sight of her.’
“‘Why,’ said my
mistress, ‘that is surely the former Mrs. Wilkes!’
“She said that the older daughter
had seen her several times standing before her glass,
fixing her hair and looking at herself, but if she
spoke to her or tried to speak, her mother would take
up something and shake it at her. And once when
we were going up-stairs together Alice screamed, and
said that her mother was at the top of the stairs and
blew her cold breath right down on her. The stepmother
started to give her her slipper, but the father pitied
her and would not allow her to be whipped, and said
‘I’ll go up to bed with you, Alice.’”
“Did you ever see the lady in white again, Ellen?”
“Never, Ma’am, nor did
I ever see any other ghost in this country that I
was sure was a ghost, but-Ireland, dear
old Ireland, oh, that’s an ancient land, and
they have both ghosts and fairies and banshees too,
and many’s the story I’ve heard over there,
and from my own dear mother’s lips, and she
would not tell a lie (Heaven rest her soul!), and
I’ve seen them myself over there, and so has
Tom and his brother too, Miss. Oh, many’s
the story I could tell!”
“Well, Ellen, let me have one
of your own-your very best.”
And I went for pencil and pad.
“And are ye going to pin down
my story. Well, Miss, if ye take it just as I
say, and then fix it proper to be read, they’ll
like it, for people are crazy now to get the true
ghost stories of dear old Ireland. O Miss, when
you go over, don’t forget my native place.
It has a real castle and a part of it is haunted,
and the master doesn’t like to live there-only
comes once a year or so, for hunting-and
the rabbits there are as thick as they can be and
the river chuck full of fish, but no one can touch
any game, or even take out one fish, or they would
be punished.”
“Yes, Ellen it’s hard,
and all wrong, but we are wandering away from your
ghosts, and you know I am going to take notes.
So begin.”
“Well, Miss, I was a sort of
companion or maid to a blind lady in my own town.
I slept in a little room just across the landing from
hers, so as to always be within reach of her.
I was just going to bed, when she called for me to
come in and see if there was something in the room-something
alive, she thought, that had been hopping, hopping
all around her bed, and frightened her dreadfully,
poor thing, for, you remember, she was stone blind,
Miss, which made it worse. So I hurried in and
I shook the curtains, looked behind the bureau and
under the bed, and tried everywhere for whatever might
be hopping around, but could find nothing and heard
not a sound. While I was there all was still.
Then I went into my room again, and left the door open,
as I thought Miss Lacy would feel more comfortable
about it, and I was hardly in my bed when she called
again and screamed out with fear, for It was hopping
round the bed. She said I must go down-stairs
and bring a candle. So I had to go down-stairs
to the pantry all alone and get the candle. Then
I searched as before, but found nothing-not
a thing. Well, my dear, I went into my room and
kept my candle lighted this time. The third time
she called me she was standing on her pillow, shivering
with fright, and begged me to bring the light.
It was sad, because she was stone blind. She
told me how It went hopping around the room, with its
legs tied like. And after looking once more and
finding nothing, she said I’d have to sleep
in the bed with her and bring a chair near the bed
and put the lighted candle on it. For a long
time we kept awake, and watched and listened, but
nothing happened, nothing appeared. We kept awake
as long as we could, but at last our eyes grew very
heavy, and the lady seemed to feel more easy.
So I snuffed out the candle. Out It hopped and
kept a jumping on one leg like from one side to the
other. We were so much afraid we covered our
faces; we dreaded to see It, so we hid our eyes under
the sheet, and she clung on to me all shaking; she
felt worse because she was blind.
“We fell asleep at daylight,
and when I told Monk, the butler, he said it was a
corpse, sure-a corpse whose legs had been
tied to keep them straight and the cords had not been
taken off, the feet not being loosened. Why my
own dear mother, that’s dead many a year (Heaven
bless her departed spirit!)-she would never
tell a word that was not true-she saw a
ghost hopping in that way, tied-like, jumping around
a bed-blue as a blue bag; just after the
third day she was buried, and my mother (the Lord
bless her soul!) told me the sons went to her grave
and loosened the cords and she never came back any
more. Isn’t it awful? And, bedad,
Miss, it’s every word true. I can tell you
of a young man I knew who looked into a window at
midnight (after he had been playing cards, Miss, gambling
with the other boys) and saw something awful strange,
and was turned by ghosts into a shadow.”
This seemed to be a thrilling theme,
such as Hawthorne would have been able to weave into
the weirdest of weird tales, and I said, “Go
on.”
“Well, he used to go playing
cards about three miles from his home with a lot of
young men, for his mother wouldn’t have cards
played in her house, and she thought it was wicked,
and begged him not to play. It’s a habit
with the young men of Ireland-don’t
know as it’s the same in other countries-and
they play for a goose or a chicken. They go to
some vacant house to get away from their fathers,
they’re so against it at home. Why, my
brother-in-law used to go often to such a house on
the side of a country road. Each man would in
turn provide the candles to play by, and as this house
was said to be haunted, bedad they had it all to themselves.
Well, this last night that ever they played there-it
was Tom’s own brother that told me this-just
as they were going to deal the cards, a tall gentleman
came out from a room that had been the kitchen.
He walked right up to them-he was dressed
in black cloth clothes, and wore a high black hat-and
came right between two of the men and told them to
deal out the cards. They were too frightened even
to speak, so the stranger took the cards himself and
dealt around to each man. And afterward he played
with them; then he looked at every man in turn and
walked out of the room. As soon as he cleared
out of the place, the men all went away as quick as
ever they could, and didn’t stop to put out
the lights. Each man cleared with himself and
never stopped to look behind. And no one cared
to play cards in that house afterward any more.
That was Tom’s own brother; and now the poor
young man who was going home at midnight saw a light
in one of the houses by the road, so he turned toward
it, thinking to light his pipe. Just before knocking,
he looked in at the window. As soon as he peeped
in the light went out on him, and still he could see
crowds of people, as thick as grass, just as you see
’em at a fair-so thick they hadn’t
room to stand-and they kept swaying back
and forth, courtesying like. The kitchen was
full, and looking through a door he saw a lot more
of fine ladies and gentlemen; they were laughing and
having great fun, running round the table setting
out cups and saucers, just as if they were having
a ball. Just then a big side-board fell over with
a great crash, and all the fine people scampered away,
and all was dark. So he turned away on his heel
and was so frightened, his mother said, he could hardly
get home from fear, and he had three whole miles to
go. Next day he was thrashing corn in the barn
and something upset him and pitched him head foremost
across the flail. He rose, and three times he
was pitched like that across the flail, so he gave
up and went home. His mother asked him:
‘Johnny, what is the matter with you? You
do look very bad!’ So he up and told her what
had happened to him in the barn, and what he saw the
night before. And he took suddenly sick and had
to keep his bed for nine weeks, and when he got up
and was walking around, he wasn’t himself any
more, and the sister says to the mother: ’Mother,
I’m sure that it isn’t Johnny that’s
there. It’s only his shadow, for when I
look at him, it isn’t his features or face,
but the face of another thing. He used to be
so pleasant and cheerful, but now he looks like quite
another man. Mother,’ said she, ‘we
haven’t Johnny at all.’ Soon he got
a little stronger and went to the capital town with
corn. Several other men went also to get their
corn ground. They were all coming home together
a very cold night, and the men got up and sat on their
sacks of corn. The other horses walked on all
right with them, but Johnny’s horses wouldn’t
move, not one step while he was on top of the load.
Well, my dear, he called for the rest to come and
help him-to see if the horses would go for
them. But they would not move one step, though
they whipped them and shouted at them to start on,
for Johnny he was as heavy as lead. And he had
to get down. Soon as he got down, the horses seemed
glad and went off on a gallop after the rest of the
train. So they all went off together, and Johnny
wandered away into the bogs. His friends supposed,
of course, he was coming on, thought he was walking
beside his load; the snow was falling down, and perhaps
they were a little afraid. He was left behind.
They scoured the country for him next day, and, bedad,
they found him, stiff dead, sitting against a fence.
There’s where they found him. They brought
him on a door to his mother. Oh, it was a sad
thing to see-to see her cry and hear her
mourn!”
“And what more?” I asked.
“That’s all. He was
waked and buried, and that’s what he got for
playing cards! And that’s all as true as
ever could be true, for it’s myself knew the
old mother, and she told me it her very self, and she
cried many tears for her son.”