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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50775 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50775)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Twenty Years' Experience as a Ghost Hunter, by
-Elliott O'Donnell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Twenty Years' Experience as a Ghost Hunter
-
-Author: Elliott O'Donnell
-
-Illustrator: Phyllis Vere Campbell
- H. C. Bevan-Petman
-
-Release Date: December 27, 2015 [EBook #50775]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GHOST HUNTER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, eagkw and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TWENTY YEARS’ EXPERIENCE AS A
- GHOST HUNTER
-
-
-
-
- Twenty Years’ Experience
- as a Ghost Hunter
-
- BY
-
- ELLIOT O’DONNELL
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE SORCERY CLUB,” “WERWOLVES,”
- “SOME HAUNTED HOUSES OF ENGLAND AND WALES,”
- “HAUNTED HIGHWAYS,” ETC., ETC.
-
-
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- PHYLLIS VERE CAMPBELL
- AND
- H. C. BEVAN-PETMAN
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- HEATH, CRANTON, LTD.
- FLEET LANE, LONDON
-
- _First Published, November, 1916._
-
- _Second Edition, February, 1917._
-
-
-
-
-AUTHOR’S NOTE
-
-
-In presenting this volume of ghostly reminiscences to the Public
-I would lay stress on the fact that, in order to avoid the danger
-of incurring an action for slander or libel, I have—save where
-expressedly stated to the contrary—resorted to the use of fictitious
-names for all persons and houses. For the reproduction of one or two
-articles I am indebted to the courtesy of Mr. Ralph Shirley.
-
- ELLIOT O’DONNELL.
-
-1916.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. I COMMENCE MY GHOSTLY INVESTIGATIONS IN DUBLIN 11
-
- II. I AM PURSUED BY PHANTOM FOOTSTEPS 23
-
- III. SOME STRANGE CASES IN SCOTLAND 34
-
- IV. I TRAVEL ACROSS THE UNITED STATES AND DO SOME GHOST
- HUNTING IN SAN FRANCISCO 49
-
- V. A HAUNTED OFFICE IN DENVER 58
-
- VI. CASES OF HAUNTINGS IN ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK, AND CHICAGO 69
-
- VII. A HAUNTED WOOD, AND A HAUNTED QUARRY IN CANADA 86
-
- VIII. HAUNTINGS IN THE EAST END 105
-
- IX. NIGHT RAMBLINGS ON WIMBLEDON COMMON AND HOUNSLOW HEATH 122
-
- X. MY VIEWS ON A FUTURE LIFE FOR THE ANIMAL AND VEGETABLE
- WORLDS 136
-
- XI. A HAUNTING IN REGENT’S PARK, AND MY FURTHER VIEWS WITH
- REGARD TO SPIRITUALISM 148
-
- XII. A HAUNTED MINE IN WALES 159
-
- XIII. THE POOL IN WALES THAT LURES PEOPLE TO DEATH 169
-
- XIV. I GO ON WITH THE HISTORY OF MY LIFE, AND NARRATE A
- GHOSTLY HAPPENING IN LIVERPOOL 183
-
- XV. SOME STRANGE CASES IN BIRMINGHAM, HARROGATE, SUSSEX AND
- NEWCASTLE 194
-
- XVI. WAR GHOSTS 206
-
- XVII. A CASE FROM JAPAN 223
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- 1 “WE BOTH LOOKED IN THE DIRECTION HE INDICATED” 39
-
- 2 “WHO IS THAT TALL, GOOD-LOOKING GIRL, STELLA, THAT I’VE
- SEEN FOLLOWING YOU INTO THE BUILDING....” 63
-
- 3 “BUT THERE ARE OTHER GHOSTS—IF YOU LIKE TO TERM THEM
- SO—THAT ARE MORE TROUBLESOME” 82
-
- 4 “I LOOKED UP, JUST IN TIME TO SEE THE GIRL FLASH ME A LOOK
- OF SUBTLE WARNING” 94
-
- 5 “THE THING CAME RIGHT UP TO THE WINDOW, AND THEN RAISED ITS
- FACE” 101
-
- 6 “WHAT GIVES ME THE WORST FRIGHT IS A TREE....” 141
-
- 7 “MY GOD! THERE’S DICK! HE’S JUST BEHIND YOU” 167
-
- 8 “I SUDDENLY CAUGHT SIGHT OF A LARGE EYE” 205
-
-
-
-
- Twenty Years’ Experience
- as a Ghost Hunter
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-I COMMENCE MY GHOSTLY INVESTIGATIONS IN DUBLIN
-
-
-In starting a book of this sort, I believe it is usual to say something
-about one’s self.
-
-I was born in the ’seventies. My father came from County Limerick, and
-belonged to the Truagh Castle O’Donnells, who, tracing their descent
-from Shane Luirg, the elder brother of Niall Garbh, the ancestor of
-Red Hugh, rightly claim to be the oldest branch of the great clan. He
-graduated at Trinity College, Dublin, was for some time vicar of a
-parish near Worcester, and died in Egypt, under mysterious and much
-discussed circumstances,[1] soon after I came into the world.
-
- [1] See “The Oriental Zig-zag,” by C. Hamilton.
-
-My mother was English; she belonged to an old Midland family, and only
-survived my father a few years.
-
-Although I am generally known as a ghost hunter, needless to say it
-was not for such a career that I was educated, first of all at Clifton
-College, then at an Army crammer’s, and finally at Chedwode Crawley’s
-well-known coaching establishment in Ely Place, Dublin. There I read
-for the Royal Irish Constabulary, and, attending regularly, remained
-for a little over two years. I can safely say these two years were two
-of the happiest I have ever known, for my companions at that time were
-the nicest set of fellows I have ever met, and amongst them I formed
-many lifelong friendships.
-
-When I was not working, I usually spent my time playing football
-or cricket, to both of which sports I was devoted, and, when I was
-not thus engaged, I used to tramp across hill and dale continually
-exploring the country in search of adventure.
-
-But in those days I did not look for ghosts—they came to me; they came
-to me then, as they had come to me before, and as they have come to me
-ever since.
-
-With my early experiences of the Unknown—which experiences, by the
-way, extend over the whole period of my youth—I have dealt fully
-in former works; so that in this volume I propose to confine myself
-to later experiences, commencing approximately with my début as an
-investigator of haunted houses and superphysical occurrences in general.
-
-To begin with, however, let me state plainly that I lay no claims to
-being what is termed a scientific psychical researcher. I am not a
-member of any august society that conducts its investigations of the
-other world, or worlds, with test tube and weighing apparatus; neither
-do I pretend to be a medium or consistent clairvoyant.
-
-I am merely a ghost hunter; merely one who honestly believes that he
-inherits in some degree the faculty of psychic perceptiveness from a
-long line of Celtic ancestry; and who is, and always has been, deeply
-and genuinely interested in all questions relative to phantasms and a
-continuance of individual life after physical dissolution. Moreover, in
-addition to this psychic faculty, I possess, as I have already hinted,
-a spirit of adventure; and since this spirit is irresistible, had I not
-decided to become a ghost hunter, I should doubtless have embarked upon
-some other and hardly less exciting pursuit.
-
-The actual cause of my decision to adopt ghost-hunting as a profession
-was an experience which befel me in the summer of ’92. I was at that
-time a student in Ely Place, Dublin, and being in search of rooms, was
-recommended to try a house within a stone’s throw of the Waterloo Road.
-
-A widow named Davis, with two leviathan daughters, Mona and Bridget,
-ran the establishment, and as the vacant apartments were large,
-apparently well ventilated and exceedingly moderate in price, I
-decided to take them. Consequently, I arrived there with my luggage
-one afternoon, and was speedily engaged in the tiring and somewhat
-irritating task of unpacking.
-
-When I retired to rest that first night, I certainly had no thought of
-ghosts or anything in connection with them; on the contrary, my mind
-was wholly occupied with speculations as to how I should fare in the
-coming weekly examination at Crawley’s, whether the extra attention I
-had recently bestowed on mathematics would be of any service to me,
-or whether, in spite of it, I should again occupy my place at the
-bottom of the class. I remember thinking, however, as I blew out the
-light and turned into bed, that there was something about the room
-now—though I could not tell what—that I had not noticed by daylight;
-but I soon went to sleep, and although I awoke several times before
-morning—a phenomenon in itself—I cannot say that I thought then of
-any superphysical element in the atmosphere. It was not until I had
-been there several nights that the event occurred which effectually
-shaped my future career.
-
-One evening the two girls, Mona and Bridget, were making so much
-racket in the room beneath me, that I found work impossible, and being
-somewhat tired, for I had stuck very close to it all day, I resolved
-to go to bed. On my way thither I encountered two young men, T.C.
-students, who were also lodging in the house, hotly engaged in an
-argument; and they appealed to me to express an opinion. I told them
-what I thought, as they followed me upstairs; then, when I reached my
-room, I abruptly bade them good-night, and, entering, locked the door
-behind me.
-
-Sitting down on the edge of the bed, I quietly slipped off my clothes
-and put out the light. The two men were still haranguing one another
-for all they were worth when I got in between the sheets and prepared
-to lie down. The room was not entirely dark; from between the folds of
-the thick plush curtains that enveloped the windows stray beams from
-the powerful moonlight filtered through and battled their way to the
-foot of the bed. I was looking at them with some degree of curiosity,
-when I saw something move. I glanced at it in astonishment, and, to
-my unmitigated horror, the shape of something dark and sinister rose
-noiselessly from the floor and came swiftly towards me. I tried to
-shout, but could not make a sound. I was completely paralysed, and as I
-sat there, sick with fear and apprehension, the thing leaped on to me,
-and, gripping me mercilessly by the throat, bore me backwards.
-
-I gasped, and choked, and suffered the most excruciating pain. But
-there was no relaxation—the pressure of those bony fingers only
-tightened and the torture went on. At last, after what seemed to me
-an eternity, there was a loud buzzing in my ears, my head seemed to
-spin round violently, and my brain to burst. I lost consciousness. On
-coming to, I found that my assailant had left me. I struck a light. My
-fellow-lodgers were still going at one another hammer and tongs—and
-the door was, as I had left it, locked on the inside. I searched the
-room thoroughly; the window was bolted; there was nothing in the
-cupboard; nothing under the bed; nothing anywhere. I got into bed
-again, full of the worst anticipations, and, if sleep came to me, it
-was only in the briefest snatches.
-
-At dawn the room became suffused with a cold, grey glow, and the
-suggestion of something horribly evil standing close beside the bed
-and sardonically watching me impressed me so strongly that, yielding
-to a sudden impulse of terror, I hid my head under the bed-clothes,
-and remained in that undignified position till the morning was well
-advanced and I was “called.”
-
-I got up, feeling downright ill, and although the sunlight
-metamorphosing everything now made the mere thought of a ghost simply
-ludicrous, I hurried out of the room as speedily as possible. Nor did I
-venture to pass another night there.
-
-My landlady did not demur when I asked her to transfer me to another
-apartment, and later, before I took my final departure from her house,
-she confessed to me that it was haunted. She believed that it had been
-used as a private home for mentally afflicted people, and that someone,
-either one of the patients or a nurse—she did not know which—had
-died, under extremely painful circumstances, in the room I had first
-occupied.
-
-The Davises left the house soon after I did, and who lives there now,
-and whether the hauntings still continue, I cannot say. When I last
-made enquiries, about two years ago, I learned that the then occupants
-had never admitted experiencing anything unusual, but that they always
-kept the room in which I had undergone the sensations of strangulation
-carefully locked.
-
-This adventure of mine, intensely unpleasant as it had been at the
-time, profoundly interested me. Hitherto I had placidly accepted as
-truth all the dogmas of religion hurled at me from the pulpit and
-drilled into me at school, for the simple reason that I had always been
-taught to regard as infinitely correct and absolutely above criticism
-all that the clergy told me: God made the world, they said, and all
-the laws and principles appertaining to it—that was sufficient—I
-need not ask any questions. When I looked about me and saw men, and
-women, dogs, horses, and other animals suffering indescribable agonies
-from all kinds of foul and malignant diseases; when I encountered
-cripples, the maimed and blind, idiots and lunatics; or read in the
-papers of swindles, murders and suicides; or noted how, throughout
-nature, the strong animals prey upon the weak; how, for example, the
-tiger, the lion and the leopard terrorize the jungle, just as the shark
-and octopus terrorize the sea, and the wasp and spider, centipede and
-scorpion terrorize insect life (being furnished respectively with
-weapons for tearing and rending, and sucking the flesh, and entailing
-the most excruciating tortures on the nerve centres); when, I say, I
-noted all this, I was given to understand that I must on no account
-comment upon it—to do so was impious and wicked—I must abide by the
-precept of my pastor and pedagogue, namely, that “God is almighty and
-merciful, loving and wise.”
-
-But now it was different—I was no longer in the schoolroom, no longer
-under the immediate influence of the Church. I met people in Dublin
-imbued with the broader instincts of a big, cosmopolitan community;
-I listened to their reasoning—reasoning which at first immeasurably
-shocked me, and afterwards struck me as horribly sane. Then, at this
-crisis, came the incident of the strangling. I tried to attribute it to
-a dream, but I was prevented by the fact that I had only just got into
-bed, and had not even lain down, when the figure seized me. Hence, I
-could only conclude that some spirit—the nature of my suffering and
-the horror it inspired leading me to suppose that it was a particularly
-evil one—had been my aggressor.
-
-But why was it not in Hell? Had it escaped in spite of the strict
-supervision of the Almighty? Or could it be possible that the orthodox
-Paradise and Purgatory did not exist, and that the spirits of the dead
-were allowed to wander about at will? I became interested—deeply so;
-all sorts of wild speculations floated through my mind; I resolved to
-enquire further.
-
-I would not be guided by any creed; I would set out on my work of
-investigation wholly unbiassed; I would gain whatever knowledge there
-was to be gained of another world without the aid either of priest or
-occultist, medium or scientist.
-
-Several of my friends in Dublin were greatly interested in ghosts, and
-I learned from them of two houses that had long borne the reputation of
-being haunted. One was close to St. Stephen’s Green, within sight of
-the Queen’s Service Academy, and the other, a big, ugly edifice of a
-dingy grey, was in Blackrock. I had stayed in the former when a child,
-and had vivid recollections of the holes in the stone stairs, through
-which boiling oil was poured on the heads of the English soldiers at
-the time of the ’98.
-
-There were many large and stately rooms in the house, oak-panelled
-and beautified throughout with much carving. I remember looking with
-awe and perplexity at the number of odd shadows that used to put in
-an appearance on the stairs and in the passages, just when it was my
-bed-time, but I did not then attribute them to ghosts. I simply did
-not know what they were. I heard sounds, too—clangs and clashes, and
-footsteps tramping up and down the stairs; sounds I did not attempt to
-analyse, possibly because I dared not. That was in 1886; I was then
-a small boy, and now—now only—after I had long left the house, and
-was back in Dublin, with the experience of the strangling ghost still
-fresh in my mind, I began to wonder whether these strange sounds and
-shadows might not have been due to the presence of the Superphysical.
-I mentioned the matter to my friends, and they expressed astonishment
-that I had not heard the house was haunted. One of them, a lady, told
-me that she had once stayed there and had been awakened every night by
-the sounds I had described—the sounds of heavy footsteps rushing up
-the stairs, of cries and groans, shrieks and oaths, coupled with the
-clashing of scabbards and sword blades, and the sound as of falling
-bodies.
-
-Yet nothing was ever to be seen, saving the moonlight and
-shadows—plenty of shadows—shadows strangely suggestive of grotesque
-and fancifully clad people. I tried to obtain permission to sleep in
-the house, and in my innocence of the ways of landlords, I stated with
-the most pathetic candour my true intention—I wanted to investigate.
-The reply I got was certainly not courteous, neither did it permit of
-argument. Hence, feeling considerably crestfallen and humiliated, I
-found myself forced to give up my first attempt at ghost-hunting.
-
-Then I turned my attention to the house in Blackrock, and fared no
-better. The landlord had been bothered to death with requests to spend
-nights there, and was endeavouring to discover the originator of the
-report that the place was haunted, in order that he might bring an
-action for Slander of Title. Consequently I could only examine the
-house from the outside, hoping that its ghostly inhabitants would one
-night take pity on me and exhibit themselves at one of the windows. But
-in this, too, I was disappointed; although, as the place invariably
-inspired me with the greatest dread, I have no doubt whatever but that
-it was genuinely and badly haunted.
-
-There were several stories in circulation in Dublin about that time
-concerning the nature of the haunting, and the following—one of the
-most reliable—was told me by a Mrs. Blake. I will give it as nearly as
-I can in her own words:
-
-“When I was a child of about twelve,” she began, “which was a good
-many years ago, my father, who was then stationed in Dublin, took the
-house on a three years’ lease, at a very low rental, due, so the owner
-stated, to the fact that there were far too many stairs, a feature to
-which most people, on account of their servants, strongly objected.
-Nothing was said about ghosts, and nothing was further from my parents’
-minds when they took possession. We moved in towards the end of July,
-but it was not until the middle of September that we first became aware
-that the house was haunted. It happened in this way: My father and the
-maids were out one evening, and only my mother, my small brother and I
-were in the house. It was about eight o’clock. I was upstairs in the
-nursery reading to Teddy, and my mother was in the drawing-room, two
-storeys beneath. I was just in the middle of a sentence, when Teddy
-interrupted me. ‘Did you hear that?’ he exclaimed; ‘it’s someone on
-the stairs. I believe they are listening.’ I paused, and heard a loud
-creak. ‘Who can it be?’ I said; ‘there’s only mother in the house!’
-Much mystified, I closed the book and went out on to the landing. No
-one was there; but when I got to the head of the stairs, I heard a loud
-scream, and then a dull thud, just as if someone had fallen. In an
-agony of mind I ran downstairs to see what had happened. As I arrived
-in the hall, the door of the drawing-room was slowly opened, and I
-saw, peeping cautiously out, a white face with two dark, gleaming,
-obliquely-set eyes, that filled with an expression of the most
-diabolical hatred as they met mine. I was so terrified that I started
-back some paces, and, as I did so, the door opened a little wider, and
-the figure of a short, elderly woman, clad in an old-fashioned black
-dress, and white cap crumpled closely round her lean, haggard face,
-glided out, and, passing by, ascended the stairs. As she came to the
-first bend, she turned, and looking down at me with an evil leer,
-shook her hand menacingly at me. She then passed out of sight, and I
-heard her climb the stairs, step by step, till she came to the nursery
-landing. A moment later, and Teddy gave a violent shriek.
-
-“My terror was now so great that I think I should have gone mad had I
-been left there any longer by myself; but, by a merciful providence, a
-key turned in the lock of the front door, and my father entered. The
-sight of his well-known figure on the threshold at once loosened the
-spell that had bound me, and with a cry of delight I clutched him by
-the arms, imploring him to see at once what had happened to mother and
-Teddy.
-
-“He ran into the drawing-room first and found my mother on the floor,
-just reviving from a faint. Lighting the gas, he fetched her some
-brandy, and then, bidding me stay with her, he hastened upstairs to
-Teddy. The latter was very badly frightened, and it was some days
-before he was well enough to give anything like a coherent account
-of what had happened. Of course, mother and father told Teddy that
-the queer figure they had seen was some friend of the servants, who
-had called while they were out, but I suppose they deemed me old
-enough to know the truth, for they discussed the incident openly in
-my presence. It appears that my mother had been quietly knitting in
-the drawing-room, when she suddenly felt very cold, and rising from
-her chair, with the intention of closing the door, found herself
-confronted by a hideous form. Subsequently, my father made a thorough
-search of the house, but he found no one, and as all the windows were
-fastened and the doors locked on the inside, we could only come to the
-conclusion that the figure my mother and Teddy and I had all seen was a
-ghost. A few days later it appeared to my father. He was coming out of
-his bedroom, when he saw a woman steal stealthily out of a room on the
-same landing and creep downstairs in front of him. There was something
-about her so intensely sinister that he felt chilled; but, determining
-to find out who she was, he followed her, and catching her up,
-demanded her name. There was a chuckling answer, the figure instantly
-disappeared, and a number of invisible somethings clattered down the
-stairs past him.
-
-“I think my father was very scared; at all events he came into the
-breakfast-room with a very white face and ate hardly anything. Some
-time after this, when the autumn was well advanced, my uncle came to
-stay with us. He was a jolly, rollicking sailor, who had fought the
-Turks at Navarino, and had had many exciting adventures with Chinese
-pirates.
-
-“No one told him the house was haunted; it was decided he should find
-that out for himself. One afternoon, several days after his arrival,
-he was taking off his boots in a room in the basement, when a current
-of icy air blew in on him, and, on raising his eyes to see whence
-the draught came, he perceived an extraordinarily pretty girl, clad
-in a dark green riding-habit, such as he believed were worn in the
-days of his great grand-parents, standing in the doorway, watching
-him intently. ‘This is one of Jack’s surprises’ (Jack was my father),
-he said to himself, ‘and a deuced pleasant one, too! The rogue, he
-knows nothing pleases me so much as the sight of a pretty girl, and,
-by Jove, she is pretty!’ Springing to his feet—for my uncle was never
-bashful in the presence of the fair sex—he advanced to shake hands.
-To his chagrin, however, she promptly turned round, and, walking
-swiftly away, began to ascend the stairs. My uncle followed her. On and
-on she led him till she came to the drawing-room; there she paused,
-and with the forefinger of her left hand on her lips, glanced coyly
-round at him. She then quietly turned the door handle, and signalling
-to him to follow, stole into the room on tiptoe. Charmed with this
-piece of acting, the naïvety of it appealing very strongly to his
-susceptible nature, my uncle hastened after her. The moment he crossed
-the threshold, however, he recoiled. Standing in the middle of the
-room was an old woman with a hideous, white face and black, leering
-eyes. There were no signs anywhere of the young and beautiful lady.
-She had completely vanished. My uncle was so shocked by the spectacle
-before him that he retreated on to the landing, and, as he did so, the
-drawing-room door swung to with a loud crash. He called my father, and
-they entered the room together; but it was quite empty, the old hag had
-disappeared as inexplicably as the girl. That evening there was to be
-a party, and the table in the dining-room groaned beneath the weight
-of one of those inimitable ‘spreads,’ in vogue some fifty or sixty
-years ago. With somewhat pardonable pride my mother took us all—my
-father, uncle and myself—to have a peep at it, before the guests
-arrived. As we drew near the room, we heard, to our astonishment,
-the plaintive sound of a spinet. My mother instantly drew back,
-trembling, whereupon my uncle, forcing a laugh, said, ‘This is one of
-the occasions upon which a gentleman should go first.’ He threw open
-the door as he spoke, and we all peered in. What I saw will never be
-effaced from my memory. The room exhibited a complete wreckage—the
-cloth was half off the table, the massive silver candlesticks were
-overturned, and the floor was strewn with piles of broken glass, china
-and eatables—everything was smashed and ruined. In the midst of the
-debris, her face turned towards us, lay a very beautiful girl. There
-were unmistakable evidences of a ghastly wound, but her eyes were
-partly open, and the strange light which gleamed from their blue depths
-revealed an expression which could only have been hatched in hell—a
-hell, peopled not with passive torture-torn sufferers, but with wholly
-abandoned beings actively engaged in licentiousness and everything that
-is destructive and antagonistic to man’s moral and mental progress.
-Standing over the woman, and holding a kind of stiletto in his hand,
-was a tall, fair man, in whose agonised and remorseful features we
-recognised at once a most startling likeness to my uncle. No detail
-was wanting—there was the deep scar on the temple, the curiously deep
-dimple in the chin; indeed, saving for the old-fashioned clothes, no
-likeness could have been more exact. Standing by his side, her hideous,
-scowling face thrust forward, her evil eyes glaring at us with the same
-vindictive insolence, was the old woman I had seen that night in the
-hall. Then, my father, uttering some exclamation, crossed himself, and,
-as he did so, the figures abruptly vanished, whilst the whole house
-echoed and re-echoed with loud peals of mocking, diabolical laughter.
-That was the finale; we left immediately afterwards, and from that day
-to this the house, I believe, has stood almost uninterruptedly empty.”
-
-This is the gist of Mrs. Blake’s account of the happenings, and as I
-never found her anything but strictly truthful, I believe them to have
-been given me without any conscious exaggeration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-I AM PURSUED BY PHANTOM FOOTSTEPS
-
-
-Before I left the west of Ireland, I set out one day to investigate a
-case of haunting by fairies, which was alleged to take place nightly at
-the junction of four cross roads on the southern slope of the Wicklow
-mountains.
-
-I found a spot that seemed to correspond with the description of the
-scene of the haunting given me by my informant, and kept a vigil
-there for two consecutive nights without experiencing any of the
-anticipated results. However, I intended giving the place another
-trial, and accordingly set out; but when within half a mile or so of
-my destination, I began to feel very tired, and having a bad cold on
-me besides, I decided to put up at a cottage I espied a short distance
-off, instead of pursuing my way further.
-
-The cottage stood a little back from the main road, perhaps a hundred
-yards or so, and was connected with it by a narrow lane. The situation
-was one of intense loneliness; the nearest village was a good two miles
-away, and few people, other than occasional cyclists, ever passed
-along the high road after nightfall. At the time I am speaking of, the
-cottage was tenanted by a couple named Mullins. The man was a drover,
-and his wife one of the tallest women I have ever seen; she possessed,
-moreover, a pair of green-grey eyes, and these were remarkable, not
-only for their curious colouring, but for the impression they gave one
-that they were perpetually trying not to see too much. Apart from these
-peculiarities, she seemed ordinary enough, and I felt I was in the
-house of very worthy and hard-working people.
-
-I went to bed early and was given the only spare room in the cottage.
-It faced the front and was immediately over the tiny parlour. As the
-linen was spotless and felt thoroughly dry, I had no scruples about
-getting in between the sheets, and, stretching myself out, I was soon
-fast asleep.
-
-I awoke with violent palpitations of the heart to find the room bathed
-with moonlight; and, as all was absolutely silent, I concluded it must
-be far on into the night. Suddenly I heard footsteps—footsteps in the
-distance, running at a well-regulated pace. They rang out sharp and
-clear in the still air, and gradually became more and more distinct.
-I was wondering who the person could be, out at such an hour, when a
-dog, apparently in the yard at the back of the house, set up the most
-unearthly howling. The next moment I heard Mrs. Mullins speak, and,
-inadvertently, I listened.
-
-“John,” she said, “do you hear the dog?”
-
-“I should be deaf and dumb if I didn’t,” Mullins replied sleepily.
-“What is it?”
-
-“What is it, indeed! Why the dog never barks like that unless there
-is a spirit about. Do you remember those knocks on the door the night
-Uncle Mike died, and how the dog howled then? There’s something of the
-same sort about to-night. Listen!”
-
-The steps very were near now. I listened intently. The runner, I
-thought, must be wearing very extraordinary boots, for every step, so
-it seemed to me, was accompanied by a peculiar and almost metallic
-click.
-
-“John,” Mrs. Mullins suddenly resumed, “do you hear those steps? What
-are they? It’s the first time in my life I’ve heard anyone running
-along the high road like that at this time of night. Hark! They’ve got
-to the turning—they’re in the lane—they’re coming here! Get up at
-once; go and bolt the front door. The thing’s evil—evil, I’m sure, and
-it’s someone of us here it’s after.”
-
-The steps grew rapidly nearer, and Mullins, stumbling hastily down the
-stairs, bolted both the doors and swung to the little wooden shutters.
-A moment later, and I heard the steps come right up to the door. There
-was a momentary pause, then a series of terrific knocks.
-
-“Cross yourself, John; for God’s sake cross yourself!” Mrs. Mullins
-cried. “And may the Holy Virgin protect us.” She then started praying
-loudly and vehemently, and, whether it was the effect of her prayers
-or not, the knocking gradually diminished in violence, and then ceased
-altogether.
-
-“Come on up, John,” Mrs. Mullins called out; “the thing, whatever it
-is, has ceased troubling us, and we may go to sleep in peace.”
-
-Mullins, needing no second bidding, joined his wife, and once again the
-whole place was wrapped in silence.
-
-I must confess that, whilst the knocking continued, I had no desire
-whatever to look out of the window, but the moment it was over I got up
-and peered out. I could see right down the lane and for some distance
-along the high road.
-
-There was no sign of anyone or anything that could in any way account
-for the disturbance—the landscape was brilliantly illuminated with
-moonlight, every stick and stone being plainly visible, and all nature
-seemed to be sleeping undisturbedly, as if no interruption in its
-ordinary routine had occurred. I got back into bed, and, falling into
-a gentle doze, slept soundly till the morning. After breakfast, Mrs.
-Mullins said, “You’re not thinking of spending another night here, sir,
-are you?”
-
-“Why, no,” I replied. “I must be back in Dublin at my work by this
-afternoon.”
-
-“I’m glad of that, sir,” she went on; “because I couldn’t let you stay.
-I suppose you heard the rapping, sir?”
-
-“I did,” I replied; “and the footsteps—how do you account for them?”
-
-“Only in one way,” she said; “they came after you. At least, that was
-my impression, and my impressions are seldom wrong. I seemed to see
-some terrible form—half animal and half human—something indescribably
-grotesque and unnatural—something, my instinct tells me, was wanting
-to get at you.”
-
-Her description of the figure reminded me so strongly of the queer
-thing that tried to strangle me in the house near the Waterloo Road,
-that I narrated my experience to her.
-
-“You may depend upon it, sir,” she said when I had finished, “that the
-ghost you have just told me about and the one that came to the cottage
-last night are the same. I have heard that spirits will sometimes
-attach themselves to persons who have been staying in the house they
-haunt, and that they will leave the house with them and follow them
-wherever they go. I only hope and trust that this one will never do you
-any harm, and that you will succeed in ridding yourself of it, but my
-husband and I feel, asking your pardon, that we should not like to have
-you sleep here again.”
-
-I did not tell her that even had she been willing, nothing on earth
-would have induced me to stay, for whether she was right in her theory
-about the steps or not, the neighbourhood had lost all its charms for
-me. Indeed, when next I had a ghostly visitation, I hoped I should be
-quartered in a less isolated spot.
-
-My aunt, Mrs. Meta O’Donnell, tells me that a relative of hers once had
-a remarkable encounter with fairies on the road between Ballinanty and
-the village of Hospital in County Limerick.
-
-He was driving home one evening in his jaunting car, unaccompanied save
-by his servant, Dunkley, who was sitting with his back to him, when a
-number of little people—fairies—sprang on the car, and clambering up,
-tried to pull him off.
-
-Finding that, owing to the vigour with which they pulled, he was
-actually slipping from his seat, he appealed to his servant for
-assistance; and the latter, doing as he was told, held on to him with
-all his strength, and thus prevented the little people from dragging
-him to the ground. Mrs. Meta O’Donnell is absolutely sure that her
-relative never took stimulants of any sort, and that he was in a
-perfectly normal state of mind when this event happened.
-
-Nor is this road haunted only by fairies, for Mrs. Meta O’Donnell again
-tells me that this same relative of hers, when driving home on another
-occasion—this time with several friends—saw a man on horseback, in
-a hunting coat, suddenly leap the hedge, and, after riding for some
-distance by the side of the car, abruptly vanish. Two of the men who
-were with him, she believes, also witnessed this phenomenon.
-
-It is a long step, seemingly, from the fairy to the banshee, but
-these two types of spirit have at least one trait in common, namely,
-exclusiveness; and the banshee, even more emphatically than the fairy,
-will have nought to do with the alien. It will attach itself only to
-the family of bona-fide Irish origin, only to the clan that has been
-associated with Irish soil for many generations.
-
-With the kind permission of Mr. Ralph Shirley, I will here introduce,
-making only slight alterations, a few extracts from an article of mine
-on the banshee, which appeared in the “Occult Review” for September,
-1913:
-
-“Contemporary with fairies and the Feni, phantoms typical of the great
-lone hills of Wicklow and Connemara, and of the bare and wind-bitten
-cliffs of Galway, may well have been the banshees, which, attaching
-themselves for divers reasons to various chieftains and sons of
-chieftains, eventually became recognised as family ghosts or familiars.
-
-“Many people have fallen in the error of imagining all banshees are
-moulded after one pattern. Nothing could be more fallacious. The
-banshee of the O’Rourkes, for example, does not resemble that of the
-O’Donnells; there are many forms of the banshee, each clan having a
-distinct one—or more than one—of its own. Some of the banshees are
-fair to look at, and some old, and foul, and terrifying; but their
-mission is invariably the same, i.e., to announce a death or some great
-family catastrophe.
-
-“The banshee is never joyous; it is always either sad or malevolent.
-Sometimes it wails once, sometimes three times—the wail in some
-degree, but not altogether, resembling that of a woman in great trouble
-or agony; sometimes, again, it groans; and sometimes it sighs, or
-sings. In some clans the demonstrations are both visual and auditory,
-in others only visual; and in others, again, only auditory. There is no
-really old clan but has its banshee, and few members of that clan who
-are not, at some time or other of their lives, made aware of it.
-
-“How well I recollect as a child being told by those who had experienced
-it, that a dreadful groaning and wailing had been heard the night prior
-to the death of a very near relative of mine in Africa. I enquired what
-made the wailing, and was informed ‘the banshee,’ or the ghost woman,
-who never fails to announce the death of an O’Donnell.
-
-“Years later, when in the extreme West of England, my wife and I were
-awakened one night by a terrible wail, which sounded just outside our
-door. Beginning in a low key, it rose and rose, until it ended in a
-shrill scream, that in time died away in a horrible groan. The idea of
-the banshee at once flashed through my mind, for I felt none other but
-a banshee could have made such a sound.
-
-“Still, to satisfy my wife, I jumped out of bed and went on to the
-landing; all was dark and silent, and outside their bedrooms were
-assembled the rest of the household, terrified, and eager to have
-an explanation of what had happened. We searched the whole house
-and the waste land outside, but there was nothing which could in
-any way account for the noise, and in the morning I received news
-of the death of someone very closely related to me.... Whilst some
-writers are inclined to treat the subject jocularly, and attribute
-the banshee either to obviously absurd physical causes, or to the
-abnormally imaginative powers they insist are the birthright of all
-Irishmen, others dive into the pseudo-profound compilations of modern
-Theosophy, and reappear with the pronouncement that banshees are not
-spirits at all—not entities hailing from the superphysical world—but
-mere thought germs, created by some remote ancestor of a clan, and
-wafted down from one generation to another of his descendants, an
-idea as nonsensical as it is extravagant, and which will not for an
-instant hold water when looked into by those who have had a bona-fide
-experience of the banshee or any other ghostly phenomenon. Indeed,
-it is only the latter who are capable of making observations of any
-value on such a subject, and all effort to describe or account for the
-superphysical by those who have never experienced it, no matter whether
-those efforts are made by theosophical savants, professional mediums
-or scientific experts, are, in my opinion, weightless, colourless and
-futile.
-
-“A geologist may describe the hydrosphere, and an astronomer the moon,
-and their descriptions may be swallowed with tolerable composure and
-assurance, because we know that the laws of similarity and analogy,
-when applied to the physical, generally hold good; but no scientist
-can teach us anything about spiritual phenomena, because such things
-are actually without the realm of science, just as the game of marbles
-is entirely without the province of theology. It is our sensations,
-and our sensations _only_, that can guide and instruct us when dealing
-with the superphysical. I have heard the dying screams of a woman
-murdered beneath my window; I have heard on hill and plain the cries of
-coyottes, panthers, jackals and hyenas; and I have many times listened
-to the dismal hooting of night birds, when riding alone through the
-seclusion of giant forests; but there is something in the banshee’s
-cry that differs from all these, that fills one with a fear and awe,
-far—immeasurably far—beyond that produced by a sound which is merely
-physical. Imagine then what it is to be haunted all one’s life by such
-a grim harbinger of woe, to have it ever trailing in one’s wake, always
-ready and, maybe, eager to make itself heard the moment it detects, by
-its extraordinary and unhuman powers, the advent of death. One curious
-idiosyncrasy of the banshee is that it never manifests itself to the
-person whose death it is prognosticating. Other people may see or hear
-it, but the doomed one never, so that when every one present is aware
-of it but one, the fate of that one may be regarded as pretty well
-certain.
-
-“And now once again, whence comes the banshee? From heaven or from
-hell? What is it? It is impossible to say; at the most one can
-only speculate. Some banshees appear to be mournful only; others
-unquestionably malevolent; and whereas some very closely resemble a
-woman, even though of a type long passed away, others, again, differ so
-much from our conception of any human being, that we can only imagine
-them to be spirits that never have been human, that belong to a genus
-wholly separate and distinct from the human genus, and that have only
-been brought into contact with this material plane through the medium
-of certain magical or spiritual rites practised by the Milesians, but
-for some unknown reason discontinued by their descendants. This appears
-to me quite a possible explanation of the origin of the banshee.
-
-“One realizes, when dabbling in spiritualism to-day, one of the
-greatest dangers incurred is that of attracting to one certain
-undesirable, mischievous, and malignant spirits—call them elementals
-if you will—which, when so attracted, stick to one like the proverbial
-leech. And what happens to-day may very well have happened thousands
-of years ago; in all probability, the Unknown never changes; its ways
-and habits may be as constant as those of Nature, guided by laws and
-principles which may at times vary, but which, nevertheless, undergo no
-material alteration. The superphysical, attracted to the ancients as it
-is attracted to us to-day, would adhere to them as it now adheres to
-us. I cannot surmise more.
-
-“Supposing then that this theory accounts for the one class of banshee,
-what accounts for the other—the other that so nearly tallies with the
-physical? Are the latter actual phantoms of the dead; of those that
-died some unnatural death, and have been earth-bound and clan-bound
-ever since? Maybe they are. Maybe they are the spirits of women,
-prehistoric or otherwise, who were either suicides or were murdered,
-or who themselves committed some very heinous offence; and they haunt
-the clan to which they owed their unhappy ending; or, in the event of
-themselves being the malefactors, the clan to which they belonged. From
-all this we can conclude that, whilst the origin and constitution of
-banshees vary, their mission is always the same—they are solely the
-prognosticators of misfortune. A sorry possession for anyone; and yet,
-how truly in accord with the nature of the country—with its general
-air of discontent and barrenness, with its rain-sodden soil and gloomy
-atmosphere—as an unkind critic might say, could anyone imagine the
-presence of cheerful spirits under such conditions?
-
-“But the banshee has the one admirable trait which the average
-Englishman obstinately refuses to recognize in the material Irish—the
-trait of loyalty and constancy. It never forsakes the object of its
-attachment, but clings to it in all its vicissitudes and peregrinations
-with a loyalty and persistency that is unmatchable. It is thoroughly
-Irish, essentially Irish; the one thing, apart from disposition and
-character, that has remained exclusively Irish through long centuries
-of robbery and oppression; and which, in spite of assertions to the
-contrary, never has been, nor ever will be shared by other than the
-genuine clansman.
-
-“The banshee is most fastidious in its tastes—it will have none of
-the pseudo-celt; none of the individual who, possessing an absolutely
-English name, and coming entirely of English forefathers, terms himself
-Irish merely because his ancestors happen to have settled in Ireland.
-That is nothing like exact enough for the banshee. Others may talk
-of it and write of it, but they can never honestly claim it; for
-the banshee belongs wholly and exclusively to the bona-fide O’s and
-Macs—and them, and them only, will it never cease to haunt so long as
-there is one of them left.”
-
-My last experience with a ghost in Dublin took place just after I had
-been medically examined for the R.I.C., and to my intense grief had
-been rejected, owing to varicose veins, which the examining doctor told
-me were of a far too complicated nature to permit of an operation;
-consequently, although I had been “cramming” for two years, and my
-prospects of getting through the literary examination were deemed
-extremely fair, it was futile to go up for it, as all chance of my ever
-being in the R.I.C. was now at an end.
-
-On the night of my failure to pass the medical I had gone to bed early,
-as I had a splitting headache, and, after vain efforts, had at length
-succeeded in falling asleep. I awoke just in time to hear a clock from
-somewhere in the downstairs premises of the house—I was then lodging
-in Lower Merrion Street—strike two, and almost immediately afterwards
-there came a loud laugh, just over my face, and so near to me that I
-seemed to feel the breath of the laughter fan my nostrils. Nothing I
-have ever heard before, or have ever heard since, was so repulsive as
-that laugh—it was the very incarnation of jeering, jibing mockery;
-of undying, inveterate hate. I felt that nothing but a spirit of
-unadulterated evil could have made such a noise, and that it had come
-to gloat over my misfortunes—to let me know how greatly it rejoiced
-at the cruel blow I had suffered. I naturally associated it with the
-ghost that had tried to strangle me, and my heart turned sick within
-me at the thought that such a horrible species of phantasm was still
-hovering near me. Should I ever be free from it? I was not quite so
-frightened, however, as I had been on the occasion of its visit to me
-in the house near the Waterloo Road, and determining to prevent myself
-from falling into that kind of paralytic condition again, in which all
-my muscles and faculties had remained alike spell-bound and useless, I
-sat up. The room was in pitch darkness, and everything was breathlessly
-still. I waited in this posture for some seconds, my heart beating
-like a sledge-hammer, and then, deriving assurance from the fact that
-nothing happened, I got out of bed and struck a light. The door was
-locked on the inside, and there was nothing in hiding that could in
-any way account for the noise. I went to the window, and, lifting it
-gently, peered out into the street. There was no moon, but many stars
-and lamp-lights enabled me to see that the street was absolutely
-empty—not even a policeman was in sight. I leaned far out, and from
-immediately beneath me, although no one was visible, there suddenly
-commenced the sound of running footsteps. Ringing out loud and clear,
-and accompanied by a queer familiar clicking, they seemed to follow
-the direction of the street towards Ely Place. I wanted to get back to
-bed, for I was lightly clad, and the air was cool and penetrating, but
-something compelled me to keep on listening, and so I remained with my
-neck craned over the window-sill, till the steps gradually grew fainter
-and fainter, and suddenly ceased altogether. And with their termination
-this early period of my ghostly experiences in Dublin terminated, too.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-SOME STRANGE CASES IN SCOTLAND
-
-
-I returned to England in that “tub-like” old relic of mid-Victorian
-steamboats, “The Argo”—long since defunct, but which for many years
-sailed to and from Dublin and Bristol with as many passengers and
-cattle as could be crammed, with any degree of safety, into her dingy
-and clumsy-looking hulk. I remember the passage well, for two of my
-fellow students were on board, and we spent nearly all the time on
-deck, telling ghost tales, and earnestly discussing the possibility
-of a future life. In the end we made a solemn compact, whereby it was
-agreed that the one who died first would try his level best to give
-some kind of spirit demonstration to the other two. Both my friends
-died within a few years of that date, and within three weeks of each
-other. The one, who had a commission in a cavalry regiment, was killed
-at the Battle of Omdurman, and the other, who having followed in the
-footsteps of his distinguished father, had become a novelist of great
-promise, was kicked to death by a horse. The day after the death of
-the former, as I was busily engaged writing the first chapter of my
-novel, “For Satan’s Sake,” a portion of the mantel-piece in the room in
-which I was working suddenly fell with a loud crash on to the grate. Of
-course, the incident may not have had anything to do with the death of
-my friend, but it was nevertheless remarkable, as previously nothing
-in the nature of a flaw had been noticeable in the condition of the
-mantel-piece. My other friend died—as I subsequently learned, i.e.,
-after the incident I am about to narrate had occurred—at ten o’clock
-one Friday morning, and that afternoon as I was changing for football,
-the grandfather clock on the landing outside my bedroom suddenly struck
-ten. I went to look, and the hands pointed to three. There had been
-nothing amiss with the striking before, and there was nothing amiss
-with the striking after.
-
-These were the only phenomena I experienced at the time these two
-friends of mine died.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On arriving at Bristol, I spent some weeks in the West of England and
-then journeyed north to Scotland. My original intention had been to
-spend a few weeks with an old Clifton friend of mine, whose father
-owned an estate near Inverary; but, on arriving at Glasgow, I heard of
-such a promising case of haunting in that city, that, unable to resist
-the temptation of investigating it, I decided to postpone my journey
-west. The case, as outlined to me in the first instance, was this:—
-
-A Glasgow solicitor, named James McKaye, desirous of taking a house
-close to his office, went one morning to look at one in Duke Street.
-He went there alone, and, carefully closing the front door behind him,
-proceeded to wander from room to room, beginning with the basement.
-
-As he was going upstairs to the first floor, he suddenly heard
-footsteps following him. He turned sharply round; there was no one
-there. Thinking this was odd, but attributing it to the acoustic
-properties of the walls, he continued his ascent. Having arrived on the
-first landing, he went into one of the rooms. The steps followed him.
-A brilliant idea then occurred to him—he stamped his foot. There was
-no echo. He turned round and went into the next room, and the steps
-once again accompanied him. Then he grew frightened. It was broad
-daylight, the sun was shining brilliantly and the birds were singing;
-but there was something in this house that jarred on him horribly—a
-something that was completely out of humour with the golden sunbeams
-and the cheerful chirping of the sparrows. The day was hot, and the
-sun was pouring in through the blindless windows; but in spite of this
-the rooms were icy, and he was deliberating whether it was worth while
-to explore the house further, when he caught sight of a shadow on the
-wall. It was not his own shadow. It was that of a man with his arms
-stretched out horizontally on either side of him, and whereas the right
-arm was complete in every detail, the left had no hand. James McKaye
-now yielded to an ungovernable terror and rushed frantically out of the
-house.
-
-One would naturally think that after all this McKaye would have vowed
-never to go near the place again. Nothing of the sort. The house
-fascinated him. He could not get it out of his mind; he even dreamed
-of it; dreamed of it in connection with some mystery that he must
-solve—that he alone could solve. Besides, there was not another house
-in the town so conveniently situated, nor so cheap. Consequently, he
-took it, and within a fortnight had moved in with all his family and
-household goods. For the first few weeks everything went swimmingly,
-and McKaye, who was shrewd, even for a Scot, congratulated himself upon
-having made such an excellent bargain.
-
-Then occurred an incident which recalled sharply the day he had first
-seen the place. He was writing some letters one morning in his study,
-when the nurse-maid entered, white and agitated. “Oh, do come to the
-nursery, sir,” she implored; “the children are playing with something
-that looks like a dog, and yet isn’t one. I don’t know what it is!” And
-she burst out crying.
-
-“You’re mad,” McKaye said sharply and, springing to his feet, he ran
-upstairs.
-
-On reaching the nursery, the blurred outline of something like a huge
-dog or wolf came out of the half-open door, and raced past him, so
-close that he distinctly felt it brush against his clothes.
-
-Where it went he could not say; he was thinking of the children, and
-did not stop to look. Oddly enough, the children were not a bit afraid;
-on the contrary, they were pleased and curious. “What a strange doggy
-it was, Daddy!” they cried; “it never wagged its tail, like other
-doggies, and whenever we tried to stroke it, it slipped away from
-us—we never touched it once.”
-
-Sorely puzzled, McKaye told his wife, and the two decided that if
-anything further happened, they must leave the house.
-
-That night McKaye happened to sit up rather late; at last he got up,
-and was about to turn off the gas, when he felt his upstretched hand
-suddenly caught hold of by something large and soft, that did not seem
-to have any fingers. He was so frightened that he screamed; whereupon
-his hand was instantly released, and there was a loud crash overhead.
-Thinking something had happened to his wife, he rushed upstairs,
-and found her sitting up in bed and talking in her sleep. She was
-apparently addressing a black, shadowy figure that was crouching on the
-floor, opposite her. As McKaye approached, the thing moved towards the
-wall, and vanished.
-
-Mrs. McKaye then awoke, and begged her husband to take her out of the
-house at once, as she had dreamed most vividly that an appalling murder
-had been committed there, and that the murderer had come out of the
-room with outstretched hands, asking her to look at them. McKaye, who
-had had quite enough of it, too, promised to do as she wished, and
-before another twenty-four hours had passed the house was once again
-empty.
-
-These were the bare facts of the case, and as they were given me by one
-of his clients, I had no difficulty in obtaining an interview with Mr.
-McKaye, who, I was told, still had the keys of the house. It was not,
-however, so easy to obtain consent to spend a night on the premises,
-and he would only permit me to do so on the condition that he himself
-accompanied me, and that I promised to keep the visit a profound secret.
-
-The evening chosen for our enterprise proved ever memorable.
-
-The rain came down in torrents, and the wind—a veritable tornado—made
-any attempt to hold up an umbrella utterly impossible. Indeed, it
-was as much as I could do to hold up myself, whilst, to add to my
-discomfort, at almost every step I plunged ankle-deep in icy cold
-puddles. At length, drenched to the skin, I arrived at the house.
-
-McKaye was standing on the doorstep, swearing furiously. He could not,
-so he said, find the key. However, he produced it now, and we were soon
-standing inside, shaking the water from our clothes. Those were the
-days before pocket flashlights had become general, and we had to be
-content with candles.
-
-We each lighted one, and at once commenced to search the premises to
-make sure no one was in hiding.
-
-The house, as far as I can recollect, consisted of four storeys and
-a basement. None of the rooms were very large; the wall-papers were
-hideous, and I remember thanking my stars that I was not called upon to
-live in such hopelessly inartistic quarters. McKaye asked me if I could
-detect anything peculiar in the atmosphere, but I could only detect
-extreme mustiness, and told him so. I fancied he seemed very fidgety
-and ill at ease; however, as he was a much older man than myself, and
-had some experience of the house, I felt perfectly safe with him. After
-we had been in all the rooms, we descended to the ground floor, and
-commenced our vigil on the staircase leading from the hall to the first
-landing.
-
-“I think we stand more chance of seeing something here than anywhere
-else,” McKaye said; “and in the case of anything very alarming
-happening, we are close to the front door.”
-
-[Illustration: “We both looked in the direction he indicated”]
-
-He spoke only half in fun and I observed that his fingers twitched a
-good deal and that his eyes were never at rest.
-
-“Oughtn’t we to put out the candles?” I said. “Ghosts surely materialise
-much more readily in the dark.” But he would not hear of it. All his
-experiences, he said, had taken place in the light, and he believed
-only spoof ghosts at séances required the opposite conditions. Then he
-regaled me once more with all that had happened during his occupation
-of the house. He was still telling me, when there came a loud rat-rat
-at the door.
-
-“That’s a policeman,” he said; “he must have seen our light.” He spoke
-truly, for, when we opened the door, a burly figure in helmet and cape
-stood on the step and flashed his dripping bull’s-eye in our faces. On
-hearing McKaye’s name the constable was instantly appeased, and, when
-we mentioned ghosts, he laughed long and loud. “Well, gentlemen,” he
-said, “you won’t never be alarmed by a happarition so long as you have
-that dog with you. I bet he would scare away any number of ghosts, and
-burglars, too. If I may be so bold as to ask, what breed do you call
-him? I’ve never seen anything quite like him before,” and he waved his
-lamp towards the stairs. We both looked in the direction he indicated,
-and there, half way up the stairs, with its face apparently turned
-towards us, was the black, shadowy outline of some shaggy creature,
-which to me looked not so much like a dog as a bear. It remained
-stationary for a moment or so, and then, retreating backwards, seemed
-to disappear into the wall.
-
-“Well, gentlemen, good-night,” the policeman said, lowering his lamp,
-“it’s time I was going.” He turned on his heel, and was walking off,
-when McKaye called him back.
-
-“Wait a moment, constable,” he said, “and we’ll come with you.”
-
-He cast a swiftly furtive glance around him as he spoke, then, blowing
-out the lights, he caught me by the arm and dragged me away.
-
-“But the dog, sir,” the policeman said, as the front door closed behind
-us with a bang; “it ain’t come out!”
-
-“And it never will,” McKaye responded grimly. “You have seen the ghost,
-constable, or at least one of them.”
-
-I have never had an opportunity of visiting the house again, but for
-aught I know to the contrary, it still stands there, and is still
-haunted.
-
-From Glasgow I went on to Inverary, where I had the most delightful
-time, fishing and shooting.
-
-I then went to Perth, and there, quite by chance, met a Mr. and Mrs.
-Rowlandson, who informed me that they were just quitting a badly
-haunted house on the outskirts of the town. The name of the house
-was “Bocarthe.” It was their own, and had only been built a year,
-but they could not possibly remain in it, they told me, owing to the
-perpetual disturbance to which they were subjected. They were just
-beginning a detailed description of the manifestations, when I begged
-them to desist. I would like, I explained, with their permission, to
-investigate the case, and I thought it would be better to do so without
-knowing the nature of the hauntings, as in these circumstances—should
-my experience happen to tally with theirs—there could be no question
-either of suggestion or of imagination.
-
-I had resolved to conduct all my investigations with an absolutely
-open mind, and I intended, when once I had satisfied myself that
-the phenomena were objective, to try and alight upon some code
-whereby I could communicate with them, and learn from them something
-certain—something definite, at all events, about the other world. To
-what extent I have succeeded I shall make it the purpose of this volume
-to reveal.
-
-But to continue: “What strikes us as so extraordinary about the whole
-thing,” the Rowlandsons said, “is that a new house, with absolutely no
-history attached to it, for we were the first people who ever inhabited
-it, and we can assure you,” they added laughingly, “there were no
-murders or suicides there during our occupancy, should be haunted. Our
-neighbours declare that we must have brought the ghost with us.”
-
-I told them I thought it quite possible that such might be the case,
-and narrated to them my experiences in Dublin. They appeared to be
-greatly interested; and were, moreover, quite willing, provided I
-promised them not to discuss the matter too openly, as they wanted to
-let the house, that I should spend a few nights at “Bocarthe.” They
-were, in fact, rather anxious to know if anything unusual still took
-place there. Thinking, perhaps, that I might not like to go alone, they
-gave me an introduction to a young friend of theirs, Dr. Swinton, who,
-they thought, might be prevailed upon to accompany me; and, before I
-left them, all the preliminaries relating to my visit to “Bocarthe”
-were satisfactorily arranged.
-
-That same day the Rowlandsons went to Edinburgh, where they told me
-they intended living, and the following day at noon I wended my way
-to the house they had vacated. As there was no story connected with
-“Bocarthe,” I set to work to make enquiries about the ground on which
-it stood, and instead of learning too little, I learned too much. An
-old minister, who looked fully eighty, was sure that the ground in
-question, until it was built upon quite recently, had been grazing
-land ever since he was a boy, and that it had never witnessed anything
-more extraordinary than the occasional death of a sheep or a cow that
-had been struck by lightning. An equally aged and equally positive
-postmistress declared that the ground had never been anything better
-than waste land, where, amid rubbish heaps galore, all the dogs in the
-parish might have been seen scratching and fighting over bones. Another
-person remembered a pond being there, and another a nursery garden;
-but from no one could I extract the slightest hint as to anything that
-could in any way account for the haunting.
-
-When I entered the house, I thought I had seldom seen such a cheerful
-one: the rooms were light and lofty, and about them all there was an
-air of geniality, that hitherto, at all events, I had never dreamed of
-associating with ghosts.
-
-Dr. Swinton joined me in the evening, but although we sat up till long
-after dawn, we neither saw nor heard anything we could not account for
-by natural causes. We repeated the process for two more nights, and
-then, feeling that we had given the house a fair trial, we concluded it
-was either no longer haunted, or that the hauntings were periodical,
-and might not occur again for years. I wrote to Mr. Rowlandson, upon
-returning the keys of the house, and, in reply, received the following
-letter from him:—
-
- No. —, C—— Crescent,
- Edinburgh.
- November 8th, 1893.
-
-Dear Mr. O’Donnell,
-
- Many thanks for the keys. No wonder you did not see our ghost! It
- is here, and we are having just the same experiences in this house
- as we had in “Bocarthe.” If you would care to stay a few nights
- with us, on the chance of seeing the ghost, we shall be delighted
- to put you up.
-
- Yours, etc.,
- ROBERT ROWLANDSON.
-
-I was obliged to return home very shortly, in order to decide
-definitely and speedily what I intended to do for a living; but
-although I knew I had little or no time to waste, I could not resist
-the Rowlandsons’ kind invitation to try and see their ghost, and
-accordingly accepted.
-
-They lived in C—— Crescent. When I arrived there, I found the entire
-household in a panic, the ghost having appeared to one and all during
-the previous night.
-
-“It was so terrible,” Mrs. Rowlandson said, “that I can’t bear even
-to think of it, and shall certainly never forget it. One of the maids
-fainted, and was so ill afterwards, we were obliged to have the doctor,
-and all have given notice to leave.”
-
-“Did nothing of the sort happen before you went to ‘Bocarthe’?” I
-ventured to ask.
-
-“No,” Mr. Rowlandson replied, “not a thing. We were then sceptics where
-ghosts were concerned, but we’re certainly not sceptical now.”
-
-“Do you think it possible,” I said, “that the ghost is attached to some
-piece of old furniture? I have read of such cases.”
-
-Mr. Rowlandson shook his head.
-
-“No,” he said, “we have no old furniture, all our furniture is modern
-and new; at least, it was new when we came to ‘Bocarthe.’”
-
-“Then, if the ghost is neither attached to the house, nor to the
-ground, nor to the furniture, it must surely be attached to some
-person,” I remarked. “I have read that one of the dangers of attending
-Spiritualistic Séances is that spirits occasionally attach themselves
-to people, and can only be got rid of with great difficulty. I suppose
-no one in the house has gone in for Spiritualism?”
-
-“I can safely say I haven’t,” Mr. Rowlandson laughed; “and you haven’t,
-either, Maud, have you?” he said, looking at his wife.
-
-Mrs. Rowlandson flushed.
-
-“The only Spiritualist I ever knew,” she stammered, “was—you know,
-dear, whom I mean——”
-
-Mr. Rowlandson raised his eyebrows and stared at her in astonishment.
-
-“I don’t,” he said. “Who?”
-
-“Ernest Dekon!”
-
-“Dekon!” Mr. Rowlandson ejaculated. “Dekon! Why, of course, I might
-have guessed Spiritualism was in his line. Some years ago, Mr.
-O’Donnell,” he went on, turning to me, “my wife met this Mr. Dekon at
-a ball given by a mutual friend, and from that time, up to his death,
-he persecuted her with his undesirable attentions. I never knew anyone
-so persistent.”
-
-“He resented your marriage, of course,” I remarked.
-
-“Resented it!” Mr. Rowlandson responded; “I should rather think he did,
-though to everyone’s surprise he came to it. Ye Gods! I shall never
-forget the expression on his face, as we caught sight of him in the
-vestibule of the church. Talk about Satan! Satan never looked half as
-evil.”
-
-“And Mr. Dekon was a Spiritualist!” I said.
-
-“He was very keen on séances,” Mrs. Rowlandson interposed. “Most keen,
-and was at one time always trying to persuade me to go to one with him.”
-
-“I never knew that,” Mr. Rowlandson exclaimed.
-
-“Perhaps not,” his wife said demurely. “You see, you don’t know
-everything. However, I never went.”
-
-“And how did he die?” I ventured.
-
-“Suicide,” Mr. Rowlandson said. “He shot himself, and was dastardly
-enough to leave a note behind him, pinned to the toilet-cover of
-his dressing-table, stating that his death was entirely due to the
-heartless conduct of my wife.”
-
-“When was that, Mr. Rowlandson?” I asked.
-
-“Let me see,” Mr. Rowlandson soliloquised. “We have been married not
-quite eighteen months. About fifteen months ago—shortly before we came
-to ‘Bocarthe.’”
-
-“I know what’s in your mind,” Mrs. Rowlandson observed. “You think that
-very possibly it is the spirit of Ernest Dekon that is troubling us. Do
-you really think it could be?”
-
-“From what you have told me,” I said, “I should say that it is more
-than likely. The mere fact of his having been a Spiritualist would
-mean that he had, in some measure, got in touch with the Unknown; so
-that on passing over with his mind solely concentrated on revenge, he
-would, in all probability, speedily become closer acquainted with those
-spirits whom he had known here—not a very high class, but apparently
-the only class that a séance can attract—and these would undoubtedly
-aid him in his attempt to come back and annoy you.”
-
-Mrs. Rowlandson gave vent to an exclamation of dismay. “I have always
-felt,” she said, “that there might be some mysterious connection
-between Ernest Dekon and the dreadful thing we have seen.”
-
-“Of course,” I added, “that is only a suggestion on my part. When does
-the phenomenon usually appear?”
-
-“At all times, and when we least expect it,” Mrs. Rowlandson said. “For
-example, if I am going upstairs alone, it either springs out at me or
-peers down at me from over the banisters. Or, again, it rouses us in
-the middle of the night by rocking our bed! Always some alarming trick
-of that kind.”
-
-“Then you could hardly expect it to manifest itself if we all sat here
-in the dark?”
-
-“Hardly.”
-
-“You haven’t a photograph of Mr. Dekon, I suppose?” I hazarded.
-
-“A photograph of that scoundrel,” Mr. Rowlandson cried. “If he had
-given her one, it wouldn’t have remained long in her possession, I can
-assure you.”
-
-“Well, he never did,” Mrs. Rowlandson said, forcing a smile, “but I can
-describe him.”
-
-“I don’t know whether that will do much good,” I observed. “Because
-I understand that if one of the lower order of earthbounds, usually
-called Elementals, wanted to ‘fool’ us, it could easily impersonate
-him. Dekon’s phantom would not, of necessity, be very like his material
-body; it would depend entirely on how much of the animal there was in
-him; if a great deal, then one might expect to see a creature with
-a pig’s, or some other kind of beast’s, head, with only a slight
-facial resemblance to Dekon. Can you describe his hands? Because I
-believe spirits that have lost all other resemblance with the physical
-body might be identified by some peculiarity in the formation of the
-fingers.”
-
-“Yes,” Mrs. Rowlandson said; “I do remember his hands distinctly. They
-were so ugly! They were long, and red, and the tips were club-shaped; I
-am sure I should recognise them anywhere.”
-
-This conversation took place in the interval between tea and dinner.
-After dinner we sat in the drawing-room, discussing plans for the
-night, and finally came to the conclusion that when bed-time came we
-should retire to our respective rooms, and sit there in the dark,
-waiting and watching for whatever might happen. It was furthermore
-agreed that directly anyone saw or heard anything, they should at once
-summon the others.
-
-We sat up rather late, and it was close on midnight before Mrs.
-Rowlandson rose, and we all—there were two guests besides myself,
-a Colonel and Mrs. Rushworth—took our candlesticks, and followed
-her upstairs. We had mounted the first flight, and had turned the
-bend leading to the second—the house seemed all stairs—when Mrs.
-Rowlandson halted, and, looking back at us, said, “Hush! Do you hear
-anything?”
-
-We stood still and listened. There was a thump, that apparently came
-from a room just at the top of the stairs—then another—and then a
-very curious sound, as if something was bounding backwards and forwards
-over bare boards with its feet tied together. At a signal from Mr.
-Rowlandson, we immediately blew out our lights. A church clock solemnly
-struck twelve. We heard it very distinctly, as the Rowlandsons, being
-enthusiasts for fresh air, kept every window in the house wide open.
-The reverberation of the final stroke had hardly ceased when a loud
-gasp from someone in front of me sent a chilly feeling down my spine.
-
-At the same moment the darkness ahead of us was dissipated by a faint,
-luminous glow. As I watched, the glow speedily intensified, and
-suddenly took the shape of a cylindrical column of six or seven feet
-in height, and this in turn developed with startling abruptness into
-the form of something so shockingly grotesque and bestial that I was
-rendered speechless.
-
-It is extremely difficult to give a very accurate description of it,
-because, like the generality of occult phenomena I have experienced
-in haunted houses, it was a baffling mixture of the distinct and yet
-vague, entirely without substance, and apparently wholly constituted
-of vibrating light that varied each second in tone and intensity. I
-can only say that the impression I derived was that of a very gross or
-monstrous man.
-
-The head, ill-defined on the crown and sides, appeared to be abnormally
-high and long, and to be covered with a tangled mass of coarse,
-tow-coloured hair; the nose seemed hooked, the mouth cruel, the
-eyes leering. The general expression on the face was one of intense
-antagonism. The body of the thing was grey and nude, very like the
-trunk of a silver beech, the arms long and knotted, the hands huge, the
-fingers red and club-shaped. The latter corresponded exactly with Mrs.
-Rowlandson’s description.
-
-This hideous, baleful apparition was the spirit of animal man,
-the symbolical representation of all carnal lusts—it was Ernest
-Dekon—soulless.
-
-But although this spirit was without substance, it was composed of
-complex forces—forces both physical and mental. It could shut and
-open doors, move furniture, rap and make sundry other noises, and it
-could also convey the sensation of intense cold, and the feeling of the
-most abject fear. I now found myself wondering if it possessed other
-properties: Was it sensible? Could it communicate in any way?
-
-I was thus deliberating, when the figure seemed to move forward; then
-someone shrieked. Mr. Rowlandson struck a light, and simultaneously
-the apparition vanished. The effect it had had on us all was novel
-and striking—we were all more or less demoralized; and yet no two
-of us had seen the ghost the same—and some, Mr. Rowlandson and Mrs.
-Rushworth, had not seen it at all.
-
-We went back again into the drawing-room and discussed it. Mrs.
-Rowlandson was the first to speak. She, too, had been particularly
-impressed by the hands, and she was sure they were the hands of Ernest
-Dekon.
-
-“I can say nothing about the face,” she cried, “as it did not appear to
-me, but having seen the hands, I am firmly convinced that the ghost is
-Ernest Dekon, and that it is Ernest Dekon who is tormenting us. Can’t
-any of you think of a plan to get rid of him?”
-
-“Cremation is the only thing I can think of!” cried Colonel Rushworth,
-who had hitherto been silent. “That is the means employed, I believe,
-by the hill tribes in Northern India. When a spirit—a spirit they can
-identify—begins to haunt a place, they dig up the body and burn it,
-and they say that as soon as the last bone is consumed the haunting
-ceases. They have a theory that phantoms of dead people and animals can
-materialise as long as some remnant of their physical body remains.
-Where did this Ernest Dekon die?”
-
-“In Africa,” Mr. Rowlandson said.
-
-“That’s capital! If we can find the cemetery, there ought to be no
-difficulty in getting at the body. The officials are, as a rule, open
-to bribery. Anyhow, we might try it as an experiment.”
-
-I left Edinburgh next day, but I heard some months later from Mr.
-Rowlandson.
-
-“You may recollect Colonel Rushworth’s suggestion,” he wrote. “Well,
-the hauntings have ceased. We are shortly returning to ‘Bocarthe’!”
-
-From this I gathered that an attempt to exhume and cremate Ernest
-Dekon’s body had been made, and had proved successful.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-I TRAVEL ACROSS THE UNITED STATES, AND DO SOME GHOST HUNTING IN SAN
-FRANCISCO
-
-
-Upon leaving Scotland I seriously considered my future, and at length
-decided to go to Oregon and fruit farm. Though the expedition, through
-no fault of my own, proved a failure, and I had to return to England
-within a comparatively short time, I managed, whilst in America, to
-see and learn a good deal. Apart from visiting Crater Lake, which in
-those days was one of the wildest spots imaginable, far out of the
-beat of any but the most adventurous tourist, and seeing the Rogue
-River Indians in their native element, I spent several weeks in the big
-cities, and when in San Francisco obtained the services of a guide,
-and did a nightly tour of China Town, and several of the lesser known
-subterranean haunts of that city.
-
-It was in San Francisco that I had my first experience with an American
-ghost. I had been out tramping all day along the southern side of
-the bay, and it was close on midnight before I got back to the city,
-feeling thoroughly done up and very footsore. The last chime of twelve
-o’clock sounded, as I swung wearily round 117th Street into a narrow
-thoroughfare leading to the obscure quarter of the town in which my
-finances forced me to live. As I came within sight of the end house
-of a block of low old-fashioned buildings, I received something of a
-shock. I had passed by it that morning and had noticed that it was to
-let. I was quite sure of this, because there was something about the
-house that had especially attracted my attention. I was struck with its
-utter loneliness, its air of past grandeur—so oddly at variance with
-the modern and mediocre buildings around it—and, peeping in at the
-windows, I had taken stock of its big oak-panelled apartments devoid of
-furniture and bestrewn with dust and cobwebs.
-
-Now, to my astonishment, I perceived a bright glow—a kind of
-phosphorescent light—emanating from one of the rooms on the ground
-floor. I approached nearer, and, as I leaned against the verandah and
-peered in, it suddenly seemed to me that the room was no longer empty,
-but richly carpetted and full of ponderous, old-fashioned furniture.
-I also seemed to see in the centre of the room a long table covered
-with a snowy cloth, on which were arranged, in rich profusion, many
-handsome silver dishes containing a selection of the choicest food. I
-was dumbfounded. Twelve hours ago there was not a soul to be seen about
-the house nor a particle of furniture in it, and now!—well, it looked
-to me as if it never, never had been empty.
-
-Whilst I was thus meditating, my face glued to the window, I thought
-that a sudden blaze illuminated the room, and by degrees I became
-conscious of the glare of countless candles, some of the candelabra
-branching from the walls, and others—of chased silver—standing on
-the table. I then saw the door at the far end of the apartment open,
-and a young and charming girl, dressed à la mode de Marie Antoinette,
-her gown high-waisted and her hair poudré, hurriedly enter. She gave
-a quick glance at the table, and then, advancing to the fireplace,
-where, for the first time, I perceived the cheery glow of a huge log of
-wood, gazed at herself in a large, richly-framed mirror. The reflection
-evidently pleased her, for she turned round all smiles; and then her
-eyes fell on the window, and on me.
-
-In an instance her countenance changed. Putting a finger to her lips
-with a great air of mystery, she beckoned to me to come in. I started
-back in confusion. Again she beckoned, and with such pretty pleading in
-her eyes that, despite my travel-stained clothes, I yielded. I walked
-to the front door; she opened it, and in hushed tones, in which I
-detected a slight French accent, she bade me welcome.
-
-“We are having a fancy-dress dance,” she said, “but none of the guests
-have as yet arrived, and I want you to come into the ball-room while I
-rehearse some of the dance music.”
-
-She led the way across a big, deserted and strangely silent hall, up
-a flight of thickly-carpeted stairs, along a dimly lighted corridor,
-peopled with nothing but odd shadows, to which I could see no material
-counterparts, and into a room obviously prepared for a ball.
-
-“There is no one about but you and I,” she said laughingly. “Only we
-two; but someone else will arrive soon. It’s not half-past twelve, is
-it?”
-
-“No,” I said; “twenty past.”
-
-“Ten more minutes!” She sighed deeply, and her expression, which up
-to now had been one of gay mischief, changed to one of immeasurable
-sadness. Then she nodded, suddenly burst out laughing, and casting the
-most bewitching look at me from out her long, thickly lashed blue-grey
-eyes, sat down at the piano and began to play a Strauss waltz.
-
-Fascinated though I was by her extreme archness and beauty, I could
-not stifle the thousand and one uncomfortable thoughts that speedily
-crowded into my mind.
-
-Who was this strangely friendly and peculiarly solitary girl? Surely
-someone must have helped her prepare the house and supper. Where were
-they? Besides, she couldn’t possibly live in that house alone.
-
-And yet, apart from the music—which seemed to reverberate through
-every stick and stone of the building—there was no other sound. I
-might have been alone with her on some desert island in the far Pacific.
-
-A feeling of intense but wholly unaccountable fear gradually crept over
-me.
-
-“It is close on the half hour,” she suddenly whispered. “Listen!”
-
-She paused for a moment, and I heard a door from somewhere in the
-lower part of the house open and shut. Then came the sound of muffled
-footsteps, stealthily feeling their way upstairs. Up and up they came,
-till they arrived outside the door of the room we were in. There they
-stopped, and I instinctively felt that their owner was listening.
-
-Presently the girl recommenced playing, and I saw the door-handle
-began to turn. Slowly, very slowly, the door then opened, and on the
-floor of the room there appeared a black shadow—vague, indefinite and
-grotesque. The girl looked over her shoulder at it, and I caught an
-expression in her eyes that appalled me. Turning to the piano again,
-she played frantically, and the faster her fingers flew, the nearer
-crept that shadow.
-
-Suddenly it seemed to shoot right forward, there was a wild scream of
-terror, a terrific crash, and all was in absolute darkness.
-
-I groped my way frantically towards the door. Something—I could not
-define what—came into violent collision with me; I staggered back half
-stunned; and, when my brain cleared, I found myself standing in the
-street, weak with exhaustion, and—hatless.
-
-I visited the house the next day, when the sun was shining brightly
-and there were plenty of people about. It was as I had first seen it,
-untenanted and unfurnished.
-
-I must then have dreamed the whole thing. And what more likely! I was
-excessively tired at the time, so tired that I felt I could hardly
-crawl home—and without a doubt I had dropped off to sleep resting
-against the verandah.
-
-Just out of curiosity, however, I determined to find out if the
-interior of the house in any way resembled the interior I had seen in
-my dream, and, with that object in view, I applied to Mr. C.——, the
-owner, for permission to look over it, frankly telling him why I was
-doing so. As he appeared to be interested, I described my dream to him
-in detail, and he afterwards told me the following story:—
-
-“About fifty years ago, a very rich French family occupied the house;
-and at the coming of age of their daughter they gave a fancy-dress
-ball. Among the guests was an Italian, who, being a rejected suitor of
-the daughter’s, had not been invited. He appeared in some grotesque
-and alarming costume, and when the dance was at its height suddenly
-overturned a large oil lamp.
-
-“In a moment the whole floor was ablaze; and before anyone could stop
-him, he had seized the daughter of the house and hurled her into the
-midst of the flaming mass. Both he and the girl were burned to death,
-and the house, although it was thoroughly restored, has never let
-since.”
-
-Having concluded his story, Mr. C.—— said he would like to go with me
-to the house, and accordingly we set out together.
-
-Though my experience had been only a dream, the coincidence connected
-with it, which only needed my identification of the scene to be
-complete, was startling enough, and I grew more and more excited as we
-neared our destination. When we arrived, Mr. C.—— insisted upon my
-going first; and once inside, recognising every feature in the house,
-I led him first to the room in which I had seen the supper-table laid,
-and then upstairs to the ball-room, where, to my unspeakable surprise,
-lying in the middle of the floor, I found my hat.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What a strangely fascinating city was old San Francisco—that is
-to say, San Francisco before the last great fire and earthquake!
-Consisting of street upon street, terrace upon terrace of quaintly
-irregular buildings, to me its atmosphere—as no other atmosphere ever
-has been—was impregnated with the superphysical. I stayed for a few
-days in a vast hotel in 117th Street, in which I was the only visitor.
-I shrewdly suspect it was haunted, although I cannot truthfully say
-that I ever saw a ghost there, and when I retired to bed up flight
-after flight of stairs, and past dimly-lighted passages teeming with
-doors—doors with nothing, nothing material at least, behind them—the
-only sounds I heard were the hollow echoes of my own footsteps as I
-went on ascending higher, higher, and higher.
-
-Hearing, however, that I was interested in ghosts, the landlord of the
-hotel introduced me one day to a Mr. Sweeney, who kept a drug store in
-Market Street.
-
-“The only experience I ever had with the Supernatural,” Mr. Sweeney
-began, in answer to my interrogations, “took place in this very room.
-Exactly twelve years ago I engaged the services of a young man called
-Edward Marsdon. He was very amiable and capable, but highly-strung and
-hypernormally sensitive. He had been with me about six months, when
-he came into the parlour one evening with a face like a corpse. ‘I’ve
-poisoned someone,’ he gasped. ‘Poisoned someone?’ I ejaculated. ‘Good
-God, what do you mean?’ ‘What I say,’ he replied. ‘A young fellow
-came into the store about an hour ago and handed me a prescription.
-It was signed by Dr. Knelligan, of 111th Street. I made it up, as I
-thought, all right, and gave it him. A few minutes ago, I found I
-had put in salts of lemon instead of paregoric.’ ‘Are you sure?’ I
-asked. ‘Certain!’ he said, ‘as the bottle of salts of lemon is on the
-table in the laboratory with the stopper out. I must have used it in
-mistake. The young man will die, if, indeed, he is not dead already,
-and I am ruined for life.’ ‘We both are,’ I said tersely. ‘Ring up
-Dr. Knelligan at once, and ask him for the young man’s address. When
-you get it, drive round at once and see if you are in time.’ It was
-of no use scolding him for carelessness—he was upset enough already,
-and a ‘blowing up’ just then might, I thought, result in another
-tragedy. The only thing to be done was to hope for the best. He rang
-up Knelligan, got the address, drove round to it, and discovered that
-the young man had just left. The landlady had no idea where he had
-gone. To Marsdon this was the last straw. He came back in a state
-of utter collapse, trembling all over as if he had ague, and, after
-telling me what happened, he went upstairs and slammed his door. About
-a quarter of an hour later, my wife, the servant, and I all heard
-Marsdon, so we thought, come downstairs and go out. The servant then
-went up to his room to make the bed, and hearing her scream out, I ran
-upstairs, to find her standing in the middle of the floor, wringing her
-hands, whilst Marsdon was sitting in a chair—dead! He had been dead
-some minutes. That, Mr. O’Donnell, was the beginning of the strange
-occurrences here. If it was not Marsdon whom we all heard go out, who
-could it have been? There was no one in the house but we three, and the
-body in the chair upstairs, so that it must have been Marsdon’s ghost.
-Well, from that day on, we had no peace.
-
-“Footsteps, which we all recognised as Marsdon’s, for he had a most
-peculiar lumping kind of walk, trod up and down the stairs all hours
-of the day and night, and frequently when I was in the laboratory
-mixing medicines I was strongly conscious of some presence standing
-close beside me and watching everything I did. One day my wife saw
-him. She was going out, and wanting some money, she called to me. As
-I did not answer, she went in search of me, and finding me, as she
-thought, standing on the hearthrug of the parlour with my back to her,
-she touched me on the shoulder. The next moment she discovered her
-mistake. The person whom she had mistaken for me turned round, and she
-found herself confronted with the white, scared countenance of Edward
-Marsdon. She started back with a loud shriek, and Marsdon walked
-out of the room, and apparently right through the servant who came
-running in to see what was the matter. My wife asked the maid if she
-had seen anything, and the latter said, ‘No, only a dark shadow seemed
-to fall right across me, and just for a second or so I felt miserably
-depressed.’ A week or so afterwards he was again seen; this time by my
-wife and the maid. They met him on the stairs. He appeared to be under
-the influence of some very painful emotion, and he passed them at a
-great rate, and so near that they felt his clothes—apparently quite
-material—brush against them. He disappeared in the laboratory, and
-on their entering it immediately afterwards, there was no one there.
-Something of this nature—either auditory or visual, or both—now
-happened pretty well daily, until one morning a young man came to the
-store to see me. ‘I am the young man,’ he said, ‘to whom your assistant
-gave that unfortunate mixture. I have just returned to San Francisco,
-and have heard all about it. The medicine was perfectly all right. I
-drank it directly I left here, and it did me the world of good. There
-was not even the suspicion of poison in it. Marsdon was labouring under
-some extraordinary delusion. If only he had told my landlady about
-it when he called and found I had gone, she could have given him the
-glass I had drank out of, which doubtless contained some dregs of the
-stuff—at any rate, a sufficient quantity for analysis. I am told there
-are rumours afloat that his apparition has been seen several times
-since he died; not that I believe in such things as ghosts.’
-
-“‘Whether you believe in them or not,’ I said quietly, ‘it is a fact
-Edward Marsdon has both been seen and heard.’ ‘Then I hope,’ he said,
-‘my visit here to-day will put matters all right, and that his poor,
-wandering spirit, learning that I am alive and well, will find rest,
-and trouble you no more.’ He then bid me good-morning and walked
-towards the door. ‘My God!’ he suddenly cried, coming to an abrupt
-halt, ‘there he is!’ I looked, and as sure as I am sitting here, Mr.
-O’Donnell, there was Edward Marsdon, just as I had known him in life,
-standing on the pavement with his face glued to the window, peering
-in at us. The expression in his eyes was one of infinite joy and
-astonishment.
-
-“I took a step or two towards him with the intention of speaking, when
-he immediately vanished, and from that day to this the hauntings have
-entirely ceased.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-A HAUNTED OFFICE IN DENVER
-
-
-After leaving San Francisco, I visited Sacramento, where I bought a
-pair of braces, suspenders as they call them there, that lasted me for
-years. They were the very best half-dollar’s worth I ever had, and I
-still have the remains of them stowed away in a big trunk amongst other
-mementos of the long past.
-
-I can’t imagine any city in America hotter than Sacramento in the
-summer, or more unpleasantly cold in the winter, apart from which there
-was nothing about the place that caused it to be very deeply impressed
-on my memory, saving that I met a man in one of the streets one day who
-was so exactly like an old Clifton College master called Tait that I
-believed it was he, and accosted him accordingly.
-
-The man gasped at me in amazement. “Why, Jupp,” he said, “how on earth
-have you managed it. It’s only ten minutes since I left you eating
-your dinner in the Eagle Hotel on the other side of the town. Have you
-wings?”
-
-The moment he spoke I knew he was not Tait, but it took me some time to
-convince him I was not Jupp; and when he introduced me to the latter
-half an hour or so later, I was not surprised, for I do not think
-there could have been a more striking likeness to myself, even in my
-own portrait.
-
-The coincidence was all the more remarkable since there was at Clifton
-College, contemporary with Tait, a master named Jupp, of whose cane I
-had the most striking recollection. In appearance, however, the Clifton
-Jupp was not in the least bit like me.
-
-This was the only adventure of note, if one may so designate it, I
-had during this visit to Sacramento. I went on from there to Denver,
-where I met one or two relatives of friends of mine in England, and
-did a little work as a “Free Lance” journalist. It was summer when I
-had last stayed in Denver, and then the intense heat, combined with an
-injudicious consumption of fruit and iced water, had brought on a mild
-attack of cholera, which left me with a none too favourable impression
-of the place.
-
-But now all was changed. The weather was much cooler; I was growing
-acclimatised, and I did not feel altogether among strangers.
-Consequently my apathy vanished, and, despite the fact that my
-employment was anything but lucrative, I enjoyed this second stay in
-Denver immensely.
-
-The town had not been built long. Indeed, ten years previously it had
-only one anything like orthodox street; so that it was the last place
-in the world where one would expect to come across a haunted house. Yet
-I heard of three haunted houses at least whilst I was there.
-
-The one I think most likely to interest my readers I heard of in this
-way. I had been to the Zoological Gardens, and was returning by tram,
-when a journalist called Rouillac, with whom I had a very slight
-acquaintance, came running up to me in a great state of excitement.
-“O’Donnell,” he cried, “I have unearthed something that will interest
-you—the case of a haunting in an office in Race Street.” He then
-proceeded to give me an account of it.
-
-The office was rented by a Mrs. Bell, a typist who employed two girls,
-Stella Dean and Hester Holt.
-
-One day Hester Holt failed to put in an appearance.
-
-“If she is ill,” Mrs. Bell said to Stella Dean, “she ought to have let
-me know. There was nothing wrong with her yesterday, was there?”
-
-“Not that I am aware of,” Stella Dean replied. “When she parted from
-me, just across the way, she went off in the best of spirits. I expect
-she’ll turn up all right to-morrow.”
-
-The morrow came, and Hester Holt not arriving, Stella Dean was
-despatched in the dinner-hour to find out what had become of her. She
-returned looking very white and scared.
-
-“Why, Stella,” Mrs. Bell exclaimed. “What on earth’s the matter?”
-
-“Hester’s gone away without telling anyone where she was going,” Stella
-Dean answered.
-
-“You don’t say so,” Mrs. Bell cried. “What can have happened?”
-
-“She never went to her lodgings after leaving here; at least, that’s
-what the landlady says,” Stella Dean replied. “And she hasn’t written,
-either—but I think you’d better call there yourself; I don’t like the
-woman.” And Stella burst out crying.
-
-This was the beginning of the mystery. Mrs. Bell interviewed the
-landlady, who stuck to her statement that she had neither seen Hester
-Holt nor heard of her since she had left the house two days ago,
-presumably to attend business. There had been no words between them,
-she said, and Hester had seemed as usual, perfectly happy. She was a
-singularly reserved girl, and never mentioned her family excepting when
-she went away for her annual holiday. She then requested that all her
-letters should be forwarded to the address of her married sister.
-
-The landlady, Mrs. Britton, gave this address to Mrs. Bell, and the
-latter, writing off at once, received an answer by return of post to
-say that Hester was not there and no tidings of her had been received
-for over a month. The married sister, however, made an important
-statement. She said that one person was sure to know of Hester’s
-whereabouts, and that was Pete Simpkins, the young man with whom she
-kept company, and was hoping eventually to marry. Mrs. Bell, now
-keenly interested, hastened off and interviewed Simpkins. To quote
-her own words, he seemed “a bright, intelligent young man,” and
-exhibited unfeigned astonishment and perturbation on learning of the
-disappearance of his sweetheart.
-
-“When did you last see her?” Mrs. Bell enquired.
-
-“The day she left you,” he responded. “I had been out in the country
-all day, superintending the building of a large farm some ten miles to
-the east of this city, and I was cycling home along a very unfrequented
-route, when I met a buggy. Two girls were in it, and to my amazement,
-they were Hester and Stella Dean.”
-
-“What!” Mrs. Bell cried. “Stella Dean? Are you sure?”
-
-“Absolutely!” Simpkins replied. “I can swear to it. It astonished me
-because I knew they had been on very bad terms. I was engaged to Stella
-before I met Hester, but I could not stand her temper. One day she was
-so enraged with my dog because it snarled at her, that she seized my
-walking-stick and beat it on the head till it was dead. I found her
-standing over it, white with fury; and feeling that after what I had
-witnessed I could never like her again, I broke off our engagement
-there and then. After that I met Hester Holt at the same house where I
-had first seen Stella, and we at once became friends. Stella Dean did
-not like it, but she took on more than was necessary; and Hester told
-me there had been several very painful scenes between them. Indeed, I
-understood that out of business hours they were not on speaking terms;
-hence you can judge of my astonishment when I saw them driving in the
-buggy side by side.”
-
-“It’s all very mysterious,” Mrs. Bell observed. “If she does not turn
-up soon, I shall have to inform the police.”
-
-The following day, Mrs. Bell asked Stella if she had gone for a drive
-with Hester Holt the evening of the latter’s disappearance, and Stella
-Dean promptly replied, “No; the last time I saw Hester was when she
-left here that afternoon. She said good-bye to me as usual on the other
-side of the road, and I have never set eyes on her since.”
-
-She admitted she had once been engaged to Pete Simpkins, but
-emphatically denied that Hester’s keeping company with him had led to
-any rupture between them. “Hester and I were always on the very best of
-terms,” she said, “and it would be downright mean of anyone to allege
-otherwise. Besides, I can produce proofs to the contrary.”
-
-The next day, as Hester was still missing, Mrs. Bell told the police.
-The affair was at once inquired into, and Pete Simpkins’ story about
-the buggy was corroborated. Someone else had seen the two girls driving
-towards the outskirts of the town that same evening; whilst a car
-proprietor also came forward and declared that he recollected Miss Holt
-hiring a buggy from him, but that she had driven off in it alone. When
-the buggy was brought back, he being out, his wife had taken the money
-for it. But as it was then dusk, she could not possibly swear to the
-identity of the lady who had paid her, especially as the latter had
-been so muffled up, presumably on account of the coldness of the night,
-that practically nothing of her face was visible. She could only say
-Miss Dean resembled her both in build and height.
-
-[Illustration: “Who is that tall, good-looking girl, Stella, that I’ve
-seen following you into the building...?”]
-
-Stella Dean was now asked if she could produce an alibi; and,
-accordingly, her mother, a very decrepit old lady, declared that Stella
-had come straight home from the office, and had remained indoors all
-that evening. To add to the complexity of the affair, someone else
-testified to having seen Hester Holt enter Mrs. Britton’s house with a
-latch key rather late on the night in question; and this of course made
-some people suspect Mrs. Britton, but the police could prove nothing,
-and the matter was eventually dropped.
-
-All this happened about three months before I arrived in Denver.
-
-A week after the disappearance of Hester Holt, Mrs. Bell had a new
-assistant called Vera Cummings, a very material, practical young lady,
-the daughter of a farmer somewhere near Omaha.
-
-The day after her arrival, Miss Cummings was busy typewriting in the
-office with Mrs. Bell and Stella Dean, when she suddenly exclaimed,
-“How is it that I get convulsed with shivers whenever I sit next to
-you, Miss Dean? I don’t when I’m sitting next to Mrs. Bell. Eugh! I
-feel as if the icy east wind were blowing right through me.”
-
-“What nonsense!” Stella Dean replied; “you imagine it.”
-
-“No, I don’t,” Miss Cummings retorted; “I’m going to sit somewhere
-else,” and she moved to the other side of the table.
-
-Mrs. Bell made no comment. An hour or so afterwards, Vera Cummings
-abruptly observed:
-
-“My, Stella Dean, what long legs you have!”
-
-“What in the world do you mean?” was the surprised and rather indignant
-retort.
-
-“Why, there’s no one else on your side of the table, is there?” Vera
-Cummings responded; “and someone’s feet keep kicking mine.”
-
-“You’re dreaming,” Stella Dean said, and Mrs. Bell noticed she turned
-very pale.
-
-Two days now passed uneventfully, but on the third day after the above
-conversation, Mrs. Bell and the two girls were sitting talking—it was
-close on the interval for tea, and work was just then very slack—when
-Vera Cummings remarked, “Who is that tall, good-looking girl, Stella,
-that I’ve seen following you into the building on several occasions.
-I’ve watched her keeping close behind you till you get to the elevator,
-and then she disappears. Where she goes I can’t imagine.”
-
-“A tall, good-looking girl following me to the elevator,” Stella Dean
-repeated, her cheeks ashy. “What do you mean? I’ve seen no one. You’ve
-dreamt it.”
-
-“What was she like?” Mrs. Bell interrupted.
-
-Vera Cummings gave a minute description of her.
-
-“Are you sure, Stella, we don’t know anyone like her?” Mrs. Bell said
-quietly. “That description seems to tally exactly with someone we once
-knew. Someone who used to frequent this place. Can she have returned,
-do you think?”
-
-“I don’t know who you mean,” Stella Dean said crossly. “I tell you,
-I’ve seen no one.”
-
-The next morning they all three arrived simultaneously, and went
-up together in the elevator. On nearing the office, the sound of a
-typewriter was heard. They looked at one another in open-mouthed
-astonishment.
-
-“It must be one of the other clerks in the building,” Vera Cummings
-said. “She’s mistaken our room for hers. She’s an early bird, anyway,
-for I reckon there’s no one else arrived yet.”
-
-“But the door’s locked,” Mrs. Bell whispered. “See, here’s the key!”
-And she took it out of her pocket as she spoke.
-
-“Well, there’s no mistaking the sound, is there?” Vera Cummings
-laughed. “Click, click, click—that’s a typewriter, sure enough.
-Someone must have got in through the window. My, Stella, how white you
-are!”
-
-Mrs. Bell glanced sharply at Stella Dean—there was not an atom of
-colour in her cheeks, and the pupils of her eyes were dilating with
-terror.
-
-Mrs. Bell then put the key in the lock and opened the door. The
-typewriter was working away furiously, but there was no one at it, the
-room was absolutely empty. It stopped the moment Mrs. Bell crossed the
-threshold.
-
-That afternoon Stella Dean complained of a headache and went home
-early. She was in bed for several weeks, and during her absence from
-the office the strange phenomena there entirely ceased. The morning
-she returned, Pete Simpkins met her and Vera Cummings just outside the
-office building. He was bubbling over with excitement.
-
-“She’s come back!” he cried. “Come back, and never sent me a word. I
-_am_ glad though.... Hoorah!”
-
-“Come back!” Stella Dean said, drawing herself up stiffly and regarding
-him with an angry stare. “Who are you talking about?”
-
-“Hester Holt!” Pete Simpkins ejaculated. “She’s just gone into your
-place. Didn’t you know?”
-
-Miss Dean made no reply. She simply pushed past him and walked in. Vera
-Cummings, however, dawdled behind.
-
-“What’s Miss Holt like?” she asked anxiously.
-
-Simpkins described her.
-
-“Why that’s the girl I used constantly to see following Stella,” she
-said. “Where she disappears to is a mystery, but it’s only one of the
-many funny things that have happened since I’ve been here.”
-
-She then told him about the typewriter and the feet under the table.
-Pete Simpkins repeated the story to his friends. Rouillac got hold of
-it, and hence, as the reader already knows, it was handed on to me.
-
-Rouillac was most anxious that I should go with him to the haunted
-office straightaway, but it so happened that I had work to finish in a
-given time, and it was therefore arranged that he should call for me
-one day the following week.
-
-At the hour appointed, he came. “I fear it’s no use,” he said; “the
-office is closed, and it is impossible to get permission to go there.
-It’s come about like this. The day after Stella Dean returned to
-work, Mrs. Bell was away—ill—and the two girls were alone. Some
-time after they had started work, it might have been eleven o’clock
-or thereabouts, Vera Cummings got up to get a drink of water, and in
-passing chanced to look at Stella Dean. The latter was leaning forward
-in her chair and staring with an expression of the utmost horror in her
-eyes at a despatch case on the floor, which was oscillating violently
-to and fro. Vera noticed that the despatch case was marked on one side
-with the letters ‘H. H.’ ‘That’s odd,’ she cried. ‘What makes it do
-like that—it can’t be due to vibration, because there’s nothing going
-by outside. How do you account for it, Stella?’
-
-“‘I don’t know,’ Stella Dean gasped, making a vigorous attempt
-to appear unconcerned; ‘perhaps they’re shunting something heavy
-downstairs.’
-
-“‘But we should hear them,’ Vera Cummings replied. ‘I believe it’s
-Hester Holt; she’s dead, and for some mysterious reason her spirit
-haunts this room.’
-
-“‘Nonsense,’ Stella Dean stammered. ‘How can you be so silly! There are
-no such things as ghosts.’
-
-“After a while, the case stopped shaking, and the two girls went on
-with their work. Lunch time came and they both rose to get ready to go
-out. Vera Cummings had put on her hat, and was walking to the door,
-when she heard a sharp cry. She turned round, and there was Stella Dean
-standing in front of the looking glass and gazing at the reflection of
-a pale face, with two dark menacing eyes glaring fixedly at her from
-over her shoulder. Vera recognised the face at once. It was that of the
-girl she had so often seen following Stella, the girl Pete Simpkins had
-told her was Hester Holt.
-
-“She was so frightened, for she knew for certain now that the thing
-she was looking at was nothing earthly, that she ran out of the room,
-and as she crossed the threshold, the door slammed behind her with a
-terrific crash. Ashamed of her cowardice, she tried the door-handle. It
-turned, but though she pressed her hardest, the door would not open.
-She called to Stella, there was no reply. Greatly alarmed, she ran to
-the elevator and fetched the man in charge of it. They both pushed the
-door, and still it would not open. They were deliberating what to do,
-when they saw the handle suddenly turn and the door gently swing back
-on its hinges. They peered in. Stella Dean was lying on the hearthrug
-in a dead faint. She died that same night.”
-
-“Died!”
-
-“Yes! Some people fancy she committed suicide, but her mother declares
-that her heart had long been affected and that she died from syncope.
-Anyhow, she’s dead, and the office is closed, as nothing will persuade
-Vera Cummings to work there till Mrs. Bell is well enough to return. I
-tried to get permission to spend a night there, but Mrs. Bell dare not
-give it. She says the landlord is furious with her for allowing the
-report to get abroad that the building is haunted, and threatens her
-with a libel action if he hears anything further.”
-
-“That’s a great pity,” I said; “for few cases have interested me more.”
-
-“What do you make of it?” Rouillac asked.
-
-“Why,” I replied, “the same as you. There can only be one conclusion.
-Stella Dean was madly jealous of Hester Holt, and during that drive in
-the buggy she killed her. Whether the murder was premeditated or done
-in a sudden fit of blind passion—you tell me her temper at times was
-very uncontrollable—of course we cannot say. From your sketch of her,
-however, I am inclined to think she planned the whole thing.”
-
-“But what could she have done with the body?” Rouillac said. “The
-police searched everywhere.”
-
-“So they say,” I observed; “but the track Simpkins was on when he
-passed the buggy affords countless opportunities for concealing a body.
-It is full of deep ditches, creeks, and crevices, covered with a thick
-and rank vegetation, and the police would take at least a century
-to explore it. Besides, from what I know of the super-physical I do
-not think for one moment that Stella Dean was haunted without some
-poignant reason.”
-
-“Was haunted!” Rouillac observed.
-
-“You said she was dead, didn’t you?” I exclaimed.
-
-“Yes,” Rouillac replied slowly, “there’s no doubt whatever on that
-point. She’s dead right enough. But when Vera Cummings passed by the
-office this morning, she saw Stella Dean enter it—Stella Dean just as
-she looked when alive, only very white and in abject terror. She passed
-right in through the half-open doorway, and, as usual, Hester Holt
-followed her.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-CASES OF HAUNTINGS IN ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK, AND CHICAGO
-
-
-One of the most extraordinary men I have ever met was Ephraim B.
-Vandergooch, who, at the time of my travels in America, practised
-dentistry in 6th Street, St. Louis. Dentists are not, as a rule, the
-people to associate themselves with psychical research, and it is just
-as well for their patients, perhaps, that they are not, for sitting up
-all night in dark houses looking for ghosts has an unsteadying effect
-on the nerves—it is apt to make one “jumpy”—and if a dentist’s hand
-were to jump, it is more than likely that his patient would jump too.
-Mr. Vandergooch, however, was an exception. He was a ghost hunter, and
-his investigations had but a slight and temporary effect on his nervous
-system. His hand was as steady as a rock, his wrists like steel. I went
-to him to have a tooth filled, and during the operation I asked him if
-he knew of any haunted houses in the town.
-
-He was a stranger to me then, and of course I expected a superior
-smile, if not an actual sneer, for, as I have said, dentists are, as a
-rule, anything but psychics. To my surprise, however, he took me quite
-seriously, and said he knew of several haunted places in St. Louis,
-and that nothing interested him more than really first-hand ghost
-stories. He told me he had had an experience himself, and narrated the
-following:—
-
-“A few years ago,” he began, “I learned of a haunting in a street of
-rather older houses than these, close to here; and as the evidence in
-this case was to a large extent corroborative, I decided to investigate
-it. It was Christmas time, and the thought of earthbound spirits pacing
-up and down cold, empty houses, when all around was warmth and jollity,
-depressed me. I felt that I must, now that an opportunity had come, try
-to see them, and if possible do something for them.
-
-“I set out on Christmas Eve, and I admit that when I left the
-cheerfully lighted thoroughfare, and plunged into the dark silent
-emptiness of the house, my heart almost failed me. Apart from ghosts
-there were so many possibilities, and what more likely than that some
-tramp or criminal had forced an entrance, and was hiding somewhere
-on the premises. For a few seconds I stood and listened, and then,
-feeling a trifle more assured, I closed the door gently and advanced
-cautiously along the wide hall. At each step I took I became more and
-more sensitive to an atmosphere of intense sadness and desolation—an
-atmosphere of intense loneliness, loneliness that is without hope—that
-is perpetual and absolute. It could be felt in all parts of the house,
-but more particularly, perhaps, in the kitchen, which was built out at
-the back on the ground floor. I had never been in such a dreary and
-inhospitable kitchen. The night was bitterly cold and the bare stones
-sent chilly currents up my legs and back, into my very brain.
-
-“To remain in such a hole till morning was assuredly courting pneumonia
-or rheumatic fever. I looked at the range, it was covered with rust and
-verdigris. If only it could be lighted! Then I uttered an exclamation
-of joy, for lying in one corner was a pile of wood—boxes, shelves,
-faggots, etc., intermingled with an assortment of other rubbish. In
-my early days I had lived on a ranch out west, and the experience I
-had had there now came in useful. In a few minutes there was a loud
-crackling, and the kitchen filled with a ruddy glow. A couple of
-dresser-drawers served me for a seat, and I was soon ensconced in a
-tolerably snug position, from which, however, I was prepared to spring
-at a moment’s notice.
-
-“The hours sped by, and the silence deepened.
-
-“At last, just about two o’clock, when I was beginning to think nothing
-would happen, I heard a door slam somewhere upstairs. This was followed
-by a series of creaks, and I heard someone cautiously descending the
-stairs. A great fear now seized me, and had I been able, I should
-doubtless have beaten a hasty retreat. Instead, I was possessed with
-a kind of paralysis, which rendered me quite helpless and prevented
-me from either moving a limb or uttering a sound. The creaks came
-nearer—down, down, down, until quite suddenly they stopped, and I
-heard a cough.
-
-“It was repeated—cough, cough, cough. The cough of a delicate,
-neurotic woman. At first it simply startled me—it sounded so distinct,
-so reverberating, so real. Then it irritated me, and then it infuriated
-me—almost drove me mad. ‘God take the woman,’ I raved. ‘Will she never
-cease.’
-
-“Cough, cough, cough. A nervous, hacking cough, a worrying, grating
-cough, an intensely silly, murder-instilling cough. I could see the
-owner of it—upstairs, hidden from me by impenetrable darkness, and
-yet quite distinct—a slight, pale, excessively plain little woman,
-with watery eyes and a quivering mouth. Heavens, how the mouth maddened
-me! On she went—cough, cough, cough! She was still coughing, when I
-suddenly became aware of a presence close beside me, and I saw in the
-glow from the dying embers the figure of a man seated at a table in the
-middle of the kitchen. He appeared to be trying to write, but to be
-unable to collect his thoughts. Every now and then he paused, dashed
-his pen down, and clenched his fists furiously. At first I could not
-understand his behaviour, and then it all of a sudden occurred to
-me—the coughing, of course. That perpetual noise, that everlasting
-hacking—it distracted, demented him. I watched him with feelings of
-infinite sympathy. At last, unable to stand it any longer, he sprang
-from his seat and dashed upstairs.
-
-“I heard him race up two steps at a time. No madman would have raced
-faster or more nimbly. Then came a strange variety of sounds—a
-gratuitous course in phonetics—an altercation, more coughing, oaths,
-bumping, a scream, a thud, a little feeble cough, silence, and then
-rapidly descending footsteps—a man’s footsteps. I did not wait for
-them. The spell that had hitherto held me limb-tied now abruptly left
-me, and I fled out of the building—home.
-
-“The next day—Christmas Day—I made my report to the owner of the
-house, and told her exactly what had happened.
-
-“‘Good heavens!’ she exclaimed, ‘and he’s married Maisie! Swear that
-you will never tell a soul, no one, not even your most intimate friend,
-and I will give you an explanation of what you witnessed.’ (“All this
-happened years ago,” Mr. Vandergooch remarked, “so it’s all right my
-telling you now.”) I promised, and she at once began.
-
-“‘Ten years ago the occupants of the house you’ve been in were
-a well-known dramatist and his wife, whom I will call Mr. and
-Mrs. Charles Turner. Mrs. Turner was exactly like the woman you
-imagined—frail, small and very plain; whilst her husband would tally
-with the man you saw in the kitchen—a tall, muscular, handsome man. He
-obviously married her for her money, poor soul, for there was nothing
-in her to attract him, and everyone could see how she irritated him,
-especially when she coughed—in fact, he often said to me, ‘You don’t
-know, Mrs. Wehlen, how Eva annoys me. Whenever I am in the midst of
-my work, trying to concentrate my thoughts, she starts her infernal
-coughing—I can hear her all over the house—hack, hack, hack.’ ‘She
-can’t help it, poor thing,’ I replied. ‘You ought to feel sorry for
-her.’ ‘Feel sorry for her,’ he said. ‘You’d feel sorry for her if you
-were tormented as I am. I believe she does it on purpose.’
-
-“‘Well, one evening—to be precise, it was Christmas Eve—Mrs. Turner
-was found at the foot of the hall staircase with her neck broken.
-There was no direct evidence as to how she came there, but as one of
-the stair-rods was found loose, it was presumed that she fell over it,
-and, accordingly, a verdict of accidental death was returned. Charles
-Turner left the house directly afterwards, and a few months ago married
-my niece, Maisie. As far as I know, what you have seen has never been
-seen by anyone else, but coughing in the house has been heard, and it
-is quite plain to me now that Charles Turner murdered his first wife. I
-only pray to Heaven he won’t serve Maisie the same.’
-
-“But he did,” Mr. Vandergooch added, “for she, too, was found at the
-foot of the staircase with her neck broken! In all probability she had
-possessed some idiosyncrasy that worried and annoyed him; or, possibly
-having once taken to murder, he felt he must go on with it—the habit
-of homicide being, no doubt, just as fascinating as the habit of drugs
-or of drink.
-
-“Nothing, however, was proven, and, for all I know to the contrary,
-he may still be alive, still be killing people to appease his
-hyper-sensitive and outraged nerves.”
-
-This experience of Mr. Vandergooch made me think; and eventually led to
-my devoting no small amount of attention to psychology and criminology.
-From what a variety of influences, it seemed to me, any one act might
-be induced, and to what innumerable and varied causes any one crime,
-for instance murder, might be traced. A minute bone pressing on a
-certain section of the brain, a stomach continually overladen with
-beefsteak and other animal food, over-excited nerves, the sight of
-some locality, such as a wood, an object, such as a knife, all may
-lead to the same thing—the desire to kill; whilst, at the same time,
-the superphysical, through the agency of some evil spirit continually
-whispering to its selected victim the arrestive, the compelling
-thought, almost enforces any and every sort of crime. Seeing, then,
-that in every act of cruelty or violence it is more than likely that
-either one or other of these factors has been at work, is it fair that
-we should so readily condemn and therewith rest content?
-
-True, it may be, and, I believe, it is expedient to punish the
-criminal, but surely it is even more urgent that we should make
-ourselves thoroughly acquainted with his case, so that we may if
-possible discover the factor that conduces to his crime, and then
-either destroy or counteract it.
-
-From St. Louis I went to New York, where I lodged in a fifty cent.
-hotel in West Quay.
-
-It was not a particularly elevating neighbourhood, but it was one that
-boasted of several haunted houses. I was taken to see one of them—a
-small store that supplied seamen’s kits—by a fellow lodger, who, if I
-remember rightly, bore the name of Boxer. The proprietor of the store
-was a Swede; his name I cannot quite recall, it was, I believe, Jansen,
-or something like Jansen. He was at first extremely reticent, but on my
-assuring him that I was not in touch with any of the New York journals,
-and would not connive at his story getting into print, he agreed to
-tell me what had happened.
-
-Calling his wife, a plain, stolid-looking woman, dressed in a neat
-and spotlessly clean print gown, he led the way upstairs to the top
-landing. There he stopped opposite a closed door, in front of which
-stood a large oak chest. “That’s the room,” he said; “we’ve barricaded
-it like that to prevent the children going in. When we first came here,
-my wife, and I, and our youngest child, Bertha, slept there. But we
-none of us liked the room, and we soon began to have very disturbed
-nights. I had ghastly nightmares, and so had my wife.
-
-“And Bertha too,” Mrs. Jansen chimed in; “she used to dread being left
-alone in the room even for five minutes, and used to cry till one or
-other of us went to her.”
-
-“That’s right enough,” Mr. Jansen interrupted; “and Bertha’s never
-behaved like that since we moved her into another room.”
-
-“Well, we experienced nothing more disturbing than bad dreams for the
-first fortnight or so, and nothing happened until we were both aroused
-one night by hearing Bertha scream. We lit a candle and got out of bed.
-‘What is the matter,’ I asked; ‘are you in pain?’ ‘No, Poppa,’ she
-said. ‘Not in pain, but so frightened. I kept hearing the bed creak,
-and I thought one of you was coming out of it to kill me.’
-
-“‘Why, what nonsense,’ I said. ‘You’ve been dreaming again, child.’
-Then, turning to my wife, I remarked, ‘If she has many more of these
-nightmares we had better send for the doctor. Don’t you think so?’
-My wife made no answer, but suddenly gave a cry and pointed at the
-bed. ‘Otto!’ she cried. ‘Look at the clothes! We never left them like
-that. What’s happened to them?’ I looked. The clothes were all heaped
-together down the centre of the bed exactly in the shape of a human
-body, with the face turned towards us.
-
-“We all three stared at it in open-mouthed silence, and the longer we
-gazed, the more pronounced grew the features, until they at last became
-so lifelike, so evil, that my wife and I instinctively shrank back
-against the child’s cot, and tried to hide the thing from her. My wife
-declares she saw it move.”
-
-“It did,” Mrs. Jansen said. “I saw it distinctly shift nearer to us. So
-did Bertha.”
-
-“I know you were both agreed on that point,” Mr. Jansen went on. “All I
-can say is I didn’t see it do that, but I started praying, and whether
-it was the effect of my prayers or not, the clothes gradually became
-clothes again, and, after soothing Bertha, we scrambled back into bed,
-feeling rather ashamed we had been so frightened.
-
-“The following evening after Bertha had been put to bed, we heard
-her scream again, and we ran up and found her quivering under the
-bedclothes. She said our bed had begun rattling, just as if we were
-moving in it. On turning to examine it, we found the clothes just as we
-had seen them in the night, with one of the pillows pressed and moulded
-into the speaking likeness of a face.
-
-“As I looked at it, the features became convulsed with such an
-indescribable expression of hellishness that I backed against the table
-and upset the light.
-
-“On re-lighting it, the thing on the bed had disappeared, and the
-clothes were once again normal. That same night, some time after
-we were in bed, I awoke to find myself being roughly shaken by the
-shoulders. It was my wife, but, perhaps I had better let her go on with
-the story.”
-
-“I shook him,” Mrs. Jansen explained, “because a feeling had suddenly
-come over me that I must kill Bertha. The very first night we slept in
-the room I became obsessed with a passionate desire to see someone die,
-a desire that I can assure you was absolutely novel to me, because I
-flatter myself I am naturally kind-hearted and extremely sensitive to
-seeing other people suffer.”
-
-“She’s kindness itself,” Mr. Jansen observed.
-
-“Well,” Mrs. Jansen went on, “the feeling became so unbearable, that
-fearing I should actually be compelled to kill someone, I awoke my
-husband and begged him to tie my hands together; which, after some
-hesitation, he did. Bertha was crying bitterly, and told us she had
-again heard creaks in the room, just as if someone was getting out
-of bed to murder her. That was the last time we slept in the room. I
-felt it was a positive danger to spend another night in it, and so we
-removed into the one we are sleeping in now.”
-
-“And has it never been occupied since?” I asked.
-
-“Yes, for one night,” Mrs. Jansen replied. “A niece of mine, Charlotte,
-came to stay with us, and as we had nowhere else to put her, she had
-to sleep there. We went to bed rather late that night, and I dreamed
-three times in succession that Charlotte was creeping down the stairs
-with some strange weapon in her hand, with which she intended killing
-Bertha. Bertha was then sleeping alone in the room facing ours.
-
-“The third dream was so vivid that I awoke from it bathed with
-perspiration. I told my husband, and he said, ‘Well, that’s curious,
-for I thought I heard someone moving about overhead. I’ll go and
-see if anything is amiss.’ He opened the door, and, going on to the
-landing, discovered Charlotte tiptoeing cautiously down the stairs,
-holding a long, glittering pair of scissors in her hand, and with an
-expression on her face similar to that on the face in the bedclothes.
-‘What are you doing here?’ my husband demanded, and Charlotte at once
-dropped the scissors and began crying. She told us that no sooner
-had she got into bed, than she felt like another person. It was
-just as if someone else’s soul had crept into her body. All her old
-sentiments and ideals vanished, and the maddest and most unholy ideas
-presented themselves in rapid succession to her mind. A blind hatred of
-everyone in the house possessed her, and she was seized with the most
-ungovernable craving to kill. For a long time she fought against this
-mania, until at last, unable to restrain it any longer, she got out of
-bed and sought some weapon. Cold hands, she declared, seemed to guide
-her to the scissors, and armed with them, she crept downstairs, just
-as I had seen her in my sleep, determined to butcher Bertha first, and
-then, if possible, my husband and myself.
-
-“She pleaded our forgiveness and begged to be allowed to go home
-first thing in the morning. ‘I do not feel I am responsible for my
-behaviour,’ she said. ‘I never had the slightest inclination to do
-anything of the sort before. I am sure it’s that room. There’s some
-sinister influence in it, and if I go back to it, I’m certain I shall
-do something dreadful.’
-
-“She spent the rest of the night on the sofa in the parlour, and
-shortly before noon returned to her parents.
-
-“After that we locked up the room and had this chest placed against the
-door, as you now see it.”
-
-“Do you know the history of the house?” I asked.
-
-“Only that before we came here,” Mrs. Jansen said, “there were several
-sudden deaths. I do not think any of them were actually attributed to
-murder, though they were all due to rather extraordinary accidents.
-Originally, I believe, the house was an inn, kept by a woman who bore a
-very evil reputation, and we have always wondered if the hauntings had
-anything to do with her.”
-
-“I suppose you couldn’t tell whether the face formed by the bedclothes
-was a man or a woman’s?” I remarked.
-
-“Not, perhaps, by the actual features,” she responded, “only by the
-expression. I can’t explain how, but it was an expression which at once
-explained to me its sex, and that sex was not masculine.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-As I have said, this was not the only case of haunting in West Quay
-that I heard of during this visit of mine to New York, but it is the
-only one of sufficient interest to note here. Two equally interesting
-cases, perhaps, came my way when I was travelling West. The one was in
-Boston, the other in Chicago. I will deal with the Chicago one first:—
-
-A banker in Chicago, to whom I had a letter of introduction, hearing
-that I was interested in ghosts, showed me a house close to Michigan
-Avenue where he had had a somewhat novel experience.
-
-“Some years ago,” he said, “that house had the reputation for being
-very badly haunted, and not by one ghost, but by dozens. It was
-then occupied by an eccentric old millionaire, whom I will call Mr.
-Hoonigan. Mr. Hoonigan had a very curious hobby. In a room, which he
-named Duckdom, he had a collection of the most exquisitely wrought
-models of women, clad in costumes which must surely have cost thousands
-of pounds. They were all made in Paris, and many of them had once stood
-in windows in the Rue de Rivoli. I have never seen anything to equal
-them; their eyes, hair, and finger nails were not only beautifully
-coloured and moulded, they were most natural and life-like. Mr.
-Hoonigan worshipped them. He used to spend hours a day sitting before
-each of them in turn, fondling their hands and making love to them in
-the most exaggerated fashion. Mad! Yes, of course, he was mad; but his
-madness did not always take such a harmless form. In a room opposite
-Duckdom, which he named Devildom, he had collected the models—some
-fifty or more—of murderers, and other criminals of the lowest type,
-besides a heterogeneous assortment of the most revolting objects.
-Amongst these objects were images of the South Sea Islands and Mexican
-gods; figures in wood and stone, representing ghosts and demons;
-cases full of mummies and skeletons; weapons that had once belonged
-to murderers and still bore traces of their victims’ blood; scalping
-and flaying knives; and a variety of ancient instruments of torture;
-whilst to accentuate the horror of the room as a whole, paintings such
-as only a brain in the most advanced stage of morbid disease could have
-conceived covered the walls. Mr. Hoonigan did not make a practice of
-showing his collections promiscuously, he was far too jealous of them,
-and I do not suppose there were ten people in Chicago who knew of their
-existence. Indeed, it was only with the very greatest difficulty that
-I got his permission to view them. He allowed no servants to sleep in
-the house, and when I went there one evening to see his treasures, he
-opened the door to me himself. ‘Do you see this?’ he cackled, pointing
-to the brown muzzle of a revolver, which showed itself from under
-his coat. ‘Well, I have two more of them, and the house is full of
-pitfalls, all admirable inventions of my own, and warranted to upset
-the calculations of even the most experienced cracksman.’ ‘Have you
-ever been troubled by burglars?’ I asked, glancing over the shoulders
-of the queer old figure before me, and letting my eyes wander round
-the great hall, dimly lighted and full of many suggestive nooks. ‘Yes,
-several times,’ he said, ‘and once, one actually got in. He is here
-now.’ ‘Here now!’ I cried. ‘Why, you surely don’t mean to say that
-you’ve reformed him and kept him as your servant?’
-
-“Mr. Hoonigan chuckled, and his yellow fangs reminded me unpleasantly
-of the blunt and rusty teeth of a saw. ‘Not exactly,’ he said. ‘He fell
-into one of my traps. You will see him later in my little chamber of
-horrors. He’s been there ever since.’ (This seemed a trifle indiscreet;
-but Mr. Hoonigan knew he could trust me. You see, I was his banker, and
-business means business in Chicago.)
-
-“‘But come,’ he continued, ‘I will show you Duckdom first, because you
-will then the better appreciate its opposite. There is nothing like
-contrasts to teach you true enjoyment.’ He stepped into an elevator,
-and we went up, passing storey after storey, all dark, silent and
-deserted. At last we stopped, and getting out, entered a brilliantly
-illuminated room. ‘Here they are!’ Mr. Hoonigan exclaimed. ‘Let me
-introduce you to my fair women friends.’ I looked round, and there
-before me was a vast assemblage of women, all of them richly dressed
-in the very latest fashion. All beautiful, however, and all most
-artistically posed; some sitting, some standing, some lying at full
-length on rugs and sofas. They were so absolutely natural that it took
-me some seconds to realise they were only models—models in wax. Mr.
-Hoonigan approached one, and taking its hand, pressed it reverently.
-‘When I die,’ he said, ‘I shall be placed here, and the room shall be
-hermetically sealed. I want no other heaven.’ He then took me across
-the landing to another room. I had been prepared for a shock, but not
-for the kind of shock I got when the door opened, and a hell, seething
-with devilry—ten thousand times more devilish than the devilry of
-Dante’s Hell—was suddenly thrust under my very nose. I recoiled, and
-Mr. Hoonigan, perceiving my fright, playfully pushed me in. When we
-were well in the midst of them, he pointed with great glee to several
-of the most notorious murderers, and insisted upon my picking up and
-examining their weapons. He then made me sit on a garotting chair,
-which he had quite recently purchased in Cuba, and when I was thus
-seated, he thrust a skull on my knee, which he said was that of a Red
-Indian Chief, who had for certain skinned alive with his own hands a
-whole family of whites.
-
-“By this time, as you may think, I had had enough of it, but, as Mr.
-Hoonigan truly remarked, there was so much to be seen; besides, he
-must, he said, whilst I was there, show me a stock of engravings which
-he had just bought in Madrid. They dated from the reign of Philip
-II., and represented, in grim detail, all the horrors of the Spanish
-Inquisition. But this was not all. Their chief interest, according
-to Mr. Hoonigan, lay in the fact that the inquisitors—to quote Mr.
-Hoonigan’s own words—‘just as an appetiser—an hors d’œuvre, don’t
-you know,’ used to give them to their victims to examine before they
-commenced to torture them.
-
-“At the conclusion of this exhibition I managed somehow to get away,
-and was walking to the elevator, when I saw something slink past us. I
-turned round, and in the gloom could only see, indistinctly, the form
-of a man of medium height, with a thick-set, brutal figure, and ambling
-gait. I could not see his face. He seemed to walk right through the
-door, which was shut, into the room we had just vacated. ‘What is it?’
-Mr. Hoonigan asked. Somewhat nervously, I told him. ‘Ah,’ he said,
-‘that’s only one of them, and one of the least terrifying. You didn’t
-know, I suppose, that the house is haunted. From your description I
-should say that what you have just seen is the ghost of the burglar I
-told you about. But there are other ghosts—if you like to term them
-so—that are most troublesome. I have had to give up sleeping on this
-landing. I sleep on the ground floor now, with the electric light full
-on, all night.’”
-
-The case of the Boston ghost came to my notice in a very direct
-fashion. I only stayed in the town two nights, and chance led me to
-put up in an hotel which I learned bore an undeniable reputation for
-being haunted. It was in rather a poor neighbourhood—at least poor
-for Boston—and there were few visitors; indeed, on the landing where
-I slept, no one. I spent all my first day in the town sight-seeing and
-visiting relatives whom I had never met before, and I did not get back
-to the hotel till very late. The place was dimly lit and oppressively
-silent.
-
-“Am I the last in?” I asked the night porter, who rubbed his eyes
-wearily and yawned.
-
-“Yes, sir,” he said; “the other guests have been gone to bed two hours
-or more. It’s close on one.”
-
-“What part of Ireland do you come from?” I enquired.
-
-“County Limerick, to be sure,” he said; “but you couldn’t tell I was
-Irish!”
-
-“At once,” I said. “What were you over there?”
-
-“I was working on the roads,” he said, “and before that I was in the
-Army—in the Inniskillings.”
-
-“What date?” I enquired.
-
-He told me, and it then transpired that he had enlisted in that
-regiment when one of my uncles was a major in it, and he remembered
-him well. We were thus talking away and recalling episodes of the long
-past, when I heard a familiar sliding kind of noise, and broke off in
-the middle of a sentence.
-
-“Surely, that’s the elevator,” I exclaimed. “I hope our talking has not
-disturbed anyone.”
-
-[Illustration: “But there are other ghosts—if you like to term them
-so—that are more troublesome”]
-
-“I don’t think so, sir,” he said. “At any rate, I shouldn’t trouble
-myself about it.” His voice sounded so strange, I thought, and there
-was such an odd, furtive look in his eyes, that I became curious, and
-walking across the hall, arrived on the other side, just in time to see
-the elevator come slowly and softly down.
-
-To my astonishment there was no one in it.
-
-“How’s that happened?” I remarked. “No one called it, and had they done
-so we must have seen them.”
-
-“I can’t say, sir,” the porter replied, looking very uneasy.
-
-“Well, it’s certainly rather odd,” I ejaculated. “Anyhow, it’s chosen
-to come down at a very convenient moment.” And, getting in, I went up.
-
-The following night I returned late, and entered the vestibule of the
-hotel just as the elevator stopped.
-
-“Does it come down at the same time every night?” I asked the porter.
-
-“Yes, sir,” he muttered, “every night.”
-
-“And the reason?—there must, of course, be some reason. An elevator
-can’t start off unless someone or something starts it.” He was silent.
-“I see there’s some mystery attached to it,” I persisted. “What is
-it? Tell me.” He remained obdurate for some seconds, but eventually
-succumbed.
-
-“For goodness sake, don’t let on, sir,” he said, “because the boss has
-forbidden any of the staff to mention it, and if he found out I’d told
-you, he’d sack me at once. This hotel is haunted. Several years ago,
-before my time, a visitor arrived here late one night and was found by
-the day porter dead in the lift. How he died was never exactly known;
-it was rumoured he had either committed suicide or been murdered. It
-was never found out who he was or where he came from, and, as he had no
-money on him, he was buried like a pauper. Well, sir, ever since then
-that elevator has taken it into its head to set itself in motion at the
-same time every night. Sometimes the gates clang just as if someone
-were getting in and out. At first I usedn’t to like it at all. You can
-imagine, perhaps, what it’s like to know that you are the only person
-about in a place of this sort—and then to hear the elevator suddenly
-beginning to descend. However, by degrees, I got accustomed to it, and
-if that was all that happened, I shouldn’t mind.”
-
-“What else does happen?” I asked.
-
-“I can’t tell you, sir. Would you like a bit of exercise?”
-
-“I don’t mind,” I said. “Why?”
-
-“Will you try the staircase, then, instead of the elevator? Count the
-stairs and note carefully when you come to the forty-first.”
-
-I agreed. The stairs were narrow and tortuous, the light meagre, and
-soon I began to feel very, very far from my friend the porter, and
-very much alone in the building. This feeling increased the further I
-proceeded, until, at last, it became so unbearable that I involuntarily
-halted. I had conscientiously counted the steps. I was at the
-thirty-ninth. I looked around me. High over head was a kind of funnel
-formed of black, funereal, and apparently never-ending banisters; below
-me was a similarly constructed pit. The flickering gas-light brought
-into play innumerable shadows. I tried to look away from them, for
-their gambols were unpleasantly emphasized by the ominously oppressive
-silence, but they fascinated me to such an extent that I was forced
-to watch them, and, whilst I was thus engaged, I became suddenly
-aware of a presence. Something I could not see was standing on the
-staircase, a few steps ahead, barring my way. I advanced one step, and
-with a tremendous effort I struggled on to the next one. Then the most
-frightful, the most overwhelming, diabolical terror seized me, and
-turning round, I tore downstairs.
-
-“Well,” the door porter said, “you’ve come back. Couldn’t pass it. No
-one who tries to do so at this time of night ever can.”
-
-“What is it?” I gasped. “What is the beastly thing?”
-
-“I don’t know,” he replied; “no one knows. This place was once a
-madhouse, I believe, and perhaps——”
-
-“Ah, well,” I said, “I can understand it now. Thank goodness I’m
-leaving to-morrow, and as it’s a choice of two evils, I’ll go up in the
-lift.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-A HAUNTED WOOD AND A HAUNTED QUARRY IN CANADA
-
-
-All my ghostly experiences in the United States were of indoor
-hauntings, consisting mostly of the visitation of phantasms of the
-dead, who in earthly form had either suffered or committed some deed of
-violence. I never met with a psychic experience out-of-doors, though I
-only too well realised the possibilities of such when I was sleeping
-by myself on the ranche in Oregon, or riding alone through the giant
-forests of the Cascades mountains.
-
-I believe all the loneliest parts of America, the great, bold Rockies,
-the vast Californian and Oregon forests are periodically visited by
-ghosts—ghosts of murdered soldiers, of scalp-raising Indians, of tramp
-suicides—of all manner of evilly-disposed white and red people, and
-of neutrarians, spirits that have never inhabited earthly bodies, and
-which are as grotesque and awe-inspiring as the fantastically carved
-boulders and queerly shaped tree trunks with which those parts are so
-lavishly bestrewn.
-
-America, indeed, affords one of the wildest fields in the world for
-the genuine ghost hunter. I use the word genuine advisedly, for I
-would differentiate between the ghost hunter who is genuine, and the
-professor of physics, who expects the Unknown to be subservient to
-his beck and call. I say, then, for the ghost hunter with a kindly,
-sympathetic nature, the ghost hunter whose thoughts are more often on
-the spiritual than the material plane, and who would earnestly seek the
-chance to succour and comfort a lost soul, the United States of America
-gives the greatest scope.
-
-From what I have heard, for I have never been there, Canada also is a
-much haunted country. An account of a haunting there was given me by a
-French Canadian, Bertram Armand, whom I met with his wife one day at an
-hotel in New York. Though born and educated in Canada, he had served in
-the French Army, and had spent a considerable portion of his life in
-France and Algiers. He had now retired, and it was on the occasion of
-his quittal of the Army and return to Canada that the event I am about
-to narrate, and which I give as nearly as possible in his own words,
-occurred:—
-
-“My home,” he began, “was in a small town called Garvois,[2] to the
-South-West of Winnipeg, which, at the time of my adventure, some ten or
-twelve years ago, was nothing like the size it is now.
-
- [2] I am not sure of the proper spelling of the word, as the
- writing in my original notes has become so very illegible
- in places.
-
-“I had got out of the train at Winnipeg, and dined at an hotel, and the
-evening was well set in before I rose from my comfortable seat before
-the fire and prepared for my long tramp.
-
-“‘If you take my advice, sir,’ the landlord said, ‘you will avoid the
-wood of Garvois after dark.’ ‘And why, pray?’ I asked. ‘Because, sir,’
-he responded, ‘because it bears an evil reputation.’
-
-“‘An evil reputation!’ I laughed. ‘Ma foi! it must bear a very evil
-reputation, a positively devilish reputation, to frighten an old
-soldier like me. Why, man alive, I have served in the French Army
-in the wildest regions of Algiers for years. A wood with an evil
-reputation, mille tonnerres,—that’s a joke I shan’t forget in a
-hurry.’ Then seeing him look glum, I remarked, for I had no wish to
-hurt his feelings, ‘I can appreciate your intended kindness, but you
-see I have been away from home for ten years—ten whole years, and I
-am dying to see my father. He is the only relative I have—therefore
-you can gather that I want to go by the quickest route, and the road
-through the wood, if I remember rightly, is twice as short as that by
-the plain. Is it not so?’
-
-“The landlord shrugged his shoulders. ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘the road over
-the plain is longer—certainly it is longer—and if you go by it you
-won’t arrive at your father’s house till morning, but, monsieur, if you
-go by the wood you may never reach home at all.’
-
-“‘I will risk it,’ I laughed; ‘there can only be robbers or wolves,
-and I am prepared for either. I have these!’ And I tapped the ends of
-two six-shooters. ‘At all events, if anything happens, I will haunt
-the wood, and you may come and see me. Au revoir!’ I waved my hand as
-I spoke, and putting my pack in the proper place on my back, I stepped
-airily on to the broad, brown track leading to Garvois.
-
-“Within an hour of my departure, the weather, which had been abominably
-cloudy for the time of the year, took a sudden turn for the worse, and
-the rain descended in torrents. I chuckled grimly, Mr. O’Donnell, for
-what after all are the discomforts of sodden clothes and squishy boots
-compared with what a soldier has to undergo in Africa—in the Sahara,
-where the sun is hell and the insects—devils. Rain, Mon Dieu! What’s
-rain! On and on I tramped, whistling gaily and running my hand over my
-pack now and again to see that everything was safe. I had a present
-there for my father, whom I loved more than anyone else in the world.
-‘You see,’ he added with a smile, ‘I hadn’t met Jacqueline then.’
-
-“Well, so long as I kept to the main track there was not much to
-complain about—it had recently been attended to, but the moment I
-turned off it, and on to the side one leading to the wood, my troubles
-began. Deep ruts, big holes, huge earth mounds, and sharp-edged stones
-made it bad enough in dry weather; it was now a quagmire—a quagmire
-that afforded every possibility of soon becoming dangerous.
-
-“I had seen nothing like it since I was in Algiers, but, bah! a soldier
-can get used to anything. ‘It is a mere nothing,’ I said to myself. ‘I
-can dive, I can swim; it will take more than cold water to kill me;
-and if it were twenty times as bad I would face it.’ Ten years is a
-long time to be away from one’s home, Mr. O’Donnell. I trudged on, and
-was soon ankle-deep in black mud. At eight o’clock I was confronted
-by a long line of huge, black trees, that bent their dripping tops
-as if they had orders to salute me. Coming to a halt, and leaning
-against a slender, isolated pine, that creaked and groaned in the rough
-night air, I ruefully surveyed the prospect in front of me. The track
-through the wood was twelve miles—nothing of a walk if I had been
-fresh and the weather dry, but in my present condition a seemingly
-impossible one. For the last hour or so I had experienced nothing but
-a recurrence of slips and falls, I had done nothing but plunge in and
-out of abysses, and I had been completely battered to pieces by the
-wind. And the rain! I can stand any amount of heat, Mr. O’Donnell, but
-wet, no, it gets into every pore of my skin and completely demoralises
-me. I was exhausted, almost at the end of my tether, and I felt a
-very little more would see me on the ground, absolutely done. Now, of
-course, I am used to sleeping out of doors all night; but, then, Canada
-is not France, neither is it Africa, and the warmth and dryness of the
-Sahara had made me terribly susceptible to chills. A night in this
-wood would mean for certain either pneumonia or rheumatic fever—and I
-might never get home to see my father. So what alternative was there?
-Only to tramp back again over that dreadful track, and take the long
-route over the plains. I couldn’t do it; I hadn’t the strength. I
-would struggle on. I did so—I took the plunge. The desert, with the
-lights twinkling far away on its extremities, was speedily hidden
-from view; trees shut me in on all sides; I was at last in the forest.
-I had never known what it was to be nervous, but the silence I now
-experienced disquieted me. I had never felt anything like it. It struck
-me as an assumed silence—assumed purposely to cloak a deep-rooted and
-universal resentment. Moreover, I had an uncomfortable suspicion that
-it was the prelude to something hostile—to some peculiar antagonistic
-demonstration, the very nature of which was at present enigmatical.
-It was a silence savouring of a world other than ours—of a world
-I knew nothing about—indeed, at that period of my life I was an
-atheist, and neither believed in a God or a future existence. The
-rain pattered heavily on the foliage overhead, and the wind groaned,
-but the voices—the voices of the beings in this Unknown World—were
-still, absolutely still. In the gloom the trees assumed strange shapes;
-their motions, too, were strange—so strange that I did not think
-they could possibly have been caused by the wind. You may think I am
-hyper-imaginative, Mr. O’Donnell, but I do not think I am; my wife
-would tell me if I were, for she has never been slow in pointing out my
-faults, have you, Jacqueline?”
-
-Mrs. Armand smiled. “No, Mr. O’Donnell,” she said, “he has many faults,
-but exaggeration is not one of them; indeed, he is so precise as to be
-sometimes dull.”
-
-Mr. Armand continued: “I saw lights, too, Mr. O’Donnell,” he said;
-“all kinds of coloured lights, which I did not then attribute to
-possible spirit agency. I simply did not know what they were. I was not
-afraid, but I became wary, and moved furtively forward, as if I had
-been scouting in some enemy’s country. Every now and then I fancied I
-heard soft steps that I could associate with nothing human, stealing
-surreptitiously behind me. I paused and looked carefully over my
-shoulder, but there was nothing visible—only the gloom. At length the
-darkness became so intense that I could no longer see the track. I
-continued to advance, however, and after plunging through a succession
-of bogs and briars was finally brought to a peremptory halt by a stone
-wall. This wall was four feet or so in height, but what lay on the
-other side of it, or where indeed it began or ended, it was impossible
-to decide, and I was wondering what on earth I had better do next—for
-my energy was nearly spent—when a voice suddenly called out, ‘Keep
-along by the wall and I will meet you at the wicket gate!’ Overjoyed,
-I obeyed. The wall swerved sharply round, and a few yards beyond,
-with one hand on the gate and in the other a dark lantern, stood the
-slight, muffled-up figure of a woman. In a few words I explained the
-situation—how in the blinding rain and darkness of the forest I had
-lost my way, and was too exhausted to go any further. ‘I don’t mind
-sleeping anywhere,’ I pleaded, ‘so long as I can lie where it is dry
-and rest till morning. An attic, barn, anything will do.’
-
-“‘I think I can offer you something better than that,’ the woman
-responded, as she led me through the gate and along a narrow winding
-path to a large, low, rakish-looking house, whose black walls, rising
-suddenly out of the ground before me, seemed startlingly familiar.
-My guide halted—a key turned, a door flew open—there was a rush of
-strange, musty air, and almost before I had time to realise it, I was
-inside the building. ‘I must apologise for the absence of light,’ the
-woman said, ‘but under the circumstances the omission is unavoidable.
-If we had been expecting you, it would, of course, have been different.
-If you will follow me, I will take you to your room.’ I tried to see
-her face, to make out what she was like, but I was frustrated in my
-desire by the way in which she held the lantern. Nor was I any more
-fortunate in the discernment of my surroundings; I could see the
-ground at my feet, but no more; all—everything—was shrouded in an
-impenetrable, sable mantle. The curious feeling that I had been there
-before, that I knew the house well, again came over me, although prior
-to now I had never seen any habitation in the wood, nor even known
-that one existed. I argued it was probably a scent—some peculiar
-odour in the atmosphere that had conjured back memories of some other
-and quite distinct place; but I had not much time for speculation, as
-the woman’s movements were very quick, and I had barely scraped the
-thickest of the mud from off my feet before she had begun to ascend
-a luxuriously-carpetted staircase. We crossed what I took to be a
-landing, and stepped some score or so paces down a corridor, finally
-halting before a half-open doorway.
-
-“‘There is your room,’ she said. ‘You need have no fear—the linen is
-well aired, and of course,’ she added, slightly sniffing, ‘you may, if
-you like, open the windows. We have been obliged to keep them closed,
-owing to the damp. Good-night!’
-
-“She turned to go, and just for the fraction of a second I saw her
-face. It was exquisite. My wife will pardon me for saying my wildest
-dreams of woman’s beauty were not merely rivalled, they were surpassed.
-I doubt even if so great a painter of feminine charms as Richter could
-have done her credit. Who was she? I kept asking myself that question
-long after she had left me, and the echoes of her high-heeled shoes
-along the passage and down the stairs had ceased. Who was she? Ma foi!
-The vision of such loveliness would never leave me. I would enjoy them
-over and over again in my sleep. Indeed, I was so obsessed with her
-face that I paid little or no heed to the novelty of the situation. At
-other times I might have queried the desirability of being in a strange
-bedroom in a strange house—in the dark. But the knowledge she was near
-at hand was quite enough for me. I was already in love with her—and
-the queerest, the most perplexing of predicaments were as nothing to
-me. I soared above—God alone knew how high above—dilemmas. Still,
-when I came to argue it out with myself, it was a bit of a nuisance my
-matches were sodden and I could not use them. I would have preferred
-seeing the bed upon which I was to lie, and a spot where I could lay
-my clothes. I was so afraid of soiling the upholstery that I undressed
-where I stood, and then, making a guess at the direction of the bed,
-walked cautiously forward. By a piece of luck, which struck me as
-somewhat extraordinary, I collided with the bedstead—a large brass
-one—almost immediately.
-
-“It was the work of a second to throw back the sheets and scramble in
-between them, and then, with my mind full to overflowing with visions
-of my newly-found goddess, I entrusted both her and my father to the
-safe keeping of the Virgin and the Saints—this though I had no faith
-in a future for myself—and sank into a deep refreshing sleep.
-
-“How long I remained in that condition I never knew. I woke with a
-start to find the room no longer dark, but partially illuminated with
-a fitful red glow which proceeded from the stove, now full of lurid
-logs. Thinking I must be dreaming, I rubbed my eyes. But no; the fire
-was still there, and even as I gazed at it I caught the sound of
-approaching footsteps—the sharp rat-tat of high-heeled shoes. Nearer
-and nearer they came, right up to the entrance of my room, when, to
-my astonishment and no little embarrassment, the door gently opened,
-and in tip-toed the object of my admiration. In one hand she carried a
-long-handled iron spoon, and in the other a candle. I was entranced.
-Now that she had taken off her hood and cloak, beauties hitherto
-concealed stood out in dazzling fulness and bewitched me. Never had I
-seen such a wealth of rich golden hair, such a perfect nose and chin,
-such tiny ears, carmine lips, white teeth, black-lashed, china-blue
-eyes, white tapering fingers, rosy, almond-shaped nails, and such a
-heavenly figure. My wife, Mr. O’Donnell, bears me no animosity. You
-don’t, do you, Jacqueline?”
-
-“No, no,” Mrs. Armand laughed. “I understand you. All men are the same.
-Go on and tell Mr. O’Donnell more about your goddess.”
-
-“You are right,” Bertram Armand exclaimed. “She was a goddess—at least
-my idea of one, then. What did she want? I sat up in bed, and was about
-to speak to her, when she laid a finger on her lips and smilingly
-bade me be silent. She then glided to the grate, and taking from her
-pocket a small lump of lead, carefully put it into the spoon, which
-she balanced with the utmost care on the brightest of the faggots.
-That done, she again smiled meaningly at me, and walking to the dainty
-dressing-table, strewn profusely with rings and bracelets, looked long
-and critically at herself in the mirror. It was while she was thus
-occupied that I suddenly became conscious of something or someone close
-to me. In a moment my heart ceased to beat; in deadly fear I glanced
-round, and perceived, lying by my side, an old man with long, grizzled
-hair and beard, whose features were somehow vaguely familiar to me.
-He was sound asleep—a fact betrayed by his breathing, which was loud
-and stertorious. A slight movement from the other part of the room
-attracting my attention, I looked up, just in time to see the girl
-flash me a look of subtle warning.
-
-“‘Don’t wake him, whatever you do,’ her eyes said; ‘he _must_ sleep on.’
-
-“‘Don’t wake him,’ I repeated to myself; ‘why, of course I won’t. I
-wouldn’t do anything—no matter what—if you told me not to; I would
-obey you even at the risk of life and soul!’ Dieu en ciel! How lovely!
-
-“Cautiously—first one daintily clad foot and then the other—the girl
-approached the stove. She lifted the spoon carefully from the fire,
-bore it steadily before her to the bed, and gaily motioning to me to
-keep quiet, she gently turned the sleeper’s head over on the pillow,
-and with a dexterous movement of her clever, supple fingers, poured
-the seething, hissing lead into his ear. There was an agonising
-scream—the eyes of the old man opened convulsively, and in the brief
-glimpse I caught of them, I recognised my father.
-
-[Illustration: “I looked up, just in time to see the girl flash me a
-look of subtle warning”]
-
-“Almost simultaneously came a loud crash, blinding darkness, and I was
-once again in the forest—God knows how—pursuing my way laboriously
-along the mud-laden track.
-
-“At early dawn I arrived within sight of Garvois—Garvois bathed in a
-cold grey mist, and a little later I dragged myself with difficulty
-towards the wicket gate leading to my father’s house. To my intense
-surprise it was padlocked, but the mystery explained itself at
-once—standing upright in the garden was a notice-board, bearing the
-inscription, ‘To be Let or Sold.’ I swayed on my feet as I looked at
-it, and with a bursting heart reeled away to the nearest house—the
-house of my old friend, Henry Crozier.
-
-“Henry had just awakened—he invariably got up at five—and shuffling
-downstairs, he opened the door.
-
-“‘Le diable!’ he exclaimed, ‘if it isn’t Bertram! Ma foi! I was
-dreaming of you last night. So you’ve come back!’
-
-“‘Come back to find the place empty!’ I murmured. ‘But, tell me, my
-friend, where’s my father?’
-
-“Henry’s eyes grew round with astonishment. ‘What!’ he said. ‘What!
-you don’t know?’ Then, seeing my look of utter stupefaction, he added:
-‘My poor Bertram! Your father is dead! He died a fortnight ago, the
-very day after his marriage with Mademoiselle Marie Dernille, the niece
-of his last housekeeper. What killed him? Apoplexy. It does not do to
-dispute the doctor.’
-
-“‘But the woman—the woman? What was she like?’ I stuttered.
-
-“‘Why,’ Harry enunciated slowly, ‘she was what some people would call
-beautiful, though, as God is my judge, I did not admire her. Fair, very
-fair, a mass of washed-out yellow hair, painted lips—oh, yes, anyone
-could see they were painted—and big, very big eyes—china-blue and
-smiling—name of a name—eternally smiling.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-This was Bertram Armand’s account of his experience. In answer to my
-questions he told me that he had searched the wood thoroughly, but
-there was no house of any sort in it, and afterwards, having had his
-father’s body secretly exhumed, and finding lead in the ear, he had
-obtained an order for the arrest of his step-mother. She was, however,
-nowhere to be found, and he supposed that, having got wind of the
-affair, she had escaped out of the country.
-
-Armand told his story with every appearance of sincerity, and as I
-could see that his wife believed it, I have no doubt at all that it was
-true.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The case of another haunting in Canada was told me on my way out to the
-States, on board one of the White Star Liners.
-
-My place at table was next to a Doctor and Mrs. Fanshawe, both
-Canadians, who, hearing that I was interested in everything connected
-with the superphysical, told me that they had had several rather
-curious experiences. The doctor took from his breast-pocket a small
-leather purse, and, opening it, showed me a dull, blue stone.
-
-“Are you a geologist?” he asked.
-
-“No,” I replied. “I know nothing whatever about stones. What is it?”
-
-“No one has ever been able to tell me,” he said. “I have shown it to
-several Professors at the English Universities and they have each
-classified it differently. Not one of them, I believe, had ever seen or
-even heard of a stone like it. And for a very simple reason. In Canada
-there is much soil that has never been disturbed, and many tracts of
-land no white man has ever trod.
-
-“But let me explain how the stone came into my possession. Five years
-ago we took a house situated about four or five miles from Montreal.
-It was a long, low, two storey house, standing a little back from the
-road, and connected with it by a semi-circular sweep of gravel road.
-Opposite the house was a large pit, where quarrying had recently been
-begun, but had been discontinued, owing to the calcinous nature of the
-rock, which rendered it of little use for building purposes. Incessant
-rains had formed a deep pool in the bottom of the pit, and the water
-possessed this idiosyncrasy—the weather made no difference to its
-temperature—it was icy cold in summer and winter alike.
-
-“Viewed in the day-time, the quarry struck one as ordinary enough. It
-was at dusk, when the shadows from the trees and bushes swept across
-the road and dimmed the mouth of the great pit, that it impressed one
-as unsavoury. I remember marvelling at this metamorphosis the first day
-of our arrival. It was July, and the landscape was vividly aglow with
-brilliant, scintillating sunbeams. A more radiant scene you could not
-imagine. ‘One might make a capital swimming bath of this,’ I remarked
-to my wife, as we wandered to the edge of the pit and peered down into
-the silent, sparkling water.
-
-“‘Yes,’ she laughed. ‘Supposing we start right away. I never appreciate
-a bath more than after a journey.’
-
-“That was in the morning. In the evening the place produced a very
-different impression. We had dinner—the sort of scratch meal one must
-expect when one is ‘moving in,’ and I had strolled out alone. I first
-of all explored the premises. There was a big garden with an orchard
-alongside, and a small field beyond; and I pictured to myself how nice
-it would all look when the grass was properly cut and the flower-beds
-planted by my wife, who, by the way, thoroughly understands landscape
-gardening. You do, don’t you, Mabel?”
-
-Mrs. Fanshawe nodded, and her husband resumed his story.
-
-“I lit another cigar and walked out into the road to have a look at
-the quarry. I hardly recognised it. It seemed, since the morning, to
-have undergone a complete change. The banks appeared higher and more
-precipitous, the water blacker and infinitely deeper, and there was a
-cold dreariness about the place that made me shiver. I thought I had
-never viewed anything so utterly forlorn and murderous. On the opposite
-bank were a few rank sedges and several white trunks of decayed trees.
-I had not noticed them before, but now, as I gazed down at the pool,
-I saw their re-modelled and inverted images outlined with a clearness
-that more than rivalled that of their material counterparts.
-
-“I was pondering over this phenomenon, when I suddenly felt I was
-being watched, and, raising my eyes, I perceived on the bank facing
-me, just out of reach of the water, a boulder of ebony-black and
-grotesquely-wrought rock. I could not see anything behind it, but I was
-convinced that something was there, something that was crouching on its
-haunches and glaring savagely at me. I also felt convinced that this
-thing, which I could not actually see—though I knew for certain it was
-there—was some strange hybrid of a man and animal; a thing with limbs
-like ours, but the face of some fantastic, mocking, malevolent beast.
-
-“Filled with a great uneasiness and all manner of vague fears, I
-hurried back to the house, where all was bright and cheerful, but I
-could not rid my mind of the impression it had taken from the pool, and
-that night my dreams were troubled and alarming.
-
-“I said nothing about it to my wife, but two days later, when I was
-mending my fishing-rod in the study, she came to me in a great state
-of agitation. ‘Why, what’s the matter, Mabel?’ I asked anxiously;
-‘you look very white! Are you ill?’ ‘No,’ she said. ‘I’ve only had a
-shock.’”
-
-At the doctor’s request, Mrs. Fanshawe then took up the thread.
-
-“I was walking down one of the side-paths of the garden,” she said,
-“looking for Ephraim (Ephraim was our gardener), when I heard a great
-rustling of leaves. I turned round and saw a violent agitation going
-on in the branches of an apple-tree. Much mystified, as I could see no
-cause for it, I approached nearer, and as I did so I distinctly heard
-some heavy body drop to the earth with a thud; I then felt something
-brush past me. I can’t exactly describe the sensation it caused,
-because it is beyond words. I can only say I felt I was being touched
-by something immeasurably foul and antagonistic. I reeled right back,
-and that moment someone spoke. It was the gardener who came running
-towards me to ask if he could go home, as his wife had suddenly been
-taken ill.”
-
-“That was all that happened, then?”
-
-“No,” Mrs. Fanshawe replied. “That night, after we had been in bed some
-time, we were awakened by hearing our Newfoundland dog, Pat, bark. I
-went downstairs to see what was the matter with him—he slept in the
-house—and found him standing in the hall with his hair all erect,
-looking at the window by the front door.
-
-“I called to my husband, and he came down with his revolver. We then
-both went to the window and looked out, but could see no one. ‘I’m sure
-Pat sees something,’ I observed; ‘he is beside himself with terror.’
-‘What is it, Pat?’ Dick said, and was about to stroke him, when there
-came a violent hammering at the door. We looked at one another in
-dismay. ‘Who’s there?’ Dick cried, and, there being no reply, he
-fired—the bullet going right through the door. We threw it open—there
-was no one there. We then searched the garden (nothing would persuade
-Pat to accompany us), but we found no one.
-
-“For a week after this incident we were undisturbed; then all sorts
-of noises were heard in the house—soft footsteps, heavy breathing,
-the rattling of door handles, and—most alarming of all—loud crashes
-on the door panels. The servants were terrified. One of them roused
-us one night by loud shrieks, and going to her room, we found her in
-hysterics. All the clothes had been stripped off her bed and thrown
-in a promiscuous heap on the floor. When she recovered sufficiently
-to speak, she told us something had come into her room and tried to
-suffocate her—she felt just as if all the breath in her body was being
-forcibly sucked out of her. She had seen nothing. We told her it was a
-nightmare, and tried to soothe her, but our endeavours met with little
-success, and in the morning she was seriously ill. She died within a
-fortnight, and on the same day as the gardener’s wife.”
-
-“Did the gardener’s wife live on the premises, too?” I asked.
-
-“Practically,” Mrs. Fanshawe replied. “She and her husband occupied a
-cottage close to.”
-
-“Did both women usually have good health?”
-
-“Rather,” Dr. Fanshawe laughed; “they were as tough as
-horses—rosy-cheeked, strong-limbed, typical young Canadians. Heart and
-lungs absolutely sound. I diagnosed their cases and was much puzzled.
-On the top of violent shocks, which had apparently upset their whole
-constitution, they had developed acute anæmia. Why do you ask?”
-
-“Merely because of an idea,” I replied; “but pray let Mrs. Fanshawe
-finish her story, and then, if you like, I will tell you what my idea
-is.”
-
-“Well,” Mrs. Fanshawe continued, “I haven’t much more to relate. On
-the night after our maid’s funeral, we were again disturbed by Pat
-barking. I got up and went to the bedroom window. The weather was very
-unsettled. Clouds scurried across the moon, that hung like a great
-silver ball over the St. Lawrence River, which I could see winding its
-mighty course in the distance; spots of heavy rain were falling, and
-the wind whistled dolefully through the leaves of the maples.
-
-[Illustration: “The Thing came right up to the window, and then raised
-its face”]
-
-“Suddenly I heard the sound of heavy footsteps crunching their way
-along the gravel drive. ‘It will be nothing visible,’ I said to myself,
-and then I got a pretty acute shock. Coming towards the house with
-short, quick steps was a tall figure, with its head bowed low. Its arms
-and legs were very long and bony, the feet and hands enormous. It was
-quite nude, and from all over its body, which was of an exaggerated
-whiteness, there emanated a strange, phosphorescent glow. I called to
-Dick, and he at once joined me. The Thing came right up to the window,
-and then raised its face. If I live to be a thousand years old I shall
-never forget what I saw. The proportion of the face was not human, and
-it was partially covered with hair, but the eyes were the same shape as
-ours, only very much bigger. They were pale, almost white, I thought,
-and their expression——”
-
-“Don’t talk of it,” Dr. Fanshawe interrupted. “One can only say it was
-too damnable, too utterly vicious and loathsome for words.”
-
-“We were so overcome,” his wife went on, “that for some seconds neither
-of us could articulate a syllable. We both stared at it in hideous
-fascination. At last it made some slight movement, and Dick, released
-from the spell that held him, fired at it. The bullet must have gone
-right through it, for we saw the gravel on the path immediately behind
-it spurt up and scatter. However, the figure was unharmed, and it moved
-on towards the front door. Dick fired again, but with no better result.
-A fearful horror now seized us, lest it should get into the house. I am
-not a religious woman, but I prayed, and as I did so I saw Dick throw
-something. What he threw seemed to strike the thing full in the face,
-and it vanished. As we got back into bed, I said to Dick, ‘That was
-very odd! What did you throw?’”
-
-“‘A stone I picked up near the quarry this morning,’ he replied. ‘I
-don’t know why I threw it, but directly you started praying, a feeling
-came over me that I must.’
-
-“We were not disturbed again that night, but slept better than we had
-done for some time, and in the morning Dick found and showed me the
-stone—the stone you are looking at now. We had it fixed to the front
-door, and after that we were not troubled again.”
-
-“There was no history attached to the place,” Dr. Fanshawe added, “and
-no one we spoke to had ever heard of its being haunted. Now, what do
-you make of it?”
-
-“A fairly satisfactory case,” I replied, “because I think this stone
-affords a clue to part of the mystery at least. When I was out in the
-West, I was told by some Indians of the Rogue River tribe, whom I was
-delighted to fall in with, that when a place of theirs was haunted,
-they kept the ghost quiet by burying a piece of blue rock, which is
-to be found in the lava beds of that district, but is very rare. Now
-in all probability this custom is not confined to the Indians of
-one tribe, but is more or less universal; therefore we need not be
-surprised to find a piece of this blue rock buried elsewhere.”
-
-“But there are no Indians in this neighbourhood,” Mrs. Fanshawe
-remarked.
-
-“Not now,” I said, “but undoubtedly there were once. My supposition is
-that this place has a history. It was once badly haunted by spirits of
-the most dangerous type, which, for want of a better name, I will style
-neutrarians.
-
-“These neutrarians are spirits that have never inhabited material
-bodies, and are only to be found in very remote and isolated districts,
-where the soil has rarely if ever been disturbed. They are invariably
-antagonistic to all forms of animal life, probably, because, if they
-were created first, which is quite feasible, they regard man as an
-interloper, and, probably, also because they covet man’s body and are
-jealous of him. Many of the Indians believe that man is descended
-from the gods, and neutrarians from devils, and that the latter
-feel the distinction and hate man accordingly. Neutrarians vary
-considerably both in appearance, habits and constitution. Whilst some
-can apparently reveal themselves at will, others can only do so by
-stealing vitality from human beings or animals. Let us now see how all
-of this applies to the present case. When you came to your house you
-did not get the impression it was haunted; it was only when you looked
-at the quarry—it was there you received your first impressions—and
-they were, in all probability, correct. I believe a great deal in
-first impressions, particularly with regard to the superphysical. This
-theory, too, namely, that the hauntings originated in the quarry, finds
-support in the fact that you found the blue stone close to the quarry,
-and that the figure you both saw coming along the carriage drive was
-coming from that direction. The blue stone, I believe, had been buried
-there and was dug up when the quarry was made; thus the stopper, so
-to speak, which kept the ghost in check being removed, the hauntings
-of course recommenced. Belonging to the species that cannot manifest
-itself without drawing vitality from some form or other of animal life,
-this neutrarian first attacked the gardener’s wife, and then the maid,
-selecting these two on account of their unusual robustness. Had you not
-thrown the blue stone at it, and afterwards fixed the stone to your
-door, it is more than likely that you would both have succumbed.”
-
-“Then many diseases that have defied diagnosis, and there are
-countless such,” Dr. Fanshawe exclaimed, “may very probably be due to
-neutrarians.”
-
-“I think it is very likely,” I said. “I have noticed, for example,
-houses, where several people have been medically stated to have died of
-cancer, have been haunted by disturbances of a parallel nature to those
-you experienced.”
-
-“But are such hauntings to go on for ever?” Mrs. Fanshawe asked. “Is
-there no means of putting an end to them, saving by blue stones? How
-about exorcism?”
-
-“I am not sure on that point,” I said. “I certainly do not think
-that neutrarians or the spirits of imbeciles can be exorcised
-satisfactorily, as I have known several cases of hauntings by these
-spirits in which exorcism has been practised, and in no instance has it
-had any effect whatsoever. I should say hauntings by neutrarians might
-last indefinitely; I see no reason why they should not. Have you made
-any enquiries lately about the house?”
-
-“No,” Mrs. Fanshawe replied, “not for some time. When we get back to
-Montreal, we will do so, and let you know.” The conversation ended here.
-
-A year later I received a letter from her husband. “I have been to
-the house,” he wrote, “and the present occupants are leaving almost
-immediately. There have been three deaths there during their tenancy,
-and they complain of exactly the same disturbances that alarmed us. I
-have lent them the blue stone.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-HAUNTINGS IN THE EAST END
-
-
-Having come to the conclusion that it was quite impossible to earn a
-living in America, I returned to England as a steerage passenger on the
-German liner “Elbe.”
-
-It was the last homeward journey she was destined to go, for she was
-run into on her next outward voyage by the “Crathie,” several hundred
-miles off the East Coast of England, and sunk with an appalling loss of
-life. The weather being particularly rough, we were about nine days at
-sea; and the fact that our quarters were extremely close, consisting
-of little more than a square foot to each person, coupled with food
-that I could not eat, made me sincerely thankful when the time came to
-go ashore. Apart from these details I had nothing to complain of in
-the way I was treated, for the crew—though barely concealing their
-hearty contempt for all but the first-class passengers—were to me
-civil enough. At the same time the experience—an experience I had not
-bargained for—was one I certainly do not desire to go through again.
-
-I shall never forget how glad I was to find myself once more in an
-English restaurant, sitting down to a good, square English meal. I
-spent two nights in Southampton, travelling thence to London.
-
-On arriving at Waterloo, I found myself almost as embarrassed as I had
-been in New York, for my knowledge of London was extremely limited.
-I had only been there—excepting when I was up for my Sandhurst
-Exam.—for an odd day occasionally, and then I had always stayed at a
-private hotel in Cambridge Street, Hyde Park. Now, however, my funds
-being no longer equal to the West End, I was forced to look elsewhere
-for a lodging. After a wearisome search, I at last found a room in
-Tennyson Street, S.E. That room will take a lot of forgetting. It was
-very small, very dark, and very beetly. I could hear whole armies of
-blackbeetles parading the floor and scaling the walls. Occasionally,
-one dropped with a thud seemingly close to me, and I sprang out of bed
-in terror, lest it had landed on the counterpane. I honestly believe I
-am as much afraid of cockroaches as I am of ghosts.
-
-I only stayed in that house three days, and then moved into the attic
-of a coffee tavern in York Road. That was midway in the ‘nineties, and
-York Road then was very different from what it is now. In the day-time
-it was full of frowsily dressed men and women and the fœtid steam from
-the cheaper kinds of restaurants.
-
-I well remember one shop that boasted of hot rabbit dinners for
-fourpence; and big pork pies, that had a peculiar fascination for
-blue-bottles, were sold there, all the year round, for threepence. I
-often wondered how many people those pies killed, and how any man could
-be such a villain as to sell them.
-
-But if York Road was mean and squalid in the day-time, it was
-infinitely worse at night. I have never in any other street in London
-seen such an endless procession of women of the unfortunate class. They
-were nearly all German, and their hard, cruel faces should have been
-a sufficient warning to anyone to give them a wide berth. I haven’t
-the slightest doubt that many of the young men who were foolish enough
-to be enticed by them were ruthlessly robbed, and not infrequently
-murdered.
-
-One very nasty incident took place just under my window. It was in the
-depths of December, and the snow lay thick on the ground. Will anyone
-who experienced it ever forget that Christmas of 1894. I was laid up
-with influenza, and was lying awake coughing, when I heard a loud
-shriek, followed by an oath, and a series of groans and gurgles. Then
-someone whistled, and a cab came up, after which all was quiet for a
-few minutes, when a crowd collected and a babel of voices arose.
-
-In the morning my landlady, with a very white face, told me she had
-seen it all through her window; she slept in the basement, and had been
-too horrified to move. It appears that, shortly before midnight, a man
-had hidden in the doorway of the house, as if waiting for someone,
-and about ten minutes later a woman had come along, whom he hurled
-to the ground, and stabbed. When the woman had ceased groaning, the
-man whistled, and a cab came up. The driver, getting down from his
-seat, helped lift the woman into the vehicle; he and the murderer then
-climbed into the box, there was the crack of a whip, and the cab was
-gone. A few minutes afterwards a couple of policemen appeared on the
-scene, talked for some time, and then walked away, after which the
-street remained silent till dawn.
-
-I went out and looked at the scene of the incident. There was abundant
-evidence on the doorstep and window-sill as to what had taken place,
-and seeing the people next door looking at it, I asked them if they
-had heard anything in the night. They shrugged their shoulders. “It’s
-quite a common occurrence in this neighbourhood,” they said, “and it
-would never do for us to take any notice of it. If we did, we should
-certainly, sooner or later, share the same fate as that woman.” Thus,
-no attempt was made to bring the miscreant to justice, and the matter
-ended.
-
-During the time I was with her, my landlady was robbed twice. On the
-first occasion two boys came into the front part of the shop and asked
-for some sandwiches. Whilst the landlady’s daughter, who was alone
-behind the counter, was serving them, one of the boys snatched up a
-ham, the other threw down a chair, and both flew out of the shop.
-The girl rushed after them, but of course fell over the chair. Her
-cries brought her brother Bert and me to the rescue, and we set off
-in pursuit of the thieves. Although they had got some distance, Bert,
-being an astonishingly fast sprinter, had nearly caught them up, when
-the foremost of the boys abruptly halted, and, whirling round, flung
-the ham right at him. He ducked, and the ham landed with a splash in a
-puddle of rain water. Picking it up, we bore it triumphantly home, and
-it was soon resting on the counter, I hope—since it was to be sold as
-usual—none the worse for its adventure.
-
-Episode number two did not end quite so happily. A young man with a
-clean-shaven face, and innocent, big blue eyes came to look for rooms.
-He spoke with a strong American accent, and said he was travelling for
-a well-known firm of jewellers in Boston. Whether it was the eyes, or
-thoughts of gold bracelets and pearl pendants, I cannot say—perhaps
-it was both; anyhow, the landlady’s daughter beamed on him, and from
-that day forth I became a person of second importance, if, indeed, of
-any importance at all. Whatever he said was law, and whatever he chose
-to wear was “most elegant.” Then something happened, for which I was
-not altogether unprepared. He came down one morning carrying a somewhat
-bulky parcel, which he told the landlady’s daughter was his dress suit.
-“It’s too small for me,” he said. “This bracing climate of yours has
-given me such an appetite, I’ve grown fat. I’m going to take it to the
-tailor down the street to see if he can enlarge it for me. By the way,
-can you change me this sovereign?” He handed her a coin, and I saw him
-smile tenderly. Then he went out of the shop with a pile of silver in
-his hand—and never came back. The sovereign was of course a bad one,
-and, worse still, the dress clothes were a new suit of Bert’s, one for
-which he must have given at least three pounds.
-
-I was not idle all the time I stayed in York Road. I was thrown on
-my own resources and had to find some means of making a livelihood.
-Expensive though my education had been, it was of little practical use
-to me now. The only subjects I knew anything about were those required
-for the Sandhurst and R.I.C. Examinations, and they in no way fitted
-me for business. A board-school youth with a knowledge of book-keeping
-and shorthand stood a much better chance of obtaining a clerkship than
-I did. It was a bitter revelation to me. I had always been brought up
-with the idea that breed and manners were a valuable asset.
-
-I now discovered that without money and influence they were a handicap
-rather than otherwise. The majority of employers I interviewed
-were certainly not gentlemen, nor apparently did they care to have
-anything to do with such; all they wanted was smartness in figures and
-the capacity of standing prodigiously long hours and any amount of
-bullying. I worked for a week in an office in Lewisham. My employer
-was a kind of jobbing stockbroker with a florid face and yards of gold
-watch-chain. My hours, as far as I can remember, were from nine to six,
-with twenty minutes interval for luncheon. The second day I was there
-I was kept at work till after seven, and the following day, by way of
-retaliation, I took a good hour over my lunch. When I got back to the
-office, I thought my employer would have died of apoplexy. I have never
-seen a man in such a fury.
-
-“What do you think I pay you for?” he shrieked; “to eat?”
-
-“You haven’t paid me yet,” I responded; “it will be time enough to give
-way to your emotions when you have. You kept me here last night an
-hour longer than the time agreed. Very good! You get an hour less work
-out of me to-day. What’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.”
-
-He raised his thick, podgy hand, and I thought he was going to strike
-me, which I hoped he would do, for I have always been very fond of
-boxing, and a scrap with him just then would have been as nectar to me.
-To my astonishment, however, he suddenly subsided, and, walking out of
-the room, left me to go on with my work undisturbed. I left the office
-punctually at six that evening, and for the few remaining days I was
-with him, the prearranged hours were rigidly adhered to. That was my
-one and only experience in business. I tried to get on the staff of a
-newspaper, but although I wrote to almost every editor in London, I did
-not succeed. I am convinced that no post, outside that of a reporter,
-for which I had neither the training nor the inclination, can be
-obtained without the investment of money or colossal influence.
-
-I managed, however, to do some free lance work, and I derived no little
-interest and amusement, though not much remuneration, interviewing for
-a weekly journal called “Theatricals.” The first man of any note I
-met was the late Sir Augustus Harris, to whom I introduced myself on
-the stage of Drury Lane. It was during a rehearsal of the pantomime,
-at which, if I remember rightly, Harry Nicholls, Herbert Campbell,
-Dan Leno, and many other favourites of those times were present. Sir
-Augustus listened to what I had to say with great courtesy, and told
-me to go to Mr. Neil Forsyth. I did so, with the result that I was
-offered a small post on the staff of the theatre. I was grateful to Mr.
-Forsyth, who was one of the very kindest men that ever breathed, but
-apart from the smallness of the salary, there were obstacles in the
-way, and so I had to refuse.
-
-About this time I met a girl with whom I became madly infatuated, and
-when she refused to marry me, I seriously contemplated suicide. It was
-this episode that gave me the central idea for my first novel, “For
-Satan’s Sake,” in which I introduced the girl, and which is written
-very much round my own life.
-
-I am only too thankful now that she did not accept me, for I do not
-know how I should have kept her, and that, apparently, as far as she
-was concerned, was the only thing that mattered.
-
-I fought a desperate battle with myself for some time, and in the
-end came to the grim resolution to go on living. It was when I was
-recovering from this state of excessive mental dejection that I came
-in contact with an old acquaintance, a public schoolman, at whose
-suggestion I decided to try schoolmastering, and consequently obtained
-a post at Daventry Grammar School.
-
-But I must now return to the principal subject of this narrative,
-namely, ghosts.
-
-During the year I was in York Road I thoroughly explored the East
-End, and in the coffee houses and restaurants of Poplar, Deptford,
-Tilbury and Whitechapel I heard many first-hand accounts of hauntings.
-Though it is not generally known, the East End of London is far more
-haunted than the West. On one of my nocturnal rambles, I made the
-acquaintance of a Russian Jew, who had an extraordinary mania for
-spiders, which he kept in specially designed boxes with glass lids.
-On their half-holidays he used to set his children to work collecting
-flies and other insects, and the whole family used to revel in watching
-the spiders gorge themselves on their victims. You could see he was
-innately cruel by the hard twinkling of his little black eyes, and the
-spasmodic twitching of his flat, greasy, white fingers, but he was
-something of a scholar and he had a devout dread of ghosts. “There is a
-haunted house close to here,” he said to me one evening; “if you like
-to come with me I will introduce you to the owner. He is a Chinaman,
-called King Ho, or some such outlandish name, and he keeps an opium
-den.”
-
-King Ho did not require much of an introduction, for, as soon as we
-entered, he fixed his little slit-like eyes on me and said:
-
-“Well, what do you want? A smoke?”
-
-“No,” I said. “I’ve come to hear about your ghosts. I’m interested in
-them.”
-
-“There are plenty of them here,” he murmured; “the house is full of
-them. Sit down!”
-
-I obeyed, and the Russian Jew went back to his spiders and left me
-alone with the Chinaman.
-
-It was a dirty, sordid, ill-ventilated place, reeking with a dozen
-different odours, and suggestive of vermin _ad libitum_, and diseases
-of an Oriental origin and unspeakable nature. A curtain was drawn
-across one end of the room, and noticing that my eyes wandered off in
-that direction, King Ho got up and pulled aside the drapery. Two wooden
-berths, one above the other, were discovered; the top one was empty,
-and the lower occupied by a corpse-like Chinaman, who was lying on his
-side, facing us, with absolutely no expression in his eyes or mouth. He
-might have been dead the best part of a week.
-
-“He’s away in the rice fields of his native home,” King Ho said,
-“talking to his wife and playing with his children. He goes there every
-night at this time”—and he glanced at the big, round, wooden clock
-hanging on the wall.
-
-“You mean he is dreaming,” I said.
-
-“No, I don’t,” King Ho retorted. “I mean he’s there—his spirit, his
-intelligence is there. That thing you are looking at is only his
-material body. He, and I, and others we know, don’t set much value
-on that, we can get out of it so easily. It’s the immaterial self we
-esteem.”
-
-Then, seeing I was interested, he resumed his chair, and stretching
-out his long, thin, yellow hand, he touched me on the arm.
-
-“Listen,” he said, “we, Chinamen, who come from the fields and
-mountains, and grow up in close touch with Nature, can concentrate.
-From our infancy upwards we think deeply. We think of the sky, the
-stars, the sun, the moon, the mighty Hoang Ho River and the vast range
-of the Pelings. We think of them in a sense quite different from the
-sense in which you Londoners would think of them. You would regard
-them as so many objects only—sky and land-marks. We think of them
-as spirits that can act as magnets to our spirits—as intelligences
-akin to ourselves, that can, when once we become thoroughly acquainted
-with them, draw us to them. The Pelings live just as much as you and I
-live—you might pull down their body, that great, elevated frame you
-style the mountains, just as you might overturn that bench; but the
-real, the spiritual Pelings would still remain. When once you grasp
-the idea that all Nature lives—that everything, even to the chairs
-and tables, have immaterial representatives, then you will begin to
-understand the principle of the concentration we practise. You must see
-the Pelings, the Hoang-Ho, the rice fields, not as they would appear
-to the man in the street here, here in London, Piccadilly, but as we,
-who live near them and know them, see them—as figures that can see
-and hear, figures with intelligence, expression—intense expression in
-their eyes. When you see them like that, you will get to love them,
-and, when you love them, you will unconsciously concentrate on them, as
-you do on all things that you love. Your love will not be in vain, it
-will be reciprocated, and the love that reciprocates yours will, as a
-magnet, draw you—you—your immaterial ego—your true self—towards it.
-Now you begin to understand, I can tell by your face. The Chinaman—the
-Chinaman of the plains and hills—like myself, _thinks_—he knows
-Nature, and when he leaves China and comes over here, he concentrates
-until he hears the voice of that Nature calling to him; and when he
-hears it, his spirit is gently freed from his material body, and borne
-silently and instantaneously to his home.
-
-“Now, he can think best when he can get some at least of the conditions
-of his native surroundings—and the most important of them is silence.
-Not silence such as you may understand it, but the silence of the
-conscious, inanimate hills, and rivers, and plains—and the only way to
-procure it is through opium—the opium I supply. Hence he comes here,
-takes it, and lies over yonder, and thinks, till he hears the call and
-his spirit is released.”
-
-“But the ghosts,” I interrupted, “the ghosts you spoke about.”
-
-“Wait,” he said. “Listen! Sometimes men have come here who have lost
-the love of the spirit of the mountain and river. They have lost it
-because they have liked too much this London of yours, and have imbibed
-too deeply of that detestable immorality, which so weakens the spirit
-that it cannot, even if it heard the call, get away from the flesh. I
-tell those men that my opium will do them no good, but they take it;
-they take it, and dream as Englishmen would dream—with their spirits
-chained to their material bodies. When these depraved Chinamen awake
-and realise that they can never, never again, be drawn by the mighty,
-majestic love of the Spirit of the Mountain and River, and that they
-can never again revisit the home of their childhood, so bitter is
-their disappointment that they kill themselves—not always here, but
-anywhere—in their lodgings, in the river, or in the docks. Their
-spirits then invariably come here, where, undoubtedly, they renew their
-vain efforts to get back to China—to the mighty, majestic Spirit of
-the Mountain and River, whose love they have lost. Look in that top
-berth and tell me what you see there?”
-
-“It’s empty,” I said.
-
-“Look again,” he replied.
-
-I did so, but still there was nothing there, only just the bare, dingy
-panelling.
-
-“Well,” he asked, “what now?”
-
-“Nothing,” I said; “absolutely nothing.”
-
-“Go up to it and put one hand inside,” he remarked.
-
-I did so, and sprang back with a loud cry. I had touched a face!
-
-“Yes,” he said, as I stepped out into the semi-darkness of the
-causeway, “it frightens some people, but it never frightens me, because
-I know that the only consolation possible for these unhappy spirits is
-to lie next to, or to come in contact with, the bodies of those whose
-spirits are walking and talking with their fond ones in distant China.”
-
-Whilst I was at York Road I became acquainted with an Irish doctor,
-whom I will call Flynn. He ran a surgery not far from King Ho’s house.
-Flynn belonged to a famous secret society, whose fundamental object
-was to carry on a doctrine of surreptitious hatred to England and all
-things English. Though I had no sympathy with such a society—for I
-have always held the opinion that, however badly England behaved to
-Ireland in the past, the majority of the English people of to-day are
-only too anxious to act fairly to her, and therefore it is better to
-let bygones be bygones—I found Flynn a very original and entertaining
-character. All his patients were either Irish or of foreign extraction,
-and whenever any English person came to the surgery, he flatly refused
-to attend them.
-
-One evening, when I was sitting chatting with him in front of a blazing
-peat fire—Flynn would never burn English coal—two Swedish engineers
-came into the surgery, and Flynn, who, for some peculiar reason, was
-particularly partial to the Swedes, asked them to join us at supper.
-The meal certainly was not in the approved style of the West End,
-nor, perhaps, would it have appealed to the nouveau riche; for there
-was no snowy tablecloth, no serviettes, no champagne, no liqueurs; it
-consisted of boiled beef, suet dumplings, potatoes—boiled in their
-skins, of course—and plenty, yes, plenty, of stout and whiskey; and it
-was very welcome to the four hungry, healthy men, who did ample justice
-to it. After we had finished, and pipes were produced, I brought up the
-subject of ghosts—never very far from my mind—and one of the Swedes
-laughed.
-
-“Ghosts,” he said, “there are no such things. Neither ghosts nor
-fairies. I believe in nothing. There is no God, no devil, no heaven, no
-hell. When we die, we die—there is no future life whatever.”
-
-“Let’s have a séance,” Flynn said, “and see if we can’t convince him. I
-have the skeleton of a murderer in the room overhead. I will fetch it
-down, and it shall sit round the table with us.”
-
-“All right!” the sceptical Swede, whose name was Nielssen, said. “Fetch
-it down; fetch twenty skeletons you like, the more the merrier. Nothing
-will convince me.”
-
-Flynn ran upstairs, and presently reappeared with a tall skeleton in
-his arms. The table was cleared, and we all sat round it with our
-hands spread out after the usual manner of table turners, the skeleton
-being placed between the two Swedes, each of whom had hold of one of
-its hands. Flynn then turned down the lights, and we started asking
-the table questions, many of which, I fear, were of a very ribald and
-frivolous nature. Every now and then it gave a big tilt, and Nielssen
-shouted, “That’s for me! It’s my mother-in-law—she’s found out I’ve
-been making love to my landlady’s daughter.” Once there was a rap, and
-for the moment I was taken in. Then the other Swede, Heilborn, cried
-out, “It’s only Nielssen. He did it with his foot; he’s incorrigible!”
-This sort of thing went on for some time, Flynn and Nielssen constantly
-playing some prank, and Heilborn and myself not always too serious.
-
-Suddenly the atmosphere of the room seemed to undergo a change, and, as
-if by common consent, we were all silent. Then Nielssen uttered a sharp
-cry of pain.
-
-“Strike a light quickly,” he cried; “my hand is being hurt frightfully!”
-
-We did so, and Nielssen gave vent to an expression of relief.
-
-“How did it happen?” Heilborn asked.
-
-“I don’t know,” Nielssen said faintly. He was evidently much shaken,
-and spoke with the emotion of a man who has undergone some violent
-shock. “I was only holding the skeleton the same as you, when I
-suddenly felt its fingers close like a vice on mine. It was a grip of
-iron. See, my hand is crushed almost out of shape!” He held it out, and
-we all bent over it curiously. Compared with the other hand, it looked
-singularly white and limp, and when Flynn touched it, Nielssen very
-perceptibly winced.
-
-Flynn gave him some brandy, and after a little while he seemed himself
-again; but he would not continue the séance. “There’s something very
-odd about the skeleton,” he said. “I don’t believe in spirits, as you
-know, but there must be something closely akin to one attached to this
-thing,” and he gave it a vicious kick with his foot.
-
-A week later, when I called at Flynn’s house, he told me that Nielssen
-was in bed. He had fallen downstairs and badly bruised his spine,
-besides breaking a leg. “He’ll get over it all right,” Flynn said,
-“but it will be some time before he can do anything. His account of
-the accident is most remarkable; in fact, he declares that it wasn’t
-an accident, that he was deliberately thrown. He swears that he
-distinctly saw a skeleton hand suddenly catch hold of him round the
-ankle, and that the next moment he felt himself whirling through the
-air. He is most emphatic in his declaration that he will never again
-scoff at ghosts or play with the invisible. And now,” Flynn added,
-“the wretched thing has begun to plague me. I can’t get a decent
-night’s sleep. As soon as I begin to doze I am visited by the most
-disturbing dreams. I invariably hear knocking at the door, and when I
-open it, something rushes in and strangles me. But the worst of it is,
-I hear the knocking when I’m awake, too. Sometimes it begins directly
-I get into bed, before my head has touched the pillow. Knock, knock,
-knock!—the hard, sharp knock of bony knuckles on door, walls and
-furniture. I am not actually frightened, but I don’t like it. What do
-you make of it?”
-
-“If it’s not the skeleton, the spirit of some depraved human,” I
-replied, “it’s some other equally low and vicious earth-bound, one
-of the class that visit séances and attach themselves to the unlucky
-sitter. You might try getting rid of the skeleton—have it cremated and
-see what effect that has.”
-
-Flynn took my advice; the skeleton was reduced to ashes, and the ashes
-buried many miles away from Limehouse Causeway, after which, the
-disturbances, as far as Flynn was concerned, at any rate, entirely
-ceased. Whether Nielssen was victimised again I cannot say. He rejoined
-his ship as soon as he had recovered, and since then he has completely
-passed out of my existence.
-
-There was a house I used occasionally to go to in Whitechapel, a
-rendezvous of itinerant free lance writers like myself, where,
-although I never actually saw any ghostly phenomena, I always had
-very extraordinary impressions. The moment I crossed the threshold, I
-fancied I was in a big funeral procession following a hearse. It was
-a dull, winter’s day, I thought; there were inches of slush on the
-ground, and the cold was intense. I could not see the faces of the
-people walking beside me, but I instinctively knew that they wore an
-expression of extreme relief, and that some even of them should-be
-mourners laughed. We tramped on till we came to a steep hill, then
-there was a loud report, and at once everything became chaotic. After
-this my mind gradually cleared and the impressions abruptly ceased.
-There was no variation in these impressions, they always began and
-ended in precisely the same way; moreover, I invariably received
-them whenever I entered the house. I mentioned my experience one day
-to an habitué of the place, and he quite casually informed me that
-several men who went there had had similar experiences, and he thought
-the landlord, if approached tactfully, might offer some sort of
-explanation. Acting upon this suggestion, I spoke to the landlord, and
-learned from him that half a century or more ago the house was owned by
-a wealthy tradesman, who, it was generally supposed, had made his money
-by sweating his employés. When he died, all the hands had to attend his
-funeral, but far from looking sad, as they followed the coffin, they
-had exhibited every manifestation of joy. Just as the procession had
-reached the summit of a steep hill, a half-witted man fired a gun from
-a cottage window, and the horses drawing the hearse, taking fright,
-dashed down the incline and into a wall at the foot of it. Strange to
-say, no one was injured, but the coffin was thrown out and broken to
-pieces. The event made a great impression upon the minds of all who
-witnessed it, and the landlord informed me that I was by no means the
-only person who, upon entering the house, had received a vivid mental
-picture of the scene.
-
-I am often asked if I am a consistent medium. No, I am not. It is only
-at times I see ghosts, only at times I receive vivid impressions, and
-I do not believe that any person, however mediumistic, can depend upon
-his or her psychic faculty for consistency. I have been to several
-public séances, where professional mediums have had the audacity to say
-they see spirits standing beside practically everyone in the assembly.
-They rattle off the description of an alleged spirit, as if it were a
-part in a well-rehearsed play—and play it undoubtedly is to anyone
-who pauses to reflect. Genuine phantasms do not come to order quite so
-readily.
-
-In olden times, when people were really psychic, those versed in the
-art from their childhood upwards could only raise a ghost with great
-difficulty, and often, only by resorting to spells, many of which were
-of a very subtle and complex nature. And when, in the end, they did
-succeed, such manifestations invariably had a very alarming effect on
-the medium as well as the spectator. How is it, then, that so many of
-the professional mediums of to-day can not only see visitants from
-the other world, whenever they like, all around them, but can view
-these ghostly visitants without being in the least disconcerted,
-without—as the saying is—turning a hair? Have they really stronger
-nerves than had Saul, and a closer, far closer intimacy with the
-Unknown than had the Witch of Endor, or can it be that the Spirit
-World has so participated in our age of quickness—our rapid forms
-of locomotion—that a medium has only to raise his or her eyebrows
-and a host of spirits at once whiz into the room? I do not think so.
-I believe that such mediums—the mediums whose psychic vision is
-apparently inexhaustible, and can be turned on and off to order—are
-either unmitigated humbugs or hysterical dupes, who mistake the baldest
-impressions for actual spiritual phenomena.
-
-The unmitigated humbug has only to describe the alleged presence with a
-little elasticity, and the description will surely fit—albeit somewhat
-loosely—one or another of our departed friends. Who amongst us does
-not know someone on the other side passably good-looking, rather tall,
-of medium colouring, and somewhat stout? And if we plead that we do
-not, it is of no consequence—the medium glibly asserts that the spirit
-he or she describes has got behind our chair by mistake, and is really
-searching for someone else. But apart from this obvious fraud, can we
-believe that any one of those whom we have loved and lost would so
-degrade themselves and us as to appear at a public séance before a
-company of strangers. Surely we would rather not see them at all, than
-see them in such circumstances. At any rate, we would rather—much
-rather—possess our souls in patience, until our departed loved ones
-can appear to us in private—as they sometimes can—without the
-intervention of any medium whatsoever.
-
-With regard to automatic or spirit writing, there is, I believe, just
-as much fraud practised. The mere fact that Sir somebody or other
-has a touching belief in one or two of these automatic scribes is
-quite enough for most people, and, consequently, they never dream of
-questioning the integrity of any medium who professes to convey to them
-messages from the dead. It is sufficient that the man with the title,
-the great man of science, believes. But they forget, often wilfully
-forget, that the cleverest man is often the most simple; that a great
-judge has not unfrequently had his pockets picked; and that eminence in
-one direction by no means denotes ability in another.
-
-Snobbishness is responsible for much. The big man is credulous, and
-because he is credulous the little man is credulous too. Hence,
-consistency in the spirit world, in clairvoyance, in automatic
-writing, is, for the moment, almost universally accepted, and direct
-communication with the spirit world erroneously looked upon as an
-every-day occurrence. It will be otherwise when the man in the street
-wakes up and discovers the occult for himself. Experience will, I
-think, teach him, as it has taught me, that although ghosts may on very
-rare occasions come to order—and when they do, their coming is, I
-believe, quite as surprising to the medium as it is to the audience—by
-far the greater number of superphysical phenomena appear spontaneously;
-and it is through such spontaneous appearances only that we can hope to
-make any progress in our communication with the other world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-NIGHT RAMBLINGS ON WIMBLEDON COMMON AND HOUNSLOW HEATH
-
-
-If there are any places in London that should be more haunted than
-others, assuredly those places are the parks and commons. When I was
-living on the south side of the river, I spent many nights tramping
-about Wimbledon, Clapham, Wandsworth, Tooting and Streatham Commons.
-Since then I have lived at Blackheath, Hampstead, Hounslow and Dulwich,
-so that I may say I know pretty nearly every inch of these places. I
-can see myself now standing on Wimbledon Common close to a pool, in the
-dead of night. No one about, and the reflection of the moon staring
-at me from the unruffled surface of the water. I am trying to get
-impressions of any event that may have taken place there. I got none.
-Suddenly a hand falls on my shoulder; I swing round, and peering into
-my face is the white, haggard face of a tramp.
-
-“You ain’t going to drown yourself, are you?” he said.
-
-“Why?” I asked, anticipating a severe rebuke from this withered and
-worn scarecrow of humanity.
-
-“Why,” he said, “because don’t do it here! I can show you a much better
-spot, where the water is deep, and where, when once you get in, you
-can’t very easily get out.”
-
-“But how will that benefit you?” I enquired, wondering why he was so
-eager.
-
-“You can let me have your clothes, can’t you?” he explained; “you won’t
-want to take them with you into the next world. From what I hears
-about it, sperrits don’t need neither coats nor trousers, and the few
-shillings I shall get for them will do me a bit of good, and won’t hurt
-you.”
-
-“But I wasn’t contemplating suicide,” I remarked. “I’m not tired of
-life yet.”
-
-“Ain’t you,” he said, in extremely disappointed tones. “Then why are
-you out here at this time of night?”
-
-“If it comes to that,” I observed, “why are you?”
-
-“I ain’t got nowhere else to go,” he said; “and there are no police out
-here to disturb anyone.”
-
-“Nor ghosts?” I remarked.
-
-“Ghosts!” he chuckled. “I’m not afraid of ghosts. I shall soon be one
-myself, I expect; but there is one spot here I don’t go near after
-dark.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Why,” he said. “Come along with me, and maybe you’ll guess.”
-
-Had he been anything like my size I should not have gone, for his
-appearance was very far from assuring, but, as he was a small man,
-I felt comparatively safe. We walked side by side over the grass,
-crossed a gleaming, white path, and steering in a slightly northerly
-direction—I could tell that much by the stars—abruptly halted in
-front of a shallow pit, on the other side of which was a big bush.
-
-“It’s there,” he said, pointing at the pit. “I’ve tried to sleep there
-twice, and each time I’ve been woken up by hearing something heavy
-fall close to my head. It seems to come from the bush. It’s the bush
-that skeers me,” he added, “and though I don’t mind passing it in the
-day-time, nothing on earth will persuade me to look behind it after
-dark.”
-
-“Not even sixpence,” I said, fingering that coin in my waistcoat pocket.
-
-“Go on,” he said, “you haven’t sixpence, otherwise you’d not be here.
-You’re joking. If anyone really did offer me sixpence now to do it,
-well, I don’t say but what I mightn’t try.”
-
-He spoke so hungrily and looked so famished that I decided to part with
-it, though sixpence to me just then had a particularly real value. I
-showed it him. “Look behind that tree,” I said, “and I’ll give it you.”
-
-He set off at once. “No,” I called out, “that won’t do; you must go
-through the pit.” He proceeded to obey, and was in the middle of the
-hollow, when I distinctly heard something very heavy strike the ground
-apparently close to him. I ran round the bush, just in time to see what
-I thought was a black shadow shoot across the ground and disappear in a
-neighbouring cluster of trees. When I returned, the tramp was still in
-the pit, but I could see nothing there to account for the noise.
-
-“Well,” he said. “Did you hear it?”
-
-“I heard something,” I replied, “and there’s your sixpence.”
-
-I often went to Wimbledon Common afterwards, but never again saw the
-tramp, nor found the hollow.
-
-My Blackheath and Greenwich Park experiences, or at least most of them,
-are narrated fully in my “Haunted Houses of London,” so that I can only
-refer briefly to them here.
-
-From the impressions I got, when walking on the Common at Blackheath,
-I shall always believe that the superphysical influences there are
-particularly demoralising. It always seemed to me that Blackheath—by
-the way a curiously appropriate name—might be the rendezvous of the
-very worst type of earth-bound phantasms of the dead, and of the most
-vicious neutrarians.
-
-After leaving London and entering on my scholastic career, I was
-first of all a master at Daventry, then tutor in an Irish family at
-Aldershot, and then, in succession, a master in preparatory schools at
-Wandsworth, Hereford and Blackheath. Of these various posts, I liked
-that at Blackheath the least, partly because the headmaster there was
-the most unmitigated snob, and my pupils hopelessly spoilt, and partly
-because I had such a detestation of the heath after dark.
-
-My only consolation in those days was cricket and writing. Every
-evening, after my work with the boys was done, I repaired to a room
-over a library in Blackheath village, and it was there that I completed
-my first novel, “For Satan’s Sake.”
-
-The book deals with the soul of a suicide, and was based, as I have
-already stated, on my experiences in America and York Road, Lambeth.
-I tried it with various publishers, but without success, and it was
-not until six years later, when I was living in a small fishing town
-in Cornwall, that I eventually got it taken. It so happened that a
-well-known novelist came to see me one day, and when I told him that I
-had attempted a book, he said he would like to see it. I fished it out
-of the box, where it had lain undisturbed for years, and he went off
-with it, subsequently showing it to a reader of a publishing firm—also
-a well-known novelist—who was staying in the town at the time, and who
-was so impressed with it, that he advised his firm to accept it. It did
-not even then come out for over a year, and the anxiety of awaiting my
-début as an author can better be imagined than described. The success I
-prayed for was not showered upon me, but the book was well received on
-the whole, and paved the way for other works to follow.
-
-And now, let me hie back to London and its commons. Though Hampstead
-has, in all probability, its share of phantasms, my impressions there
-have been of a more agreeable nature than at Blackheath. I spent the
-greater part of several consecutive nights one summer sitting on a
-bench in a very rustic glade on the heath, waiting for anything that
-might happen. Once or twice between one and two something seemed to be
-making a violent effort to materialise, and I fully expected to see a
-figure suddenly appear before me. My impressions were that it would be
-the figure of a woman, and that she would be carrying a white bundle
-in her arms. I felt that she was in great trouble and wanted to ask
-me for advice. I associated her worries with a big house that used to
-stand somewhere near the summit of Hampstead Hill. I felt all this very
-acutely, and I used to repeat aloud my willingness to do anything I
-could to assist her.
-
-Strange to say, a few years later, I met a lady who told me that she
-had had a curious experience in the same spot. She was walking through
-it rather late one autumn evening, accompanied by her dog, a big black
-retriever. When she came to the seat where I used to sit, the dog
-started barking and showed signs of great terror. Somewhat alarmed,
-she was about to hurry on, when a voice close to her said, “It’s only
-me, Winifred; don’t be frightened. The boat I sailed in to America was
-wrecked, and only the child was saved.”
-
-The lady looked round, but there was no one in sight. On reaching
-home, she mentioned the incident to her mother, who exclaimed in
-astonishment, “Well, that is odd! I was sitting on a seat, I should
-think in that very spot, about forty years ago—we were living in D——
-House, on Haverstock Hill, at the time—when a letter was brought me
-announcing the loss of a big sailing vessel in the Atlantic, on which
-my maid, Winnie, as we used to call her, had sailed with her husband
-to America. Only a very few of the passengers and crew survived, and
-Winnie and her husband were both drowned. But I never knew they had a
-child.”
-
-Hounslow Heath should teem with ghosts, for it once swarmed with
-foot-pads, who, after committing every conceivable act of violence on
-and around the heath, usually ended their career there on gibbets. I
-once had rooms near the Bath Road, and spent many nights rambling
-about the Heath in quest of ghostly adventure. One evening I kept
-fancying I was followed everywhere by a tall, muffled figure, and when,
-in alarm, I hastened over the grass on to the roadway, I heard a low,
-cynical laugh. All the way home the steps seemed to pursue me, and when
-I got into bed and prepared to blow out the light, I saw the curtains
-by the window rustle and swell out, as if someone was behind them. It
-was a long time before I ventured to blow out the light, and, when I
-slept, I dreamed a dark, hooded figure was bending over me.
-
-On another occasion, as I perambulated the heath, where the trees were
-thickly clustered and the undergrowth had become the densest tangle, I
-caught a glimpse of two men playing dice. I heard their laughter and
-the rattling of the box, as they shook it in the air and threw out
-the dice. Then suddenly their gaiety was turned to wrath—there were
-oaths and blows, cries and groans, and all became silent, save for the
-soughing and moaning of the wind through the lofty tree-tops. But as I
-came away from the heath, there was again that cynical laugh, and again
-footsteps seemed to follow me home, and again the curtain by the window
-of my room shook and swelled.
-
-I did not go to the heath one night; I lay awake in bed instead, and
-about the hour I had usually returned I heard steps, long, swinging
-steps coming down the little side road towards the house. My memory
-at once went back to that night in Dublin, and I strained my ears to
-catch the accompanying sound. I had not long to wait—it soon came, the
-same old familiar click, click, click! In an agony of fear, lest the
-steps should stop at the house and there should be a repetition of the
-terrible knocking at the door, I lighted a candle and sat up. Nearer
-and nearer they came, and then, when I felt certain they would stop, to
-my infinite relief they went on. On past the house, the echoes ringing
-out loud and clear in the keen, frosty air, until they reached the Bath
-Road.
-
-I fully expected some misfortune would happen to me after this
-occurrence, as the last time I had heard the steps had been at the time
-of my failure to pass the medical for the R.I.C., and shortly before
-my disastrous trip to America. Yet nothing of a specially untoward
-nature happened. Apparently, the steps on this occasion merely heralded
-another change in my vocation, for I shortly afterwards became imbued
-with the desire to be an actor, and commenced what was destined to be
-a lively, though very brief theatrical career, as a pupil in the Henry
-Neville Studio, Oxford Street.
-
-Before, however, passing on to subsequent events, I must relate one
-other—the only other—ghostly happening I experienced at Hounslow. In
-a remote corner of the heath there was one spot that had a peculiar
-fascination for me, and, whenever I returned from it, I dreamed the
-same dream—that a beautiful girl in an old-world costume, with fair
-hair, large, blue eyes and daintily-moulded lips, approached my bed and
-leaned over me. She had the most appealing expression in her face, and
-seemed to be anxious to make me her confidant. I was always about to
-address her, when some extraordinary metamorphosis took place, and I
-awoke, palpitating with terror.
-
-The dream greatly impressed me, and I tried my best to discover a
-reason for it. I did eventually, but not until the year I published
-“Some Haunted Houses of England and Wales,” when I got into
-correspondence with a very old lady, whom I will call Miss Carmichael.
-Miss Carmichael lived at Ealing, close to the Parish Church, and wrote
-to me to the effect that, if I liked to call on her, she could tell me
-a curious tale about an old house that used to stand on the outskirts
-of Hounslow Heath. Of course I accepted this invitation.
-
-I found Miss Carmichael, when I called, lying on a sofa, crippled with
-rheumatism, but otherwise in the full possession of all her senses, and
-wonderfully vivacious, despite the fact that she was well over ninety.
-
-“The house I want to tell you about,” she said, “was called ‘The
-Gables.’ It was a large, old-fashioned manor house with very extensive
-grounds, and at the beginning of the last century it belonged to my
-aged relative, Miss Denning. She never lived in it herself, but she
-kept it in excellent repair, and at her death, in or about 1820, her
-nephew inherited an apparently valuable property. Now, Tom Denning had
-a great friend, Dick Mayhew, and it was from Dick Mayhew, who was also
-a great friend of mine, that I heard the most detailed account of the
-hauntings. I will try and tell you the story just as my friend told it
-to me.”[3]
-
- [3] I have reproduced the gist of this narrative in my own
- language.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“I was sitting in my stuffy office in Jermyn Street one spring morning,
-when, who should suddenly walk in but Tom Denning, whom I had not seen
-for some time. ‘Why, Dick,’ he said, ‘how fagged and run down you look.
-A spell in the country is what you need, it would do you all the good
-in the world. Supposing you come down to my place at Hounslow, and have
-a blow on the Heath. I keep a couple of horses, and you can ride all
-day if you like.’
-
-“What surprises you spring on one,” I ejaculated. “I didn’t know you
-were living so near London—and at Hounslow, too! Aren’t you afraid of
-highwaymen. I hear they still visit the place occasionally. How long
-have you been there?”
-
-“I haven’t been there yet,” Dick replied with a laugh; “at least, not
-to stay. The property has just been left me by my aunt. It’s a queer
-old house, just the kind of place a romantic beggar like you would
-like, and if any house ought to be haunted, it ought. They say a murder
-was once committed there by an ancestress of mine, a girl whose face
-was as beautiful as she herself was evil, and that her spirit still
-roams the house and grounds.”
-
-“I should certainly like to see her,” I said, “and so, I am sure, would
-Greg.” (Greg was Dick’s bloodhound).
-
-“Well, I’ll give you both an opportunity,” Tom laughed. “Take Greg with
-you, and a friend too, if you like, for I may not be able to join you
-at once.”
-
-“I accepted, and in due course arrived at ‘The Gables,’ accompanied by
-my cousin Ralph, who was then a Lieutenant in the Buffs, and Greg.
-
-“The grounds surrounding ‘The Gables,’ which stood near the edge of the
-heath, were encompassed by a very high, red-brick wall, and consisted
-of a broad, well-kept lawn in front, a small spinney on one side, an
-extensive shrubbery on the other, and big kitchen gardens at the back.
-The house itself, seventeenth century and covered with ivy from tip to
-toe, was picturesque in the extreme. There were no servants, only the
-caretakers, a middle-aged man and his wife, who occupied rooms in the
-east wing. The west wing was reserved for us.
-
-“After dinner, in a hall so enormous that it made us feel positively
-lilliputian, we wandered out into the garden. It was a glorious night,
-the sky one mass of silver, scintillating stars, the air redolent with
-the odour of spring flowers. ‘By Jove,’ Ralph remarked to me, as we
-strolled across the lawn, ‘By Jove! No one would think we were so close
-to that God-forsaken heath; why, it was only a few years ago that a
-fellow in my regiment was set on there, and, after being robbed of all
-he had on him, half beaten to death with bludgeons. It’s one of the
-worst cut-throat spots round London.’ Then he uttered an exclamation of
-surprise and jogged my elbow.
-
-“Coming towards us from the house was the figure of a young girl. She
-wore a white dress with a dark cloak flung loosely over her shoulders,
-and the moonlight playing over her face revealed a countenance of
-extraordinary delicacy and beauty. Her eyes were large and childlike in
-their expression, her lips daintily modelled, her teeth wonderfully
-white and even, her hair golden. Whether it was the effect of the
-moonlight on them or not, I cannot say, but her cheeks were absolutely
-devoid of colour, almost strikingly pale, whilst I fancied I detected
-in the slightly open mouth an expression of pain. I saw every detail
-most distinctly, even to the shape of her fingers, which were very
-pointed. She came on without apparently noticing us, and we watched her
-trip past us and disappear in the spinney.
-
-“‘What a stunner!’ Ralph exclaimed. ‘I don’t know when I’ve seen a
-prettier face! Sly fellow, Denning! I wonder who she can be!’ He had
-hardly finished speaking when we heard the most awful scream, a shriek
-of terror and despair, such as sent all the blood in my body to my
-heart, and left the rest of me like ice.
-
-“‘My God! What’s happened to her?’ Ralph gasped. ‘She’s being murdered.
-Quick!’ We dashed into the spinney, but despite the fact that we
-searched everywhere, no girl was to be found.
-
-“Returning to the house, we made enquiries of the caretakers, who were
-vehement in their denial of knowing the girl or of having heard her
-cries. Much puzzled, we then retired to our night quarters. The room
-that had been assigned to us, for we preferred to share one between us,
-was situated about midway down a long, narrow corridor, lighted at the
-further end by a casement window, across which sprays of ivy blew to
-and fro in the cool breeze.
-
-“For a long time we sat in front of the fire chatting, but at one
-o’clock Ralph got up, and exclaimed that it was high time we turned
-into bed.
-
-“‘Hullo, look at Greg!’ he said, pointing to the dog, who was crouching
-on the floor in front of the door showing its teeth in a series of
-savage growls. ‘What’s the matter with him?’
-
-“Before I had time to reply, we suddenly heard a regular, measured tap,
-tap, tap, as of high-heeled shoes, coming along the corridor towards
-our door.
-
-“‘That can’t be either the caretaker or his wife,’ Ralph whispered.
-‘I wonder if it’s the young lady! Perhaps she’s going to pay us a
-surreptitious visit. I only wish she would—the little darling!’
-
-“Nearer and nearer came the steps, until they seemed to stop just
-outside our door. Greg’s hair bristled, he gave a deep growl, and
-retreated half way across the room. Then there came a loud knock on the
-door, followed by the sound of a violent scuffle. Springing forward,
-Ralph threw the door wide open. There was nothing there, only the cold
-light of the moon, and the white, motionless faces of the Dennings’
-ancestors hanging on the walls.
-
-“‘It’s deuced odd,’ Ralph said. ‘I swear I heard steps and a knock, and
-yet there’s nothing to account for it. Could it have been rats?’
-
-“‘I don’t think so,’ I said; ‘rats wouldn’t have frightened Greg. Look
-at him now; he has quite recovered.’ Greg had come to my side and was
-licking my hand and wagging his tail.
-
-“In the morning I asked the caretaker’s wife if the place was haunted.
-
-“‘Haunted,’ she stammered. ‘No. Whatever made you think of such a
-thing, sir! There ain’t no such things as ghosts. It’s them howls you
-’eard.’
-
-“Seeing there was nothing to be got out of her, Ralph and I did not
-refer to the subject again, but spent our time reading in the library,
-and wandering about the heath.
-
-“In the evening we sauntered out into the garden and tried to coax Greg
-to come with us, but he resolutely refused, and so we had to leave him
-behind. Just about the same time as on the previous evening, and in
-identically the same place, we again saw the girl.
-
-“‘I’ll speak to her, hanged if I don’t,’ Ralph muttered, and taking
-off his hat, he stepped forward and accosted her. Without apparently
-perceiving us, she passed resolutely on, and, entering the spinney, was
-speedily lost to sight. Almost directly afterwards, the same awful,
-wailing scream rose shrill and high on the still night air. This time
-we did not rush after her, but, walking hurriedly back to the house, we
-sought the companionship of the bright and cheery fireside.
-
-“At one o’clock we were again seated in our bedroom, and the events of
-the preceding night were repeated in every detail.
-
-“On the morrow Tom joined us. When we told him of the ghost, he became
-intensely interested.
-
-“‘It must be my ancestress,’ he said. ‘The girl who was supposed to
-have murdered somebody. I’ll sit up with you two fellows to-night and
-we’ll have the door open.’
-
-“After dinner we all three went into the garden.
-
-“‘It’s here we first caught sight of her,’ Ralph exclaimed, as we
-halted on the lawn, ‘here, and precisely at this hour. Yes—by
-Jove!—and there she is!’
-
-“I looked, and there was the figure I knew so well, tripping daintily
-towards us, her yellow hair and silver shoe buckles gleaming furiously
-in the moonlight.
-
-“‘She wears a hood,’ Tom cried, ‘and it completely hides her face.’
-
-“‘What!’ Ralph retorted; ‘she has no hood, you must be dreaming.’
-
-“As before, the girl passed us and we lost sight of her amongst the
-trees. The next moment, and we again heard her scream. Then we searched
-everywhere, but with no result. She was certainly not on the premises,
-and as there was no avenue of escape save by scaling a ten foot
-wall, we could only conclude she had melted into fine air, in other
-words—vanished.
-
-“‘I’ll get to the bottom of this mystery,’ Tom growled between his
-teeth, ‘if I root up every tree in the garden.’
-
-“‘What you’ve seen so far,’ Ralph observed, ‘is only the prelude.
-There’s more to come, and I’m not sure if Act II. is not the most
-exciting. What do you think, Dick?’
-
-“‘Ask Greg,’ I replied. ‘I believe he knows more about it than we do.’
-
-“On arriving indoors, we all three retired to the bedroom we had agreed
-to share. The night was so exquisite that I sat by the open window.
-Directly beneath me was the gravel drive, which lay like a broad,
-white belt encircling the house, and beyond it, on the level sweep of
-lawn, danced the shadows from the larch and fir trees in the paddock;
-the only sign of life came from the bats and night birds that wheeled
-and skimmed in silent flight in and out the bushes. There was very
-little breeze, sufficient only to make the ivy rustle and the window
-in the corridor outside give the faintest perceptible jar. I gazed at
-my companions. Ralph lay on the sofa, sound asleep, a half-serious,
-half-amused look on his handsome features, while Tom sat in an armchair
-directly in front of the fire, his head buried in the palms of his
-hands, as if wrapt in profound thought. A distant church clock boomed
-one. Greg growled, and Tom, at once springing up, flung the door widely
-back on its hinges. ‘There,’ he said. ‘Come what may, we’re ready for
-it.’ As he concluded, there came a tapping.
-
-“Tap, tap, tap; someone in high-heeled shoes was walking over the
-polished oak boards of the corridor in our direction. To me there was a
-world of stealth and cautiousness in the sounds, that suggested a host
-of conflicting motives. As the steps drew nearer, the door suddenly
-swung to with a loud crash, and before we had time to recover from our
-astonishment, someone rapped. With a shout of baffled rage, Tom leaped
-to his feet and tore at the handle. The massive door at once flew open.
-The corridor was empty—only moonbeams and pictures—nothing more.
-
-“The following day was wet, and we stayed indoors, all the morning and
-afternoon, reading. As it cleared up a little towards supper-time, Tom
-proposed going for a short walk. We slipped on our overcoats, and were
-crossing the big entrance hall to the front door, when Tom suddenly
-exclaimed, ‘Hang it! I’ve left my pipe upstairs. I say, wait a minute,
-you fellows, till I get it.’ He started running, and then stopped
-short, giving vent to a loud exclamation. Ascending the broad staircase
-in front of us was a form, whose back view exactly resembled that of
-the golden-haired beauty we had seen in the garden. Where she had
-sprung from we could not say. We only knew she was there.
-
-“‘By Jove! I’ll see her face this time,’ Tom said. ‘I’ll see it, even
-if I have to force her to turn round.’ He ran after her, and, mounting
-the stairs two at a time, stretched out his hand to pluck at her
-sleeve. She turned, and her face was to us a blank. What Tom saw we
-never knew. Shouting, ‘Take the damned thing away from me!’ he stepped
-back and fell; and when we ran forward, we found him lying at the foot
-of the stairs—dead.”
-
-The property, Miss Carmichael informed me, passed to a distant
-relative, who, after trying in vain to let it, pulled it down. The
-ghost, it was rumoured, was that of a very beautiful ancestress of
-the Dennings, who, after leading a life, evil even for those times,
-disappeared. What happened to her material body no one ever knew, but
-her spirit was supposed to haunt the house and grounds in dual form.
-To the stranger, that is to say, to those outside her own family,
-she appeared in all the radiant beauty of her earthly body, but to
-the Dennings she seldom revealed her face. When she did, they beheld
-something too terrible for the mind to conceive—and live.
-
-“I have heard,” Miss Carmichael added, “that the ghost has been seen
-quite recently haunting the site once occupied by the house and
-grounds, and also the borders of the heath.”
-
-And as Miss Carmichael was very emphatic on this last point, I may not
-unreasonably conclude that the girl of my dreams was the actual ghost
-of “The Gables.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-MY VIEWS ON A FUTURE LIFE FOR THE ANIMAL AND VEGETABLE WORLDS
-
-
-I mentioned in one of my former works that I believe many of the
-figures we pass by in the streets are not men and women like ourselves,
-but phantasms—phantasms of the living, that is to say, spirit
-projections of people consciously or unconsciously thinking of being
-where we see them—phantasms of the dead, and impersonating neutrarians.
-
-Mingling with the crowds in the parks and gliding in and out the trees,
-I have often seen people with the pallor of corpses; I have followed
-them, and they have unaccountably vanished. I believe Hyde Park,
-particularly the northern side, to be as full of ghosts as any spot
-in London, and I have heard many strange tales from the outcasts, the
-tattered and torn brigade, who have slept all night under its trees and
-bushes. The police are, I believe, expected to clear the Park before
-locking-up time, and I’ve no doubt they try to do so, but they cannot
-possibly look into every nook and cranny in that vast expanse, and
-there are many in which one could easily hide and defy detection. I
-have tried the experiment once, and I am not anxious to try it again;
-there is no place so terribly depressing, so strangely suggestive of
-suicide, and hauntings by the most grotesque type of neutrarians, as
-London’s premier park by night.
-
-Some twelve or fifteen years ago, in my nightly rambles there, I
-noticed that the seat beneath a certain tree, mid-way between the
-Marble Arch and Lancaster Gate, was rarely occupied, whereas all the
-other seats in that vicinity were invaded by couples. One evening,
-the weather being warm and sultry, I went and sat there. I dozed off,
-and eventually fell into a deep sleep. I dreamed that an old man and
-a young girl stood under the tree, whispering, and that as I watched
-them they raised their eyes, and looked in a horribly guilty manner,
-not at me, but at the space next me, which I perceived, for the first
-time, was occupied by a tiny child. Moving stealthily forward and
-holding in their hands an outspread cloth, they crept up behind the
-child, the cloth descended, and all three vanished. Then something made
-me gaze up into the branches of the tree, and I saw a large, light,
-colourless, heavily-lidded eye peering down at me with an expression
-of the utmost malevolence. It was altogether so baneful, so symbolic
-of cruelty, malice, and hate that I could only stare back at it in
-mute astonishment. The whole shape of the tree then seemed to alter,
-and to become like an enormous dark hand, which, swaying violently
-to and fro, suddenly dived down and closed over me. I awoke at once,
-but was so afraid of seeing the eye, that for some minutes I kept my
-own eyes tightly shut. When I opened them, I saw, bending over me, a
-very white face, and to my intense relief a voice, unmistakably human,
-croaked, “No wonder you’re scared, sitting here at this time of night
-by yourself.”
-
-The speaker was merely one of the many hundreds of tramps for whom the
-Park was reception and bedroom combined. His hat was little more than
-a rim, and his trousers cried shame on the ladies I saw every day with
-their skirts plastered all over with buttons. His cheeks were hollow,
-his eyes preternaturally bright, and his breath full of hunger. Still,
-he was alive, and anything alive just then was very welcome.
-
-“I never sleep here,” he said; “none of us do.”
-
-“Why?” I asked.
-
-“Because it’s haunted,” he said. “You may laugh—so did I years ago,
-afore I took to this sort of thing. But sleeping out-of-doors all night
-has taught me more than any politicians, bishops, or schoolmasters
-know; or any of those fine ladies that swell about in their carriages
-know; I’ve seen sights that would make an hangel afraid; I’ve seen
-ghosts of all sorts. They’re not all like us, neither. Some of them
-ain’t human at all, they’re devils. You may laugh when you read about
-them in them library books, but it’s no laughing matter when you see
-them, as I’ve seen them, all alone and cold, in some wayside ditch.
-This tree, I tell yer, is ’aunted—and it’s a devil that ’aunts it. Ask
-my mates, any of them that you’ll find sleeping in the parks. There’s
-many of them that ’ave experienced it. They’ve seen something hiding in
-the branches, and when they’ve seen it, they’ve felt they must either
-kill themselves or someone else. There’s a devil in the tree that
-tempts one to do all kind of wicked things, and if you take my advice,
-young man, you’ll sit somewhere else.”
-
-“I think I will,” I said; “and here’s something for your warning.”
-I gave him threepence, the only coins I had on me just then, and,
-overwhelming me with thanks, he shuffled away.
-
-Since that night I have often thought that the poor—the very
-poor—know far more of the other world or worlds than do the rich,
-and that they know more—far more—on other points than the rich.
-The statesman talks of the people and the people’s needs, but what
-does he know of the people and their needs? He rarely, if ever, goes
-amongst them. Except in electioneering times, I doubt if any Member of
-Parliament ever goes into the more squalid of our London districts. I
-have seen one Member of the House of Lords eating whelks in a tavern
-in the Limehouse Causeway, but he is an exception. Journalists go
-there—but the leisured folk—never.
-
-It bores them; and yet how much they might learn, how much not only
-of urgent human needs, but of coming storms. They might learn that
-the East End brews whilst the West End sleeps, and that as surely as
-the long-talked-of German war cloud—that war cloud they affected to
-ridicule—has at last burst, so undoubtedly will the war cloud of
-revolution; revolution hatched by malcontents of all nationalities in
-East End doss houses and crowded coffee taverns.
-
-This is no empty prophecy. The cinders of the volcano have been hot for
-some time—they are now burning hot—and the hour is fast approaching
-when they will arise mightily in a red conflagration. Are we prepared
-for it? It takes a very sound constitution to face a revolution with
-perfect confidence. Are we sound? Can any constitution be sound when
-the rich daily grow richer, and the poor, poorer. Where Art—all that
-cries out for beauty, real beauty, beauty as it is seen and worshipped
-by souls uninspired by lucre—is starved to death and crushed, limp and
-lifeless, by the thumbscrews of a vain, shallow, mercenary mushroom
-aristocracy on the one hand, and an equally selfish, crude, ignorant,
-money-grabbing working class on the other. But let me say again it is
-the East End, the ever watchful, never slumbering East End, that is
-the thermometer of future events. And why? Because it is here that the
-lean, hungry men of letters, who seldom, if ever, get their thoughts
-transferred to print, are even now threshing out the nation’s destiny.
-Threshing it out, consolidating it, whilst the monied men and women,
-the present all-powerful nouveau riche—the beer, whiskey and tobacco,
-peers and peeresses—the lords of the Stock Exchange, Banks and Divorce
-Courts—those who have made their money out of the sins and follies
-of the world, or by sweating and usury, are lolling in their soft,
-upholstered chairs, smoking luxurious cigars and quaffing liqueurs.
-
-The war has done much: it has aroused patriotism, it has given rise to
-self-sacrifice, but it has not touched the root of the gangrene, it
-has not lessened our worship of the dollar. Individualism, as we know
-it to-day, must collapse, and some better and purer system—a system
-that does not encourage selfishness—must prevail. The people are dying
-for change—for some great change that will give them fair play. This
-is the people’s need—the need that you may hear voiced throughout
-the length and breadth of the squalid East End. “We want a Government
-that remembers its primary duties,” they cry. “A Government that is
-father to its children, that loves, fosters and protects them. We have
-never had one yet, but the hour may not be far distant when we shall
-demand one.” This is what the people of leisure might learn, if they
-visited the haunts I visit; and they might learn more beside. They
-might learn of another world, a spirit world, such as is never alluded
-to in the pulpits, with which people in the poorest parts—people who
-are too poor to pay for beds—are forced to live in contact. Nights
-in the parks and commons have taught these vagrants more, a thousand
-times more, than they ever learned in Sunday or County Council Schools.
-They have seen sights—spirits in the form of man and of beast, of
-both and of neither—that have revealed to them how closely the other
-world borders on this, and to what close supervision the inhabitants
-of the other world subject some of us. They have learned, I say, what
-no priest or preacher would, or could, teach them, namely, that the
-hell of spirit-land lies on this earth, and that the worst of all
-punishments is that of the poor phantasms of the dead, that glides in
-and out the trees nocturnally, never meeting those it knew and loved,
-but ever encountering the most terrifying of the spirits that are
-hostile to man.
-
-[Illustration: “What gives me the worst fright is a tree....”]
-
-Our vagrants know, too, the power of these neutrarians, they know they
-can adopt any shape, and tempt and goad man on to the committal of
-any crime, however heinous. They have, moreover, acquired a further
-knowledge—a knowledge denied and scoffed at by the ministry of all
-Christian denominations—namely that all forms of animal and vegetable
-life, all forms of flora and fauna, pass into the superphysical, and
-live again.
-
-I myself first learned of a tree ghost from an old tramp, who came and
-sat by my side on a seat on Clapham Common.
-
-“Do I ever see anything strange here at night?” he repeated in answer
-to my question. “Yes, I do, at times, but what gives me the worst
-fright is a tree that I sometimes see close to the spot where that man
-was murdered some ten or twelve years ago. I never saw it before the
-murder, but a few nights afterwards, as I was passing the spot, I saw
-a peculiar glimmer of white, and, on getting a bit closer, I found, to
-my astonishment, that it was a tall, slender white thing with branches
-just like a tree, only it was not behaving like a tree. Although there
-was not a breath of wind, it kept lurching with a strange, creaking
-noise, and I felt it was watching me, watching me furtively, just as if
-it had eyes, and was bent on doing me all the harm it possibly could.
-I was so scared, I turned tail, and never ceased running till I had
-reached home.”
-
-“Home!” I said.
-
-“Yes, a clump of bushes near the ditch, where I always turn in of
-nights. It ain’t much of a home, to be sure, but it’s the only one I’ve
-got, and I can generally count on lying there undisturbed till the
-morning.”
-
-I gave him a few coppers, and he blessed me as if I had given him a
-fortune.
-
-On Tooting Common I met a Northumberland miner, who had come to London
-for the first time on a holiday, and, having had his pocket picked,
-was obliged to spend the night out-of-doors. “Ghosts,” he said, when
-I asked him if he had any experiences with the supernatural whilst
-engaged in his underground work. “Ghosts! Yes, but of a nature you
-don’t read about in books. Me and my mates, when working in a drift
-at night, have heard the blowing of the wind and a mighty rustling of
-leaves, and have found ourselves surrounded on all sides by numerous
-trees and ferns that have suddenly risen from the ground and formed a
-regular forest. They have not resembled any trees you see now-a-days,
-but what you might fancy existed many thousands of years ago. There
-has been no colour in them, only a uniform whiteness, and they have
-shone like phosphorous. We have heard, too, all the noises, such as go
-on daily in forests above-ground—the humming and buzzing of insects,
-and the chirping of birds; and shafts and galleries have echoed and
-re-echoed with the sounds, till you would have thought that those away
-above us must have heard them, too.”
-
-I do not think the miner romanced, for what he said was only a
-corroboration of what other miners have often told me.
-
-Of course, it is not every mine that is haunted in this way, or
-every miner that sees such sights, for the Unknown confines its
-manifestations to the few, but I firmly believe such phenomena do
-happen, because as I state in my “Byways of Ghostland” (W. Rider &
-Sons), I have seen several tree ghosts myself. If one form of life
-possesses a spirit, why should we not assume that other forms of
-life possess a spirit, too? Why should man have the monopoly of an
-immaterial self, and alone of all creation continue his identity
-after physical dissolution? On moral grounds? No! For man, generally
-speaking, is in no sense superior morally to the so-called beasts
-around him. He is often the reverse. Oddly enough, we have so long
-accustomed ourselves to using the term immorality exclusively in
-reference to our illegal relations with the other sex, that we have
-come to regard these illegal relations as the only immorality existing.
-It is a curious error. Immorality comprises theft, and theft not only
-comprehends depriving people of their material goods, it comprehends
-slander and gossip—_i.e._, depriving people of their character;
-sweating—_i.e._, depriving people of the just rewards of their mental
-and manual labour; and bread-snatching,—_i.e._, depriving people of
-their only means of existence; beside many other acts of an equally
-odious nature. The average drawing-room is invariably the rendezvous
-of immoral people; nine out of every ten of the ladies one meets there
-are robbers—they steal, almost at very breath, someone’s good name and
-reputation, a far worse crime than the purloining of a loaf, for which
-act of desperation a poor man would be sent to prison, and a hungry dog
-beaten. In the drawing-room, too, one meets the girl with a few hundred
-a year, who announces her intention of taking some post—maybe on the
-stage, or on the staff of some paper, or in a business house, “just to
-make a little money.” A little money at the expense of someone else’s
-life! For that is what the want of occupation to the person with no
-private income literally means. We see none of this mean immorality in
-the animal world. Dogs steal bones from one another, it is true, but
-they do not lie, and cheat, and intrigue; nor do they, when they have a
-sufficiency themselves, snatch away the little that constitutes another
-person’s all.
-
-Animals are accused of being cruel—of barbarously murdering one
-another, as in the cases of the cat and mouse, the lion and deer,
-etc. But they rarely kill, saving when they are hungry, and for
-food man kills, too, in a fashion and with a method which is truly
-disgusting. By studiously looking after the daily wants of certain
-animals, such as cows and sheep, and by caring for them when they are
-ill, man leads them to suppose he is their friend, and they learn to
-trust him. Vain faith. He is kind to them only to suit his own ends.
-He out-Judas’s Judas, and after nonchalantly accepting their most
-lavish tributes of affection, he takes them unawares and kills them,
-either with a poleaxe, or some other weapon entailing an equally
-painful and lingering death. Do any animals behave quite so basely?
-Besides, there is no cruelty in the animal world—not even the most
-excruciating suction of the octopus, nor the sharp, agonising bite of
-the flesh-eating parrot of New Zealand—that can for one moment compare
-with the coolly planned and leisurely executed horrors of the Spanish
-Inquisition; and the tiger, at its worst, is but a tyro in savagery
-compared with the creature God is said to have made in His own image.
-
-From vices turn to virtues, and pause for a moment in reflection on
-the many lovable qualities of the dog. Where in man do we find such
-affection, forgiveness, general amiability, constancy and patience;
-and in the case of the horse, such a willingness to labour without
-any thought of recompense. It makes me positively ill, when I hear
-hopelessly immoral men and women—gossips, slanderers, breadsnatchers,
-usurers, sweaters—speak condescendingly of animals—of dogs and horses
-that are on an infinitely higher moral plane than ever they have been,
-or ever will be. But moral superiority is not the only superiority that
-man fallaciously assumes. He lays claim to an intellectual superiority,
-which is equally fallacious, equally a myth. No one who has ever
-studied animal and insect life can but have been impressed with the
-marvels of ingenuity and skill displayed therein. The web of the common
-garden spider and the nest of the wren, for example, are every whit as
-wonderful in their way as the architectural works of Inigo Jones or
-Christopher Wren. On the grounds of a moral and mental inferiority,
-therefore, the argument of a future life for the human species only,
-fails. Another argument, an argument advanced by the most bigotted of
-the religious denominationalists, is “that man only has a conscience,
-and that conscience which he alone possesses is the only passport to
-another world. Without conscience there can be no soul, and without
-soul there can be no hope of a continuation of life after death.”
-This, of course, is merely assumption, as is nearly all the teaching of
-the Churches. Conscience, like religion, depends to a very large extent
-on climate. A man born in the centre of Africa might not think it wrong
-to do things that would appear appalling to a Plymouth Brother, and
-vice versa. There is at present no fixed and universal standard of
-right and wrong, any more than there is a fixed and universal standard
-of beauty—for as each eye forms its own idea of feminine loveliness,
-so each heart forms its own conception of honour and dishonour, virtue
-and vice. We know that this is the case as far as mankind is concerned,
-and we have nothing beyond assumption to assure us that it is not
-so throughout the animal and insect world. If the animals have no
-conception of a moral standard, how is it that they do not destroy one
-another? That the instinct to injure people is innate in us is readily
-proved by the joy nearly all of us take in saying disparaging things
-of our neighbours. We go so far, and we would undoubtedly go the whole
-hog and kill those we hate, if something more, perhaps, than the mere
-fear of hanging did not hold us back. That restraining something is
-unquestionably the fear of the Future, and it is that fear which I
-am inclined to think is the origin of what we term our consciences.
-Were we sure there was no future existence, there would be no moral
-restraint (it would only be the prospect of legal punishment that would
-deter us from injuring other people to our heart’s content), we should
-have no consciences; and if this is applicable to mankind, why is it
-not applicable to other forms of animal life?
-
-Is it not feasible to suppose that it is this same fear of the
-future that acts as a preventive to animals killing one another
-indiscriminately? That they do at times rob and kill for other
-motives than to satisfy their hunger is indisputable, but these
-exceptional cases prove what I am trying to maintain—that there is
-some restraining influence that keeps the vast majority highly moral;
-and I see no feasible arguments for not supposing this influence to
-be a conscience begat by a deep-rooted fear of what may await them on
-physical dissolution.
-
-And if this applies to the mammals, why not to the whole animal,
-insect, and vegetable worlds—to everything that has life, for
-Science has yet to prove that where there is life, there is not also
-intelligence.
-
-The superior morality of animals to man, then, may be considered as
-due to their more powerful consciences, and to their stronger fear
-of the possibility of the superphysical. And why should they have a
-much stronger fear? Because, unquestionably, they have a more intimate
-knowledge of the Unknown than has man. No one who has had much to
-do with dogs and horses can doubt this. Who that has ridden through
-woods and jungles, or lonely country roads at night, has not seen
-their horse suddenly stop and evince every evidence of fear. Though
-the human eye has seen nothing to account for it, the horse obviously
-has seen something, and it has only been by dint of the utmost coaxing
-and petting that the sagacious animal has been persuaded to continue
-its course. It is the same with dogs. Over and over again I have had
-dogs with me in houses alleged to be haunted, and they have suddenly
-manifested symptoms of the greatest, the most uncontrollable fear. I
-have endeavoured to pacify them, to urge them to follow me, but it
-has been in vain; though obedient and fearless as a rule, they have
-suddenly become the most disobedient and incorrigible of cowards. Why?
-Because I am certain they have seen and heard things which, for some
-unaccountable reason, have been held back from me.
-
-If knowledge, then, of another life is any plea for the bestowal of an
-unperishable spirit, animals should live again even more surely than
-man. And so also should the vegetable world, for I have myself seen
-trees violently agitated, as if with paroxysms of the most sublime
-terror, before the advent of superphysical phenomena.
-
-And stronger than any of these arguments is that of the ghosts
-themselves. There are innumerable and well-authenticated cases of
-hauntings by the phantasms of dogs, horses, birds, insects, and trees,
-and it is, perhaps, chiefly through these hauntings that we can
-disprove the theory that man possesses a monopoly of the immaterial
-planes; a theory which, were it not for his insufferable egotism and
-conceit, he would never have advanced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-A HAUNTING IN REGENT’S PARK, AND MY FURTHER VIEWS WITH REGARD TO
-SPIRITUALISM
-
-
-Before concluding my experiences in the parks and commons of London, I
-will cite one other case, a case which serves to illustrate the theme I
-have just been discussing.
-
-I was visiting the Zoological Gardens in Regent’s Park, one day in the
-summer of 1898, and was so struck with the look of yearning in the eyes
-of one of the lions, the desperate look of yearning to have just five
-minutes’ gambol on the sunny lawn outside, five minutes in which to
-stretch its poor, cramped-up limbs, and sniff, perhaps for the first
-time, the fine fresh air of freedom, that I could not refrain from
-mentioning what was passing in my mind to a white-haired old man and a
-plainly dressed young woman, who were standing near.
-
-“Yes, sir,” the old man said. “It does seem hard on these huge animals
-to be confined within the limits of such a very small space and to have
-to pace up and down these little boxes, tantalised by the sight of
-other creatures enjoying the privileges that are denied to them. It is
-worse treatment than any meted out to criminals; in fact, the biggest
-ruffian in jail does not suffer in anything like the same degree as
-these animals. They have one thing to be thankful for, however—life
-cannot last for ever. Death will be their kindest friend. It is the
-rich man’s purgatory, but it is Paradise for all these creatures as
-well as for the poor man.”
-
-“You believe in another world, then?” I remarked.
-
-“Believe in another world?” he answered sharply, “why, of course I do.
-I have seen far too much of it to do otherwise, haven’t I, Minnie?”
-
-“Yes, Grandad,” the girl said simply.
-
-“We both have, Minnie and I,” the old man went on.
-
-“Spirits?” I enquired.
-
-“Yes, spirits. Ghosts, if you like,” he said.
-
-“Tell me. I’m not one of the scoffers,” I pleaded.
-
-He looked at me searchingly, and then said: “I used to be a keeper
-here many years ago. I was devoted to the animals, and when they died,
-I invariably saw their ghosts. So did some of the other keepers. Now
-don’t run away with the idea that the Gardens are haunted, sir. As far
-as I know, they are not. It was only to us who had so much to do with
-them when they were alive that the spirits of these animals appeared.
-I remember one instance in particular, about twelve years ago, just
-before I left the Zoo. A young lion came here from East Africa. It
-wouldn’t let any of the keepers go near it excepting myself, and it
-was generally regarded as having a very uncertain temper. But I never
-found it so. I knew that the reason of its restlessness was its hatred
-of confinement. I knew it hated its cage, and I used to do all I could
-to comfort it. There was a sort of mutual understanding between us.
-When it saw me looking a bit anxious and worried, for my wife was
-often ill, it used to come and rub its great head against me, as if
-to cheer me up, and when I saw it looking more than usually dejected,
-I used to stop and talk to it for a longer time than I talked to any
-one of the other animals. Well, one day it fell ill, caught a chill,
-so we thought, and evinced a strong dislike to its food. I discussed
-its case with the other keepers, and they agreed there was nothing to
-be alarmed about, as it was young and to all appearances healthy. We
-all thought it would be well again in a few days. I had gone home as
-usual one night, and was sitting in the kitchen reading the evening
-paper, when something came over me that I must go for a walk. I told
-Minnie, who was a little girl then, not more than nine or ten years
-of age, and she begged her mother to let her go with me. We started
-off with the intention of going to the Caledonian Road, as Minnie
-liked looking at the shops there, but we hadn’t gone far before Minnie
-suddenly exclaimed, ‘Grandad, let’s go to Regent’s Park.’ ‘Regent’s
-Park,’ I ejaculated; ‘whatever do you want to go there for at this time
-of night!’ ‘I don’t know,’ she said, ‘but I feel I must.’ ‘Well now,’ I
-replied, ‘that’s odd, because the very same feeling has come over me.’
-
-“We struck off down Crowndale Road—I was living in the neighbourhood
-of the St. Pancras Road then—and got to Gloucester Gate just about
-dusk. We had passed through, and were walking along the Broad Walk by
-the side of the Zoo, when Minnie suddenly caught hold of my arm, and
-said, ‘Look, Grandad!’ I followed the direction of her gaze, and there
-coming straight towards us from the Zoo walls was a lion. I can tell
-you it gave me a jump, as I naturally thought one of the animals had
-escaped. It aimed straight for us, and upon its getting close to I
-recognised it at once—it was the young lion that had been taken ill.
-To my astonishment, however, there was nothing of the invalid about
-it now. The expression in its eyes was one of infinite happiness. It
-seemed to say, ‘I have attained my ideal; I am out in the open, in
-the sweet, fresh air, and the wide darkness of the fast approaching
-night.’ It came right up to us, and I stretched out my hand to touch
-it, wondering what the passers-by would do when they saw it, and how
-on earth we should get it back into the gardens. It bitterly grieved
-me to think it would have to lose its freedom. I stretched out my
-hand, I say, to touch it, and to my surprise my fingers encountered
-nothing—the lion had vanished. I then realised what Minnie had known
-all along—that what we had seen was a ghost. A ghost, and yet it had
-appeared to me so absolutely real and life-like.”
-
-“How did you know it was a ghost?” I enquired of the young woman.
-
-“By the curious kind of light that seemed to emanate from all over
-its body,” she replied. “I can only describe it as a kind of glow,
-something like that of a glow-worm. It was not a bit natural.”
-
-“But you saw the figure distinctly?”
-
-“Yes,” she responded, “very distinctly, and I wasn’t the least bit
-afraid.”
-
-“Let me tell you the sequel, sir,” the old man interrupted. “On my
-arrival at the Zoo in the morning, one of the men came running up to
-me. ‘It’s dead!’ he said. ‘Dead!’ I cried. ‘Who’s dead?’ ‘Why, that
-young lion of yours,’ was the reply; ‘it died at eight o’clock last
-night.’
-
-“And, sure enough, when I went into the lion-house, there was the
-animal lying stretched out at full length in its cage—dead. It had
-died at eight o’clock, which was the exact time we had seen it in the
-park.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now to pursue the thread of my own life, which must of necessity
-run through this volume. While I was teaching at Blackheath, I not only
-completed my first novel, “For Satan’s Sake,” but studied for the stage
-at the Henry Neville Studio in Oxford Street. I shall never forget with
-what joy, when my duties with the spoilt and tiresome boys were over,
-I exchanged the terrible monotony of the schoolroom for the delightful
-and interesting atmosphere of the Studio. Henry Neville did not teach
-there himself, but periodically came to watch and help us with his
-criticisms, which were always as kindly and instructive as they were
-utterly free from pomposity and egotism. Easy and natural himself, he
-tried to infuse something of his spirit into us, and with many of us,
-I believe, he succeeded; for even those who did not believe that acting
-could be taught, were bound to admit that the pupils of Henry Neville
-were singularly free from the staginess almost always seen in amateurs,
-and sometimes in professionals as well.
-
-Henry Neville’s brother, Fred Gartside, who gave me my first lesson in
-elocution—an abler or more persevering instructor could not have been
-found—left off teaching at the Studio soon after I joined. Mr. G. R.
-Foss took his place, and is, I believe, still at the head of it.
-
-I have always looked upon G. R. Foss as one of the greatest stage
-geniuses I have ever met. He is that rarest of all individuals—the
-born actor—the man who can perform almost any _rôle_ with equal
-success. He is the ideal stage manager, a past master in the knowledge
-of all the technicalities adhering to the theatre, and the possessor of
-a never-ceasing flow of wit and good humour.
-
-Among the pupils who were at the Studio with me, several have performed
-in London. I toured with George Desmond, who was quite recently playing
-in the West End, and I met Miss Yvonne Orchardson again, some two or
-more years ago, when she was also acting in a London theatre, whilst I
-constantly see that charming and talented old Nevillite, Miss Lilian
-North, who delights London audiences with her sweetly told stories and
-good recitations. Apart from many other personal attractions, Miss
-North has the most beautiful hands; the fingers are long and tapering
-and the nails exquisitely shaped. It is the rarest combination of the
-psychic and dramatic hand, and such as I have very seldom seen saving
-among Orientals.
-
-If I have spoken somewhat extravagantly of the Neville Studio, its
-instructors and pupils, it is only what I genuinely feel, and I repeat,
-again, that the hours there were some of the most delightful I have
-ever experienced. When I had completed my course of instruction, I
-went on tour in “A Night Out.” I then came back to London and remained
-nearly a year in Town, writing in the day-time and playing in one or
-other of the suburbs in the evening. I lived, for the most part, in St.
-James’ Road, Brixton, where I wrote my second and third books, both
-novels, and entitled respectively “The Unknown Depths” and “Dinevah the
-Beautiful.”
-
-“The Unknown Depths,” founded to a large extent upon my own life,
-introduces the subject of Spiritualism, or, as it is now more often
-termed, Spiritism, and, whilst I was engaged on it, I attended many
-séances.
-
-I am often asked to express an opinion on Spiritualism.
-
-I am very averse from any attempt to invoke spirits, either through the
-aid of spells or mediums, by table-turning, or by automatic writing.
-As I have already said, I believe that genuine spirits do occasionally
-manifest themselves at séances, but that, when they do, the medium
-is quite as surprised at the manifestation as the sitters, and in no
-greater a degree, perhaps, responsible for it. I believe the spirit I
-have named neutrarian is the only type of spirit that takes advantage
-of a séance, that is to say, takes advantage of the peculiar magnetic
-atmosphere created at a séance. It adopts the form, or attributes, of
-some relative or friend of one of the sitters, and, thus disguised,
-manifests itself merely for the sake of deceiving and misleading
-over-credulous men and women. But unfortunately these spirits do not
-stop at mere mischief. Having once gained a footing, so to speak,
-they can attach themselves to certain people, and by tormenting them
-continually, drive them in the end to madness and suicide.
-
-In addition to the danger of attracting undesirable neutrarians at
-séances, there is the risk of being duped by mediums. I have met a
-good many professional mediums—so-called clairvoyants, aura tellers,
-psychometrists, materialising mediums, and the like, and none of
-them have convinced me that they can do all that they profess to do.
-Besides, even if they could, the mere suggestion that one’s spirit
-friend or relative is tapping on a wall or blowing through a trumpet,
-presumably to satisfy the curiosity of a number of strangers, and
-incidentally to fill the coffers of an illiterate man or woman, only
-fills one with disgust. If any departed friends of mine wish to visit
-me, I am sure they could do so without the assistance of a so-called
-medium and all their paltry paraphernalia. The usual argument in
-defence of these mediums is that some well-known scientific man
-believes in them. “If Sir somebody or other says I am genuine,” the
-clairvoyant exclaims, “then I am genuine, and you’ve no right in the
-world to doubt me.”
-
-The medium is wrong. I have every right. Scientists may be very shrewd,
-perhaps infallible in their own legitimate calling, but, outside it,
-their opinion need carry no more weight than mine, or yours, or anyone
-else’s.
-
-It by no means follows that because a man is a Professor of Physics
-he is also a great student of character. Poring over chemicals or
-figures all day is a very poor training for reading the human mind.
-An actor is a far more able exponent of psychology than any chemist
-or mathematician, and this being so, it is the actor who should play
-a prominent part in psychical research and not the scientist. If a
-veteran actor were to say to me, “Look here, I have watched that woman
-very carefully when she was supposed to go into a trance, and to speak
-in an entirely different voice from her own, and I am convinced she
-is merely acting,” I should be inclined to believe him. In his wide
-experience of facial expression, posing, and assumed voices, it would
-be comparatively easy for him to tell whether the medium was shamming
-or not. A clever actress can disguise her voice effectually, and no one
-would know it. She can speak with a French accent one moment and broad
-cockney the next, and so naturally that few people would know she was
-the same person. That is why, when I have listened to a clairvoyant,
-in an alleged trance, speaking in the voice of Tommy Jones or some
-other presumed obsessing spirit, I have been unmoved. There are a
-dozen actresses of my acquaintance who could easily do the same. But
-someone exclaims, “She actually spoke in Russian, a language she knows
-nothing about.” “How do you know she is unacquainted with Russian?”
-is my answer; no one can possibly tell that but herself. She has most
-likely acquired a smattering of it, simply for this purpose. What
-could be easier? I have a smattering of a good many languages, but I
-could easily stimulate complete ignorance of any one or all of them;
-I repeat, no one knows but ourselves how much we have seen, and read,
-and heard, where we have been, and what we have studied, and, if we
-are sufficiently clever, we can let the outside world know just as
-much as we want it to know and no more. Some mediums are said to act
-in one manner when they are obsessed, and in an entirely different
-manner when in their normal condition. What futile rubbish! Who knows
-when they are in their normal condition, or what their normal condition
-really is? Most of us are complex. I myself have several distinct
-personalities—and I defy anyone to enumerate them—any one of which
-might be equally my true, my normal self. Moreover, I might go into
-a trance, speak with the voice of a Spaniard, and behave like a Red
-Indian, and those who saw me would think me obsessed. Yet they might
-easily be mistaken. I might have secretly acquired a smattering of
-Spanish, and one of my hobbies might be that of imitating, in private,
-the ways and habits of a Sioux or Crow Foot.
-
-I know a clergyman who attracts large congregations by reason of his
-eloquence and apparent piety, and who is believed in his parish to be
-most moral and sincere. I also know him to spend several evenings a
-week in an East End tavern, singing ribald songs and playing poker.
-Which is his true self, which his normal condition? His congregation
-believe him to be one thing, his East End cronies another, and he is
-apparently quite as much at home in the church as he is in the tavern.
-
-Then, apart from the question of personalities, I believe another
-evidence of trickery lies in the non-usefulness of any of the
-communications alleged to be made by the spirits. If professional
-mediums could receive bona fide communications from the other world,
-I am quite sure that they would acquire some knowledge of a practical
-nature, and that we should, in consequence, soon see them all
-multi-millionaires. That they are not all Vanderbilts and Rothschilds
-is, I think, a very strong argument that their alleged spirit friends
-have told them nothing.
-
-And that is what it all amounts to—nothing. Automatic writing,
-table-turning, and trances have taught us absolutely nothing concerning
-either this or the other world, and the messages purporting to
-come from the spirits have hitherto, at all events, consisted of
-trivialities and commonplaces of such an unedifying nature that we
-cannot dissociate them from factory girls and nursemaids.
-
-Our friends on the other side, who have passed through the valley of
-the shadow of death, might reasonably be expected to know something
-that we do not; and yet not even the smallest fragment of their
-knowledge has so far been transmitted to us through any of the channels
-resorted to by Spiritualists. Neither, as far as I know, have the
-police benefited by any information imparted to them by mediums or
-automatic writers. On the other hand, although the Unknown has refused
-to confide to those claiming to be its chosen few any messages that
-would right the wrong, bona fide phantasms of the dead have certainly
-been known to appear spontaneously, to other than professional mediums,
-with this intent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I am acquainted with an old lady, who tells me that she often talks
-with Charles Dickens, Napoleon Bonaparte, Cardinal Newman and other
-eminents. I have enquired how, and she has reluctantly admitted that
-the spirits of these eminents come to her at a séance conducted by a
-professional medium, who, of course, is paid very liberally for her
-services. The medium, I gather, sits behind a screen, where she is
-supposed to wait, until she is obsessed. When everything is ready,
-she glides out, and in a voice purporting to be that of Napoleon, or
-of someone equally distinguished, she converses with this foolish and
-conceited old lady. It seems incredible that anyone outside a lunatic
-asylum could believe that the spirits of such great men as Napoleon,
-Newman and Dickens should take the trouble to obsess a medium, in order
-to chat with some nonentity, who is neither extraordinarily clever nor
-particularly interesting. And yet there are dozens of people, apart
-from the old lady I have mentioned, who know so little of genius and
-eminence, and even ordinary talent, as to believe this incongruous
-happening to be possible. I, myself, have heard a Spiritualist, who
-lays down the laws respecting the Unknown, as if he were actually
-the Creator, declare that, whenever he lectures, the hall is full to
-overflowing with spirits. Amongst them, he says, are the shades of
-Charles Dickens—there must be at least a hundred shades of Dickens,
-for there is hardly a spiritualistic meeting or séance that I hear
-of at which Dickens is not alleged to be present—Sir Isaac Newton
-and Napoleon. (Soon, perhaps, there will be the Kaiser and the Crown
-Prince. I hope so.)
-
-Family séances are, of course, quite another matter. I have not the
-least doubt that when the friends and relatives of some departed person
-meet together, and, concentrating very earnestly on that dead one being
-present, create the right magnetic atmosphere, that sometimes a real
-spirit manifestation does take place, and the phantasm of the deceased,
-or what at any rate purports to be the phantasm of the deceased, does
-actually appear.
-
-The phenomenon may possibly be a neutrarian—for, of course, there
-is always that risk—or it may really be the soul, spirit, or
-whatever else we like to call it, of the dead person. And here let
-me urge again, the utter absurdity of attempting to dogmatise on the
-Unknown. At one time it was the parson, who unfolded to us, with all
-the sageness of one who had been there, the mysteries of the other
-world. He not only told us what we must do and not do in order to
-ascend to Heaven, but he went a step further: he told us what Heaven
-was like, and what actually was taking place there. The parson of
-to-day, however, does not seem quite so sure of his knowledge on
-these points as he was formerly, and his statements have become far
-less assertive; indeed, they have become somewhat tentative. It is
-the Occultist now who dictates. He talks with an air of absolute
-authority of Astral Planes, Elementaries, Elementals, vitalised shells,
-Karmas, and goodness knows what besides, and uses such a variety of
-high-falutin’ terms, that our brains at last become bewildered, and
-we begin to wonder with Goldsmith how it is possible that one small
-head can carry all he knows. But when we have boiled it all down,
-when we have analysed his dissertation, we find that it is, in the
-last resort, merely a repetition of all the old doctrines with which
-we have been familiar from our earliest youth. The only difference is
-that our Occultist, chiefly by discarding the old names of dogmas, and
-adopting a superfluity of new ones, has made of these same doctrines a
-hotch-potch of such rare quality, that few—if indeed any—of us can
-digest it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-A HAUNTED MINE IN WALES
-
-
-While I was at Brixton, paying daily visits to various well-known
-theatrical agencies in search of work, I ran across the manager of a
-fit-up company, who wanted a man of about my age and build to play
-second lead in a melodrama. I closed with his offer, and for the next
-four weeks, which was as long as his funds held out, I paid three night
-visits to various towns in Wales, winding up at Llandudno, no better
-off financially than when I commenced, and having to pay my own fare
-back to London.
-
-If, however, my excursion into Wales was unprofitable from the monetary
-standpoint, it was by no means lacking in other respects, for, apart
-from the experience I gained from playing four entirely different parts
-a night, with two electric changes, I came across several interesting
-cases of hauntings.
-
-One of my landladies, a kindly old soul to whom I had chatted about
-ghosts, introduced me to an old man, Clem Morgan, whom she said had had
-a curious experience in one of the neighbouring mines. The incident had
-taken place some fifty years ago, shortly after a dreadful explosion,
-whereby many scores of the miners had been killed and injured. I will
-narrate the experience—merely altering the wording of it here and
-there—just as Clem Morgan narrated it to me:—
-
-“A thousand feet down, close to the site of a great tragedy that
-had thrilled the whole country to the very core, my mate and I were
-at work. Pick, pick, pick; shovel, shovel, shovel; the sound of our
-instruments must have been heard hundreds of yards away.
-
-“‘George,’ I said suddenly, leaving off work, ‘was it like this afore
-the accident?’
-
-“‘Like what?’ George grunted. He was a middle-aged man with a black,
-stubby beard, and arms like the gnarled and knotted branches of an oak.
-‘Like what?’
-
-“‘Why, as lonely as this? Were you working with just one other man, or
-were you with the rest of the gang?’
-
-“‘With one other,’ George responded, ‘and just as soft as you. Why
-can’t you let the matter drop? I’m sick to death of hearing about it.’
-
-“‘It’s a marvel to me how you escaped,’ I went on; ‘whereabouts were
-you?’
-
-“‘Just where we are now,’ George growled, ‘and that’s all I’ll tell
-you, so you’d best shut up!’
-
-“‘And you went up them steps with all the hell of the explosion ringing
-around you?’ I observed, advancing to the edge of the black shaft close
-to where we were working, and looking at the slender wooden ladder
-leading up to the dark vault above. ‘It’s a wonder to me you didn’t
-miss your footing in your hurry, and fall. I should have done.’
-
-“‘I’ve no doubt you would,’ George sneered, ‘but I’m no tenderfoot; I
-was at this game when you were in your cradle, which you never ought to
-have left.’
-
-“‘How many feet down is it?’ I went on, peering below me, much
-fascinated.
-
-“‘Fourteen fathoms. We don’t reckon by feet here. Done with that way of
-doing things in the schoolroom.’
-
-“‘So that you would be killed outright, if you fell?’
-
-“‘Try and see,’ George jeered.
-
-“‘It’s my brother I was thinking of, not myself,’ I observed. ‘Where
-was he exactly, when the explosion took place?’
-
-“‘How can I say, boy,’ George replied, irritably. ‘I don’t know where
-half the folk are.’
-
-“‘They told me he was in an adit leading into the main shaft.’
-
-“‘He may have been, for all I know—and for all I care,’ George
-answered gruffly.
-
-“‘Do you suppose it was here he was working?’ I said, after a moment or
-two’s pause, during which I again went to the shaft and peered down.
-
-“‘This is not the only adit on the main,’ George growled. ‘He wasn’t
-here—leastways not when I was.’
-
-“‘I heard he was with a man he unintentionally injured, and who ever
-after bore him a grudge.’
-
-“‘Oh, oh!’ George exclaimed; ‘so you know as much as that, do you? And
-what, pray, was this man like?’
-
-“‘I couldn’t say,’ I replied, ‘excepting that he was much older than
-Dick, and very ugly.’
-
-“‘A description that would fit in with dozens down here. If he was
-working with your brother, and your brother was killed, the odds are he
-was killed too.’
-
-“‘You think so?’
-
-“‘It seems reasonable enough, don’t it?’ George said.
-
-“‘He might have escaped like you did.’
-
-“‘He might,’ George laughed, ‘just in the same way as pigs might fly.
-Supposing you get on with your work and let me do the same.’
-
-“‘I had a queer dream about that man,’ I went on.
-
-“‘Dreams! Pooh! Who believes in dreams!’ George said. ‘What was it?’
-
-“‘Why, I dreamed he had something to do with Dick’s death and with the
-accident.’
-
-“‘You had better tell the Inspector,’ George sneered. ‘And maybe he’ll
-alter his verdict. You seem to have been very fond of this brother of
-yours. You’ve done nothing but carp about him all the morning.’
-
-“‘I was,’ I replied. ‘So were we all. He kept the home going for the
-last six years.’
-
-“‘Kept the home going! Why, where was you?’
-
-“‘At College, studying for a teacher. I gave it up after his death.’
-
-“‘A schoolmaster! Well, I’m blowed. Then you didn’t see much of Dick?’
-
-“‘Only in the holidays.’
-
-“‘And who told you about this fellow who was supposed to have had a
-spite against him?’
-
-“‘Mother.’
-
-“‘It was your mother, was it? Only hearsay evidence after all. Well,
-they’re both dead, anyhow—good and bad, and bad and good—all went
-together—in a moment, boy! What do they call you?’
-
-“‘Clem.’
-
-“‘Well, Clem, get on with your shovelling for mercy’s sake. I’ve had
-enough of talking to last me to the end of the week.’
-
-“I took up my spade, and for the next hour there were no other sounds
-but the steady, mechanical pick, pick, pick, and scrape, scrape,
-scrape. Every now and then George sprang aside, there was a crash, and
-a huge block of coal fell on the rocky floor, mid a blinding shower of
-dust. A fraction of a second later, and George would have been under
-it—his head a jelly. Yet the narrowness of his escape did not seem to
-affect him; he treated it with the utmost indifference, and, wiping
-away the smuts from his eyes, took up his pick and resumed his hitting.
-I regarded him in silent wonder. When the dinner-hour arrived, I groped
-my way to one of the big galleries—the idea of eating alone with
-George did not appeal to me—and, an hour later, I set out on my way
-back.
-
-“A terrible sense of isolation hung over that part of the mine
-whither I bent my steps. It was so far away from the other adits—so
-tremendously deep down—so alarmingly dark, so sepulchrally silent. Up
-above, in the fields, woods, valleys, even far away in the primitive
-parts of the world, one is never quite alone, for the voice of Nature
-makes itself heard in the birds and insects. One knows one is in the
-midst of life. But here!—here in the bowels of the earth, encased in
-the dead vegetation of a long-forgotten world, there is absolute, all
-paramount stillness—a thousand times stiller than the stillness of
-a closed sepulchre. As I pressed on, the crunching of my feet on the
-scattered fragments of coal awoke the echoes of the galleries, and I
-paused every now and then to listen in awe to the long reverberating
-echoes as they rolled round and round me. Once, I nearly slipped;
-another foot, and I would have plunged into a sable labyrinth, the cold
-draught from which wound itself round me and choked the air in my lungs.
-
-“I drew back in horror, and clinging to the knobbly surface of the
-black wall by my side, pressed frantically forward. God, supposing I
-should ever lose my way down here—be left behind when all the men went
-home—what would become of me? The perspiration rose on my forehead at
-the bare idea of it. Presently, to my relief, the sound of picking fell
-on my ears, and an abrupt turn of the passage brought me within sight
-of George, who had already recommenced work. I hastened to his side,
-and, picking up my shovel, began to make a neat stack of the rapidly
-accumulating chunks.
-
-“‘George,’ I said, after an emphatic silence, ‘why didn’t you tell me
-it was you who was working along with Dick?’
-
-“‘So you’ve been asking questions, have you?’ George growled, without,
-however, showing the slightest inclination to leave off working. ‘Who
-told you?’
-
-“‘Jim and Harry Peters.’
-
-“‘Well, and what of it?’
-
-“‘But why didn’t you say so, when I asked you?’
-
-“‘What odds if I had, it wouldn’t have done you any good.’
-
-“‘Did you have a quarrel with him?’
-
-“‘Did the boys tell you I had? Because if so, it’s no use my saying
-anything.’
-
-“‘But what do you say?’
-
-“‘No! Dick and me never had no quarrel.’
-
-“‘Is that true?’
-
-“‘Gospel.’
-
-“After this there was another silence unbroken save by the monotonous
-handling of the implements. Then I suddenly uttered an ejaculation and
-pointed at my cap. It was lying on the ground, some few feet from where
-we were working, close beneath a projecting block of coal, and it was
-moving—moving as if it were being violently agitated by something
-inside it.
-
-“‘What is it?’ I demanded.
-
-“‘What is what?’ George growled, resting for a moment on the handle of
-his pick.
-
-“‘Why, that!’ I said, pointing to my cap. ‘What makes it move like
-that?’
-
-“‘The wind, of course,’ George said.
-
-“‘There’s not enough draught for that. See!’ I placed a piece of
-paper on the ground within an inch or two of the cap, and it remained
-perfectly still. ‘Something must be underneath it.’ I picked the cap
-up, there was nothing there. ‘What do you think of it now?’ I asked.
-
-“George made no reply. He turned round, so that I could not see his
-face, and plied his pick vigorously. After a few minutes I stopped work
-again.
-
-“‘George,’ I cried, ‘what’s the matter with your coat? Look! It’s doing
-just as your cap did.’
-
-“George threw down his pick with an oath.
-
-“‘What do you want to keep worrying me for?’ he said. ‘What’s wrong
-now?’
-
-“‘Why, your coat! Look! it’s moving—rising up and down as if the wind
-were blowing it—and there’s not an atom of draught.’
-
-“‘It’s your fancy,’ George said hoarsely. ‘The coat’s not moving.’
-
-“‘What,’ I cried, ‘do you mean to say you can’t see it moving?’
-
-“‘No,’ George replied. ‘It’s not, I tell you.’ And picking up his tool
-he set to work again, even more vigorously than before.
-
-“Some minutes later I again stopped. ‘Heavens!’ I exclaimed. ‘Look at
-my lamp! It’s burning blue! What makes it do that?’
-
-“George paused—his pick shoulder high—and looked round. ‘Nonsense,’
-he said savagely. ‘You are——’ Then he left off and his jaws dropped.
-‘It must be some chemical in it,’ he stammered. ‘Let the damned thing
-be; it’ll soon right itself.’
-
-“‘This is a strange place, George!’ I said slowly.
-
-“‘Why strange?’ George snapped.
-
-“‘Well, first of all there was my cap, then your coat, and now the
-lantern—all doing something queer. Have you ever known the likes of it
-before?’
-
-“‘Often,’ George muttered. ‘Scores of times. Funny things is always
-happening below ground; you’ll get used to them in time.’
-
-“‘And yet you look a bit scared.’
-
-“‘Do I?’ George grunted. ‘Well, I’m not. By ——, I’m not. You can’t
-always judge by looks, you know.’ And, raising his pick, he attacked
-the coal furiously.
-
-“The afternoon was now waning. Outside, away on the top, where the only
-roof was the heavens, the sun had sunk to the level of the pine-trees,
-from whose straight and gently-swaying bodies the grotesque shadows of
-the night were beginning to steal. It is a peculiarity of the mines
-that, however deep down they may be, they yet feel the influence of
-time, and the departure of the sunlight from above creates an immediate
-increase in the gloom below.
-
-“On this afternoon in particular I felt the change acutely. A darkness,
-that did not seem to be merely the darkness due to time, stole down
-the pit’s mouth and permeated adits, shafts, galleries—everywhere and
-everything.
-
-“My light was still burning blue, but beyond it, down in the great,
-gaping chasm, not ten feet from him, and away along the narrow, winding
-passage separating me from the rest of the gang, all was black—a
-denser black than I had conceived possible. I was staring around, too
-fascinated to go on with my work, when something icy cold gripped my
-fingers, and, looking down, I saw a big, white hand lying on the top of
-mine. I gave a yell and dropped my shovel—whereupon the hand vanished.
-
-“‘What’s the matter now, curse you!’ George said angrily. ‘If you keep
-on hindering me like this, I’ll tell the overseer. See if I don’t.’
-
-“‘The place is haunted,’ I gasped. ‘A hand caught hold of mine just
-now.’
-
-“‘A hand! Rot. What next?’ And George forced a laugh.
-
-“‘I’m certain it was a hand,’ I said, ‘and it had a ring on like my
-brother Dick’s.’
-
-“‘You’ve got Dick on the brain, which is only natural, seeing that you
-was fond of him, and he only just dead. In a few days’ time you will
-get over it and laugh at your present fears. There’s no hands here but
-yours and mine, lad!’
-
-“‘Aren’t there?’ I said quietly. ‘Then what is that just below yours on
-the pick.’
-
-“George looked down. Instead of two hands—his own two hands—on the
-pick, there were three, and the third was white and luminous. With a
-shriek, George dropped the pick, and sprang away from it, as if it had
-been a serpent.
-
-[Illustration: “My God! There’s Dick! He’s just behind you”]
-
-“‘Do you believe me now?’ I remarked. ‘If that wasn’t Dick’s hand, I’ve
-never seen it. Besides, I could swear to his ring among a thousand.
-Have you noticed how dark it has been getting?’
-
-“‘I’ve noticed nothing,’ George muttered, picking up his tool. ‘It’s
-all your talk that has done it—you’ve upset my nerves.’ He raised his
-pick and began to work again, but his hands shook so much he struck his
-leg and dropped the implement with a cry of pain.
-
-“‘It’s nothing,’ he growled, as I sprang to his side; ‘only the skin
-grazed. But I reckon I’ll sit down a bit—I’m all of a tremble.’
-
-“He had moved nearer to the edge of the pit, and was about to sit
-down with his back towards it, when I cried, ‘My God! There’s Dick!
-He’s just behind you. He’s pointing at you, George. I see it all now!
-George, you devil—you murdered him!’
-
-“George looked round—and there, bending over him, was a tall figure,
-with a strangely white face. He threw out his hands to keep the figure
-off, and, as he did so, he slipped, and fell, with one loud yell of
-terror, into the pit. I heard him strike the side of the great abyss
-once—then thud—that was all!
-
-“Sick at heart, I reeled back to the safety of the niche where we had
-been working, and, as I did so, my eyes fell on the lamp—the flame was
-now white and normal.
-
-“A rescue party that went in search of George found him in a dying
-condition at the bottom of the shaft. The fact that he was not killed
-outright was due to his having fallen in a foot or two of mud and
-water, which had somewhat broken the force of the concussion. He was
-fatally injured, but he lingered just long enough to confess that he,
-and he only, was to blame for the recent disaster. He had had a violent
-quarrel with Dick, whom he had hated, and, when Dick’s back was turned,
-he had struck him over the head with his pick and killed him. Seized
-with horror, he then dragged Dick’s body into the passage, and, in
-order to minimise the risk of discovery, had saturated it with paraffin
-and set fire to it. He had had just time enough to reach the ladder
-leading up from the shaft, and climb up it, before the explosion had
-taken place.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Welsh miners are at times magnanimous, and on this occasion they
-agreed to keep George’s crime a secret. To give publicity to the
-affair, they argued, would not give them back the relatives they had
-lost, and would only do harm to the dead man’s widow and family, who
-were left almost penniless. Thus the matter ended, and to the outside
-world the cause of the explosion remained, as before, a mystery.
-
-Of course, it may be said of this case that it has no great value
-from the evidental point of view, no one having witnessed the ghostly
-happening but Morgan and the man who was subsequently killed. This may
-be. At the same time much depends upon the character of a witness, and
-the evidence of one man, who is reliable, is surely worth more than the
-evidence of several men who are not reliable.
-
-Morgan told his story in a simple, straightforward manner, and I
-believed him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE POOL IN WALES THAT LURES PEOPLE TO DEATH
-
-
-I think there is very little doubt that two of the mediums through
-which the occult forces “get at” humanity are colour and locality.
-Red, for example, being the colour of blood, is made the medium for
-instilling thoughts of murder; green, in a similar manner, is used to
-suggest suicide by drowning; yellow suggests madness; pink—vice of the
-most alluring and attractive nature; and so on, until, by a careful
-study of human crimes in their relation to colour, one might tabulate a
-complete list.
-
-And so with localities. Certain spots attract certain types of spirits,
-and these, in turn, suggest certain thoughts, some beautiful and some
-the reverse.
-
-I was still in North Wales, when, a week or so before the expiration
-of the tour, I did a day’s tramping on the hills, and, being caught in
-a heavy rain-storm, I had to take shelter under one of those low stone
-walls with which the whole country-side is intersected. The afternoon
-was drawing to a close, and the fading light made me a bit anxious as
-to how I should find my way back to my lodgings. As I was crouching
-there, praying to heaven that the storm would soon cease, so that I
-could continue my way, I suddenly heard a loud cry, as of someone in
-distress, and, on its being repeated, I scrambled up and hastened in
-the direction of the sounds. About a hundred yards further on there
-was a break in the wall, and I caught the glimmer of water. It was one
-of those roadside pools, not uncommon in Wales, and usually of great
-depth. As I drew nearer, I saw it was fringed on the far side by a
-cluster of tall pines, that creaked and groaned dismally as the strong
-west wind drove volumes of water through their bowed branches.
-
-I was noticing all this, when the form of a man in a mackintosh rose
-from the gorze close by my side, and, thrusting his head forward so
-that I could not see his face, walked with great swinging strides
-towards the pool. I thought this rather queer, but I thought it
-still queerer when the cries I had heard before broke out again with
-increased violence, unmistakably this time from the trees, and the man,
-breaking into a run, rushed up to the margin of the pool, where he
-abruptly disappeared.
-
-I was close behind him at the time, and am positive he did not enter
-the water. His whole body seemed to melt away as he stood on the bank.
-What became of him I could not say, I only know he vanished. The
-incident so unnerved me that it was only with a considerable effort
-of mind I went on. I threaded my way through the trees, and looked
-everywhere, but there was no one about and nothing whatever, as far as
-I could see, to account for the sounds. I looked at the water: it was
-inky black, and there was something sinister about it, something that
-strangely suggested to me, that away down in its cold, still depths
-was life—some peculiar, venomous, repellant living thing that was
-watching me, and longing to entwine its arms round me, and drag me
-ruthlessly down. I was appalled. The apparent loneliness of the spot
-was frightful, and, as I tore myself away and renewed my journey home,
-I fancied I heard laughter—laughter in which all the trees seemed to
-join in chorus. On arriving at my rooms, I enquired about the pool, and
-my landlady informed me it bore a very evil reputation. Several people
-had been found drowned there, and no one would go near it after dark.
-This stimulated me to make further enquiries. I came across one or two
-men who testified to having heard cries there, and one old woman, who
-declared she had seen a curious figure, half human and half animal,
-vanish in the pine trees; but I could get nothing in the way of details
-for some months, not until I had returned to London, when, quite by
-chance and under rather extraordinary circumstances, I was introduced
-to a man, long since dead, who many years before had had a somewhat
-harrowing experience there. The gist of what he narrated to me was as
-follows:—
-
-“Philip Delaney was a member of the London Stock Exchange, and at
-nine-thirty one August evening was sitting before the empty grate in
-his study, smoking. Though not naturally a pessimist, his thoughts
-were at that moment excessively gloomy; business during the past few
-years had been steadily getting worse and worse, and it now seemed as
-if the day of general stagnation must be very near at hand. From an
-average of fifteen hundred a year his income had fallen to less than
-eight hundred. Consequently, he could not as usual take his holiday
-abroad; he could only just afford to send his wife and children to
-Hastings, where he might possibly be able to join them for week-ends.
-As a fitting accompaniment to his thoughts, the weather was vile, cold
-and wet—eternally wet. He could hear the raindrops beating against
-the glass, and falling on the window-sill with an incessant, wearying
-and worrying patter. He was too depressed to read, it was too early
-to sleep, he could only sit and think, everlastingly think. Indeed,
-he was deeply engaged in thought—thought in which two, and two and a
-half percentages were paramount—when, hearing someone cough, he turned
-sharply round. No one was there.
-
-“This was odd. He could have sworn the sound came from just behind
-him. With his eyes focussed on the door, he listened. The cough
-was repeated, footsteps accompanied it, and from out of the wall
-stepped the figure of a man. Philip Delaney gasped in astonishment.
-He recognised the figure at once. It was Markham Davidson, a very old
-friend of his, the author of several well-known works on Metaphysics
-and Psychology. There was nothing peculiar about him—features,
-complexion, expression, clothes, and walk were all perfectly natural.
-They belonged to the Markham Davidson he knew, but whom he had not
-seen for ages. And yet, how, if he were flesh and blood, had he passed
-through several inches of solid brick and mortar? How? Unquestionably
-he could not have done so, unless—well, unless he had suddenly
-acquired superphysical properties, and projected his immaterial body
-after the manner of one of the phantasms about which he was so fond
-of writing. Walking across the room with a quick tread, the figure
-displayed certain mannerisms—a forward poke of the head, a prematurely
-old stoop of the shoulders, and a bend of the arms—unmistakably
-those of Davidson. Delaney noted, too, that Markham looked remarkably
-well—his cheeks were ruddy and full, his eyes were bright, his
-movements full of energy. In one hand he carried a stamped envelope,
-and in the other an umbrella, with which he tapped the ground
-vigorously as he walked. He moved in a straight line without looking
-to the right or left, and, stepping into the wall a few feet from the
-window, disappeared before Delaney could utter a sound.
-
-“As the whole occurrence had occupied so short a space of time—three
-or four seconds at the most—Delaney tried hard to persuade himself
-that the phenomena was an hallucination, but, try as he would, he
-could not bring himself to believe that what he had seen was entirely
-subjective. There on the wall was the very spot where the figure had
-emerged, and there, exactly opposite, the very spot through which it
-had vanished. No hallucination, he argued, could have been so vivid,
-nor could it have embraced so many graphic and minute details. Details!
-Yes, crowds of details. He remembered them all distinctly, especially
-the tie. There was a redness about it—a very peculiar redness he did
-not recollect seeing in any other tie. It impressed him greatly, and he
-could not eradicate it from his mind.
-
-“He noticed the envelope, too, not so much because it was addressed to
-P. Delaney, Esq., as because it was white, startlingly white, whilst
-the stamp was the same very pronounced red as the tie. Long after the
-figure had gone, Philip pondered over these idiosyncrasies, and the
-more he thought of them, the more perplexed he grew. What he had seen
-was, without doubt, the phantasm of Markham Davidson—of the living
-Markham Davidson, identical with his old friend, Markham Davidson, in
-all but the colour of the tie. Red, blood-red! What one earth could
-have possessed Davidson to wear such a colour! He pondered over this as
-deeply as though it had been one of the most weighty problems of the
-Stock Exchange, and when he went to bed that night and looked in his
-mirror, he saw, instead of his own tie, a blood-red one.
-
-“His dreams took disturbing forms. Three times following he saw Markham
-Davidson struggling for dear life in a dreary looking pool, situated
-by the side of a very lonely mountain road, and overshadowed by tall
-pines, that creaked and groaned like lost souls every time the wind
-smote them. With such perspicuity were the details in these dreams
-stamped on his mind, that each time he awoke he saw them again; there
-they were, everywhere he turned—the glimmering white road with the
-wide expanse of snow on one side and on the other the long line of low
-stone wall, beyond which lay darkness and the pool. Heavens! what a
-pool it was—inky black, unfathomably deep, and hideously suggestive of
-an antagonistic, insatiable something that lay crouching in its bosom,
-ever on the look-out for prey.
-
-“Delaney was fascinated. Although he realised that the very atmosphere
-of the place was intensely evil, that it had a wholly demoralising
-effect and contaminated everybody and everything that came near it,
-although absolutely he understood all this, yet he allowed himself to
-be drawn unresistingly towards it.
-
-“When he awoke from one vision of it, he craved heaven and hell to
-permit him to see another. And in this manner he passed the whole night.
-
-“On coming down to breakfast, the first thing that arrested his
-attention was an envelope—an envelope addressed to him in the
-well-known writing of Markham Davidson. He tore it open, and with
-breathless excitement read as follows:—‘Dear Phil,—It is a very
-long time since I heard from you.... An irresistible craze has just
-come over me to go to North Wales. Strange, because, as I daresay you
-remember, I have always detested Wales. Now, however, I am eaten up
-with a mad desire to go to Llanginney, an out-of-the-way spot somewhere
-near Cader Idris. I never heard of it till yesterday, when it suddenly
-attracted my attention as I was gazing at an atlas. Will you join me
-there for a day or two? I go to-morrow (Wednesday), and intend staying
-a week. It would be very pleasant once again to tramp the country-side
-with you....’
-
-“Delaney looked at the postmark; it was stamped 11.30 p.m. Could
-Davidson have been on the way to the pillar-box, when he (Delaney) had
-seen his phantasm? If that were so, then, undoubtedly, it was a case
-of unconscious projection. Markham, whilst thinking of him (Delaney)
-in connection with the invitation to Llanginney, had unconsciously
-separated his immaterial from his material body and projected it.
-Delaney had read one or two works on psychic phenomena, and understood
-from them that spirit projection was not only quite feasible but far
-from uncommon. However, he could not accept Davidson’s invitation. He
-had not the money. Go to Llanginney, indeed! Why, Davidson might as
-well have asked him to travel to Petrograd. And yet—the pool, that
-white road, those shaking pine-trees, that lurking invisible something.
-Could he resist? For a solid hour he battled with himself, battled till
-the sweat rose to his brow and poured down his throat and chest. Then
-he decided. To join Davidson was utterly out of the question. He had
-neither the time, money, nor inclination. Like the majority of writers,
-Davidson was a creature of impulse—erratic and irresponsible. He,
-Philip Delaney, was different. He was a materialist, wholly practical
-and level-headed. He never acted on the spur of the moment, never
-chased wild geese. In a very superior frame of mind he sat down and
-wrote to Davidson, expressing his extreme regret at not being able to
-accept his invitation. Then he got up, breathed a sigh of relief, and,
-clapping on his hat, went off to business.
-
-“All that day, however, whilst he was brooding over figures in his
-office, and listening to the ceaseless babble at the ‘Change, his mind
-reverted to the pool. It was that black piece of water, always that
-water, and Davidson in his red tie, always that particular red tie,
-struggling in it. At last he could stand it no longer. He felt that
-even if he had to sell his wife, and house, and children, he must yield
-to this attraction—this damnable attraction—and go!
-
-“Darting out of his office, shortly after luncheon, he hurried to the
-railway station and took the first train home. In less than half an
-hour he had made all the necessary arrangements for a brief absence,
-packed his valise and secured a hansom. (All this happened long before
-the advent of taxis.)
-
-“The train was an express to Chester, but the rest of the journey was
-slow, and it was nine o’clock before he found himself on the single
-platform of Llangelly, the nearest station to Llanginney.
-
-“Delaney enquired as to how he was to reach his destination, and was
-informed by the solitary porter that, if he wished to get there, he
-must walk.
-
-“‘There ain’t no vehicles for hire in this part of the country,’ the
-porter said. ‘Everyone that comes here has to use their feet. You can’t
-mistake the road. You’ve only to keep straight on—and you are bound to
-arrive there.’
-
-“Delaney smiled grimly. He felt as little like walking as he had ever
-done in his life, and, besides his gladstone, he had a raincoat and
-umbrella.
-
-“Fortunately the night was fine, and ere he had covered his first
-half-mile, the moon broke out from behind a cloud and illuminated the
-entire landscape. For the next mile or two the road was fairly flat,
-and then it gradually began to rise, the scenery becoming wilder
-and wilder. Every now and then he paused, and, throwing back his
-head, drank in deep breaths of the heather-scented air. Delicious!
-What a change from London! He calculated he must have done about
-three-quarters of the distance, when he arrived at a turning—the
-entrance to a lane—a lane that at once made him shudder. He paused
-opposite the turning, and tried to find some explanation for his fear.
-
-“It was certainly very lonely, and the white patches of moonlight on
-the footpath and hedgerows suggested much; but, after all, it was only
-suggestion—suggestion which a few sunbeams would at once dissipate. He
-was standing within the shadow of a clump of firs facing the lane, and
-looking intently ahead of him, when, at a distance of some fifty or so
-yards, the figure of a man in a mackintosh slowly emerged from a gap in
-the hedge.
-
-“The man merely glanced in Delaney’s direction, and then, turning
-round, moved on down the lane. But the glimpse, momentary though it had
-been, was sufficient to enable Delaney to identify the person. It was
-Davidson; he knew him at once by his mannerisms, and he instinctively
-felt he had on that tie—that flagrantly vulgar, blood-red tie. In an
-instant he formed a resolution. He would give his friend a surprise.
-With this intention in view he dropped his valise, and, stepping
-noiselessly forward, he followed Davidson. On and on they went, the one
-keeping fifty or so yards behind the other, till there came a sudden
-bend in the lane, and then Delaney received a shock. Spread out before
-him, exactly as he had seen it in his dreams, was the panorama of the
-white glimmering road with the wide, wild expanse of moorland on one
-side, and on the other the long line of wall, and—the pool. Nothing
-could have been more like, and it was intensified by the brilliancy
-of the moonbeams. Crouching in the heather, Delaney watched Davidson
-slowly walk up to the edge of the water, fold his arms, and gaze in a
-reflective manner into the shadowy depths. The moments flew by, and
-still he gazed. Then there came a brief, distracting interval, during
-which the moon disappeared behind a bank of black, funereal clouds.
-When it emerged, the figure of Davidson had vanished, and Delaney
-occupied the spot where he had stood.
-
-“‘The pool, the greedy, insatiable pool!’ he muttered. ‘Dark, deep and
-devilish. The three D’s. I might even add a fourth—damnable!’ And
-turning round with a chuckle, he was preparing to go, when someone
-vaulted the stone wall to his left and rapidly approached him.
-
-“‘You don’t mean to say you are still pottering about here,’ the
-stranger, a man about Delaney’s own height and build, panted. ‘I
-thought you had returned to the inn long ago.’ Then, perceiving his
-mistake, he said in amazement, ‘Why, it’s someone else! I beg your
-pardon, sir; I quite thought you were an acquaintance of mine.’
-
-“‘Davidson, by any chance?’ Delaney asked pleasantly.
-
-“‘Yes, Markham Davidson,’ the stranger said in astonishment. ‘Do you
-know him, too?’
-
-“‘I am his old friend,’ Delaney laughed, ‘and I am on my way to join
-him at Llanginney. I merely stopped here to look at the pool.’
-
-“‘The pool,’ the stranger ejaculated, eyeing him curiously. ‘It is not
-the pleasantest place in the world, is it?’
-
-“‘No,’ Delaney replied, ‘but it has its fascination. Where did you
-leave Davidson?’
-
-“‘At the entrance to this lane half an hour ago,’ the stranger
-answered, scanning the dark surface of the water anxiously. ‘I wanted
-to get as far as the brow of the hill over yonder, but, as Davidson
-complained of feeling tired, I set out alone. He said he would follow
-me slowly and wait for me somewhere about here. Did you by any chance
-hear a cry?’
-
-“‘A cry!’ Delaney exclaimed. ‘A cry? No. Did you?’
-
-“‘I thought I did,’ the stranger said, moving away from the edge of
-the water; ‘that is why I hurried here. Perhaps he is somewhere about.
-Supposing we call.’
-
-“They shouted till they were hoarse, and the great hills opposite
-hurled back the echoes of their voices, but there was no other reply.
-Not a sign of Davidson. At last the stranger touched Delaney on the arm.
-
-“‘Come,’ he said with a shiver, ‘the night air is cold. Davidson must
-have gone back to the inn, and unless we make haste we shall be locked
-out. They go to bed at eleven.’
-
-“Very reluctantly Delaney gave up the search, and the men were soon
-tramping along the road in silence—each apparently too pre-occupied
-with their own thoughts to speak. Occasionally Delaney glanced covertly
-at his companion, and whenever he did so, he surprised the latter
-in the act of peeping cautiously at him. Eventually the lights of
-Llanginney hove in view, and several of the other visitors at the inn
-strolled out to meet them.
-
-“‘No, Davidson has not returned,’ was the reply to their enquiries. ‘We
-have seen nothing of him since you left. It’s not eleven yet, however;
-he has still half an hour, and on such a night as this it would be
-practically impossible to lose one’s way.’
-
-“Delaney engaged his bed, and half an hour later, as Davidson had not
-yet come back, he made his way to the landlord’s private parlour. On
-the threshold he met his recent companion.
-
-“‘Who is he?’ he enquired of the landlord, directly the door was
-closed, and he heard the stranger’s footsteps echoing softly down the
-passage.
-
-“‘Who is he?’ the landlord sleepily exclaimed. ‘Why, Mr. Hartney, a
-London lawyer. Quite a well-known man in town, so I’m told. No, he has
-never been here before, and as far as I’m aware he had never met Mr.
-Davidson till to-day. Will I send someone to look for Mr. Davidson?
-Why, that is what Mr. Hartney has just asked me! No, sir, I have no
-one to send,’ and he spoke somewhat testily. ‘Some of my men have
-gone—those who sleep out, and the rest are in bed. I shall leave the
-door open. We aren’t afraid of burglars in this part of the country.
-No, as I told Mr. Hartney, there is no fear of the gentleman being
-lost—he has gone a little further than he intended, that is all.’ And
-the landlord yawned so emphatically that Delaney beat a hasty retreat.
-
-“‘I’m going to bed,’ he said, as he passed Hartney in the hall. ‘The
-landlord assures me there is no fear of any harm having befallen
-Davidson, and that he is sure to turn up all right.’
-
-“‘Do you think so?’ the lawyer queried.
-
-“Delaney nodded.
-
-“‘I know Davidson,’ he said; ‘I have known him since boyhood. He is the
-least likely person in the world to meet with mishap.’
-
-“‘I am glad to hear you say so,’ Mr. Hartney responded. ‘Very glad.
-I fancied somehow—but there, it must have only been fancy. Being
-intimately acquainted with Mr. Davidson, you would of course know his
-voice, and had he really called out, you would certainly have heard
-him. It is doubtless a mere fancy on my part. Good-night!’
-
-“As Delaney wearily climbed the staircase and peeped through the
-bannister, his eyes encountered those of the lawyer steadily following
-him. Dog-tired, he lost no time in undressing, but when he got into
-bed he found sleep would not come to him. He lay first on one side and
-then on the other, he tried not to think, he resorted to every possible
-device, but it was all of no avail. It was the pool, always the pool,
-the pool and the blood-red tie. He kept seeing them before him, and
-they continually bade him get out of bed and come to them. At last,
-unable to resist them any longer, he got up, and after slipping on his
-clothes, stole noiselessly out into the still and narrow country road.
-
-“When he had gone a few yards, he thought he heard a door shut behind
-him, but, on turning round and perceiving no one, he attributed it
-to fancy and went ahead at a brisk pace. At last, to his relief, the
-pool came in view. There it was, just as he had seen it, moon-kissed
-and silent, with the huge firs shaking their heads ominously on the
-far side of it, and the long line of glittering white wall casting
-its black shadow on the grass and gorse, running away from it, in an
-apparently interminable line, on the side nearest him. It was a sight
-he knew he would never forget as long as he lived.
-
-“Approaching the brink of the pool, he walked slowly round it, peering
-anxiously into the water. Suddenly he gave a start. Something white
-abruptly bobbed to the surface. He looked closely at it, and fancied he
-discerned a face. He was about to attach a name to it, when he heard
-something behind him. Swinging sharply round, he confronted Hartney.
-
-“‘Good heavens! You here!’ he exclaimed. ‘Whatever brought you out at
-this time of night?’
-
-“‘I might say the same to you,’ the lawyer replied. ‘What brought you
-here?’
-
-“‘Davidson,’ Delaney said. ‘Do you know, I can’t help associating him
-with this pool. It is damnably fascinating.’
-
-“‘I can’t help associating him with that cry,’ Hartney remarked. ‘I
-am certain it was his voice! Good God! what’s that?’ And he pointed
-frantically at the white thing bobbing up and down in the water, just
-where the moonbeams fell thickest, and not half a dozen yards from
-where they stood.
-
-“‘Where?’ Delaney said, pressing close to him in a great state of
-excitement. ‘Where? Ah! I see it now. It’s looking towards us.
-That—well, if you wish to know what it is——’ He left off abruptly.
-There was a wild scream, a heavy splash, and he continued his sentence.
-‘That, Mr. Hartney, is the solution you seek to the mystery.’ And he
-went back to the inn alone, chuckling.
-
-“The sequel to this narrative comes as a surprise. Hartney was not
-drowned. Being a very powerful swimmer, and lightly clad, he got to
-the other side of the pool, and, clambering up the bank, he wrung the
-water from his clothes and ran all the way to the inn. On arriving
-there, to his intense astonishment, he found Davidson, safe and sound,
-and dressed in clothes two or three sizes too small for him. Davidson’s
-experience had been very similar to his own. Delaney had suddenly
-seized him round the waist and hurled him into the middle of the
-pool. There, he declared, he felt something like very big and icy cold
-hands trying to pull him down. He cried for help and prayed, and, as
-he prayed, the hands relaxed their grasp, and he managed to struggle
-safely to shore. The shock of what he had gone through, however, was so
-great that he felt too ill to get back to the inn, and he was compelled
-to rest awhile at a farm, where he obtained a hot bath and a suit of
-clothes. As Davidson knew Delaney’s wife and family, he begged Hartney,
-for their sake, to keep the affair as secret as possible.
-
-“The doctor, who was called in to examine Delaney, could not certify
-him as being actually insane. However, he strongly recommended him
-to go into a private home for a time, where he would be kept under
-constant supervision, and Delaney did as the doctor advised. But after
-being in the home about a month he escaped, and was eventually found
-drowned in the lonely pool near Llanginney.
-
-“From the description given me of Delaney, I am under the impression
-that the figure I saw in the mackintosh was his ghost. But what about
-the figure Hartney was positive he saw floating in the water? Was it
-the phantom of someone who had perished there, or had Davidson again
-unconsciously projected himself? I incline to the latter. This is
-the case in toto, and it was told to me by Hartney, who got all the
-details, apart from those he had himself experienced, direct from
-Davidson and Delaney.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-I GO ON WITH THE HISTORY OF MY LIFE, AND NARRATE A GHOSTLY HAPPENING IN
-LIVERPOOL
-
-
-I gave up acting directly I became engaged to be married. I had no
-alternative, as my fiancée’s parents strongly disapproved of the Stage,
-and so long as I was on it, they would, I knew, never consent to my
-union with their daughter. But it was rather a wrench, for I really
-liked acting, and, with the exception of the Sunday travelling, the
-life suited me well. What other occupation to choose was a poser. All
-the difficulties that had faced me on my return from the States once
-again presented themselves, and were aggravated by the fact that I was
-many years older. I was racking my brain to know what to do for the
-best, when I received a letter from an old friend in Cornwall, who
-suggested that I should go down there and open up a small Preparatory
-Boys’ School. It was Hobson’s choice, and in due course of time I found
-myself once again engaged in the profession I loathed. I started with
-four or five pupils, and had worked up my connection till I had nearly
-thirty, when someone, with more money than I, set up on a much bigger
-scale, and my numbers gradually decreased.
-
-I was never an orthodox pedagogue; very much the reverse. I aimed
-rather at making my pupils manly than at cramming their heads with
-book work, and, I think, I succeeded. There were exceptions, of course,
-but my pupils as a whole developed a fondness for games, both cricket
-and football, that bore subsequent fruit when they left me and went
-on the public schools. The out-of-door occupation that formed part
-of my life now was delightful, but the dry and dull monotony of the
-schoolroom, and the eternal interference of certain of the parents
-of my pupils, who wanted everything for nothing, for my fees were
-ridiculously small, took it out of me so much, that I simply longed to
-throw up the whole thing and get back to my dearly-beloved stage or
-writing.
-
-It was while I was in Cornwall that I got my first book, “For Satan’s
-Sake,” taken. Mr. Ranger Gull, who was at that time reader for Mr.
-Arthur Greening’s publishing house, read the MS., and was so pleased
-with it, that he recommended it strongly for publication. It was
-accepted, but did not appear in print for fully a year.
-
-“The Unknown Depths,” which I had written in St. James’ Road, Brixton,
-followed; then “Jennie Barlowe,” which I wrote between school hours in
-Cornwall in the Spring of 1906; then “Dinevah the Beautiful,” the last
-of my efforts in Brixton. The latter appeared in 1907.
-
-In the winter of 1908 my wife was ill, and in the evenings, when my
-harassing duties in the schoolroom were over, I used to sit by her
-bedside evolving fresh plots. It was then that I first conceived the
-idea of writing a ghost book.
-
-In my holidays, which I usually spent in London or the Midlands, never
-in Cornwall—I always flew away from the precincts of the schoolroom
-the moment we broke up—I had often gone ghost-hunting, and I now
-determined to make use of my experiences. Consequently, I mapped out
-a synopsis of a work on haunted houses, which was at once accepted
-by Mr. Eveleigh Nash, who commissioned me to write a book on those
-lines. I did this in the Summer of 1908, and the book, which appeared
-in the Autumn of that year and was entitled “Some Haunted Houses of
-England and Wales,” created something of a sensation. It was not only
-extensively reviewed by the London papers, but by many of the American
-and Colonial ones as well. From that time onward my pen has rarely
-been idle, and, apart from compiling some dozen or so works on the
-Superphysical, I have written innumerable short stories and articles.
-Indeed, so associated has my name become with everything appertaining
-to the psychic, that publishers are inclined to the idea that I cannot
-write upon any other subject. In this, however, I venture to think they
-are mistaken; for my two works, “The Reminiscences of Mrs. E. M. Ward”
-and “The Irish Abroad,” both published by Sir Isaac Pitman & Co., have
-been very favourably received by both the Press and public.
-
-It was, however, the success of this first work of mine on ghostly
-phenomena that made me realise that what I had long hoped for had at
-last come within measurable distance of attainment. I could give up
-teaching and devote my time once again, wholly and solely to writing.
-Never shall I forget with what joy—with what unbounded and infinite
-joy—I hailed the prospect of leaving for ever behind me all those
-weary, dreary hours in the schoolroom, where I had been forced to
-display a patience I never had, and where I had been forced to assume a
-virtue I never really possessed, namely, a love of teaching.
-
-I made public my intention of giving up the school in the summer of
-1908, and the following winter saw me snugly ensconced in a little
-house in Upper Norwood, where I have been ever since.
-
-Several writers, one of whom I had the pleasure of meeting in London
-quite recently (his brilliant character studies of young and charming
-girls figure monthly in certain of the popular magazines), have been
-credited with introducing to the public, none too favourably, this
-Cornish Colony amongst whom I lived. If they have done so, I can
-certainly endorse their sentiments. In no other town that I have been
-in have I ever met people who laid themselves open to such unfavourable
-criticism. I lived there nearly eight years, and during that time I
-received the bare minimum of hospitality. I found the greater number
-of the inhabitants bigoted and pharisaical and the townfolk and
-labouring people not only extremely ignorant, but very unforgiving and
-vindictive. That they were still—that is to say, at the time I am
-writing of—in a tribal state was proved by their puerile attitude of
-hostility to strangers, whom they used frequently to insult and annoy.
-I signed two petitions relative to the throwing of stones at visitors,
-which petitions were forwarded to the Home Secretary. The result was
-nil. The local authorities, in dealing with such cases, displayed
-the most woeful apathy, and apparently this state of affairs was
-irremediable, since the magistrates, with few exceptions, were related
-to half the people in the town.
-
-With the Art Colony I had very little to do. The few artists I knew
-at all intimately I liked. I found them congenial and generally
-sympathetic, though displaying an avidity in criticising authors,
-which, considering their touchiness with regard to any criticism of
-their own work, was distinctly amusing; all the same, apart from
-this and one other harmless peculiarity, namely, an exaggerated and
-unblushing deference to titles, I found them very good fellows, and
-nearly all the hospitality I received in the town I received from them.
-
-I think I am right in saying there was never a very friendly feeling
-between the townspeople and the artists. The townspeople looked upon
-the artists as intruders, “foreigners,” whose ways and habits were
-diametrically opposite to theirs, especially with regard to the
-treatment of the Sabbath; whilst the artists showed a none too well
-concealed contempt for the townspeople, whom they seemed to regard not
-only as hopelessly inartistic, but of an utterly inferior breed.
-
-In most small towns there is a good deal of unkind gossip and scandal,
-but I really think that in this respect the town I refer to was
-unrivalled. It seemed to me that the people were never so happy as when
-saying malicious things about each other, and they meanly victimised
-those whose limited means would not permit of their taking legal action
-against them.
-
-I have often wondered what made these people so peculiarly unkind.
-
-As soon as I had settled down in Norwood, I wrote “Ghostly Phenomena,”
-which was reviewed at length by Andrew Lang in the “Morning Post.”
-About that time I had the great pleasure of meeting Mrs. E. M. Ward.
-The rencontre happened thus. The Misses Enid and Beatrice Ward, Mrs.
-Ward’s youngest daughters, were getting up some theatricals, and, being
-short of a man, asked a lady, with whom I was acquainted, if she knew
-of anyone who would help them out of the difficulty. She wrote to me,
-with the result that I took part in the play, and thus had the good
-fortune to meet the Wards, with whom, I am happy to say, I have kept in
-touch ever since.
-
-A year or so afterwards I edited Mrs. Ward’s reminiscences, which was,
-almost without exception, well received by the Press. Some papers,
-“Vanity Fair” and the “Weekly Graphic,” for instance—the “Graphic”
-has always been very kind and fair to me,—giving the book several
-lengthy and highly eulogistic notices. Mrs. Ward is a believer in
-ghosts, and in her reminiscences there is a very interesting first-hand
-experience of hers with the Superphysical. Mrs. Ward’s children, apart
-from the fact that they inherit talent from their mother and father,
-and grandfather, their great-grandfather, James Ward, R.A., and their
-great-great-uncle, George Morland, R.A., are very interesting in
-themselves and possess exceptional personal attractions.
-
-A year after I first visited their house, I was commissioned by
-the Editor of “The Weekly Despatch,” Mr. Beuley, to write a series
-of ghostly experiences for that paper. In order to do this I made
-pilgrimages to all parts of the country, and in my zeal to find ghosts
-occasionally encountered objects of a very different nature. On one
-occasion, in Brighton, I had taken advantage of a slightly open window
-to enter a tiny house I had been told was very badly haunted. It was a
-very dark night, and being unable to find my matches, I had to grope
-my way about. I was in a room with apparently never ending walls—they
-seemed to go round and round without any outlet at all. At last,
-however, I managed to discover a doorway, and, passing through it, I
-felt my way to a staircase, which I climbed up, till I came to what I
-judged to be a landing. There all further speculations were brought to
-an abrupt end by my suddenly falling over some large, soft object on
-the floor. In an instant, there was a loud yell, and I found myself
-rolling over and over clawing and clutching at some foul and unsavoury
-mass, that seemed to have fastened itself on to me with the intention
-of first probing out my eyes, and then throttling me. The small flask
-of whiskey that I happened to have on me undoubtedly saved me from
-total annihilation. The moment the claw-like hands touched the flask, I
-was free.
-
-I staggered to my feet, searched again, and, this time, fortunately
-found the match-box and struck a light.
-
-Crouching on the floor in front of me was a long, thin, scraggy
-creature with an absolutely bloodless face and two big, round,
-protruding black eyes. Its hair was matted like a mop and tossed about
-anywhere; its clothes, or rather rags, were buttonless, and only
-held together, here and there, by pieces of filthy string. A more
-disgusting, and at the same time pitiable, spectacle could not be
-imagined.
-
-It was fortunate for me that I had had previous experience of such
-sights in the parks and commons of London, otherwise I should have been
-terrified out of my wits. As it was, I only just managed to pull myself
-together, and realising that what I saw before me was not a ghost, but
-a material and now, as far as I was concerned, harmless being, I spoke
-to it.
-
-“Well,” I said, “at any rate you seem to like my whiskey. How long have
-you been here?”
-
-The flask was gradually lowered, and a voice, which I decided was that
-of a woman—for up to the present I hadn’t been able to decipher its
-sex—gurgled, “I sleep here every night. This is my house.”
-
-“Then the enigma is solved,” I said. “You are the ghost!”
-
-“I soon shall be,” the creature replied, “for I’ve eaten nothing for
-more than two days.”
-
-“Well, I’m afraid I cannot give you any more than this,” I said, “for
-it’s all I have with me.” And I handed her some biscuits and bread and
-cheese.
-
-Never shall I forget the savage joy with which she snatched the food
-from my hand and crammed it into her big, gaping, fleshless jaws. No
-animal in the Zoo was half so voracious. When she had finished it all,
-and drained the last drop of whiskey, she drew her lean and dirty,
-albeit well-shaped, fingers across her mouth, and cursed me.
-
-“Get you gone,” she snarled, “and leave me here. I tell you this is my
-house. I’ve as much right to it as you or anyone else. Get you gone,
-or I’ll spit at you.” And not wishing to be spat upon, I picked up my
-flask and departed.
-
-I encountered another ghost of this order three nights later in a house
-in Manchester. The house was furnished, but was untenanted, as the
-owner, a rich and eccentric old lady, believed it to be haunted. She
-wrote to me, _àpropos_ of my book, “Ghostly Phenomena,” and suggested
-I should try and exorcise the ghost. Now I do not altogether believe
-in exorcism. There are occasions upon which it has been practised with
-success, mostly in cases of haunting by phantasms of the sane dead, but
-there are also many cases, within my own experience, in which it has
-been practised with no result whatever.
-
-At all events, with my elastic views regarding denominational religion,
-I did not feel disposed to try it, and so I wrote and told her. She
-replied, “Come in any case, and give me your opinion as to the nature
-and cause of the phenomena.”
-
-I went. The house was in a quiet, sleepy thoroughfare, not three
-minutes walk from the Whalley Road. It was big and roomy, and would
-have been attractive but for the walls, the papers of which had
-obviously been chosen by someone who did not possess even the most
-elementary conception of what is pleasing in colour and design. As it
-was, my artistic susceptibilities were so grossly outraged, that I
-could well have imagined, the place haunted by neutrarians of the most
-undesirable order.
-
-I visited the house in the early evening, and the subdued light from
-the fast-fading sunshine, filtering through the drawn Venetian blinds,
-produced a singularly sad, and, at the same time, ghostly effect. I had
-come unaccompanied, for nothing on earth would persuade the old lady
-or any of her domestics to set a foot in the house, and as I wandered
-through room after room, the intense hush began at length to tell on
-my nerves. When I was on the staircase leading to the top storey, I
-fancied I heard a slight noise, and a sudden faintness coming over me,
-I had to clutch hold of the banisters to prevent myself falling. I went
-on, however, and opening a door at the top of the stairs, found myself
-in a large room communicating with two other rooms by means of doors,
-both of which stood slightly ajar. I had passed through the first,
-and was half across the floor of the second, when I suddenly felt one
-of my ankles caught hold of. The shock was so great that all the blood
-in my body seemed suddenly to dry up, and again I all but fainted.
-Forcing myself to look down, however, I perceived a skinny hand and arm
-protruding from under the dressing-table, and assured by the appearance
-of it that it belonged to nothing ghostly, I struck at it with my
-stick, kicking out vigorously at the same time.
-
-With terrible howlings there now crawled from under the table a long
-and lanky idiot boy. It transpired that he was the son of one of the
-old lady’s servants, and that he was enjoying a nice, comfortable home
-at her expense. His mother used to visit him every evening, and this
-evening he had hidden under the table with the intention of frightening
-her. Unfortunately for them both, however, he had frightened me
-instead. The servant, of course, lost her post, and the old lady,
-assured that there was no longer any fear of ghosts, came back to the
-house, and, at my suggestion, had all the walls re-papered.
-
-The following week I had another rather strange experience in
-Liverpool. I was getting dozens of letters weekly at that time, as
-the first of my series of ghost stories had appeared in the “Weekly
-Despatch,” and my fame as a spook hunter had spread far and wide in
-consequence. A lady in Liverpool wrote to me, saying that her daughter,
-Emily, was tormented by a man coming into her bedroom every night at
-the same time and walking off with her bedclothes. He said nothing,
-merely opened her door, and, approaching the bed on tip-toe, caught
-hold of the clothes and hurriedly retreated with them. Spirit lights,
-my correspondent added, were constantly seen in the room, and at times
-figures like angels, and she would be glad if I would visit the house,
-and discover for her, if possible, some explanation of the occurrences.
-The nature of the manifestations being somewhat extraordinary, I
-thought it discreet to take a friend. The house was in a crescent,
-close to Clayton Square. We were shown into the drawing-room, where
-all the family were assembled, and we were at once regaled with
-detailed accounts of all that was alleged to happen. Then we were
-taken to the bedroom that was haunted, and the young lady whose bed
-the ghost stripped, at our request, sat there with us. As soon as the
-electric light was switched off, she began to see spirit lights. We
-saw nothing. No man appeared, and, on taking our departure, we both
-agreed that the phenomena were subjective, and that it was simply a
-case of hallucination. Accordingly, I advised her mother to consult a
-good general practitioner, as, in all probability, her daughter needed
-a tonic and change of air. I strongly warned her against consulting any
-professional Spiritualist.
-
-Well, I returned to London, and thought no more of the matter till
-the following Christmas, when, quite by chance, I ran against a young
-doctor, to whom I had mentioned the incident. Evidently eager to
-communicate something, he remarked, “You remember that Liverpool case
-you told me about—the case of the young lady whose bedclothes used
-to disappear, and which you thought was hallucination? Well, you were
-mistaken. Since I saw you, I have become acquainted with the doctor
-who attends her, and he told me that, whilst he was there one day,
-the bedroom door opened and in walked a young man. He says the girl
-immediately exclaimed, ‘Here is the man who haunts my room at night.
-For goodness sake, Doctor, do something!’ Whereupon, the man, muttering
-some words in German, abruptly left the room. My doctor friend
-immediately ran after him, but he was nowhere to be seen, and although
-the house was at once searched, no traces of him could be found. Now,
-what do you think of the case?”
-
-“It is certainly a very unusual one,” I replied, “and, as you say,
-this sequel quite upsets my theory of hallucination. It may be a case
-of projection. Someone who knows the girl and wishes to torment her is
-experimenting in visiting her in his immaterial ego. I have heard of
-similar cases.”
-
-“But she knows no one like him,” my friend responded.
-
-“Probably not,” I said. “The image she sees may be, and very likely is,
-merely an assumed one. Does she know any Indians, or anyone who is an
-earnest student of the occult? Find out if you can.”
-
-I have not yet heard from my friend, but I still incline to the idea
-that the ghost in this case was a phantasm of the living, rather than a
-phantasm of the dead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-SOME STRANGE CASES IN BIRMINGHAM, HARROGATE, SUSSEX AND NEWCASTLE
-
-
-Whilst I was still writing for “The Weekly Despatch,” I happened to
-visit an old friend of mine, a Captain Rupert Tennison, who was staying
-with an aged relative in the Hagley Road, Birmingham.
-
-“This is hardly the house you would expect to see a ghost in, is it?”
-he remarked to me after luncheon. “And yet I can assure you I had a
-very remarkable psychic experience here, in this very room. I’ve often
-wanted to tell you about it. It happened one New Year’s Eve three
-and a half years ago. My aunt had a nephew, on her husband’s side,
-called Jack Wilmot, and he and I used to meet here regularly at the
-commencement of every New Year. On this occasion, however, my aunt
-informed me that Wilmot was unable to be present, as he was detained in
-Mexico, where he had a very good post as a mining engineer.
-
-“I was much disappointed, for Wilmot and I were great pals, and the
-prospect of staying here alone with the old lady struck me as perfectly
-appalling. I resolved to make the best of it, however, for I was
-genuinely sorry for my aunt, whom I could see was quite as disappointed
-as I was. I arrived late in the afternoon of December 31st. We dined at
-seven, and at nine my aunt went off to bed and left me in this room by
-myself.
-
-“For some time I read—no, not one of your books, O’Donnell—a Guy
-Maupassant; but the light being rather bad, and my eyes tired, for I
-had been travelling all the previous night, I was at last obliged to
-desist and devote myself entirely to a pipe.
-
-“The servants went to bed at about ten. I heard them tap respectfully
-at my aunt’s door on their way, and wish her good-night. After that the
-house was absolutely silent, so silent, indeed, that the hush began to
-get on my nerves, and I was contemplating retiring also, when heavy
-footsteps suddenly crossed the hall and the door of this room was flung
-wide open. I looked round in amazement. Standing on the threshold was
-Wilmot.
-
-“‘Why, Jack!’ I cried. ‘I am glad to see you, old fellow. Your aunt
-told me you could not come. How did you manage it?’
-
-“‘Quite easily,’ he said in the light, careless manner which was one of
-his characteristics. ‘Where there’s a will, there’s a way, you know.
-I’ve taken French leave.’
-
-“‘Taken French leave!’ I ejaculated. ‘Then there’ll be the deuce to pay
-when you get back. Anyhow, that’s your affair, not mine. You’ll have
-some supper?’
-
-“‘No,’ he said; ‘I had a very good meal a short time ago, and I’m not
-the least bit hungry. We will chat instead.’
-
-“He pulled his chair up to the table, and, leaning his elbows on it,
-stared right into my face.
-
-“‘You don’t look very well, Jack,’ I said. ‘Maybe this strong light
-has something to do with it, but you are as pale as a sheet. Is it the
-voyage?’
-
-“‘Not altogether,’ he replied. ‘I’ve had a lot of trouble lately.’
-
-“‘Tell me,’ I said.
-
-“‘Won’t it bore you?’ he replied. ‘After all, why should I bother other
-people with my woes. Oh, all right, I will if you like.
-
-“‘Some months ago there came to the town where I am working a wealthy
-Spaniard and his wife. Their name was Hervada. He was a tall, lean,
-sour-faced old curmudgeon, and she one of the most beautiful young
-creatures you can imagine. You can guess what happened?’
-
-“‘You fell in love with her, of course,’ I cried.
-
-“‘From the moment I saw her,’ Jack replied.
-
-“‘You got introduced,’ I said.
-
-“‘Trust me,’ he laughed. ‘I found out where she lived, and the rest was
-so easy that before the end of the week I had dined with them, and also
-had had one clandestine meeting in the Park. At first her old villain
-of a husband suspected nothing. But it is infernally hard to keep up
-a pretence for long, when one is really madly consumed with passion.
-Eyes are sure indicators of what the heart feels, at least mine are,
-and when Hervada suddenly looked up and caught me gazing at his wife as
-if I could devour her, the cat was completely out of the bag. I give
-him credit for one thing, however: he took it very calmly. Despite his
-unprepossessing exterior he could at times be extremely courteous and
-dignified.
-
-“‘You will oblige me by settling this matter in the way customary to
-gentlemen in this country,’ he said. ‘You must remember you are not in
-England now; you are in Mexico. Have you a revolver?’
-
-“‘I am never without one,’ I replied.
-
-“‘Then,’ he observed, ignoring the intervention of his wife, whose
-apprehensions were only too plainly more on my account than on his, ‘we
-will step on to the verandah.’
-
-“‘What!’ I said. ‘You don’t mean to say you actually fought a duel?’
-
-“Jack nodded. ‘Yes!’ he said. ‘We measured off twenty paces, and then,
-turning round, fired.’
-
-“‘And you killed him?’
-
-“‘That would be your natural surmise,’ was the reply. ‘But you are
-mistaken. It was I who was killed.’
-
-“The moment he had said these words, he seemed to fade away, and before
-I could recover from my astonishment, he had completely disappeared,
-and I found myself staring not at him but the blank wall. And now comes
-the oddest part of it. I naturally expected to hear Jack was dead. I
-said nothing to my aunt, but I wrote off to his address at once.
-
-“Judge, then, of my relief when I received a letter from him by
-return of post to say he was absolutely fit and well, and getting on
-splendidly. That was in February. In the following August my aunt
-wrote to me saying a very tragic occurrence had taken place. Jack was
-dead. He had been found on the verandah of an hotel in Mexico shot
-through the heart. Though the identity of his murderer was generally
-suspected, there was no actual proof, and as the man was very rich and
-influential, it was thought quite useless to take up the case. Now what
-kind of superphysical phenomenon do you call that?” Captain Tennison
-concluded.
-
-“I can’t exactly say,” I replied. “It is one of those strange
-prognostications of the future that happen more often on New Year’s Eve
-than on any other day of the year.
-
-“I don’t think the phantasm you saw was actually Wilmot’s spirit. I
-don’t see how it could have been. I think it was an impersonating
-neutrarian, one of that order of phantasms that have never inhabited
-any kind of material body, and whose special function is apparently to
-foretell the end of certain people, and certain people only.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When I had finished my articles for “The Weekly Despatch,” which I
-was writing in alternation with “The Reminiscences of Mrs. E. M.
-Ward,” I took a brief holiday, visiting for the first time Matlock and
-Harrogate.
-
-Learning that there was an alleged haunted house in the latter town, I
-sought, and managed to obtain, permission to spend a night in it. It
-was a modern edifice of a great height, situated about ten minutes walk
-from St. James’ Hall.
-
-I went there alone, and, on entering the premises, encountered an
-almost death-like air of stillness, which contrasted oddly with the
-world outside, where all was life and gaiety. But a moment before I had
-mixed with the streams of ultra-fashionable people heading for the Spa
-Concert, the Theatre, and the Valley Park, and, so free had they seemed
-from all trouble and responsibility—so full of sparkling, spontaneous
-fun and flippancy—and above all, so full of the flamboyant spirit of
-sheer life, that one could not help feeling, as one looked at them,
-that after all there could be no such thing as death for them—that
-such pronounced vitality must go on for ever.
-
-But this house—this forsaken house, void of furniture, of everything,
-save the soft summer evening sunlight, the shadows, and my presence—how
-different! Wandering from room to room, and floor to floor, I at length
-completed my preliminary search, and being somewhat tired, I sat down
-on the floor of the hall, and, taking a newspaper from my pocket,
-started reading. As the hours passed by and darkness came on, I began
-to be afraid. No amount of experience in ghost hunting will ever enable
-me to overcome that awful, hideous fear that seizes me when I see the
-last glimmer of daylight fade, and I realise I am about to be brought
-into contact with the superphysical, and that I must face it—alone.
-
-Noises in empty houses I have noticed usually commence in the basement,
-and I was not at all surprised when presently I heard a faint tapping
-proceeding from one of the kitchens. This was followed by a long spell
-of silence, and then one of the stairs creaked. My heart gave a big
-thump, and I gazed expectantly into the darkness before me, but there
-was nothing to be seen. Silence again, and then more tapping, and more
-creaking. Something then tickled my hand, and a moment later my fingers
-touched a blackbeetle. In an instant I was on my feet, for I dread
-beetles more than I dread ghosts, and, on my striking a light, I found
-the whole floor swarming. I wondered very much at this, because beetles
-do not as a rule frequent houses that have been empty for any length
-of time, especially in a climate like that of Harrogate. I have since,
-however, arrived at the conclusion that where there are hauntings,
-there are, more often than not, plagues of beetles, but whether
-attracted by the ghost, or not, I cannot say.
-
-As I could no longer tolerate the idea of remaining in the hall in the
-dark, I lighted four candles, and, placing them on the floor, sat in
-the midst of them.
-
-It was only eleven o’clock by my watch, and the idea of keeping up my
-vigil till the morning did not strike me as particularly pleasant. I
-took up my paper and again began to read. Half an hour or so passed,
-and then I received a start. A door opened and shut downstairs, and
-bare footsteps pattered their way along the stone passage and up the
-wooden stairs.
-
-The nearer they drew, the more intolerable became my suspense. What
-should I see? A white-faced, glassy-eyed phantasm of the dead, or
-some blood-curdling, semi-human, semi-animal neutrarian. Which would
-it be? I confess I would have given all I possessed to be out in the
-road, but, as is usually the case with me when in the presence of the
-superphysical, I was quite powerless to speak or move. Then, to my
-unfeigned astonishment, instead of anything grotesque and awful, there
-appeared before me a little fair-haired girl, clad in a much-soiled
-pinafore and without either shoes or stockings.
-
-Though not actually crying, she appeared in great distress, and feeling
-around on all sides, as if anxiously searching for someone, she ran
-past me, and commenced to ascend the stairs. Picking up a candle, I
-followed her, and, as the patterings of her poor, chilled feet spread
-their echoes far and wide through the vast deserted house, I thought
-I had never experienced anything half so pathetic. On and on we went,
-the little thin legs leading the way, till we reached the top storey,
-when she ran into a room facing me, and slammed the door. I immediately
-followed, but the room was quite empty. There were no signs of the
-child; there was only a particularly vivid beam of moonlight, and a
-virile and overwhelming atmosphere of sadness.
-
-During the next few days I was told a story that fully accounted for
-the hauntings.
-
-It appears that about thirty years before my visit to the house a
-little girl had lived there with her father and step-mother. Her nurse,
-to whom she was very much attached, being summarily dismissed by her
-step-mother, she became ill, and very soon died, so it was rumoured, of
-a broken heart.
-
-Shortly after her death the house was to let, and no tenant, I found
-out, has ever occupied it since for very long.
-
-I have often wished that I had spoken to the sad little spirit, but I
-was too fascinated by it, and too much engaged watching its movements,
-to think of anything else. And I have found that this same fascination
-and preoccupation have prevented me from trying to communicate with
-the ghost in nearly all the cases of haunting that I have ever
-investigated. On the few occasions that I have spoken to a phantasm, I
-have received no reply, no indication even that it has heard me.
-
-In a very famous haunted house in the West of England, during
-my investigations which were spread over a period of nine, not
-uninterruptedly consecutive, nights, manifestations took place twice,
-and on both occasions I stood up and spoke, but in neither case was
-there any response whatever. This same ghost had been subjected to
-exorcism by a well-known ecclesiast, but, far from being exorcised,
-the ghost so scared his exorciser that he all but fainted. These
-demonstrations were visual. In a haunted house that I was asked to
-visit in Sussex I saw nothing, but heard knockings, and by means of
-them tried, though without success, to establish a code. I heard of the
-case in this way.
-
-A young lady, whom I will call Miss Hemming, wrote to me. She and her
-mother occupied a modern and picturesquely situated house at the foot
-of the Downs, and were very frequently disturbed, she said, between
-nine and ten in the evening, by sounds, such as might be made with a
-muffled hammer, on the wall of her mother’s room. Simultaneously the
-figure of a young man moved noiselessly across the lawn, from the
-direction of a swing. He usually approached her window and came to
-a halt immediately beneath it. He had never replied when spoken to.
-She had fired at him several times, but the bullets had had no effect
-whatever. It seemed as if they had passed right through him, because
-he still stood there, whilst the gravel was splattered up immediately
-behind him. On one or two occasions he shone a bicycle lamp on his
-face, so that she could distinctly see his features. It was the face
-of no one she knew, though she fancied it bore a close resemblance
-to a notorious murderer, whose photos had been in the papers, and
-who had expiated his crime on the gallows. These were not the only
-manifestations. Stones had been repeatedly thrown at Mrs. Hemming,
-and, although the house was being closely watched by the police, the
-stone-throwing still went on, and so far the culprit had not even been
-seen, let alone caught.
-
-I visited the house once by myself, and once with a party of men. On
-the former occasion I hid in a little copse at the furthest extremity
-of the lawn, and watched the house and swing closely, but I neither
-heard nor saw anything. Returning to the house, I was told by Miss
-Hemming that both she and her mother had heard the knockings, and that
-she herself had, at the same time, seen the figure on the lawn.
-
-On the occasion of my second visit, we all heard the knockings on the
-wall of Mrs. Hemming’s room, and one of us, who was looking out of
-her daughter’s window, saw what he fancied were two shadows of human
-beings cross the moonlit lawn and vanish in the direction of a hedge.
-Trickery was practically impossible, as the garden was protected on all
-sides by barbed wire, and there were on the premises four or five dogs,
-including a young bloodhound. We had of course made a thorough search
-of the house and grounds previously.
-
-One or two other incidents happened during the night. When I was in
-the hall alone, a light, as from a bicycle lamp, was suddenly shone
-in my face, apparently from a blank wall, and when we were all seated
-in front of the dining-room fire, we heard heavy footsteps cross the
-hall, and although we ran out at once we could see no one. We were
-shown the stones that were alleged to have been thrown, but none were
-thrown whilst we were there. They were a peculiar kind of flint, which
-certainly did not belong to the neighbourhood. Mrs. Hemming had several
-times narrowly escaped being hit by them, and one had crashed through
-the bedroom window as she was looking out of it.
-
-I did not continue my investigation of the case, because there were
-certain features in connection with it of a private and family nature,
-which greatly added to its complexity, and which would, of necessity,
-have rendered any attempt at solution incomplete and unsatisfactory.
-
-Cases of complex haunting, although, for obvious reasons, seldom
-admitting of any satisfactory explanation, always interest me the most.
-Here is one I chanced to hit upon in Newcastle.
-
-A house in —— Street had stood empty for seven or eight years, and
-on my making enquiries about it, I was told to apply to a Mr. Black,
-the last tenant. I did so, and Mr. Black very kindly gave me a detailed
-account of what had taken place there during his tenancy. It was as
-follows:—
-
-“A day or two after our arrival I happened to be going upstairs, and,
-as I passed by one of the bedrooms, the door of which was slightly
-open, I glanced in, and saw the figure of a lady, whom I had never
-seen before. She was dressed in green, and standing in front of the
-looking-glass, engaged apparently in putting on her hat. Wondering who
-on earth she could be, for I knew the room had not been slept in, I
-spoke to her, and receiving no reply, I was advancing towards her, when
-she suddenly disappeared. I did not know what to make of the affair,
-but, thinking that possibly it was an hallucination, I resolved to
-think no more of it, and to say nothing about it to any of my family or
-household.
-
-“Some days later, however, when out walking with my wife, I met a
-friend who asked me where I was living. I told him, and he exclaimed
-excitedly:
-
-“‘Good gracious, not in that house! Why, my dear fellow——’ At a sign
-from me he stopped. I had guessed what was coming, and as my wife is
-extremely nervous I thought it best she should not hear what I knew he
-was going to say, namely, that the house was haunted.
-
-“That night I went round to see my friend. He made no bones about it;
-he told me that the house I had taken was haunted—that he knew it for
-a fact.
-
-“‘Some months ago,’ he said, ‘I was thinking of taking it myself, and,
-obtaining the key from the agent, went to look over it. It was quite
-light, not more than five o’clock in the afternoon, and the house
-seemed bright and cheerful. Closing the front door carefully behind
-me, I commenced a tour of the premises. I had reached the top floor,
-and was standing in the centre of one of the rooms, when I heard a
-slight noise. I started, and, turning round in the direction from
-which the sound came, perceived a lady and a little girl standing in
-the doorway watching me. There was nothing at all remarkable about
-them. The lady was dressed in green, the child in white, both modern,
-or at least comparatively modern, costumes. I was so surprised at
-their being there, however, as I knew I had shut the hall door, that I
-simply stood and stared at them. Then something much more extraordinary
-happened—they vanished. It was not an hallucination—that I can swear
-to—and thoroughly scared, I tore downstairs and out of the house.
-After this I gave up all idea of taking the place, and I can’t help
-feeling sorry, old fellow, that you’ve taken it.’
-
-“In spite of this warning,” Mr. Black continued, “I did not give
-up the house immediately. After we had been there a week or so, a
-cousin of mine came to stay with us; and one evening he and one of my
-children, who were in the drawing-room, together heard a soft, cautious
-whistle—as if someone were giving a signal, coming, they thought, from
-just behind them. The whistle was repeated, and a few minutes later
-they heard a loud cry, half human, half animal, and wholly ominous.
-My cousin pretended it was one of the servants, but my child would
-not be convinced, and begged to be taken to bed at once, as she dared
-not remain in the room any longer. After this, phenomena of all kinds
-happened; steps used to be heard bounding up and down the stairs at all
-hours of the night; one of the maids declared she saw something that
-was a man and yet not a man come out of the drawing-room with a run,
-and race up the staircase two or three steps at a time; heavy pantings
-and sighs were heard, and several of the household were awakened by a
-cold hand being laid upon their face. But I think the most remarkable
-thing that happened is this:—I was sitting in my study one evening,
-when the maid rapped at my door and said that a clergyman (whom she
-had shown into the drawing-room) wished to see me on some very urgent
-matter. I at once put down the book I was reading, and, hastening to
-the drawing-room, found it empty. Wondering what had become of the
-clergyman, I was about to ring the bell to enquire, when I suddenly
-caught sight of a large eye, human in shape and horribly sinister,
-glaring at me from behind an arm-chair. I was so frightened that I
-could do nothing but stare back at it, and then, to my intense relief,
-my wife entered the room with a friend, and the phenomenon disappeared.”
-
-[Illustration: “I suddenly caught sight of a large eye”]
-
-“And the parson?” I observed.
-
-“I never heard anything more of him,” Mr. Black remarked. “The maid
-assured me on her honour that she had shown him into the room, but no
-one saw him leave the house, so he, too, might have been a ghost; but
-supposing him to have been a living person, his disappearance would not
-be unnatural. He had doubtless seen the eye and precipitated himself
-into the street through the open window.
-
-“The following day, my children being badly frightened by something
-in one of the passages, I decided to leave the house; and, although I
-afterwards made every possible enquiry, I could never hear of anything
-particularly tragic that had ever happened there. We were the first
-tenants, so I was told, that had ever complained of disturbances, and
-it was suggested that we might have brought the ghosts with us, but as
-none of us had ever seen a ghost before we entered that house, and we
-had no old furniture, at least none that we had not always had, and
-not one of us had ever attended a séance or in any way dabbled with
-Spiritualism, I do not think that theory at all possible. How do you
-account for the hauntings?”
-
-“I cannot,” I replied, “nor can anyone else. The sheer complexity
-of such a case renders any definite conclusion with regard to it
-extremely difficult, and any positive solution of it utterly out of the
-question.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-WAR GHOSTS
-
-
-Of late years the increase of interest taken in things psychical,
-particularly among the more educated classes, the classes that were
-at one time incorrigibly sceptical, has been enormous. I believe this
-to be mainly due to the fact that people are no longer satisfied
-with the scriptural declaration of another world. They want proof of
-it—that is to say, absolutely authentic and corroborative evidence
-that it exists—and they feel that they can only obtain such evidence
-by witnessing superphysical manifestations themselves. Psychical
-Research Societies, perhaps, convince them even less than the Bible.
-And naturally, for the scientist, even though he be titled, can hardly
-hope to accomplish in one generation what theologians, of an equal if
-not superior intelligence, have attempted and failed to accomplish
-throughout the ages. Hence, I am of the opinion that one can learn more
-from one spontaneous ghostly manifestation in a haunted house than
-from a thousand lectures, or a thousand books. Experience is the only
-medium of conviction, and so long as people are without a personal
-experience relating to another world, they can never really believe.
-The boy in rags and tatters may be far more conversant with—may
-know far more about—a future life than the more learned Professor
-at the University. But no one can logically claim to be an absolute
-authority on the Unknown; the most any of us can do—even those of us
-who have actually seen and heard spirit manifestations—the rest do not
-count—is to speculate. When we attempt to do more, we label ourselves
-fools.
-
-Of all the professions, none, I believe, is more interested in this
-question of another world than the theatrical. I have a great many
-friends amongst actors and actresses, and I find them not only keenly
-interested in my work, but always ready—even when working hard
-themselves—to share my vigils in a haunted house.
-
-Only the other day, at a concert given by the Irish Literary Society in
-Hanover Square, I was introduced to Miss Odette Goimbault, who recently
-delighted London audiences by her impersonation of the child “Doris”
-in “On Trial” at the Lyric Theatre. Odette Goimbault is unquestionably
-pretty—but there is much in her looks besides mere prettiness. She has
-eyes that are extraordinarily spiritual, eyes that seem to look right
-into the soul of things and see things that are not generally seen by
-ordinary mortals.
-
-When a very small child, Odette Goimbault lived with her mother in
-a house at Thornton Heath. A lady died of consumption in the flat
-immediately beneath Mrs. Goimbault’s, and after the burial, Odette,
-though previously very fond of staying up late, used, every night,
-precisely at seven o’clock, to beg her mother to take her upstairs to
-bed, declaring, in a great state of terror and with tears in her eyes,
-that she saw an old man with only one leg standing in a corner of the
-room shaking his stick at her. When once she was taken out of the room
-her fears subsided.
-
-In my opinion she is an ideal young actress for the pourtrayal of soul,
-for the transmittal of a sense of soul to the audience, and I think
-there is no one, either on the stage or off it, who looks more in touch
-with the spiritual world than Odette Goimbault.
-
-But stronger even than its hold upon the theatrical profession is the
-stand that psychism has taken with regard to the present war.
-
-Ever since the fighting began I have heard speculations raised as
-to whether our soldiers at the Front have been witnessing ghostly
-manifestations or not. So far, I must own that I have elicited very
-little reliable evidence on this point, but the circumstances have
-established at least one interesting fact, and that is, that to the man
-in the street the question of another world has at last become a matter
-of some importance.
-
-The wife of a very eminent official at the War Office told me a few
-weeks ago that officers who took part in the Dardanelles Expedition
-assured her that figures believed to be ghosts were on several
-occasions seen gliding over the ground after an engagement, especially
-where the dead bodies of the Turks lay thickest. The same lady also
-told me that when a certain regiment formed up after a brilliant
-charge, in which it had suffered very severe casualties, some of the
-gaps in the ranks were observed to be filled by shadowy forms—forms
-which disappeared the moment anyone attempted to touch them.
-
-Neither my informant nor any of the soldiers from the Front that I
-have met have been able to give me any information as to the alleged
-superphysical demonstrations in the sky during the retreat from Mons.
-But I should like to record here, in connection with the war, a case
-I heard in Paris. I published an account of it in the November, 1915,
-number of “The Occult Review,” and now reproduce it through the
-courtesy of Mr. Ralph Shirley:
-
-“The mention of Ferdinand of Bulgaria brings vividly back to my memory
-two stories I heard about him, when I was dining one evening in June,
-1914, at the renowned Henriette’s Restaurant in Montparnasse. Two men
-were seated at a table close beside me, and I eventually got into
-conversation with them. They informed me they were journalists, and
-that their names were Guilgaut and Bonivon respectively.
-
-“‘You would laugh, if you knew where I spent last night,’ I observed.
-‘I was in an alleged haunted flat in Montrouge. I don’t suppose either
-of you believes in ghosts?’
-
-“‘I do,’ Guilgaut said. ‘I have had more than one experience with an
-apparition in my life, and so has my friend.’
-
-“‘Yes,’ chimed in Bonivon, ‘we have good cause to remember ghosts,
-since we stayed six weeks in a haunted hotel in Bucharest, and never
-had such an infernally uncomfortable time either before or since. We
-never saw the ghost ourselves, but one of the other lodgers declared he
-did, and used to wake us every other night by the most unholy screams.’
-
-“They then talked a lot about their adventures in the Balkans, and
-finally alluded to Ferdinand of Bulgaria. ‘If ever a man is haunted, he
-is,’ Guilgaut remarked. ‘I believe he never leaves his room at night
-without the shadow of Stambuloff, whose death he brought about in 1895.
-It simply steps out from the wall and follows him.’
-
-“‘That is a lot of exaggeration,’ Bonivon said with a laugh. ‘But,
-quite seriously, we heard on very excellent authority that on more than
-one occasion a figure has been seen accompanying Ferdinand sometimes
-when dining and sometimes when walking, and that it has been recognised
-by the spectators as Stambuloff, the dead Minister. Once, we were told,
-Ferdinand visited a certain Princess, and it was remarked that Her
-Royal Highness appeared strangely embarrassed and perturbed. At last
-someone ventured to enquire of the lady-in-waiting, who also appeared
-to be greatly perturbed, what was the matter. “It’s that man,” was
-the whispered reply, “that man who persists in standing beside His
-Majesty. He never takes his eyes from our faces, and he looks just like
-a corpse.” Her interrogator asked her to describe the figure, which he
-said was quite invisible to him.
-
-“‘She did so, and the description tallied exactly with that of
-Stambuloff.’
-
-“‘Tell him about Ferdinand and the fortune-teller,’ Guilgaut said.
-
-“‘Yes, that happened when we were staying close to his Kohary estates,’
-Bonivon responded. ‘Ferdinand is notoriously sly and mean, and one
-day, as he was passing through the village where we were staying, he
-chanced to encounter a charming Hungarian maiden, who eked out a very
-precarious livelihood hawking ribbons and telling fortunes. Ferdinand
-had his hand read, and, thinking to trap the girl, disguised himself
-and went to her again the following evening. To his astonishment,
-although the make-up was skilful, for Ferdinand is a born actor in
-more senses than one, the girl recognised him at once as the gentleman
-who had been to her the previous evening. “I was expecting you,” she
-said. “Expecting me?” Ferdinand stammered. “How is that? I’ve told no
-one.” “Oh, fie!” the girl remonstrated, shaking her finger at him.
-“The gentleman who accompanied you last night came here himself an
-hour ago and told me you were coming.” “What was he like?” Ferdinand
-asked, shaking all over. “Like,” the girl retorted pertly. “Why,
-you know as well as I do,” and she rattled off a description of the
-man, which tallied exactly with that of the dead Stambuloff, whom,
-by-the-way, Guilgaut and I had seen many scores of times in the early
-eighties. “Your friend,” the girl continued, “left a message for you.
-He said—tell him when he comes that he will perish in very much the
-same manner as I have done; and he showed me his hand.” “And what did
-you see?” Ferdinand asked. “I saw the same ending to the life line in
-his hand as I see in yours,” the girl replied. “Why, there is your
-friend! He is beckoning to you. You had better go to him.” And, to her
-astonishment, Ferdinand walked off in the opposite direction.
-
-“‘We had the story first hand. She told it us two or three days
-afterwards, and expressed great anxiety as to the identity of the two
-men who had behaved so strangely to her.’”
-
-Only one case of haunting at the actual Front has been related to me. I
-will state it in my own words.
-
-It happened during the retreat from N——.
-
-The O——’s had suffered heavily, and, in the scramble to get out of
-the deadly fire zone, small parties of them, owing to the nature of
-the country, had got isolated from the main body and left behind. This
-was the case with a dozen or so men of B Company, who, after racing
-across a field amid a hail of shrapnel, had clambered over a formidable
-barrier of barbed wire into a dense wood.
-
-Under cover of a thick cluster of trees they sat down and doctored
-their wounds. There was not a sound man amongst them. Sergeant Mackay
-had been struck in three places in his right leg; Corporal MacIntyre
-had had a good square inch of flesh taken off his thigh; Private
-Findlay had lost three of his fingers; and Bugler Scott—an ear; while,
-in addition to these slight inconveniences, they were all ravenously
-hungry and parched with thirst.
-
-“I suggest,” said Sergeant Mackay, after a brief lull in their
-conversation, “that we push on again and see if we can find some sort
-of habitation where we can get a mouthful.”
-
-“Aye, mon!” Corporal MacIntyre replied, for during such “sauve qui
-peuts” all formality of rank is dropped, “It’s the wee drappie I’m
-thinking after, and unless we get some of it pretty soon there’ll not
-be any of us left to need it. I’m bleeding like a pig, and so are a
-good many more of us.”
-
-“Very well, then,” Sergeant Mackay observed, rising with difficulty,
-and wincing in spite of his efforts to appear comfortable. “Let us
-press on.”
-
-The men were all absolutely ignorant of their surroundings. They
-had seen nothing of the country save from the train, and during a
-few hours’ tramp from the railway depot to the lines they had just
-evacuated. Consequently, for all they knew to the contrary, the
-wood that lay in front of them might stretch for miles, or might be
-inhabited by anything from grizly bears to hyænas—for the knowledge of
-the British “Tommy” with regard to the fauna and flora of Belgium is
-extremely limited.
-
-Threading their way through the thick undergrowth, they stole
-stealthily forward, the roar of artillery still sounding faintly in
-their ears, till at length they emerged into a wide clearing, at the
-far extremity of which stood a neatly thatched white cottage. It was
-so home-like with its small plot of flower-bedecked garden, its walls
-covered with clematis and honeysuckle, and its tiny spiral column of
-smoke curling heavenwards, that the bleeding and exhausted men gave
-deep sighs of relief.
-
-“Reminds me of Scotland,” Private Findlay whispered.
-
-“It’s as like my mother’s cottage as two peas,” Private Callum retorted.
-
-They halted, and were looking at Sergeant Mackay to see what he would
-do—for bold as the O——’s are in battle, they are often among the
-most bashful of His Majesty’s troops in time of peace—when suddenly
-the door of the cottage opened and an old woman appeared on the
-threshold, armed with a blunderbuss. Glaring fiercely and shouting, she
-put the weapon to her hip and fired. There was a loud bang, and one or
-two of the men uttered ejaculations of pain.
-
-“God save us!” Sergeant Mackay cried. “The gude wife takes us for
-Germans.” Then addressing the woman, who was pouring another handful of
-shot into the muzzle of her infernal piece of antiquity, he called out,
-“Are ye daft or glaikit? Dinna ken that we are Scots. Anglais.”
-
-It was the only word of French the Highlander knew, and, on shouting it
-three times in rapid succession, and with increased emphasis, it had
-effect. The old woman lowered her weapon, and shading her eyes with a
-lean, brown, and knotted hand, exclaimed. “Ah, moi dieu, les Anglais!
-On me dit que les Anglais sont les amis des Belgiques. Et je vous aurai
-tué! Pardonnez-moi messieurs.”
-
-This speech was of course lost upon the Highlanders, who would have
-laughed—so comic was the picture of this old woman with the ancient
-gun—had they not been faint from exhaustion.
-
-Now, as she beckoned to them to approach, they doffed their caps and
-filed in at her gate, Sergeant Mackay leading the way.
-
-The interior of the house was as they had expected—scrupulously neat
-and clean.
-
-“Wipe your boots, boys,” Sergeant Mackay whispered. “We mustn’t put the
-old lady out more than we can help.”
-
-They all trooped in. As soon as they were seated the old woman vanished
-through a low doorway, reappearing a few seconds later laden with bread
-and cheese and wine, which she watched them eat and drink with perfect
-satisfaction, and when they had finished, conducted them to a loft at
-the back of the cottage, where she made them understand by signs they
-could lie as long as they pleased.
-
-“I kinna think,” Sergeant Mackay said, as soon as their hostess had
-retired, “where the Germans are. It’s passing strange they have not put
-in an appearance here.”
-
-“Maybe they’ve gone by and missed this spot. It’s nae sae handy,”
-Private Findlay said. “Anyhow, I’m for sleeping—for it’s ten days
-since I shut my eyes.”
-
-“It’s the same with me,” ejaculated Private McCallum. “I hae not slept
-a wink since we left Plymouth.”
-
-Apparently they were all of the same opinion—namely, that they needed
-rest; and, without further ado, every man selected a place in the hay,
-stretched himself out at full length, and was soon fast asleep. The
-afternoon wore away, the sun set, and one by one the stars made their
-appearance, but still the men slept.
-
-The gloom of the forest thickened, and with the long and waving shadows
-of the elms and beeches crept forth forms of a more tangible and
-sinister nature. Sergeant Mackay awoke with a start, and, springing to
-his feet, strained his ears and listened.
-
-“Nightmare!” he said. “I made certain the Germans had got hold of me.
-Weel, weel, it’s nowt but a dream. I will go and see what the gude
-wife is about, and, perhaps, if she hae not gone to bed, she will gie
-us some hot tea or milk—that red wine of hers hae made me uncommon
-thirsty.” He scrambled down on to the ground, and, leaving the rest of
-the men still asleep, crossed the yard and pushed open the door leading
-to the kitchen. He was about to enter, when there came a half-choking
-cry and the front of the house filled with soldiers. Sergeant Mackay
-knew them at once—they were Germans! Shrinking back into the shadow
-of the doorway he stood and listened. Though he could not understand
-their jargon, he soon formed an idea of what was taking place. They had
-caught the old woman by surprise and were discussing what they should
-do with her. Had the O——s been armed, Sergeant Mackay would not have
-hesitated—he would have staked anything on a win against odds at six
-to one, but in their hasty flight the men had left their rifles behind
-them, and it would be sheer suicide for them to attack the Germans with
-their bare fists. Therefore it at once entered his mind to slip out
-quietly and warn his comrades, so that they could escape without their
-presence being detected. A cry of pain, however, made him hesitate.
-
-Two Germans had hold of the old woman’s arms and were twisting them
-round.
-
-The difficulty of his position was not lost on Sergeant Mackay. If he
-played the knight errant and helped the old woman, he would not be
-able to give his comrades the necessary warning, and they would all
-be taken prisoners—perhaps shot. On the other hand this gude wife had
-been extremely kind to them, and was proving her loyalty by maintaining
-an absolute silence as to their presence in the cottage. Could he stand
-by and see her abused? He could not. There was too much of the Gael in
-him for that, and as the old woman gave another gurgle, he stepped out
-from his hiding place, and picking up a kitchen chair, rushed at her
-captors, both of whom he stunned. He was, of course, eventually borne
-down by numbers, and dragged to the ground.
-
-“What shall we do with him?” one of the men who were holding him asked.
-“The dog! He has broken Fritz’s head, and more than half killed Hans.
-He has arms like a bullock.”
-
-“Hang him,” the sergeant in charge of the men replied. “Tie him and the
-old woman together and hang them from this beam.” And he pointed to a
-great, white rafter running across the ceiling.
-
-Sergeant Mackay’s uniform should, of course, have protected him, but,
-then, as the German sergeant put it, this cottage was well hidden in
-the woods, the English were evacuating the country, and no one was
-likely to come across the bodies, saving Belgian peasants who dare
-not say anything, and German soldiers who would not say anything. So
-Sergeant Mackay was dragged up from the floor, beaten and bruised till
-there was very little of him left, bound tightly to the old gude wife,
-and hanged with her. The Germans then ransacked the house, and were
-preparing to explore the outer premises, when a bugle rang out, and
-they hurriedly left the cottage. Ten minutes later, when all was quiet,
-into the house, on tip-toe, stole the rest of the O——s.
-
-“God save us!” ejaculated Private Findlay, starting back and pointing
-to the grim figures swaying gently from the ceiling. “God save us! Sae
-what the deils hae done!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Halt!” The word of the Colonel, transmitted by his adjutant to the
-head of the column, brought the O——s to a dead stop.
-
-For this they were not altogether sorry, as they had been footing it
-for eight or nine hours on end—and every little respite was welcome.
-But the Colonel in this instance, at least, was not intentionally a
-good Samaritan. He had halted, not for the purpose of resting his men,
-but because he was fogged as to his whereabouts. The night was inky
-black, the country difficult—all hills, deep depressions and thick
-woods—and the Colonel, relying implicitly on the guidance of his
-intelligence officer, whom he supposed had made himself thoroughly
-familiar with the locality, found himself obviously going astray. He
-should now be at a railway bridge, which was six miles from the village
-of Etigny, the last landmark. But no such bridge, as far as he could
-judge, was anywhere near, and Lambert, the intelligence officer, on
-being questioned, admitted he did not exactly know where they were.
-That is why the Colonel had halted. His object was to make a flank
-attack on the German outposts, who were supposed to be in hiding in a
-wood, some three miles to the south of T——, where the extreme right
-of their main army lay, and obviously it was of no use advancing any
-further until he had ascertained the direction in which he must steer.
-
-In this wood was a cottage, that had been enlarged and fortified,
-and hitherto used as a place of internment and hospital for English
-prisoners, until they could be transported to Potsdam. Reports had
-reached the English C.O. that the Germans intended killing all their
-prisoners, if compelled to evacuate T——, and so the O——s were
-to endeavour to rescue these prisoners, whilst at the same time
-outflanking and cutting off the German outposts. The movement had, of
-course, to be in the nature of an entire surprise, and the hospital
-to be rushed, if possible, without any firing. According to Lambert,
-the wood was about one mile due east of the railway bridge, and there
-was a tiny path near a mill, on the outskirts of it, that led to the
-rear of the cottage. To miss this path would be dangerous, as the wood
-elsewhere was covered with morass and full of quarries.
-
-“Well, Lambert,” the Colonel said, “you have led us into a deuced
-rotten hole, and you must get us out of it somehow. Surely you have
-some idea of our whereabouts.”
-
-Lambert peered again into the darkness and shook his head. “On a night
-like this,” he argued, “it is easy to make mistakes. We must have come
-much further to the west than I intended.”
-
-“Well, then, we had better veer round and make for the extreme east,”
-the Colonel said tartly.
-
-“Would it not be as well to return to Etigny, sir,” the Adjutant
-suggested.
-
-“What, six miles—lose all that time—and with our men already pretty
-well exhausted!” the Colonel retorted angrily. “No, that is utterly out
-of the question. Lambert has brought us here, and, egad, he must take
-us on to our destination.”
-
-Lambert took a few paces into the darkness, and was again peering
-round, when a young lieutenant approached the Colonel and saluted.
-
-“If you please, sir,” he said, “a man has just arrived who says he will
-act as our guide.”
-
-“A man! A German, I suppose you mean? What language does he speak?”
-
-“English. At least in part. He is a Scot. Shall I bring him to you?”
-
-The Colonel gave a gruff assent, and in a few minutes the subaltern
-returned, followed by a tall figure enveloped in a long black cloak.
-With one accord the Colonel, the Adjutant and Lambert all swung round
-and eyed him curiously.
-
-“Who and what are you?” demanded the Colonel.
-
-“I’m an inhabitant of these parts,” the stranger answered, “and I have
-come to offer you my services as guide.”
-
-“You’re in the pay of the Germans, of course,” the Colonel retorted
-sharply. “How did you know we wanted a guide?”
-
-“I overheard your conversation.”
-
-“What!” the Colonel cried furiously. “You have been listening to what
-we were saying. Take him away, Anderson, and have him shot at once.”
-
-No one moved. A sort of spell stole over Lambert, the Adjutant, and
-Anderson, and held them rooted to the ground. The Colonel repeated his
-order, and was about to lay hands on the stranger himself, when the
-latter waved him back.
-
-“In an emergency like this, Colonel R——,” he said, “you must take
-what Providence sends you. I am no more a German spy than is your
-son, Alec, who is, probably, at the present moment returning from an
-afternoon’s march out with the O.T.C. at Cheltenham.”
-
-“Great Heavens,” the Colonel gasped, “how do you know I have a son
-Alec, and that he is at Cheltenham. Who are you, sir? A renegade?”
-
-“No, Colonel, I’m not,” came the reply. “I’m someone in whom you can
-place perfect confidence. Trust yourself to me and I will conduct you
-at once to the cottage in the wood.”
-
-“It’s very extraordinary. I don’t for the life of me know what to make
-of it,” the Colonel muttered, turning to the group of officers by his
-side. “What do you advise, Lambert?”
-
-“Under the circumstances, sir,” Lambert replied slowly, “I should trust
-him. You can have him shot if he leads us wrong.”
-
-“That’s true,” the Colonel murmured, and turning to the stranger, “Did
-you hear what Major Lambert said? I can have you shot, if you lead
-us astray. And, by Jove, I will. Take your position at the head of
-the column. If we are successful, I will see that you are adequately
-rewarded; if you betray us—you die. Do you understand?”
-
-“I do, Colonel,” the stranger replied, “and I accept your conditions
-willingly.”
-
-He stepped back, and, at a signal from the Colonel, followed Lieutenant
-Anderson to the head of the column. A sergeant and a corporal—two
-old and tried veterans—took up their positions a pace or two behind
-him, and, at a word from the Colonel, the whole battalion was once
-more on the move. On and on they went. A dull tramp, tramp, tramp, but
-in a completely different direction from the one in which they had
-previously been going. It was all so pitch dark that the corporal and
-the sergeant had to keep very close to the stranger to see him.
-
-“He marches just like one of us,” the Sergeant whispered, “and yet I
-kenna hear the sound of his feet. What do you make of him?”
-
-“I don’t know,” the Corporal replied. “I seem to know him, and yet I
-haven’t seen a feature of his face. Something about him reminds me
-of the night I escaped from N——. It strikes me, Sergeant, that the
-cottage the Colonel is after is the very one in which we took shelter.”
-
-“Then you know the way?”
-
-“Nae,” Corporal Findlay replied. “I was too rushed and scared that
-night to remember much. The only thing I can remember seeing plainly
-is those two corpses swinging from the beam—Sergeant Mackay’s and the
-gude wife’s—and the scene comes back to me vividly now as I look at
-this guide of ours. Why, I dinna ken.”
-
-“Be ready to shoot him, mon, the instant there’s treachery,” the
-Sergeant whispered.
-
-“Aye, Aye!” Corporal Findlay replied, tapping the barrel of his rifle
-knowingly. “He’ll nae want a second dose.”
-
-On and on they tramped, till presently they forsook the highway for a
-field, and then, plunging down and down, eventually found themselves
-upon level ground facing some trees. “This is the wood,” the guide
-observed, “and here is the path. After we have travelled along it in
-Indian file, and on tiptoe, for two miles, we shall emerge into a
-small clearing, where a low mud wall, overtopped by a machine gun,
-will confront us. The soldiers supposed to be on duty there have been
-drinking red wine all day, and are now sleeping. If you approach
-noiselessly you will be able to climb the wall and take them by
-surprise. The cottage is then yours.”
-
-“But there are sentries in the wood.”
-
-“One! He will be leaning on his rifle dozing. You must creep up to him
-and settle him before he has time to make a sound. I will tell you when
-we approach him.”
-
-The guide advanced, and the whole battalion of O——s stalked along
-behind him.
-
-“I shall be gay glad when this job is over,” Corporal Findlay murmured.
-“I would as soon spend the night in a kirkyard.”
-
-However, although every now and then a rustling of leaves that heralded
-a rabbit made them start, and the ominous screech of an owl caused
-the hair on the scalp of more than one superstitious Celt to bristle,
-so far there was no real cause for alarm, and on and on the battalion
-stole. At last their guide halted, and every man behind him instantly
-followed suit. He whispered to Corporal Findlay and the Sergeant, and,
-making way to let them pass, kept close to their heels, guiding them by
-what appeared to be a minute bull’s-eye lantern.
-
-On turning a sharp bend in the path, Corporal Findlay and the Sergeant
-saw the sentry, as their guide had described him, asleep, and, before
-he had time to awake, Corporal Findlay had dashed him to the ground
-with a swinging blow from the butt-end of his rifle. Three minutes
-later, and the head of the column found itself facing the mud wall and
-the machine-gun. This was the critical moment. If their guide meant
-mischief, now was his opportunity. Following closely at his heels,
-their rifle and revolver at his head, the Sergeant and Corporal crept
-up to the wall, and, one by one, the rest of the O——s filed into
-the open space after them. Holding their breath the Highlanders laid
-hold of the top of the wall, then with a sudden stoop, they swung
-themselves upwards. The sleeping sentinels awoke, but only to feel one
-short, sharp thrust—and the pangs of death. The outer position won,
-the Highlanders next turned their attention to the cottage and the
-enclosed space in front of it. There, a strong body of German infantry
-were stationed, and, as they came rushing out to meet the intruders,
-they shared the same fate as their companions. In ten minutes there
-was not a German left alive, and the O——s, their bayonets dripping
-with blood, were busy liberating the English prisoners. When it was
-all over, and the Colonel and his staff were sitting down in the
-front parlour of the cottage enjoying some refreshment, Colonel R——
-suddenly remembered the guide. “Anderson,” he said, “fetch that
-fellow—our guide—in here. It’s not very gracious behaviour on our
-part to leave him outside, for, egad, if it had not been for him we
-should not be where we are. Moreover, I want to see him—I’ve an idea
-he’s someone I know.”
-
-The subaltern departed, and after an interval of some minutes returned,
-followed only by Corporal Findlay.
-
-“Hulloa!” exclaimed the Colonel, looking up sharply from his meal.
-“This is not the man I wanted. Where is he?”
-
-“If you please, sir,” the subaltern said, in a voice full of suppressed
-excitement, “Corporal Findlay can tell you all about it—he was the
-last to see him.”
-
-“The last to see him,” growled the Colonel. “Why, what the deuce do you
-mean. Where is he?”
-
-“I can’t say, sir,” Corporal Findlay began. “After the fight was
-over I followed him into this cottage, right into this room. And he
-halted just where you are sitting, under that beam,” and he pointed
-to the great, white rafter immediately over the Colonel’s head. “He
-then turned round, sir, and drawing aside the cloak, that had hitherto
-hidden his face, showed himself to me!”
-
-“Good God, man, you needn’t look so frightened!” the Colonel cried. “He
-wasn’t the devil, was he?”
-
-“No, sir, he wasn’t the devil,” Corporal Findlay responded. “He was
-Sergeant Mackay of the first battalion—and the last time I had set
-eyes on him was in this room on the night of the retreat from N——,
-when I and several others of the O——s found him hanging from that
-rafter—dead.”
-
-“And then,” said the Colonel, after a long pause, “and then what
-happened?”
-
-“Why, sir,” Corporal Findlay replied, “he smiled, as if something had
-pleased him mightily, and waving his hand—disappeared.”
-
-“And you expect me to believe such a cock and bull story as that,” the
-Colonel said slowly.
-
-“It’s the truth, sir,” Corporal Findlay said slowly. “Sergeant Scott
-can corroborate it, for he was with me all the time.”
-
-“There’s no need to do that,” the Colonel answered, “for I know you
-have spoken the truth. This is by no means my first experience with
-ghosts—only—for goodness sake do you and Sergeant Scott say nothing
-about it to the other men. If you do there won’t be an ounce of nerves
-left among them by the morning. Germans are one thing, but ghosts
-another! It was a splendid revenge for Sergeant Mackay!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The stories I have just narrated must be taken for what they are worth.
-Though I believe they were told me in good faith, I cannot vouch for
-them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-A CASE FROM JAPAN
-
-
-Since Japan is a country in which I believe many people are intensely
-interested, I do not think I need apologise for introducing here the
-following account of a Japanese haunting.
-
-Never having been to Japan, I cannot lay claim to having had any
-ghostly adventures there myself; but as this is copied, word for word,
-from the MSS. of Mr. G. Salis, which was very kindly lent me for the
-purpose by Mrs. Salis (Mr. Salis’s mother), I can most certainly answer
-for its authenticity.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“In the spring of 1913, I settled in the village of Akaji, in the
-southern Island of Japan, in order to work a colliery. The country in
-this part is mountainous and quite off the track of any tourists, and
-the inhabitants remain in a very primitive condition. All the people
-are either farmers, miners, or the keepers of very small shops, and
-there is not a single hotel nor even an inn. I stayed at first in one
-of the rooms of a farm house, and, after a little while, was able to
-lease an old thatched farm house, standing in a small orange orchard,
-quite close to the colliery.
-
-“Its owner lived in a little house at the back. My house was
-one-storied, but very high, the pitch of the thick thatch being
-very steep. On entering, one found a kitchen with various cooking
-places, but no chimneys: the smoke curling and losing itself among
-the huge rafters that supported the roof. The rest of the house was
-raised, and consisted of four rooms divided from each other by sliding
-paper-covered screens or fusuma, and with thick padded straw mats or
-tatami on the floor. I got a table and chair, and put up some book
-shelves, and made the best room as habitable as possible. This room had
-a tokonoma, or recess, painted a dark grey; and a scroll, a crystal
-and a vase of flowers put in it gave the necessary decoration to the
-severely bare interior. For the first few months I slept in one of the
-back rooms, but later, when it got very hot, I only used the one room.
-I had one servant, and as we got up at dawn, we also went to sleep
-very early, and usually by nine o’clock the house was in darkness and
-silence. One night I was awakened, and heard talking and laughing in
-the next room, only separated from me by a thin screen. Someone was
-telling a story in an animated voice, and his auditor every now and
-then ejaculated ‘naruhode’ (to be sure) and ‘sodesuka’ (is that so),
-but the voices were kept low and the laughs were subdued. Just then the
-kitchen clock struck two. I was annoyed at my servant having friends
-in at that hour, and in the room next mine, and determining to have it
-out with him in the morning, I fell asleep. Next morning he absolutely
-denied that anyone had been in the house, and became very indignant
-when I insisted on what I had heard.
-
-“Two nights later, I again heard a conversation going on, and
-reluctantly got out of bed and from under the mosquito curtains to
-investigate. A low chuckling laugh and then a snatch of song—and I
-pushed back the sliding fusuma. The room was in darkness, but I had
-a little electric torch which I used in the colliery, and, pressing
-its button, the room was brightly lit. Inside the mosquito curtain,
-Tanaka lay soundly sleeping—no one else was in the room; indeed,
-but for the futon or mattress covered by the net it was completely
-bare, and the talking still went on, seeming now to come from the room
-behind me. I awoke Tanaka, and we went out into the garden. No one was
-stirring, and the sounds came from inside the house. Away, down the
-road, three miners were returning from a night shift, and my servant
-wanted to run and fetch them, but I did not see the object of doing
-so. The mosquitoes were very bad, and I wanted to get back under the
-nets, conversations or no conversations, and so we re-entered the
-house. Silence reigned, and I went back to bed—but not to sleep—for
-the remainder of that night. Tanaka took the opportunity, while I
-was at the colliery the next morning, to pack up his few belongings
-and decamp, leaving a letter saying he could not stay in a house
-frequented by demons. I got a girl in from the village as a makeshift,
-and afterwards another servant, but no one would stay in the house
-after nightfall. I moved my bed into a room at the back, but still
-used the other room as a living room, and soon became used to the fact
-that it was haunted. Often, during the day, there were noises coming
-from near the tokonoma or recess—as though someone was cracking his
-finger joints, a habit the Japanese have; on several occasions, flowers
-put in the vase below the hanging scroll were taken out of their vase
-and arranged lying on a tray. One afternoon I brought my bed into the
-room, as the autumn was now getting cold, and I had been unwell for
-some days and wanted the benefit of the afternoon sun. I sent the
-servant to buy some stamps at the Post Office, a mile away, and stepped
-into the garden to gather some late dahlias. Looking up I distinctly
-saw a movement in the room I had left, through the pane of glass let
-into the paper-covered shoji. Dropping my flowers, I pressed my face
-against the pane, and saw the bedclothes, which the servant and myself
-had arranged, only five minutes previously, had been whisked off and
-were lying on the floor. Twice after this, coats hung on a peg near
-the tokonoma were found almost immediately lying on the floor at some
-distance, one having been pulled from its peg with such force as partly
-to tear it.
-
-“On many nights, when I woke up, I heard talking in the next room, and
-gradually came to distinguish a man’s voice, sometimes I thought two
-men’s, and certainly that of a woman and a baby. All the village were
-now talking of the haunted house, and, now and then, neighbours came in
-to listen to the mysterious sounds that came, from time to time, from
-the tokonoma, but they took good care to be gone before sunset.
-
-“Winter had now come, and I fell ill, and as the only really pleasant
-room in the house was made impossible during the long sleepless nights,
-I redoubled my endeavour to find another house. A baby’s wailings
-were very distinct, then it was hushed by its mother, and then long
-conversations ensued between her and one or two men—sometimes there
-were little taps, as though a tobacco pipe were being emptied of its
-ashes, but more often a curious noise was heard which sounded like
-‘putter putter.’ About this time, an account appeared in all the
-Japanese newspapers of a bridge in Tokejo, which was haunted by a
-woman, and how this spirit had been laid by priestly intervention,
-and it was suggested that the same might be tried in the present
-case. I thought it rather a good plan, but, seeing that it was rather
-expensive, said that the landlord and not his foreign tenant should
-defray the cost and arrange the matter. But my landlord, who was very
-unpopular in the village, and with whom I was not on very good terms,
-would do nothing; and as, just then, another house near the colliery
-became vacant, I was able to move, and so at last be free of my ghostly
-visitants. Everyone knew of the reason for my leaving, and the landlord
-felt sure he would never find another tenant. After the house had been
-empty for some time, the landlord himself determined to live in it
-for some months, in order to demonstrate that things were not so bad
-after all. He, and his wife, and their two grandchildren accordingly
-moved their things across from their other house, but did not at first
-occupy the room with the tokonoma. Seeing, however, that their object
-in being in the house at all would be defeated unless this room was
-used, they hung some pictures in the recess, placed a bronze flower
-vase on a carved stand below them, and also moved in a gilt shrine
-containing an image of Buddha. A few friends were asked in, but all
-left at sunset. Next morning I heard that there had been considerable
-disturbance at the house, and that the younger grandson had been taken
-with convulsions.
-
-“The same day a move was made again to their former abode, the house
-was closed, and still remains empty. A temple on a hill near by was
-being repaired, and, on the completion of the work, a priest came to
-hold a service. The head man of the village took the opportunity of
-consulting with him, and together they went to see my late landlord.
-The facts brought to light, many of which were vaguely known in the
-district, are as follows:—The house had been built about one hundred
-and fifty years previously by the head of the family, which was
-then of more consequence than at present, although it still owned
-considerable property in pine forests and rice fields. A younger
-brother of the original builder had conspired against his feudal lord
-and had committed suicide—hara-kiri. It was not known in which room,
-but probably it was in the principal one. The next tragedy, that was
-known of, had happened some fifteen years before, when the son-in-law,
-the father of the two boys already mentioned, was found hanging from a
-hook near the wooden ceiling of the room with the tokonoma. He had been
-away for some time in Tokejo, had spent a great deal of money, and, on
-his return, had quarrelled violently with his wife. She had run out of
-the house with her children, and had stayed on the hillside all night.
-Next morning her husband was found as above stated. Some months later,
-again in the same room, on the eve of the birth of her posthumous
-child, this woman killed herself by drinking poison, made from the
-leaves of a shrub still growing in the garden. During the convulsions
-which preceded her death, the child was born, but dead.
-
-“The priest said there was no doubt that the spirits of these various
-people, related by family ties, and lives, passed among the same
-surroundings, and who had all come to a dreadful violent end in the
-same house, and, probably, the same room, were earthbound, and were in
-the habit of assembling and conversing in the room where their lives
-had come to an end. Each addition would strengthen and intensify their
-bondage, and the priest expressed his surprise that the spirits were
-not actually visible. There was a good deal of discussion as to the
-terms for a service and ceremony to free the house from these ghostly
-tenants and to give them rest, I offered a small sum, but as they were,
-after all, the relations of the landlord, it was upon him that the bulk
-of the expense fell, and he refused to provide the necessary funds.
-His argument was that, even were the spirits ‘laid,’ no one now would
-rent the house, and so he would not spend any money on it. Whether he
-also thought that the spirits were as happy holding their ghost-parties
-round the tokonoma as they would be if they were at rest, he did not
-say, as such thoughts would be contrary to all Japanese ideas on the
-subject. Anyway, the house is now closed, the heavy wooden shutters are
-rolled across the verandahs and bolted, the garden is overgrown and
-choked with weeds, and the only time when there is human activity about
-it, is when the orange trees, burdened with fruit, yield their golden
-harvest.
-
- “G. SALIS.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-To revert again to my own experiences. I am often sorry, extremely
-sorry, I was ever brought into contact with the Unknown. As I said in
-one of the early chapters of this book, I did not go out of my way to
-seek the superphysical—it came to me. And it has never given me any
-peace. I feel its presence beside me at all times. In the evening, when
-I am writing, the curtains that are tightly drawn across the closed
-windows slowly bulge, the candlestick on the mantel-shelf rattles, a
-picture on the wall swings out suddenly at me, and, when I go to bed
-and try to sleep, I frequently hear breathings and far-away whispers.
-Some of these “presences” no doubt have been with me always—most
-probably they were with my ancestors—whilst others have attached
-themselves to me in my nocturnal ramblings.
-
-My wife, who was a confirmed disbeliever before our marriage, has
-long since thrown aside her scepticism, and for a good reason. She
-has had many startling proofs of the power the spirit has of making
-itself manifest. The night a near relative of mine died both she and I
-heard a loud crash on the panel of our bedroom door, and I, though I
-only, saw a hooded figure standing there. Also, besides having heard
-the banshee, my wife has seen objects moved by superphysical agency,
-seen them fanned by a wind that is apparently non-existing, had small
-stones and other articles thrown at her, and heard all sorts of queer,
-unaccountable sounds—laughs, sighs, and moans.
-
-Three ghostly incidents have happened to me within the past twelve
-months. The first was in Red Lion Square. It was twilight; I was alone
-on the top floor of the house, and no one else was in the building,
-saving the daughter of the caretaker, who was in the basement.
-Suddenly footsteps, slow, ponderous footsteps, began to ascend the
-stairs—which, being uncarpetted and of oak, carried the sound—from
-the hall. Wondering who it could be, I called out. There was no reply,
-and the steps drew nearer. On the landing immediately beneath me they
-halted. I went out and looked down. No one was to be seen, and the
-steps immediately began to descend. I followed them right down—a few
-stairs behind—till they reached the hall, when they abruptly ceased. I
-learned afterwards that these footsteps were quite a common phenomenon
-in the house, which had long been haunted by them.
-
-My second experience occurred in the Moscow Road, Bayswater. Feeling a
-heavy weight on my bed one night and wishing to remove it, I put out my
-hand. It was immediately seized and held in a warm grip. I sat up in
-bed, but could see no one. The hand that clasped mine was very soft and
-small—unmistakably that of a woman. I felt the wrist and forearm, but
-beyond the elbow there was nothing.
-
-I was rather alarmed at this occurrence at the time, as I have a friend
-who died shortly after experiencing a similar phenomenon. In my case,
-however, the lady, whose hand I immediately identified as the hand
-that had clasped mine, and this lady solemnly declared that upon the
-same night—we compared dates—she had dreamed of a hand which was the
-exact counterpart of mine, and that, upon shaking hands with me that
-afternoon, she had been instantly reminded of her dream.
-
-That there was nothing in common between us, her tastes and outlook on
-life being absolutely at variance with mine, makes the occurrence, in
-my opinion, none the less interesting, though somewhat difficult to
-account for.
-
-My last experience occurred only a few days ago, as I was sitting
-on the stairs of a haunted house near Ealing. I had applied to the
-landlord for permission to spend the night there, and, pending his
-reply, had obtained the keys from the agent, in order to see what the
-house was like by daylight. Having just finished jotting down some
-notes—a memorandum of something I had suddenly thought of—I paused,
-still holding the pencil in my hand, whilst my note-book lay open on my
-knee. I had not sat thus for more than a minute, when, with a thrill of
-surprise, I felt the pencil suddenly taken from my hand, and, looking
-down, I distinctly saw it, of its own accord, scrawl right across my
-book. Whether what I afterwards found written in my note-book was
-written by the spirit that haunted the house, or by a projection of
-one of my own personalities, I cannot say; neither can I, myself, nor
-anyone to whom I have shown the symbolic writing, tell what it means.
-The appended is a facsimile.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-I might add that this is my one and only experience of spirit-writing,
-and also that it was my one and only experience in the haunted house
-near Ealing, as I did not succeed in getting leave to spend a night
-there.
-
-Although I must confess I have made little progress so far in my
-investigations, for my failure to decipher spirit-writing is not the
-only set-back that I have encountered, I still have hopes. I hope
-that some day, when I am brought face to face with the Unknown, in a
-haunted house or elsewhere, I may be able to hit upon some mode of
-communication with it, and discover something that may be of real
-service both to myself and to the rest of humanity.
-
-If only I could overcome fear!
-
-It is March 28th, midnight, and as I pen these concluding words, my
-mind reverts to the symbols and the date—March 28th, twelve o’clock.
-
-Suddenly I hear footsteps—distant footsteps on the road
-outside—coming in the direction of the house.
-
-I glance at my wife, wondering whether she hears them too. She is
-asleep, however, and, as I covertly watch her, I see a look of terror
-gradually steal into her face. Clicking steps. They come nearer and
-nearer. They stop for a moment at our door, and then—thank God—pass
-slowly on.
-
-I look out of the window—the road is absolutely deserted, but from
-close at hand the sounds are wafted to me—click, click, click,
-fainter, fainter, fainter—until they abruptly cease.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-_Printed by W. Mate & Sons, Ltd., Bournemouth._
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note
-
-Words in italics have been surrounded with _underscores_ and small
-capitals have been replaced with all capitals.
-
-Small errors in punctuation were corrected without note, also the
-following changes were made, on page
-
- 11 “ancester” changed to “ancestor” (Niall Garbh, the ancestor
- of Red Hugh)
- 16 “ill” changed to “will” (to wander about at will?)
- 27 “generation” changed to “generations” (with Irish soil for many
- generations.)
- 28 “i.” added “i.e.” (_i.e._, to announce a death)
- 33 “remanied” changed to “remained” (and so I remained with my neck
- craned over)
- 42 “genialty” changed to “geniality” (about them all there was an air
- of geniality)
- 44 “wiife” changed to “wife” (my wife met this Mr. Dekon at a ball)
- 49 “financies” changed to “finances” (in which my finances forced
- me to)
- 59 “lift” changed to “left” (which left me with)
- 62 “Be” changed to “Bell” (Mrs. Bell asked Stella if she had)
- 69 “physical” changed to “psychical” (the people to associate
- themselves with psychical research)
- 77 “overheard” changed to “overhead” (I heard someone moving about
- overhead)
- 86 “fo” changed to “of” (of tramp suicides)
- 99 “happned” changed to “happened” (That was all that happened)
- 103 “parellel” changed to “parallel” (disturbances of a parallel
- nature)
- 118 “dose” changed to “doze” (As soon as I begin to doze)
- 164 “his” changed to “my” (pointing to my cap).
-
-Otherwise the original was preserved, including inconsistencies
-in spelling, hyphenation, etc. Additional: “the ’98” on page 17
-probably refers to the Irish rebellion in 1798.
-
-
-
-
-
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-Hunter, by Elliott O'Donnell
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Twenty Years' Experience as a Ghost Hunter, by
-Elliott O'Donnell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Twenty Years' Experience as a Ghost Hunter
-
-Author: Elliott O'Donnell
-
-Illustrator: Phyllis Vere Campbell
- H. C. Bevan-Petman
-
-Release Date: December 27, 2015 [EBook #50775]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GHOST HUNTER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Shaun Pinder, eagkw and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="521" height="800" alt="Cover" title="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<h1>
-TWENTY YEARS’ EXPERIENCE AS A<br />
-GHOST HUNTER
-</h1>
-
-<hr class="l1" />
-
-
-<p class="ttl">
-Twenty Years’ Experience<br />
-as a Ghost Hunter
-</p>
-
-<p class="tp1">
-<span class="f7">BY</span><br />
-
-ELLIOT O’DONNELL<br />
-
-<span class="aut">AUTHOR OF “THE SORCERY CLUB,” “WERWOLVES,”<br />
-“SOME HAUNTED HOUSES OF ENGLAND AND WALES,”<br />
-“HAUNTED HIGHWAYS,” ETC., ETC.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="tp2">
-WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY<br />
-<b>PHYLLIS VERE CAMPBELL</b><br />
-AND<br />
-<b>H. C. BEVAN-PETMAN</b>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/title_page.jpg" width="139" height="195" alt="Logo" title="Logo" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="tp3">
-HEATH, CRANTON, LTD.<br />
-FLEET LANE, LONDON
-</p>
-
-<hr class="l1" />
-
-<p class="tp4">
-First Published, November, 1916.<br />
-<br />
-Second Edition, February, 1917.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="l1" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h2>AUTHOR’S NOTE</h2>
-
-<hr class="l4" />
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">In</span> presenting this volume of ghostly reminiscences
-to the Public I would lay stress on the fact
-that, in order to avoid the danger of incurring an
-action for slander or libel, I have—save where
-expressedly stated to the contrary—resorted to the
-use of fictitious names for all persons and houses.
-For the reproduction of one or two articles I am
-indebted to the courtesy of Mr. Ralph Shirley.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-ELLIOT O’DONNELL.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noi">1916.</p>
-
-<hr class="l1" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
- <th>CHAPTER</th>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <th>PAGE</th>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">I.</td>
- <td class="col2">I commence my ghostly investigations
- in dublin</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_1">11</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">II.</td>
- <td class="col2">I am pursued by phantom footsteps</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_2">23</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">III.</td>
- <td class="col2">Some strange cases in scotland</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_3">34</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">IV.</td>
- <td class="col2">I travel across the united states
- and do some ghost hunting in
- san francisco</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_4">49</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">V.</td>
- <td class="col2">A haunted office in denver</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_5">58</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">VI.</td>
- <td class="col2">Cases of hauntings in st. louis,
- new york, and chicago</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_6">69</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">VII.</td>
- <td class="col2">A haunted wood, and a haunted
- quarry in canada</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_7">86</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">VIII.</td>
- <td class="col2">Hauntings in the east end</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_8">105</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">IX.</td>
- <td class="col2">Night ramblings on wimbledon
- common and hounslow heath</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_9">122</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">X.</td>
- <td class="col2">My views on a future life for the
- animal and vegetable worlds</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_10">136</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XI.</td>
- <td class="col2">A haunting in regent’s park, and
- my further views with regard to
- spiritualism</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_11">148</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XII.</td>
- <td class="col2">A haunted mine in wales</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_12">159</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XIII.</td>
- <td class="col2">The pool in wales that lures
- people to death</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_13">169</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XIV.</td>
- <td class="col2">I go on with the history of my life,
- and narrate a ghostly happening
- in liverpool</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_14">183</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XV.</td>
- <td class="col2">Some strange cases in birmingham,
- harrogate, sussex and newcastle</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_15">194</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XVI.</td>
- <td class="col2">War ghosts</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_16">206</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">XVII.</td>
- <td class="col2">A case from japan</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#chapter_17">223</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="l1" />
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<hr class="l4" />
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<tr>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class="ill">FACING<br />
- PAGE</th>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">1</td>
- <td class="col2">“We both looked in the direction he
- indicated”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill1">39</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">2</td>
- <td class="col2">“Who is that tall, good-looking girl,
- stella, that i’ve seen following you
- into the building....”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill2">63</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">3</td>
- <td class="col2">“But there are other ghosts—if you like
- to term them so—that are more troublesome”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill3">82</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">4</td>
- <td class="col2">“I looked up, just in time to see the girl
- flash me a look of subtle warning”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill4">94</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">5</td>
- <td class="col2">“The thing came right up to the window,
- and then raised its face”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill5">101</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">6</td>
- <td class="col2">“What gives me the worst fright is a
- tree....”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill6">141</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">7</td>
- <td class="col2">“My god! there’s dick! He’s just behind
- you”</td>
- <td class="col3"><a href="#ill7">167</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="col1">8</td>
- <td class="col2">“I suddenly caught sight of a large eye”</td>
- <td align="right"><a href="#ill8">205</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="l2" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_1"></div>
-
-<p class="ttl1">
-Twenty Years’ Experience<br />
-as a Ghost Hunter
-</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nb">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="subt">I COMMENCE MY GHOSTLY INVESTIGATIONS IN DUBLIN</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">In</span> starting a book of this sort, I believe it is usual to
-say something about one’s self.</p>
-
-<p>I was born in the ’seventies. My father came from
-County Limerick, and belonged to the Truagh Castle
-O’Donnells, who, tracing their descent from Shane
-Luirg, the elder brother of Niall Garbh, the ancestor
-of Red Hugh, rightly claim to be the oldest branch of
-the great clan. He graduated at Trinity College,
-Dublin, was for some time vicar of a parish near
-Worcester, and died in Egypt, under mysterious and
-much discussed circumstances,<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> soon after I came into
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>My mother was English; she belonged to an old
-Midland family, and only survived my father a few
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Although I am generally known as a ghost hunter,
-needless to say it was not for such a career that I was
-educated, first of all at Clifton College, then at an
-Army crammer’s, and finally at Chedwode Crawley’s
-well-known coaching establishment in Ely Place, Dublin.
-There I read for the Royal Irish Constabulary, and,
-attending regularly, remained for a little over two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-years. I can safely say these two years were two of
-the happiest I have ever known, for my companions at
-that time were the nicest set of fellows I have ever met,
-and amongst them I formed many lifelong friendships.</p>
-
-<p>When I was not working, I usually spent my time
-playing football or cricket, to both of which sports I
-was devoted, and, when I was not thus engaged, I used
-to tramp across hill and dale continually exploring the
-country in search of adventure.</p>
-
-<p>But in those days I did not look for ghosts—they
-came to me; they came to me then, as they had come
-to me before, and as they have come to me ever since.</p>
-
-<p>With my early experiences of the Unknown—which
-experiences, by the way, extend over the whole period
-of my youth—I have dealt fully in former works; so
-that in this volume I propose to confine myself to later
-experiences, commencing approximately with my début
-as an investigator of haunted houses and superphysical
-occurrences in general.</p>
-
-<p>To begin with, however, let me state plainly that I
-lay no claims to being what is termed a scientific
-psychical researcher. I am not a member of any august
-society that conducts its investigations of the other
-world, or worlds, with test tube and weighing apparatus;
-neither do I pretend to be a medium or consistent
-clairvoyant.</p>
-
-<p>I am merely a ghost hunter; merely one who honestly
-believes that he inherits in some degree the faculty of
-psychic perceptiveness from a long line of Celtic ancestry;
-and who is, and always has been, deeply and
-genuinely interested in all questions relative to phantasms
-and a continuance of individual life after physical
-dissolution. Moreover, in addition to this psychic
-faculty, I possess, as I have already hinted, a spirit of
-adventure; and since this spirit is irresistible, had I
-not decided to become a ghost hunter, I should doubtless
-have embarked upon some other and hardly less exciting
-pursuit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The actual cause of my decision to adopt ghost-hunting
-as a profession was an experience which befel
-me in the summer of ’92. I was at that time a student
-in Ely Place, Dublin, and being in search of rooms, was
-recommended to try a house within a stone’s throw of
-the Waterloo Road.</p>
-
-<p>A widow named Davis, with two leviathan daughters,
-Mona and Bridget, ran the establishment, and as the
-vacant apartments were large, apparently well ventilated
-and exceedingly moderate in price, I decided to take
-them. Consequently, I arrived there with my luggage
-one afternoon, and was speedily engaged in the tiring
-and somewhat irritating task of unpacking.</p>
-
-<p>When I retired to rest that first night, I certainly had
-no thought of ghosts or anything in connection with
-them; on the contrary, my mind was wholly occupied
-with speculations as to how I should fare in the coming
-weekly examination at Crawley’s, whether the extra
-attention I had recently bestowed on mathematics would
-be of any service to me, or whether, in spite of it, I
-should again occupy my place at the bottom of the
-class. I remember thinking, however, as I blew out the
-light and turned into bed, that there was something
-about the room now—though I could not tell what—that
-I had not noticed by daylight; but I soon went
-to sleep, and although I awoke several times before
-morning—a phenomenon in itself—I cannot say that I
-thought then of any superphysical element in the
-atmosphere. It was not until I had been there several
-nights that the event occurred which effectually shaped
-my future career.</p>
-
-<p>One evening the two girls, Mona and Bridget, were
-making so much racket in the room beneath me, that
-I found work impossible, and being somewhat tired, for
-I had stuck very close to it all day, I resolved to go to
-bed. On my way thither I encountered two young men,
-T.C. students, who were also lodging in the house, hotly
-engaged in an argument; and they appealed to me to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-express an opinion. I told them what I thought, as
-they followed me upstairs; then, when I reached my
-room, I abruptly bade them good-night, and, entering,
-locked the door behind me.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting down on the edge of the bed, I quietly slipped
-off my clothes and put out the light. The two men
-were still haranguing one another for all they were
-worth when I got in between the sheets and prepared
-to lie down. The room was not entirely dark; from
-between the folds of the thick plush curtains that
-enveloped the windows stray beams from the powerful
-moonlight filtered through and battled their way to the
-foot of the bed. I was looking at them with some
-degree of curiosity, when I saw something move. I
-glanced at it in astonishment, and, to my unmitigated
-horror, the shape of something dark and sinister rose
-noiselessly from the floor and came swiftly towards me. I
-tried to shout, but could not make a sound. I was completely
-paralysed, and as I sat there, sick with fear and
-apprehension, the thing leaped on to me, and, gripping
-me mercilessly by the throat, bore me backwards.</p>
-
-<p>I gasped, and choked, and suffered the most excruciating
-pain. But there was no relaxation—the pressure of
-those bony fingers only tightened and the torture went on.
-At last, after what seemed to me an eternity, there was a
-loud buzzing in my ears, my head seemed to spin round
-violently, and my brain to burst. I lost consciousness.
-On coming to, I found that my assailant had left me. I
-struck a light. My fellow-lodgers were still going at one
-another hammer and tongs—and the door was, as I had
-left it, locked on the inside. I searched the room thoroughly;
-the window was bolted; there was nothing in the
-cupboard; nothing under the bed; nothing anywhere.
-I got into bed again, full of the worst anticipations, and,
-if sleep came to me, it was only in the briefest snatches.</p>
-
-<p>At dawn the room became suffused with a cold, grey
-glow, and the suggestion of something horribly evil
-standing close beside the bed and sardonically watching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-me impressed me so strongly that, yielding to a sudden
-impulse of terror, I hid my head under the bed-clothes,
-and remained in that undignified position till the
-morning was well advanced and I was “called.”</p>
-
-<p>I got up, feeling downright ill, and although the
-sunlight metamorphosing everything now made the
-mere thought of a ghost simply ludicrous, I hurried out
-of the room as speedily as possible. Nor did I venture to
-pass another night there.</p>
-
-<p>My landlady did not demur when I asked her to
-transfer me to another apartment, and later, before I
-took my final departure from her house, she confessed to
-me that it was haunted. She believed that it had been
-used as a private home for mentally afflicted people, and
-that someone, either one of the patients or a nurse—she
-did not know which—had died, under extremely painful
-circumstances, in the room I had first occupied.</p>
-
-<p>The Davises left the house soon after I did, and who
-lives there now, and whether the hauntings still continue,
-I cannot say. When I last made enquiries, about two
-years ago, I learned that the then occupants had never
-admitted experiencing anything unusual, but that they
-always kept the room in which I had undergone the
-sensations of strangulation carefully locked.</p>
-
-<p>This adventure of mine, intensely unpleasant as it had
-been at the time, profoundly interested me. Hitherto I
-had placidly accepted as truth all the dogmas of religion
-hurled at me from the pulpit and drilled into me at
-school, for the simple reason that I had always been
-taught to regard as infinitely correct and absolutely
-above criticism all that the clergy told me: God made
-the world, they said, and all the laws and principles
-appertaining to it—that was sufficient—I need not ask
-any questions. When I looked about me and saw men,
-and women, dogs, horses, and other animals suffering
-indescribable agonies from all kinds of foul and malignant
-diseases; when I encountered cripples, the maimed and
-blind, idiots and lunatics; or read in the papers of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-swindles, murders and suicides; or noted how, throughout
-nature, the strong animals prey upon the weak;
-how, for example, the tiger, the lion and the leopard
-terrorize the jungle, just as the shark and octopus
-terrorize the sea, and the wasp and spider, centipede and
-scorpion terrorize insect life (being furnished respectively
-with weapons for tearing and rending, and sucking the
-flesh, and entailing the most excruciating tortures on the
-nerve centres); when, I say, I noted all this, I was
-given to understand that I must on no account comment
-upon it—to do so was impious and wicked—I
-must abide by the precept of my pastor and pedagogue,
-namely, that “God is almighty and merciful, loving
-and wise.”</p>
-
-<p>But now it was different—I was no longer in the
-schoolroom, no longer under the immediate influence of
-the Church. I met people in Dublin imbued with the
-broader instincts of a big, cosmopolitan community; I
-listened to their reasoning—reasoning which at first
-immeasurably shocked me, and afterwards struck me as
-horribly sane. Then, at this crisis, came the incident of
-the strangling. I tried to attribute it to a dream, but I
-was prevented by the fact that I had only just got into
-bed, and had not even lain down, when the figure seized
-me. Hence, I could only conclude that some spirit—the
-nature of my suffering and the horror it inspired leading
-me to suppose that it was a particularly evil one—had
-been my aggressor.</p>
-
-<p>But why was it not in Hell? Had it escaped in spite of
-the strict supervision of the Almighty? Or could it be
-possible that the orthodox Paradise and Purgatory did
-not exist, and that the spirits of the dead were allowed
-to wander about at will? I became interested—deeply
-so; all sorts of wild speculations floated through my
-mind; I resolved to enquire further.</p>
-
-<p>I would not be guided by any creed; I would set out
-on my work of investigation wholly unbiassed; I would
-gain whatever knowledge there was to be gained of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-another world without the aid either of priest or occultist,
-medium or scientist.</p>
-
-<p>Several of my friends in Dublin were greatly interested
-in ghosts, and I learned from them of two houses that
-had long borne the reputation of being haunted. One
-was close to St. Stephen’s Green, within sight of the
-Queen’s Service Academy, and the other, a big, ugly
-edifice of a dingy grey, was in Blackrock. I had stayed
-in the former when a child, and had vivid recollections
-of the holes in the stone stairs, through which boiling oil
-was poured on the heads of the English soldiers at the
-time of the ’98.</p>
-
-<p>There were many large and stately rooms in the house,
-oak-panelled and beautified throughout with much
-carving. I remember looking with awe and perplexity at
-the number of odd shadows that used to put in an
-appearance on the stairs and in the passages, just when
-it was my bed-time, but I did not then attribute them to
-ghosts. I simply did not know what they were. I heard
-sounds, too—clangs and clashes, and footsteps tramping
-up and down the stairs; sounds I did not attempt to
-analyse, possibly because I dared not. That was in 1886;
-I was then a small boy, and now—now only—after I had
-long left the house, and was back in Dublin, with the
-experience of the strangling ghost still fresh in my mind,
-I began to wonder whether these strange sounds and
-shadows might not have been due to the presence of the
-Superphysical. I mentioned the matter to my friends,
-and they expressed astonishment that I had not heard
-the house was haunted. One of them, a lady, told me
-that she had once stayed there and had been awakened
-every night by the sounds I had described—the sounds of
-heavy footsteps rushing up the stairs, of cries and groans,
-shrieks and oaths, coupled with the clashing of scabbards
-and sword blades, and the sound as of falling bodies.</p>
-
-<p>Yet nothing was ever to be seen, saving the moonlight
-and shadows—plenty of shadows—shadows strangely
-suggestive of grotesque and fancifully clad people. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-tried to obtain permission to sleep in the house, and in
-my innocence of the ways of landlords, I stated with the
-most pathetic candour my true intention—I wanted to
-investigate. The reply I got was certainly not courteous,
-neither did it permit of argument. Hence, feeling considerably
-crestfallen and humiliated, I found myself
-forced to give up my first attempt at ghost-hunting.</p>
-
-<p>Then I turned my attention to the house in Blackrock,
-and fared no better. The landlord had been bothered to
-death with requests to spend nights there, and was
-endeavouring to discover the originator of the report
-that the place was haunted, in order that he might
-bring an action for Slander of Title. Consequently I could
-only examine the house from the outside, hoping that its
-ghostly inhabitants would one night take pity on me and
-exhibit themselves at one of the windows. But in this,
-too, I was disappointed; although, as the place invariably
-inspired me with the greatest dread, I have no doubt
-whatever but that it was genuinely and badly haunted.</p>
-
-<p>There were several stories in circulation in Dublin
-about that time concerning the nature of the haunting,
-and the following—one of the most reliable—was told me
-by a Mrs. Blake. I will give it as nearly as I can in her
-own words:</p>
-
-<p>“When I was a child of about twelve,” she began,
-“which was a good many years ago, my father, who was
-then stationed in Dublin, took the house on a three
-years’ lease, at a very low rental, due, so the owner
-stated, to the fact that there were far too many stairs, a
-feature to which most people, on account of their
-servants, strongly objected. Nothing was said about
-ghosts, and nothing was further from my parents’ minds
-when they took possession. We moved in towards the
-end of July, but it was not until the middle of September
-that we first became aware that the house was haunted.
-It happened in this way: My father and the maids were
-out one evening, and only my mother, my small brother
-and I were in the house. It was about eight o’clock. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-was upstairs in the nursery reading to Teddy, and my
-mother was in the drawing-room, two storeys beneath.
-I was just in the middle of a sentence, when Teddy
-interrupted me. ‘Did you hear that?’ he exclaimed;
-‘it’s someone on the stairs. I believe they are listening.’
-I paused, and heard a loud creak. ‘Who can it be?’ I
-said; ‘there’s only mother in the house!’ Much
-mystified, I closed the book and went out on to the
-landing. No one was there; but when I got to the head
-of the stairs, I heard a loud scream, and then a dull thud,
-just as if someone had fallen. In an agony of mind I ran
-downstairs to see what had happened. As I arrived in
-the hall, the door of the drawing-room was slowly
-opened, and I saw, peeping cautiously out, a white face
-with two dark, gleaming, obliquely-set eyes, that filled
-with an expression of the most diabolical hatred as they
-met mine. I was so terrified that I started back some
-paces, and, as I did so, the door opened a little wider, and
-the figure of a short, elderly woman, clad in an old-fashioned
-black dress, and white cap crumpled closely
-round her lean, haggard face, glided out, and, passing by,
-ascended the stairs. As she came to the first bend, she
-turned, and looking down at me with an evil leer, shook
-her hand menacingly at me. She then passed out of
-sight, and I heard her climb the stairs, step by step, till
-she came to the nursery landing. A moment later, and
-Teddy gave a violent shriek.</p>
-
-<p>“My terror was now so great that I think I should have
-gone mad had I been left there any longer by myself;
-but, by a merciful providence, a key turned in the lock of
-the front door, and my father entered. The sight of his
-well-known figure on the threshold at once loosened the
-spell that had bound me, and with a cry of delight I
-clutched him by the arms, imploring him to see at once
-what had happened to mother and Teddy.</p>
-
-<p>“He ran into the drawing-room first and found my
-mother on the floor, just reviving from a faint. Lighting
-the gas, he fetched her some brandy, and then, bidding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-me stay with her, he hastened upstairs to Teddy. The
-latter was very badly frightened, and it was some days
-before he was well enough to give anything like a
-coherent account of what had happened. Of course,
-mother and father told Teddy that the queer figure they
-had seen was some friend of the servants, who had called
-while they were out, but I suppose they deemed me old
-enough to know the truth, for they discussed the incident
-openly in my presence. It appears that my mother had
-been quietly knitting in the drawing-room, when she
-suddenly felt very cold, and rising from her chair, with
-the intention of closing the door, found herself confronted
-by a hideous form. Subsequently, my father made a
-thorough search of the house, but he found no one, and as
-all the windows were fastened and the doors locked on
-the inside, we could only come to the conclusion that the
-figure my mother and Teddy and I had all seen was a
-ghost. A few days later it appeared to my father. He was
-coming out of his bedroom, when he saw a woman steal
-stealthily out of a room on the same landing and creep
-downstairs in front of him. There was something about
-her so intensely sinister that he felt chilled; but, determining
-to find out who she was, he followed her, and
-catching her up, demanded her name. There was a chuckling
-answer, the figure instantly disappeared, and a number
-of invisible somethings clattered down the stairs past him.</p>
-
-<p>“I think my father was very scared; at all events he
-came into the breakfast-room with a very white face and
-ate hardly anything. Some time after this, when the
-autumn was well advanced, my uncle came to stay with
-us. He was a jolly, rollicking sailor, who had fought the
-Turks at Navarino, and had had many exciting adventures
-with Chinese pirates.</p>
-
-<p>“No one told him the house was haunted; it was
-decided he should find that out for himself. One afternoon,
-several days after his arrival, he was taking off his
-boots in a room in the basement, when a current of icy
-air blew in on him, and, on raising his eyes to see whence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-the draught came, he perceived an extraordinarily pretty
-girl, clad in a dark green riding-habit, such as he believed
-were worn in the days of his great grand-parents, standing
-in the doorway, watching him intently. ‘This is one of
-Jack’s surprises’ (Jack was my father), he said to
-himself, ‘and a deuced pleasant one, too! The rogue,
-he knows nothing pleases me so much as the sight of a
-pretty girl, and, by Jove, she is pretty!’ Springing to
-his feet—for my uncle was never bashful in the presence
-of the fair sex—he advanced to shake hands. To his
-chagrin, however, she promptly turned round, and,
-walking swiftly away, began to ascend the stairs. My
-uncle followed her. On and on she led him till she came
-to the drawing-room; there she paused, and with the
-forefinger of her left hand on her lips, glanced coyly
-round at him. She then quietly turned the door handle,
-and signalling to him to follow, stole into the room on
-tiptoe. Charmed with this piece of acting, the naïvety of
-it appealing very strongly to his susceptible nature, my
-uncle hastened after her. The moment he crossed the
-threshold, however, he recoiled. Standing in the middle
-of the room was an old woman with a hideous, white face
-and black, leering eyes. There were no signs anywhere
-of the young and beautiful lady. She had completely
-vanished. My uncle was so shocked by the spectacle
-before him that he retreated on to the landing, and, as he
-did so, the drawing-room door swung to with a loud
-crash. He called my father, and they entered the room
-together; but it was quite empty, the old hag had disappeared
-as inexplicably as the girl. That evening there
-was to be a party, and the table in the dining-room
-groaned beneath the weight of one of those inimitable
-‘spreads,’ in vogue some fifty or sixty years ago. With
-somewhat pardonable pride my mother took us all—my
-father, uncle and myself—to have a peep at it, before the
-guests arrived. As we drew near the room, we heard, to
-our astonishment, the plaintive sound of a spinet. My
-mother instantly drew back, trembling, whereupon my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-uncle, forcing a laugh, said, ‘This is one of the occasions
-upon which a gentleman should go first.’ He threw open
-the door as he spoke, and we all peered in. What I saw
-will never be effaced from my memory. The room
-exhibited a complete wreckage—the cloth was half off
-the table, the massive silver candlesticks were overturned,
-and the floor was strewn with piles of broken
-glass, china and eatables—everything was smashed and
-ruined. In the midst of the debris, her face turned
-towards us, lay a very beautiful girl. There were unmistakable
-evidences of a ghastly wound, but her eyes
-were partly open, and the strange light which gleamed
-from their blue depths revealed an expression which
-could only have been hatched in hell—a hell, peopled not
-with passive torture-torn sufferers, but with wholly
-abandoned beings actively engaged in licentiousness and
-everything that is destructive and antagonistic to man’s
-moral and mental progress. Standing over the woman,
-and holding a kind of stiletto in his hand, was a tall, fair
-man, in whose agonised and remorseful features we
-recognised at once a most startling likeness to my uncle.
-No detail was wanting—there was the deep scar on the
-temple, the curiously deep dimple in the chin; indeed,
-saving for the old-fashioned clothes, no likeness could
-have been more exact. Standing by his side, her hideous,
-scowling face thrust forward, her evil eyes glaring at us
-with the same vindictive insolence, was the old woman I
-had seen that night in the hall. Then, my father,
-uttering some exclamation, crossed himself, and, as he
-did so, the figures abruptly vanished, whilst the whole
-house echoed and re-echoed with loud peals of mocking,
-diabolical laughter. That was the finale; we left immediately
-afterwards, and from that day to this the house,
-I believe, has stood almost uninterruptedly empty.”</p>
-
-<p>This is the gist of Mrs. Blake’s account of the happenings,
-and as I never found her anything but strictly
-truthful, I believe them to have been given me without
-any conscious exaggeration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_2"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="subt">I AM PURSUED BY PHANTOM FOOTSTEPS</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Before</span> I left the west of Ireland, I set out one day to
-investigate a case of haunting by fairies, which was
-alleged to take place nightly at the junction of four cross
-roads on the southern slope of the Wicklow mountains.</p>
-
-<p>I found a spot that seemed to correspond with the
-description of the scene of the haunting given me by my
-informant, and kept a vigil there for two consecutive
-nights without experiencing any of the anticipated
-results. However, I intended giving the place another
-trial, and accordingly set out; but when within half a
-mile or so of my destination, I began to feel very tired,
-and having a bad cold on me besides, I decided to put
-up at a cottage I espied a short distance off, instead of
-pursuing my way further.</p>
-
-<p>The cottage stood a little back from the main road,
-perhaps a hundred yards or so, and was connected with it
-by a narrow lane. The situation was one of intense loneliness;
-the nearest village was a good two miles away,
-and few people, other than occasional cyclists, ever
-passed along the high road after nightfall. At the time
-I am speaking of, the cottage was tenanted by a couple
-named Mullins. The man was a drover, and his wife
-one of the tallest women I have ever seen; she possessed,
-moreover, a pair of green-grey eyes, and these were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-remarkable, not only for their curious colouring, but for
-the impression they gave one that they were perpetually
-trying not to see too much. Apart from these peculiarities,
-she seemed ordinary enough, and I felt I was in the
-house of very worthy and hard-working people.</p>
-
-<p>I went to bed early and was given the only spare room
-in the cottage. It faced the front and was immediately
-over the tiny parlour. As the linen was spotless and felt
-thoroughly dry, I had no scruples about getting in
-between the sheets, and, stretching myself out, I was
-soon fast asleep.</p>
-
-<p>I awoke with violent palpitations of the heart to find
-the room bathed with moonlight; and, as all was absolutely
-silent, I concluded it must be far on into the
-night. Suddenly I heard footsteps—footsteps in the
-distance, running at a well-regulated pace. They rang
-out sharp and clear in the still air, and gradually became
-more and more distinct. I was wondering who the
-person could be, out at such an hour, when a dog, apparently
-in the yard at the back of the house, set up the
-most unearthly howling. The next moment I heard Mrs.
-Mullins speak, and, inadvertently, I listened.</p>
-
-<p>“John,” she said, “do you hear the dog?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should be deaf and dumb if I didn’t,” Mullins
-replied sleepily. “What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, indeed! Why the dog never barks like
-that unless there is a spirit about. Do you remember
-those knocks on the door the night Uncle Mike died, and
-how the dog howled then? There’s something of the
-same sort about to-night. Listen!”</p>
-
-<p>The steps very were near now. I listened intently.
-The runner, I thought, must be wearing very extraordinary
-boots, for every step, so it seemed to me, was
-accompanied by a peculiar and almost metallic click.</p>
-
-<p>“John,” Mrs. Mullins suddenly resumed, “do you hear
-those steps? What are they? It’s the first time in my life
-I’ve heard anyone running along the high road like that
-at this time of night. Hark! They’ve got to the turning—they’re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-in the lane—they’re coming here! Get up at
-once; go and bolt the front door. The thing’s evil—evil,
-I’m sure, and it’s someone of us here it’s after.”</p>
-
-<p>The steps grew rapidly nearer, and Mullins, stumbling
-hastily down the stairs, bolted both the doors and swung
-to the little wooden shutters. A moment later, and I
-heard the steps come right up to the door. There was a
-momentary pause, then a series of terrific knocks.</p>
-
-<p>“Cross yourself, John; for God’s sake cross yourself!”
-Mrs. Mullins cried. “And may the Holy Virgin protect
-us.” She then started praying loudly and vehemently,
-and, whether it was the effect of her prayers or not, the
-knocking gradually diminished in violence, and then
-ceased altogether.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on up, John,” Mrs. Mullins called out; “the
-thing, whatever it is, has ceased troubling us, and we
-may go to sleep in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>Mullins, needing no second bidding, joined his wife,
-and once again the whole place was wrapped in silence.</p>
-
-<p>I must confess that, whilst the knocking continued, I
-had no desire whatever to look out of the window, but
-the moment it was over I got up and peered out. I could
-see right down the lane and for some distance along the
-high road.</p>
-
-<p>There was no sign of anyone or anything that could in
-any way account for the disturbance—the landscape was
-brilliantly illuminated with moonlight, every stick and
-stone being plainly visible, and all nature seemed to be
-sleeping undisturbedly, as if no interruption in its
-ordinary routine had occurred. I got back into bed, and,
-falling into a gentle doze, slept soundly till the morning.
-After breakfast, Mrs. Mullins said, “You’re not thinking
-of spending another night here, sir, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, no,” I replied. “I must be back in Dublin at
-my work by this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad of that, sir,” she went on; “because I
-couldn’t let you stay. I suppose you heard the rapping,
-sir?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I did,” I replied; “and the footsteps—how do you
-account for them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only in one way,” she said; “they came after you.
-At least, that was my impression, and my impressions are
-seldom wrong. I seemed to see some terrible form—half
-animal and half human—something indescribably
-grotesque and unnatural—something, my instinct tells
-me, was wanting to get at you.”</p>
-
-<p>Her description of the figure reminded me so strongly
-of the queer thing that tried to strangle me in the house
-near the Waterloo Road, that I narrated my experience
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>“You may depend upon it, sir,” she said when I had
-finished, “that the ghost you have just told me about
-and the one that came to the cottage last night are the
-same. I have heard that spirits will sometimes attach
-themselves to persons who have been staying in the
-house they haunt, and that they will leave the house with
-them and follow them wherever they go. I only hope
-and trust that this one will never do you any harm, and
-that you will succeed in ridding yourself of it, but my
-husband and I feel, asking your pardon, that we should
-not like to have you sleep here again.”</p>
-
-<p>I did not tell her that even had she been willing,
-nothing on earth would have induced me to stay, for
-whether she was right in her theory about the steps or
-not, the neighbourhood had lost all its charms for me.
-Indeed, when next I had a ghostly visitation, I hoped I
-should be quartered in a less isolated spot.</p>
-
-<p>My aunt, Mrs. Meta O’Donnell, tells me that a relative
-of hers once had a remarkable encounter with fairies on
-the road between Ballinanty and the village of Hospital
-in County Limerick.</p>
-
-<p>He was driving home one evening in his jaunting car,
-unaccompanied save by his servant, Dunkley, who was
-sitting with his back to him, when a number of little
-people—fairies—sprang on the car, and clambering up,
-tried to pull him off.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Finding that, owing to the vigour with which they
-pulled, he was actually slipping from his seat, he appealed
-to his servant for assistance; and the latter, doing as he
-was told, held on to him with all his strength, and thus
-prevented the little people from dragging him to the
-ground. Mrs. Meta O’Donnell is absolutely sure that
-her relative never took stimulants of any sort, and that
-he was in a perfectly normal state of mind when this
-event happened.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this road haunted only by fairies, for Mrs. Meta
-O’Donnell again tells me that this same relative of hers,
-when driving home on another occasion—this time with
-several friends—saw a man on horseback, in a hunting
-coat, suddenly leap the hedge, and, after riding for some
-distance by the side of the car, abruptly vanish. Two of
-the men who were with him, she believes, also witnessed
-this phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p>It is a long step, seemingly, from the fairy to the
-banshee, but these two types of spirit have at least one
-trait in common, namely, exclusiveness; and the banshee,
-even more emphatically than the fairy, will have nought
-to do with the alien. It will attach itself only to the
-family of bona-fide Irish origin, only to the clan that has
-been associated with Irish soil for many generations.</p>
-
-<p>With the kind permission of Mr. Ralph Shirley, I will
-here introduce, making only slight alterations, a few
-extracts from an article of mine on the banshee, which
-appeared in the “Occult Review” for September, 1913:</p>
-
-<p>“Contemporary with fairies and the Feni, phantoms
-typical of the great lone hills of Wicklow and Connemara,
-and of the bare and wind-bitten cliffs of Galway, may well
-have been the banshees, which, attaching themselves for
-divers reasons to various chieftains and sons of chieftains,
-eventually became recognised as family ghosts or
-familiars.</p>
-
-<p>“Many people have fallen in the error of imagining all
-banshees are moulded after one pattern. Nothing could
-be more fallacious. The banshee of the O’Rourkes, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-example, does not resemble that of the O’Donnells;
-there are many forms of the banshee, each clan having a
-distinct one—or more than one—of its own. Some of
-the banshees are fair to look at, and some old, and foul,
-and terrifying; but their mission is invariably the same,
-<abbr>i.e.</abbr>, to announce a death or some great family
-catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>“The banshee is never joyous; it is always either sad
-or malevolent. Sometimes it wails once, sometimes three
-times—the wail in some degree, but not altogether,
-resembling that of a woman in great trouble or agony;
-sometimes, again, it groans; and sometimes it sighs, or
-sings. In some clans the demonstrations are both
-visual and auditory, in others only visual; and in
-others, again, only auditory. There is no really old clan
-but has its banshee, and few members of that clan who
-are not, at some time or other of their lives, made aware
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>“How well I recollect as a child being told by those
-who had experienced it, that a dreadful groaning and
-wailing had been heard the night prior to the death of a
-very near relative of mine in Africa. I enquired what
-made the wailing, and was informed ‘the banshee,’ or
-the ghost woman, who never fails to announce the death
-of an O’Donnell.</p>
-
-<p>“Years later, when in the extreme West of England,
-my wife and I were awakened one night by a terrible wail,
-which sounded just outside our door. Beginning in a
-low key, it rose and rose, until it ended in a shrill scream,
-that in time died away in a horrible groan. The idea of
-the banshee at once flashed through my mind, for I felt
-none other but a banshee could have made such a sound.</p>
-
-<p>“Still, to satisfy my wife, I jumped out of bed and
-went on to the landing; all was dark and silent, and
-outside their bedrooms were assembled the rest of the
-household, terrified, and eager to have an explanation of
-what had happened. We searched the whole house and
-the waste land outside, but there was nothing which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-could in any way account for the noise, and in the
-morning I received news of the death of someone very
-closely related to me.... Whilst some writers are
-inclined to treat the subject jocularly, and attribute the
-banshee either to obviously absurd physical causes, or to
-the abnormally imaginative powers they insist are the
-birthright of all Irishmen, others dive into the pseudo-profound
-compilations of modern Theosophy, and reappear
-with the pronouncement that banshees are not
-spirits at all—not entities hailing from the superphysical
-world—but mere thought germs, created by some
-remote ancestor of a clan, and wafted down from one
-generation to another of his descendants, an idea as
-nonsensical as it is extravagant, and which will not for
-an instant hold water when looked into by those who
-have had a bona-fide experience of the banshee or any
-other ghostly phenomenon. Indeed, it is only the latter
-who are capable of making observations of any value on
-such a subject, and all effort to describe or account for
-the superphysical by those who have never experienced
-it, no matter whether those efforts are made by theosophical
-savants, professional mediums or scientific
-experts, are, in my opinion, weightless, colourless and
-futile.</p>
-
-<p>“A geologist may describe the hydrosphere, and an
-astronomer the moon, and their descriptions may be
-swallowed with tolerable composure and assurance,
-because we know that the laws of similarity and analogy,
-when applied to the physical, generally hold good; but
-no scientist can teach us anything about spiritual
-phenomena, because such things are actually without
-the realm of science, just as the game of marbles is
-entirely without the province of theology. It is our
-sensations, and our sensations <em>only</em>, that can guide and
-instruct us when dealing with the superphysical. I have
-heard the dying screams of a woman murdered beneath
-my window; I have heard on hill and plain the cries of
-coyottes, panthers, jackals and hyenas; and I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-many times listened to the dismal hooting of night birds,
-when riding alone through the seclusion of giant forests;
-but there is something in the banshee’s cry that differs
-from all these, that fills one with a fear and awe, far—immeasurably
-far—beyond that produced by a sound
-which is merely physical. Imagine then what it is to be
-haunted all one’s life by such a grim harbinger of woe,
-to have it ever trailing in one’s wake, always ready and,
-maybe, eager to make itself heard the moment it
-detects, by its extraordinary and unhuman powers, the
-advent of death. One curious idiosyncrasy of the banshee
-is that it never manifests itself to the person whose death
-it is prognosticating. Other people may see or hear it,
-but the doomed one never, so that when every one
-present is aware of it but one, the fate of that one may be
-regarded as pretty well certain.</p>
-
-<p>“And now once again, whence comes the banshee?
-From heaven or from hell? What is it? It is impossible
-to say; at the most one can only speculate. Some
-banshees appear to be mournful only; others unquestionably
-malevolent; and whereas some very closely
-resemble a woman, even though of a type long passed
-away, others, again, differ so much from our conception
-of any human being, that we can only imagine them to
-be spirits that never have been human, that belong to a
-genus wholly separate and distinct from the human
-genus, and that have only been brought into contact
-with this material plane through the medium of certain
-magical or spiritual rites practised by the Milesians, but
-for some unknown reason discontinued by their descendants.
-This appears to me quite a possible explanation
-of the origin of the banshee.</p>
-
-<p>“One realizes, when dabbling in spiritualism to-day,
-one of the greatest dangers incurred is that of attracting
-to one certain undesirable, mischievous, and malignant
-spirits—call them elementals if you will—which, when
-so attracted, stick to one like the proverbial leech. And
-what happens to-day may very well have happened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-thousands of years ago; in all probability, the Unknown
-never changes; its ways and habits may be as constant as
-those of Nature, guided by laws and principles which
-may at times vary, but which, nevertheless, undergo no
-material alteration. The superphysical, attracted to the
-ancients as it is attracted to us to-day, would adhere to
-them as it now adheres to us. I cannot surmise more.</p>
-
-<p>“Supposing then that this theory accounts for the one
-class of banshee, what accounts for the other—the other
-that so nearly tallies with the physical? Are the latter
-actual phantoms of the dead; of those that died some
-unnatural death, and have been earth-bound and clan-bound
-ever since? Maybe they are. Maybe they are
-the spirits of women, prehistoric or otherwise, who were
-either suicides or were murdered, or who themselves committed
-some very heinous offence; and they haunt the
-clan to which they owed their unhappy ending; or, in
-the event of themselves being the malefactors, the clan
-to which they belonged. From all this we can conclude
-that, whilst the origin and constitution of banshees vary,
-their mission is always the same—they are solely the
-prognosticators of misfortune. A sorry possession for
-anyone; and yet, how truly in accord with the nature of
-the country—with its general air of discontent and
-barrenness, with its rain-sodden soil and gloomy atmosphere—as
-an unkind critic might say, could anyone
-imagine the presence of cheerful spirits under such
-conditions?</p>
-
-<p>“But the banshee has the one admirable trait which
-the average Englishman obstinately refuses to recognize
-in the material Irish—the trait of loyalty and constancy.
-It never forsakes the object of its attachment, but clings
-to it in all its vicissitudes and peregrinations with a
-loyalty and persistency that is unmatchable. It is
-thoroughly Irish, essentially Irish; the one thing, apart
-from disposition and character, that has remained
-exclusively Irish through long centuries of robbery and
-oppression; and which, in spite of assertions to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-contrary, never has been, nor ever will be shared by
-other than the genuine clansman.</p>
-
-<p>“The banshee is most fastidious in its tastes—it will
-have none of the pseudo-celt; none of the individual
-who, possessing an absolutely English name, and coming
-entirely of English forefathers, terms himself Irish
-merely because his ancestors happen to have settled in
-Ireland. That is nothing like exact enough for the
-banshee. Others may talk of it and write of it, but they
-can never honestly claim it; for the banshee belongs
-wholly and exclusively to the bona-fide O’s and Macs—and
-them, and them only, will it never cease to haunt so
-long as there is one of them left.”</p>
-
-<p>My last experience with a ghost in Dublin took place
-just after I had been medically examined for the R.I.C.,
-and to my intense grief had been rejected, owing to
-varicose veins, which the examining doctor told me
-were of a far too complicated nature to permit of an
-operation; consequently, although I had been “cramming”
-for two years, and my prospects of getting
-through the literary examination were deemed extremely
-fair, it was futile to go up for it, as all chance of my ever
-being in the R.I.C. was now at an end.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of my failure to pass the medical I had
-gone to bed early, as I had a splitting headache, and,
-after vain efforts, had at length succeeded in falling
-asleep. I awoke just in time to hear a clock from somewhere
-in the downstairs premises of the house—I was
-then lodging in Lower Merrion Street—strike two, and
-almost immediately afterwards there came a loud laugh,
-just over my face, and so near to me that I seemed to feel
-the breath of the laughter fan my nostrils. Nothing I
-have ever heard before, or have ever heard since, was so
-repulsive as that laugh—it was the very incarnation of
-jeering, jibing mockery; of undying, inveterate hate. I
-felt that nothing but a spirit of unadulterated evil could
-have made such a noise, and that it had come to gloat
-over my misfortunes—to let me know how greatly it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-rejoiced at the cruel blow I had suffered. I naturally
-associated it with the ghost that had tried to strangle
-me, and my heart turned sick within me at the thought
-that such a horrible species of phantasm was still hovering
-near me. Should I ever be free from it? I was not
-quite so frightened, however, as I had been on the
-occasion of its visit to me in the house near the Waterloo
-Road, and determining to prevent myself from falling
-into that kind of paralytic condition again, in which all
-my muscles and faculties had remained alike spell-bound
-and useless, I sat up. The room was in pitch darkness,
-and everything was breathlessly still. I waited in this
-posture for some seconds, my heart beating like a sledge-hammer,
-and then, deriving assurance from the fact that
-nothing happened, I got out of bed and struck a light.
-The door was locked on the inside, and there was nothing
-in hiding that could in any way account for the noise. I
-went to the window, and, lifting it gently, peered out into
-the street. There was no moon, but many stars and lamp-lights
-enabled me to see that the street was absolutely
-empty—not even a policeman was in sight. I leaned far
-out, and from immediately beneath me, although no one
-was visible, there suddenly commenced the sound of
-running footsteps. Ringing out loud and clear, and
-accompanied by a queer familiar clicking, they seemed to
-follow the direction of the street towards Ely Place. I
-wanted to get back to bed, for I was lightly clad, and the
-air was cool and penetrating, but something compelled
-me to keep on listening, and so I remained with my neck
-craned over the window-sill, till the steps gradually grew
-fainter and fainter, and suddenly ceased altogether.
-And with their termination this early period of my
-ghostly experiences in Dublin terminated, too.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_3"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="subt">SOME STRANGE CASES IN SCOTLAND</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">I returned</span> to England in that “tub-like” old relic of
-mid-Victorian steamboats, “The Argo”—long since
-defunct, but which for many years sailed to and from
-Dublin and Bristol with as many passengers and cattle
-as could be crammed, with any degree of safety, into her
-dingy and clumsy-looking hulk. I remember the passage
-well, for two of my fellow students were on board, and
-we spent nearly all the time on deck, telling ghost tales,
-and earnestly discussing the possibility of a future life.
-In the end we made a solemn compact, whereby it was
-agreed that the one who died first would try his level best
-to give some kind of spirit demonstration to the other
-two. Both my friends died within a few years of that
-date, and within three weeks of each other. The one,
-who had a commission in a cavalry regiment, was killed
-at the Battle of Omdurman, and the other, who having
-followed in the footsteps of his distinguished father, had
-become a novelist of great promise, was kicked to death
-by a horse. The day after the death of the former, as I
-was busily engaged writing the first chapter of my novel,
-“For Satan’s Sake,” a portion of the mantel-piece in the
-room in which I was working suddenly fell with a loud
-crash on to the grate. Of course, the incident may not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-have had anything to do with the death of my friend,
-but it was nevertheless remarkable, as previously nothing
-in the nature of a flaw had been noticeable in the condition
-of the mantel-piece. My other friend died—as I
-subsequently learned, <abbr>i.e.</abbr>, after the incident I am about
-to narrate had occurred—at ten o’clock one Friday
-morning, and that afternoon as I was changing for
-football, the grandfather clock on the landing outside my
-bedroom suddenly struck ten. I went to look, and the
-hands pointed to three. There had been nothing amiss
-with the striking before, and there was nothing amiss
-with the striking after.</p>
-
-<p>These were the only phenomena I experienced at the
-time these two friends of mine died.</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp1">*</span><span class="sp1">*</span><span class="sp1">*</span><span class="sp1">*</span><span class="sp1">*</span><span class="sp1">*</span></p>
-
-<p>On arriving at Bristol, I spent some weeks in the West
-of England and then journeyed north to Scotland. My
-original intention had been to spend a few weeks with an
-old Clifton friend of mine, whose father owned an estate
-near Inverary; but, on arriving at Glasgow, I heard of
-such a promising case of haunting in that city, that,
-unable to resist the temptation of investigating it, I
-decided to postpone my journey west. The case, as
-outlined to me in the first instance, was <span class="nobreak">this:—</span></p>
-
-<p>A Glasgow solicitor, named James McKaye, desirous of
-taking a house close to his office, went one morning to
-look at one in Duke Street. He went there alone, and,
-carefully closing the front door behind him, proceeded to
-wander from room to room, beginning with the basement.</p>
-
-<p>As he was going upstairs to the first floor, he suddenly
-heard footsteps following him. He turned sharply
-round; there was no one there. Thinking this was odd,
-but attributing it to the acoustic properties of the walls,
-he continued his ascent. Having arrived on the first
-landing, he went into one of the rooms. The steps
-followed him. A brilliant idea then occurred to him—he
-stamped his foot. There was no echo. He turned round
-and went into the next room, and the steps once again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-accompanied him. Then he grew frightened. It was
-broad daylight, the sun was shining brilliantly and the
-birds were singing; but there was something in this
-house that jarred on him horribly—a something that was
-completely out of humour with the golden sunbeams and
-the cheerful chirping of the sparrows. The day was
-hot, and the sun was pouring in through the blindless
-windows; but in spite of this the rooms were icy, and he
-was deliberating whether it was worth while to explore
-the house further, when he caught sight of a shadow on
-the wall. It was not his own shadow. It was that of a
-man with his arms stretched out horizontally on either
-side of him, and whereas the right arm was complete in
-every detail, the left had no hand. James McKaye now
-yielded to an ungovernable terror and rushed frantically
-out of the house.</p>
-
-<p>One would naturally think that after all this McKaye
-would have vowed never to go near the place again.
-Nothing of the sort. The house fascinated him. He
-could not get it out of his mind; he even dreamed of it;
-dreamed of it in connection with some mystery that he
-must solve—that he alone could solve. Besides, there
-was not another house in the town so conveniently
-situated, nor so cheap. Consequently, he took it, and
-within a fortnight had moved in with all his family and
-household goods. For the first few weeks everything
-went swimmingly, and McKaye, who was shrewd, even
-for a Scot, congratulated himself upon having made such
-an excellent bargain.</p>
-
-<p>Then occurred an incident which recalled sharply the
-day he had first seen the place. He was writing some
-letters one morning in his study, when the nurse-maid
-entered, white and agitated. “Oh, do come to the
-nursery, sir,” she implored; “the children are playing
-with something that looks like a dog, and yet isn’t one.
-I don’t know what it is!” And she burst out crying.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re mad,” McKaye said sharply and, springing
-to his feet, he ran upstairs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On reaching the nursery, the blurred outline of something
-like a huge dog or wolf came out of the half-open
-door, and raced past him, so close that he distinctly felt
-it brush against his clothes.</p>
-
-<p>Where it went he could not say; he was thinking of
-the children, and did not stop to look. Oddly enough, the
-children were not a bit afraid; on the contrary, they
-were pleased and curious. “What a strange doggy it
-was, Daddy!” they cried; “it never wagged its tail,
-like other doggies, and whenever we tried to stroke it, it
-slipped away from us—we never touched it once.”</p>
-
-<p>Sorely puzzled, McKaye told his wife, and the two
-decided that if anything further happened, they must
-leave the house.</p>
-
-<p>That night McKaye happened to sit up rather late;
-at last he got up, and was about to turn off the gas, when
-he felt his upstretched hand suddenly caught hold of by
-something large and soft, that did not seem to have any
-fingers. He was so frightened that he screamed; whereupon
-his hand was instantly released, and there was a
-loud crash overhead. Thinking something had happened
-to his wife, he rushed upstairs, and found her sitting up
-in bed and talking in her sleep. She was apparently
-addressing a black, shadowy figure that was crouching
-on the floor, opposite her. As McKaye approached, the
-thing moved towards the wall, and vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. McKaye then awoke, and begged her husband to
-take her out of the house at once, as she had dreamed
-most vividly that an appalling murder had been committed
-there, and that the murderer had come out of the
-room with outstretched hands, asking her to look at them.
-McKaye, who had had quite enough of it, too, promised
-to do as she wished, and before another twenty-four
-hours had passed the house was once again empty.</p>
-
-<p>These were the bare facts of the case, and as they were
-given me by one of his clients, I had no difficulty in
-obtaining an interview with Mr. McKaye, who, I was
-told, still had the keys of the house. It was not, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-so easy to obtain consent to spend a night on the premises,
-and he would only permit me to do so on the condition
-that he himself accompanied me, and that I promised to
-keep the visit a profound secret.</p>
-
-<p>The evening chosen for our enterprise proved ever
-memorable.</p>
-
-<p>The rain came down in torrents, and the wind—a
-veritable tornado—made any attempt to hold up an
-umbrella utterly impossible. Indeed, it was as much as I
-could do to hold up myself, whilst, to add to my discomfort,
-at almost every step I plunged ankle-deep in icy
-cold puddles. At length, drenched to the skin, I arrived
-at the house.</p>
-
-<p>McKaye was standing on the doorstep, swearing
-furiously. He could not, so he said, find the key. However,
-he produced it now, and we were soon standing
-inside, shaking the water from our clothes. Those were
-the days before pocket flashlights had become general,
-and we had to be content with candles.</p>
-
-<p>We each lighted one, and at once commenced to
-search the premises to make sure no one was in hiding.</p>
-
-<p>The house, as far as I can recollect, consisted of four
-storeys and a basement. None of the rooms were very
-large; the wall-papers were hideous, and I remember
-thanking my stars that I was not called upon to live in
-such hopelessly inartistic quarters. McKaye asked me
-if I could detect anything peculiar in the atmosphere,
-but I could only detect extreme mustiness, and told him
-so. I fancied he seemed very fidgety and ill at ease;
-however, as he was a much older man than myself, and
-had some experience of the house, I felt perfectly safe
-with him. After we had been in all the rooms, we
-descended to the ground floor, and commenced our vigil
-on the staircase leading from the hall to the first landing.</p>
-
-<p>“I think we stand more chance of seeing something
-here than anywhere else,” McKaye said; “and in the
-case of anything very alarming happening, we are close
-to the front door.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill1"></a>
-<img src="images/ill1.jpg" width="435" height="625" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“We both looked in the direction he indicated”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He spoke only half in fun and I observed that his fingers
-twitched a good deal and that his eyes were never at rest.</p>
-
-<p>“Oughtn’t we to put out the candles?” I said.
-“Ghosts surely materialise much more readily in the
-dark.” But he would not hear of it. All his experiences,
-he said, had taken place in the light, and he believed only
-spoof ghosts at séances required the opposite conditions.
-Then he regaled me once more with all that had happened
-during his occupation of the house. He was still telling
-me, when there came a loud rat-rat at the door.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a policeman,” he said; “he must have seen
-our light.” He spoke truly, for, when we opened the
-door, a burly figure in helmet and cape stood on the step
-and flashed his dripping bull’s-eye in our faces. On
-hearing McKaye’s name the constable was instantly
-appeased, and, when we mentioned ghosts, he laughed
-long and loud. “Well, gentlemen,” he said, “you won’t
-never be alarmed by a happarition so long as you have
-that dog with you. I bet he would scare away any
-number of ghosts, and burglars, too. If I may be so
-bold as to ask, what breed do you call him? I’ve never
-seen anything quite like him before,” and he waved his
-lamp towards the stairs. We both looked in the direction
-he indicated, and there, half way up the stairs, with its
-face apparently turned towards us, was the black,
-shadowy outline of some shaggy creature, which to me
-looked not so much like a dog as a bear. It remained
-stationary for a moment or so, and then, retreating
-backwards, seemed to disappear into the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, gentlemen, good-night,” the policeman said,
-lowering his lamp, “it’s time I was going.” He turned
-on his heel, and was walking off, when McKaye called
-him back.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a moment, constable,” he said, “and we’ll
-come with you.”</p>
-
-<p>He cast a swiftly furtive glance around him as he
-spoke, then, blowing out the lights, he caught me by the
-arm and dragged me away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But the dog, sir,” the policeman said, as the front
-door closed behind us with a bang; “it ain’t come out!”</p>
-
-<p>“And it never will,” McKaye responded grimly.
-“You have seen the ghost, constable, or at least one of
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>I have never had an opportunity of visiting the house
-again, but for aught I know to the contrary, it still
-stands there, and is still haunted.</p>
-
-<p>From Glasgow I went on to Inverary, where I had the
-most delightful time, fishing and shooting.</p>
-
-<p>I then went to Perth, and there, quite by chance, met a
-Mr. and Mrs. Rowlandson, who informed me that they
-were just quitting a badly haunted house on the outskirts
-of the town. The name of the house was
-“Bocarthe.” It was their own, and had only been built
-a year, but they could not possibly remain in it, they told
-me, owing to the perpetual disturbance to which they
-were subjected. They were just beginning a detailed
-description of the manifestations, when I begged them
-to desist. I would like, I explained, with their permission,
-to investigate the case, and I thought it would
-be better to do so without knowing the nature of the
-hauntings, as in these circumstances—should my experience
-happen to tally with theirs—there could be no
-question either of suggestion or of imagination.</p>
-
-<p>I had resolved to conduct all my investigations with an
-absolutely open mind, and I intended, when once I had
-satisfied myself that the phenomena were objective, to
-try and alight upon some code whereby I could communicate
-with them, and learn from them something
-certain—something definite, at all events, about the
-other world. To what extent I have succeeded I shall
-make it the purpose of this volume to reveal.</p>
-
-<p>But to continue: “What strikes us as so extraordinary
-about the whole thing,” the Rowlandsons said,
-“is that a new house, with absolutely no history
-attached to it, for we were the first people who ever
-inhabited it, and we can assure you,” they added<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-laughingly, “there were no murders or suicides there
-during our occupancy, should be haunted. Our neighbours
-declare that we must have brought the ghost with
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>I told them I thought it quite possible that such might
-be the case, and narrated to them my experiences in
-Dublin. They appeared to be greatly interested; and
-were, moreover, quite willing, provided I promised them
-not to discuss the matter too openly, as they wanted to
-let the house, that I should spend a few nights at
-“Bocarthe.” They were, in fact, rather anxious to
-know if anything unusual still took place there. Thinking,
-perhaps, that I might not like to go alone, they gave me
-an introduction to a young friend of theirs, Dr. Swinton,
-who, they thought, might be prevailed upon to accompany
-me; and, before I left them, all the preliminaries relating
-to my visit to “Bocarthe” were satisfactorily arranged.</p>
-
-<p>That same day the Rowlandsons went to Edinburgh,
-where they told me they intended living, and the following
-day at noon I wended my way to the house they had
-vacated. As there was no story connected with
-“Bocarthe,” I set to work to make enquiries about the
-ground on which it stood, and instead of learning too
-little, I learned too much. An old minister, who looked
-fully eighty, was sure that the ground in question, until
-it was built upon quite recently, had been grazing land
-ever since he was a boy, and that it had never witnessed
-anything more extraordinary than the occasional death
-of a sheep or a cow that had been struck by lightning.
-An equally aged and equally positive postmistress
-declared that the ground had never been anything
-better than waste land, where, amid rubbish heaps
-galore, all the dogs in the parish might have been seen
-scratching and fighting over bones. Another person
-remembered a pond being there, and another a nursery
-garden; but from no one could I extract the slightest
-hint as to anything that could in any way account for
-the haunting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When I entered the house, I thought I had seldom
-seen such a cheerful one: the rooms were light and lofty,
-and about them all there was an air of geniality, that
-hitherto, at all events, I had never dreamed of associating
-with ghosts.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Swinton joined me in the evening, but although we
-sat up till long after dawn, we neither saw nor heard
-anything we could not account for by natural causes. We
-repeated the process for two more nights, and then,
-feeling that we had given the house a fair trial, we
-concluded it was either no longer haunted, or that the
-hauntings were periodical, and might not occur again
-for years. I wrote to Mr. Rowlandson, upon returning
-the keys of the house, and, in reply, received the following
-letter from <span class="nobreak">him:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="lttr">
-<span class="lttr3">No. —, C—— Crescent,</span><br />
-<span class="lttr4">Edinburgh.</span><br />
-<span class="lttr2">November 8th, 1893.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Dear Mr. O’Donnell,</p>
-
-<p class="ltt1">Many thanks for the keys. No wonder you did not
-see our ghost! It is here, and we are having just the
-same experiences in this house as we had in
-“Bocarthe.” If you would care to stay a few nights
-with us, on the chance of seeing the ghost, we shall be
-delighted to put you up.</p>
-
-<p class="lttr">
-<span class="lttr5">Yours, etc.,</span><br />
-<span class="lttr1">Robert Rowlandson.</span>
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I was obliged to return home very shortly, in order to
-decide definitely and speedily what I intended to do for a
-living; but although I knew I had little or no time to
-waste, I could not resist the Rowlandsons’ kind invitation
-to try and see their ghost, and accordingly accepted.</p>
-
-<p>They lived in C—— Crescent. When I arrived
-there, I found the entire household in a panic, the ghost
-having appeared to one and all during the previous
-night.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It was so terrible,” Mrs. Rowlandson said, “that I
-can’t bear even to think of it, and shall certainly never
-forget it. One of the maids fainted, and was so ill afterwards,
-we were obliged to have the doctor, and all have
-given notice to leave.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did nothing of the sort happen before you went to
-‘Bocarthe’?” I ventured to ask.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Mr. Rowlandson replied, “not a thing. We
-were then sceptics where ghosts were concerned, but
-we’re certainly not sceptical now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think it possible,” I said, “that the ghost is
-attached to some piece of old furniture? I have read of
-such cases.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Rowlandson shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said, “we have no old furniture, all our
-furniture is modern and new; at least, it was new when
-we came to ‘Bocarthe.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, if the ghost is neither attached to the house,
-nor to the ground, nor to the furniture, it must surely be
-attached to some person,” I remarked. “I have read
-that one of the dangers of attending Spiritualistic
-Séances is that spirits occasionally attach themselves to
-people, and can only be got rid of with great difficulty.
-I suppose no one in the house has gone in for Spiritualism?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can safely say I haven’t,” Mr. Rowlandson laughed;
-“and you haven’t, either, Maud, have you?” he said,
-looking at his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Rowlandson flushed.</p>
-
-<p>“The only Spiritualist I ever knew,” she stammered,
-“was—you know, dear, whom I <span class="nobreak">mean——”</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Rowlandson raised his eyebrows and stared at her
-in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t,” he said. “Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ernest Dekon!”</p>
-
-<p>“Dekon!” Mr. Rowlandson ejaculated. “Dekon!
-Why, of course, I might have guessed Spiritualism was
-in his line. Some years ago, Mr. O’Donnell,” he went on,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-turning to me, “my wife met this Mr. Dekon at a ball
-given by a mutual friend, and from that time, up to his
-death, he persecuted her with his undesirable attentions.
-I never knew anyone so persistent.”</p>
-
-<p>“He resented your marriage, of course,” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Resented it!” Mr. Rowlandson responded; “I
-should rather think he did, though to everyone’s surprise
-he came to it. Ye Gods! I shall never forget the expression
-on his face, as we caught sight of him in the
-vestibule of the church. Talk about Satan! Satan
-never looked half as evil.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Mr. Dekon was a Spiritualist!” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“He was very keen on séances,” Mrs. Rowlandson
-interposed. “Most keen, and was at one time always
-trying to persuade me to go to one with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never knew that,” Mr. Rowlandson exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not,” his wife said demurely. “You see,
-you don’t know everything. However, I never went.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how did he die?” I ventured.</p>
-
-<p>“Suicide,” Mr. Rowlandson said. “He shot himself,
-and was dastardly enough to leave a note behind him,
-pinned to the toilet-cover of his dressing-table, stating
-that his death was entirely due to the heartless conduct
-of my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“When was that, Mr. Rowlandson?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see,” Mr. Rowlandson soliloquised. “We
-have been married not quite eighteen months. About
-fifteen months ago—shortly before we came to
-‘Bocarthe.’”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what’s in your mind,” Mrs. Rowlandson
-observed. “You think that very possibly it is the spirit
-of Ernest Dekon that is troubling us. Do you really
-think it could be?”</p>
-
-<p>“From what you have told me,” I said, “I should say
-that it is more than likely. The mere fact of his having
-been a Spiritualist would mean that he had, in some
-measure, got in touch with the Unknown; so that on
-passing over with his mind solely concentrated on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-revenge, he would, in all probability, speedily become
-closer acquainted with those spirits whom he had known
-here—not a very high class, but apparently the only
-class that a séance can attract—and these would undoubtedly
-aid him in his attempt to come back and
-annoy you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Rowlandson gave vent to an exclamation of
-dismay. “I have always felt,” she said, “that there
-might be some mysterious connection between Ernest
-Dekon and the dreadful thing we have seen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” I added, “that is only a suggestion on
-my part. When does the phenomenon usually appear?”</p>
-
-<p>“At all times, and when we least expect it,” Mrs.
-Rowlandson said. “For example, if I am going upstairs
-alone, it either springs out at me or peers down at me
-from over the banisters. Or, again, it rouses us in the
-middle of the night by rocking our bed! Always some
-alarming trick of that kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you could hardly expect it to manifest itself
-if we all sat here in the dark?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly.”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t a photograph of Mr. Dekon, I suppose?”
-I hazarded.</p>
-
-<p>“A photograph of that scoundrel,” Mr. Rowlandson
-cried. “If he had given her one, it wouldn’t have
-remained long in her possession, I can assure you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he never did,” Mrs. Rowlandson said, forcing
-a smile, “but I can describe him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know whether that will do much good,” I
-observed. “Because I understand that if one of the
-lower order of earthbounds, usually called Elementals,
-wanted to ‘fool’ us, it could easily impersonate him.
-Dekon’s phantom would not, of necessity, be very like
-his material body; it would depend entirely on how
-much of the animal there was in him; if a great deal,
-then one might expect to see a creature with a pig’s, or
-some other kind of beast’s, head, with only a slight facial
-resemblance to Dekon. Can you describe his hands?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-Because I believe spirits that have lost all other resemblance
-with the physical body might be identified by
-some peculiarity in the formation of the fingers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Mrs. Rowlandson said; “I do remember his
-hands distinctly. They were so ugly! They were long,
-and red, and the tips were club-shaped; I am sure I
-should recognise them anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p>This conversation took place in the interval between
-tea and dinner. After dinner we sat in the drawing-room,
-discussing plans for the night, and finally came to
-the conclusion that when bed-time came we should
-retire to our respective rooms, and sit there in the dark,
-waiting and watching for whatever might happen. It
-was furthermore agreed that directly anyone saw or
-heard anything, they should at once summon the others.</p>
-
-<p>We sat up rather late, and it was close on midnight
-before Mrs. Rowlandson rose, and we all—there were
-two guests besides myself, a Colonel and Mrs. Rushworth—took
-our candlesticks, and followed her upstairs. We
-had mounted the first flight, and had turned the bend
-leading to the second—the house seemed all stairs—when
-Mrs. Rowlandson halted, and, looking back at us,
-said, “Hush! Do you hear anything?”</p>
-
-<p>We stood still and listened. There was a thump, that
-apparently came from a room just at the top of the
-stairs—then another—and then a very curious sound, as
-if something was bounding backwards and forwards over
-bare boards with its feet tied together. At a signal from
-Mr. Rowlandson, we immediately blew out our lights.
-A church clock solemnly struck twelve. We heard it
-very distinctly, as the Rowlandsons, being enthusiasts
-for fresh air, kept every window in the house wide open.
-The reverberation of the final stroke had hardly ceased
-when a loud gasp from someone in front of me sent a
-chilly feeling down my spine.</p>
-
-<p>At the same moment the darkness ahead of us was
-dissipated by a faint, luminous glow. As I watched, the
-glow speedily intensified, and suddenly took the shape of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-a cylindrical column of six or seven feet in height, and
-this in turn developed with startling abruptness into the
-form of something so shockingly grotesque and bestial
-that I was rendered speechless.</p>
-
-<p>It is extremely difficult to give a very accurate
-description of it, because, like the generality of occult
-phenomena I have experienced in haunted houses, it
-was a baffling mixture of the distinct and yet vague,
-entirely without substance, and apparently wholly
-constituted of vibrating light that varied each second in
-tone and intensity. I can only say that the impression
-I derived was that of a very gross or monstrous man.</p>
-
-<p>The head, ill-defined on the crown and sides, appeared
-to be abnormally high and long, and to be covered with a
-tangled mass of coarse, tow-coloured hair; the nose
-seemed hooked, the mouth cruel, the eyes leering. The
-general expression on the face was one of intense
-antagonism. The body of the thing was grey and nude,
-very like the trunk of a silver beech, the arms long and
-knotted, the hands huge, the fingers red and club-shaped.
-The latter corresponded exactly with Mrs.
-Rowlandson’s description.</p>
-
-<p>This hideous, baleful apparition was the spirit of
-animal man, the symbolical representation of all carnal
-lusts—it was Ernest Dekon—soulless.</p>
-
-<p>But although this spirit was without substance, it
-was composed of complex forces—forces both physical
-and mental. It could shut and open doors, move
-furniture, rap and make sundry other noises, and it could
-also convey the sensation of intense cold, and the feeling
-of the most abject fear. I now found myself wondering
-if it possessed other properties: Was it sensible? Could
-it communicate in any way?</p>
-
-<p>I was thus deliberating, when the figure seemed to
-move forward; then someone shrieked. Mr. Rowlandson
-struck a light, and simultaneously the apparition
-vanished. The effect it had had on us all was novel and
-striking—we were all more or less demoralized; and yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-no two of us had seen the ghost the same—and some,
-Mr. Rowlandson and Mrs. Rushworth, had not seen it
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>We went back again into the drawing-room and discussed
-it. Mrs. Rowlandson was the first to speak. She,
-too, had been particularly impressed by the hands, and
-she was sure they were the hands of Ernest Dekon.</p>
-
-<p>“I can say nothing about the face,” she cried, “as it
-did not appear to me, but having seen the hands, I am
-firmly convinced that the ghost is Ernest Dekon, and that
-it is Ernest Dekon who is tormenting us. Can’t any of
-you think of a plan to get rid of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cremation is the only thing I can think of!” cried
-Colonel Rushworth, who had hitherto been silent. “That
-is the means employed, I believe, by the hill tribes in
-Northern India. When a spirit—a spirit they can
-identify—begins to haunt a place, they dig up the body
-and burn it, and they say that as soon as the last bone
-is consumed the haunting ceases. They have a theory
-that phantoms of dead people and animals can materialise
-as long as some remnant of their physical body remains.
-Where did this Ernest Dekon die?”</p>
-
-<p>“In Africa,” Mr. Rowlandson said.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s capital! If we can find the cemetery, there
-ought to be no difficulty in getting at the body. The
-officials are, as a rule, open to bribery. Anyhow, we
-might try it as an experiment.”</p>
-
-<p>I left Edinburgh next day, but I heard some months
-later from Mr. Rowlandson.</p>
-
-<p>“You may recollect Colonel Rushworth’s suggestion,”
-he wrote. “Well, the hauntings have ceased. We are
-shortly returning to ‘Bocarthe’!”</p>
-
-<p>From this I gathered that an attempt to exhume and
-cremate Ernest Dekon’s body had been made, and had
-proved successful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_4"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="subt">I TRAVEL ACROSS THE UNITED STATES, AND DO
-SOME GHOST HUNTING IN SAN FRANCISCO</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Upon</span> leaving Scotland I seriously considered my future,
-and at length decided to go to Oregon and fruit farm.
-Though the expedition, through no fault of my own,
-proved a failure, and I had to return to England within a
-comparatively short time, I managed, whilst in America,
-to see and learn a good deal. Apart from visiting Crater
-Lake, which in those days was one of the wildest spots
-imaginable, far out of the beat of any but the most
-adventurous tourist, and seeing the Rogue River Indians
-in their native element, I spent several weeks in the big
-cities, and when in San Francisco obtained the services
-of a guide, and did a nightly tour of China Town, and
-several of the lesser known subterranean haunts of that
-city.</p>
-
-<p>It was in San Francisco that I had my first experience
-with an American ghost. I had been out tramping all day
-along the southern side of the bay, and it was close on
-midnight before I got back to the city, feeling thoroughly
-done up and very footsore. The last chime of twelve
-o’clock sounded, as I swung wearily round 117th Street
-into a narrow thoroughfare leading to the obscure
-quarter of the town in which my finances forced me to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-live. As I came within sight of the end house of a block
-of low old-fashioned buildings, I received something of a
-shock. I had passed by it that morning and had noticed
-that it was to let. I was quite sure of this, because there
-was something about the house that had especially
-attracted my attention. I was struck with its utter
-loneliness, its air of past grandeur—so oddly at variance
-with the modern and mediocre buildings around it—and,
-peeping in at the windows, I had taken stock of its big
-oak-panelled apartments devoid of furniture and bestrewn
-with dust and cobwebs.</p>
-
-<p>Now, to my astonishment, I perceived a bright glow—a
-kind of phosphorescent light—emanating from one of
-the rooms on the ground floor. I approached nearer,
-and, as I leaned against the verandah and peered in, it
-suddenly seemed to me that the room was no longer
-empty, but richly carpetted and full of ponderous, old-fashioned
-furniture. I also seemed to see in the centre
-of the room a long table covered with a snowy cloth, on
-which were arranged, in rich profusion, many handsome
-silver dishes containing a selection of the choicest food.
-I was dumbfounded. Twelve hours ago there was not a
-soul to be seen about the house nor a particle of furniture
-in it, and now!—well, it looked to me as if it never, never
-had been empty.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst I was thus meditating, my face glued to the
-window, I thought that a sudden blaze illuminated the
-room, and by degrees I became conscious of the glare of
-countless candles, some of the candelabra branching
-from the walls, and others—of chased silver—standing
-on the table. I then saw the door at the far end of the
-apartment open, and a young and charming girl, dressed
-à la mode de Marie Antoinette, her gown high-waisted
-and her hair poudré, hurriedly enter. She gave a quick
-glance at the table, and then, advancing to the fireplace,
-where, for the first time, I perceived the cheery glow of a
-huge log of wood, gazed at herself in a large, richly-framed
-mirror. The reflection evidently pleased her, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-she turned round all smiles; and then her eyes fell on
-the window, and on me.</p>
-
-<p>In an instance her countenance changed. Putting a
-finger to her lips with a great air of mystery, she beckoned
-to me to come in. I started back in confusion. Again
-she beckoned, and with such pretty pleading in her eyes
-that, despite my travel-stained clothes, I yielded. I
-walked to the front door; she opened it, and in hushed
-tones, in which I detected a slight French accent, she
-bade me welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“We are having a fancy-dress dance,” she said, “but
-none of the guests have as yet arrived, and I want you to
-come into the ball-room while I rehearse some of the
-dance music.”</p>
-
-<p>She led the way across a big, deserted and strangely
-silent hall, up a flight of thickly-carpeted stairs, along a
-dimly lighted corridor, peopled with nothing but odd
-shadows, to which I could see no material counterparts,
-and into a room obviously prepared for a ball.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no one about but you and I,” she said
-laughingly. “Only we two; but someone else will arrive
-soon. It’s not half-past twelve, is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I said; “twenty past.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ten more minutes!” She sighed deeply, and her
-expression, which up to now had been one of gay mischief,
-changed to one of immeasurable sadness. Then she
-nodded, suddenly burst out laughing, and casting the
-most bewitching look at me from out her long, thickly
-lashed blue-grey eyes, sat down at the piano and began
-to play a Strauss waltz.</p>
-
-<p>Fascinated though I was by her extreme archness and
-beauty, I could not stifle the thousand and one uncomfortable
-thoughts that speedily crowded into my mind.</p>
-
-<p>Who was this strangely friendly and peculiarly
-solitary girl? Surely someone must have helped her
-prepare the house and supper. Where were they?
-Besides, she couldn’t possibly live in that house alone.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, apart from the music—which seemed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-reverberate through every stick and stone of the building—there
-was no other sound. I might have been alone
-with her on some desert island in the far Pacific.</p>
-
-<p>A feeling of intense but wholly unaccountable fear
-gradually crept over me.</p>
-
-<p>“It is close on the half hour,” she suddenly whispered.
-“Listen!”</p>
-
-<p>She paused for a moment, and I heard a door from
-somewhere in the lower part of the house open and shut.
-Then came the sound of muffled footsteps, stealthily
-feeling their way upstairs. Up and up they came, till
-they arrived outside the door of the room we were in.
-There they stopped, and I instinctively felt that their
-owner was listening.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the girl recommenced playing, and I saw the
-door-handle began to turn. Slowly, very slowly, the door
-then opened, and on the floor of the room there appeared
-a black shadow—vague, indefinite and grotesque. The
-girl looked over her shoulder at it, and I caught an
-expression in her eyes that appalled me. Turning to the
-piano again, she played frantically, and the faster her
-fingers flew, the nearer crept that shadow.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly it seemed to shoot right forward, there was a
-wild scream of terror, a terrific crash, and all was in
-absolute darkness.</p>
-
-<p>I groped my way frantically towards the door. Something—I
-could not define what—came into violent
-collision with me; I staggered back half stunned; and,
-when my brain cleared, I found myself standing in the
-street, weak with exhaustion, and—hatless.</p>
-
-<p>I visited the house the next day, when the sun was
-shining brightly and there were plenty of people about.
-It was as I had first seen it, untenanted and unfurnished.</p>
-
-<p>I must then have dreamed the whole thing. And what
-more likely! I was excessively tired at the time, so tired
-that I felt I could hardly crawl home—and without a
-doubt I had dropped off to sleep resting against the
-verandah.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Just out of curiosity, however, I determined to find out
-if the interior of the house in any way resembled the
-interior I had seen in my dream, and, with that object in
-view, I applied to Mr. C.——, the owner, for permission
-to look over it, frankly telling him why I was doing so. As
-he appeared to be interested, I described my dream to
-him in detail, and he afterwards told me the following
-<span class="nobreak">story:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“About fifty years ago, a very rich French family
-occupied the house; and at the coming of age of their
-daughter they gave a fancy-dress ball. Among the
-guests was an Italian, who, being a rejected suitor of the
-daughter’s, had not been invited. He appeared in some
-grotesque and alarming costume, and when the dance
-was at its height suddenly overturned a large oil lamp.</p>
-
-<p>“In a moment the whole floor was ablaze; and before
-anyone could stop him, he had seized the daughter of the
-house and hurled her into the midst of the flaming mass.
-Both he and the girl were burned to death, and the
-house, although it was thoroughly restored, has never
-let since.”</p>
-
-<p>Having concluded his story, Mr. C.—— said he would
-like to go with me to the house, and accordingly we set
-out together.</p>
-
-<p>Though my experience had been only a dream, the
-coincidence connected with it, which only needed my
-identification of the scene to be complete, was startling
-enough, and I grew more and more excited as we neared
-our destination. When we arrived, Mr. C.—— insisted
-upon my going first; and once inside, recognising every
-feature in the house, I led him first to the room in which
-I had seen the supper-table laid, and then upstairs to the
-ball-room, where, to my unspeakable surprise, lying in
-the middle of the floor, I found my hat.</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>What a strangely fascinating city was old San
-Francisco—that is to say, San Francisco before the last
-great fire and earthquake! Consisting of street upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-street, terrace upon terrace of quaintly irregular buildings,
-to me its atmosphere—as no other atmosphere ever
-has been—was impregnated with the superphysical. I
-stayed for a few days in a vast hotel in 117th Street, in
-which I was the only visitor. I shrewdly suspect it was
-haunted, although I cannot truthfully say that I ever
-saw a ghost there, and when I retired to bed up flight
-after flight of stairs, and past dimly-lighted passages
-teeming with doors—doors with nothing, nothing
-material at least, behind them—the only sounds I heard
-were the hollow echoes of my own footsteps as I went on
-ascending higher, higher, and higher.</p>
-
-<p>Hearing, however, that I was interested in ghosts, the
-landlord of the hotel introduced me one day to a Mr.
-Sweeney, who kept a drug store in Market Street.</p>
-
-<p>“The only experience I ever had with the Supernatural,”
-Mr. Sweeney began, in answer to my interrogations,
-“took place in this very room. Exactly twelve
-years ago I engaged the services of a young man called
-Edward Marsdon. He was very amiable and capable,
-but highly-strung and hypernormally sensitive. He had
-been with me about six months, when he came into the
-parlour one evening with a face like a corpse. ‘I’ve
-poisoned someone,’ he gasped. ‘Poisoned someone?’ I
-ejaculated. ‘Good God, what do you mean?’ ‘What
-I say,’ he replied. ‘A young fellow came into the store
-about an hour ago and handed me a prescription. It was
-signed by Dr. Knelligan, of 111th Street. I made it up,
-as I thought, all right, and gave it him. A few minutes
-ago, I found I had put in salts of lemon instead of
-paregoric.’ ‘Are you sure?’ I asked. ‘Certain!’ he
-said, ‘as the bottle of salts of lemon is on the table in the
-laboratory with the stopper out. I must have used it in
-mistake. The young man will die, if, indeed, he is not
-dead already, and I am ruined for life.’ ‘We both are,’
-I said tersely. ‘Ring up Dr. Knelligan at once, and ask
-him for the young man’s address. When you get it,
-drive round at once and see if you are in time.’ It was of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-no use scolding him for carelessness—he was upset
-enough already, and a ‘blowing up’ just then might, I
-thought, result in another tragedy. The only thing to be
-done was to hope for the best. He rang up Knelligan,
-got the address, drove round to it, and discovered that
-the young man had just left. The landlady had no idea
-where he had gone. To Marsdon this was the last straw.
-He came back in a state of utter collapse, trembling all
-over as if he had ague, and, after telling me what happened,
-he went upstairs and slammed his door. About a
-quarter of an hour later, my wife, the servant, and I all
-heard Marsdon, so we thought, come downstairs and go
-out. The servant then went up to his room to make the
-bed, and hearing her scream out, I ran upstairs, to find
-her standing in the middle of the floor, wringing her
-hands, whilst Marsdon was sitting in a chair—dead! He
-had been dead some minutes. That, Mr. O’Donnell,
-was the beginning of the strange occurrences here. If it
-was not Marsdon whom we all heard go out, who could it
-have been? There was no one in the house but we three,
-and the body in the chair upstairs, so that it must have
-been Marsdon’s ghost. Well, from that day on, we had
-no peace.</p>
-
-<p>“Footsteps, which we all recognised as Marsdon’s, for
-he had a most peculiar lumping kind of walk, trod up and
-down the stairs all hours of the day and night, and
-frequently when I was in the laboratory mixing medicines
-I was strongly conscious of some presence standing
-close beside me and watching everything I did. One day
-my wife saw him. She was going out, and wanting some
-money, she called to me. As I did not answer, she went
-in search of me, and finding me, as she thought, standing
-on the hearthrug of the parlour with my back to her, she
-touched me on the shoulder. The next moment she
-discovered her mistake. The person whom she had mistaken
-for me turned round, and she found herself confronted
-with the white, scared countenance of Edward
-Marsdon. She started back with a loud shriek, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-Marsdon walked out of the room, and apparently right
-through the servant who came running in to see what
-was the matter. My wife asked the maid if she had seen
-anything, and the latter said, ‘No, only a dark shadow
-seemed to fall right across me, and just for a second or so
-I felt miserably depressed.’ A week or so afterwards he
-was again seen; this time by my wife and the maid.
-They met him on the stairs. He appeared to be under
-the influence of some very painful emotion, and he passed
-them at a great rate, and so near that they felt his
-clothes—apparently quite material—brush against them.
-He disappeared in the laboratory, and on their entering
-it immediately afterwards, there was no one there.
-Something of this nature—either auditory or visual, or
-both—now happened pretty well daily, until one morning
-a young man came to the store to see me. ‘I am the
-young man,’ he said, ‘to whom your assistant gave that
-unfortunate mixture. I have just returned to San
-Francisco, and have heard all about it. The medicine
-was perfectly all right. I drank it directly I left here, and
-it did me the world of good. There was not even the
-suspicion of poison in it. Marsdon was labouring under
-some extraordinary delusion. If only he had told my
-landlady about it when he called and found I had gone,
-she could have given him the glass I had drank out of,
-which doubtless contained some dregs of the stuff—at
-any rate, a sufficient quantity for analysis. I am told
-there are rumours afloat that his apparition has been
-seen several times since he died; not that I believe in
-such things as ghosts.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Whether you believe in them or not,’ I said quietly,
-‘it is a fact Edward Marsdon has both been seen and
-heard.’ ‘Then I hope,’ he said, ‘my visit here to-day
-will put matters all right, and that his poor, wandering
-spirit, learning that I am alive and well, will find rest,
-and trouble you no more.’ He then bid me good-morning
-and walked towards the door. ‘My God!’ he suddenly
-cried, coming to an abrupt halt, ‘there he is!’ I looked,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-and as sure as I am sitting here, Mr. O’Donnell, there
-was Edward Marsdon, just as I had known him in life,
-standing on the pavement with his face glued to the
-window, peering in at us. The expression in his eyes was
-one of infinite joy and astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“I took a step or two towards him with the intention
-of speaking, when he immediately vanished, and from
-that day to this the hauntings have entirely ceased.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_5"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="subt">A HAUNTED OFFICE IN DENVER</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">After</span> leaving San Francisco, I visited Sacramento,
-where I bought a pair of braces, suspenders as they call
-them there, that lasted me for years. They were the very
-best half-dollar’s worth I ever had, and I still have the
-remains of them stowed away in a big trunk amongst
-other mementos of the long past.</p>
-
-<p>I can’t imagine any city in America hotter than
-Sacramento in the summer, or more unpleasantly cold in
-the winter, apart from which there was nothing about
-the place that caused it to be very deeply impressed on
-my memory, saving that I met a man in one of the streets
-one day who was so exactly like an old Clifton College
-master called Tait that I believed it was he, and accosted
-him accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>The man gasped at me in amazement. “Why, Jupp,”
-he said, “how on earth have you managed it. It’s only
-ten minutes since I left you eating your dinner in the
-Eagle Hotel on the other side of the town. Have you
-wings?”</p>
-
-<p>The moment he spoke I knew he was not Tait, but it
-took me some time to convince him I was not Jupp; and
-when he introduced me to the latter half an hour or so
-later, I was not surprised, for I do not think there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-could have been a more striking likeness to myself, even
-in my own portrait.</p>
-
-<p>The coincidence was all the more remarkable since
-there was at Clifton College, contemporary with Tait, a
-master named Jupp, of whose cane I had the most
-striking recollection. In appearance, however, the
-Clifton Jupp was not in the least bit like me.</p>
-
-<p>This was the only adventure of note, if one may so
-designate it, I had during this visit to Sacramento. I
-went on from there to Denver, where I met one or two
-relatives of friends of mine in England, and did a little
-work as a “Free Lance” journalist. It was summer
-when I had last stayed in Denver, and then the intense
-heat, combined with an injudicious consumption of fruit
-and iced water, had brought on a mild attack of cholera,
-which left me with a none too favourable impression of
-the place.</p>
-
-<p>But now all was changed. The weather was much
-cooler; I was growing acclimatised, and I did not feel
-altogether among strangers. Consequently my apathy
-vanished, and, despite the fact that my employment
-was anything but lucrative, I enjoyed this second stay
-in Denver immensely.</p>
-
-<p>The town had not been built long. Indeed, ten years
-previously it had only one anything like orthodox
-street; so that it was the last place in the world where
-one would expect to come across a haunted house. Yet
-I heard of three haunted houses at least whilst I was
-there.</p>
-
-<p>The one I think most likely to interest my readers I
-heard of in this way. I had been to the Zoological
-Gardens, and was returning by tram, when a journalist
-called Rouillac, with whom I had a very slight acquaintance,
-came running up to me in a great state of excitement.
-“O’Donnell,” he cried, “I have unearthed something
-that will interest you—the case of a haunting in an
-office in Race Street.” He then proceeded to give me
-an account of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The office was rented by a Mrs. Bell, a typist who
-employed two girls, Stella Dean and Hester Holt.</p>
-
-<p>One day Hester Holt failed to put in an appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“If she is ill,” Mrs. Bell said to Stella Dean, “she
-ought to have let me know. There was nothing wrong
-with her yesterday, was there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I am aware of,” Stella Dean replied.
-“When she parted from me, just across the way, she
-went off in the best of spirits. I expect she’ll turn up
-all right to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>The morrow came, and Hester Holt not arriving, Stella
-Dean was despatched in the dinner-hour to find out what
-had become of her. She returned looking very white
-and scared.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Stella,” Mrs. Bell exclaimed. “What on
-earth’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hester’s gone away without telling anyone where she
-was going,” Stella Dean answered.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say so,” Mrs. Bell cried. “What can
-have happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“She never went to her lodgings after leaving here;
-at least, that’s what the landlady says,” Stella Dean
-replied. “And she hasn’t written, either—but I think
-you’d better call there yourself; I don’t like the woman.”
-And Stella burst out crying.</p>
-
-<p>This was the beginning of the mystery. Mrs. Bell
-interviewed the landlady, who stuck to her statement
-that she had neither seen Hester Holt nor heard of her
-since she had left the house two days ago, presumably to
-attend business. There had been no words between them,
-she said, and Hester had seemed as usual, perfectly
-happy. She was a singularly reserved girl, and never
-mentioned her family excepting when she went away for
-her annual holiday. She then requested that all her
-letters should be forwarded to the address of her married
-sister.</p>
-
-<p>The landlady, Mrs. Britton, gave this address to Mrs.
-Bell, and the latter, writing off at once, received an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-answer by return of post to say that Hester was not
-there and no tidings of her had been received for over a
-month. The married sister, however, made an important
-statement. She said that one person was sure to know of
-Hester’s whereabouts, and that was Pete Simpkins, the
-young man with whom she kept company, and was
-hoping eventually to marry. Mrs. Bell, now keenly
-interested, hastened off and interviewed Simpkins. To
-quote her own words, he seemed “a bright, intelligent
-young man,” and exhibited unfeigned astonishment and
-perturbation on learning of the disappearance of his
-sweetheart.</p>
-
-<p>“When did you last see her?” Mrs. Bell enquired.</p>
-
-<p>“The day she left you,” he responded. “I had been
-out in the country all day, superintending the building of
-a large farm some ten miles to the east of this city, and I
-was cycling home along a very unfrequented route, when
-I met a buggy. Two girls were in it, and to my amazement,
-they were Hester and Stella Dean.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” Mrs. Bell cried. “Stella Dean? Are you
-sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely!” Simpkins replied. “I can swear to it.
-It astonished me because I knew they had been on very
-bad terms. I was engaged to Stella before I met Hester,
-but I could not stand her temper. One day she was so
-enraged with my dog because it snarled at her, that she
-seized my walking-stick and beat it on the head till it
-was dead. I found her standing over it, white with fury;
-and feeling that after what I had witnessed I could never
-like her again, I broke off our engagement there and then.
-After that I met Hester Holt at the same house where I
-had first seen Stella, and we at once became friends.
-Stella Dean did not like it, but she took on more than
-was necessary; and Hester told me there had been several
-very painful scenes between them. Indeed, I understood
-that out of business hours they were not on speaking
-terms; hence you can judge of my astonishment when
-I saw them driving in the buggy side by side.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s all very mysterious,” Mrs. Bell observed. “If
-she does not turn up soon, I shall have to inform the
-police.”</p>
-
-<p>The following day, Mrs. Bell asked Stella if she had
-gone for a drive with Hester Holt the evening of the
-latter’s disappearance, and Stella Dean promptly replied,
-“No; the last time I saw Hester was when she left here
-that afternoon. She said good-bye to me as usual on the
-other side of the road, and I have never set eyes on her
-since.”</p>
-
-<p>She admitted she had once been engaged to Pete
-Simpkins, but emphatically denied that Hester’s keeping
-company with him had led to any rupture between them.
-“Hester and I were always on the very best of terms,”
-she said, “and it would be downright mean of anyone to
-allege otherwise. Besides, I can produce proofs to the
-contrary.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day, as Hester was still missing, Mrs. Bell
-told the police. The affair was at once inquired into, and
-Pete Simpkins’ story about the buggy was corroborated.
-Someone else had seen the two girls driving towards the
-outskirts of the town that same evening; whilst a car
-proprietor also came forward and declared that he
-recollected Miss Holt hiring a buggy from him, but that
-she had driven off in it alone. When the buggy was
-brought back, he being out, his wife had taken the money
-for it. But as it was then dusk, she could not possibly
-swear to the identity of the lady who had paid her,
-especially as the latter had been so muffled up, presumably
-on account of the coldness of the night, that
-practically nothing of her face was visible. She could
-only say Miss Dean resembled her both in build and
-height.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill2"></a>
-<img src="images/ill2.jpg" width="384" height="622" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“Who is that tall, good-looking girl, Stella, that I’ve seen
-following you into the building...?”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Stella Dean was now asked if she could produce an
-alibi; and, accordingly, her mother, a very decrepit old
-lady, declared that Stella had come straight home from
-the office, and had remained indoors all that evening.
-To add to the complexity of the affair, someone else<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-testified to having seen Hester Holt enter Mrs. Britton’s
-house with a latch key rather late on the night in question;
-and this of course made some people suspect Mrs.
-Britton, but the police could prove nothing, and the
-matter was eventually dropped.</p>
-
-<p>All this happened about three months before I arrived
-in Denver.</p>
-
-<p>A week after the disappearance of Hester Holt, Mrs.
-Bell had a new assistant called Vera Cummings, a very
-material, practical young lady, the daughter of a farmer
-somewhere near Omaha.</p>
-
-<p>The day after her arrival, Miss Cummings was busy
-typewriting in the office with Mrs. Bell and Stella Dean,
-when she suddenly exclaimed, “How is it that I get
-convulsed with shivers whenever I sit next to you, Miss
-Dean? I don’t when I’m sitting next to Mrs. Bell. Eugh!
-I feel as if the icy east wind were blowing right through
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What nonsense!” Stella Dean replied; “you
-imagine it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t,” Miss Cummings retorted; “I’m going
-to sit somewhere else,” and she moved to the other side
-of the table.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Bell made no comment. An hour or so afterwards,
-Vera Cummings abruptly observed:</p>
-
-<p>“My, Stella Dean, what long legs you have!”</p>
-
-<p>“What in the world do you mean?” was the surprised
-and rather indignant retort.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there’s no one else on your side of the table,
-is there?” Vera Cummings responded; “and someone’s
-feet keep kicking mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re dreaming,” Stella Dean said, and Mrs. Bell
-noticed she turned very pale.</p>
-
-<p>Two days now passed uneventfully, but on the third
-day after the above conversation, Mrs. Bell and the two
-girls were sitting talking—it was close on the interval for
-tea, and work was just then very slack—when Vera
-Cummings remarked, “Who is that tall, good-looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-girl, Stella, that I’ve seen following you into the building
-on several occasions. I’ve watched her keeping close
-behind you till you get to the elevator, and then she
-disappears. Where she goes I can’t imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>“A tall, good-looking girl following me to the elevator,”
-Stella Dean repeated, her cheeks ashy. “What do
-you mean? I’ve seen no one. You’ve dreamt it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was she like?” Mrs. Bell interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>Vera Cummings gave a minute description of her.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure, Stella, we don’t know anyone like
-her?” Mrs. Bell said quietly. “That description seems
-to tally exactly with someone we once knew. Someone
-who used to frequent this place. Can she have returned,
-do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know who you mean,” Stella Dean said
-crossly. “I tell you, I’ve seen no one.”</p>
-
-<p>The next morning they all three arrived simultaneously,
-and went up together in the elevator. On
-nearing the office, the sound of a typewriter was heard.
-They looked at one another in open-mouthed astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“It must be one of the other clerks in the building,”
-Vera Cummings said. “She’s mistaken our room for
-hers. She’s an early bird, anyway, for I reckon there’s
-no one else arrived yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the door’s locked,” Mrs. Bell whispered. “See,
-here’s the key!” And she took it out of her pocket as
-she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s no mistaking the sound, is there?”
-Vera Cummings laughed. “Click, click, click—that’s a
-typewriter, sure enough. Someone must have got in
-through the window. My, Stella, how white you are!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Bell glanced sharply at Stella Dean—there was
-not an atom of colour in her cheeks, and the pupils of
-her eyes were dilating with terror.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Bell then put the key in the lock and opened the
-door. The typewriter was working away furiously, but
-there was no one at it, the room was absolutely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-empty. It stopped the moment Mrs. Bell crossed the
-threshold.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon Stella Dean complained of a headache
-and went home early. She was in bed for several weeks,
-and during her absence from the office the strange
-phenomena there entirely ceased. The morning she
-returned, Pete Simpkins met her and Vera Cummings
-just outside the office building. He was bubbling over
-with excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s come back!” he cried. “Come back, and
-never sent me a word. I <em>am</em> glad though.... Hoorah!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come back!” Stella Dean said, drawing herself up
-stiffly and regarding him with an angry stare. “Who
-are you talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hester Holt!” Pete Simpkins ejaculated. “She’s
-just gone into your place. Didn’t you know?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Dean made no reply. She simply pushed past
-him and walked in. Vera Cummings, however, dawdled
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s Miss Holt like?” she asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>Simpkins described her.</p>
-
-<p>“Why that’s the girl I used constantly to see following
-Stella,” she said. “Where she disappears to is a mystery,
-but it’s only one of the many funny things that have
-happened since I’ve been here.”</p>
-
-<p>She then told him about the typewriter and the feet
-under the table. Pete Simpkins repeated the story to
-his friends. Rouillac got hold of it, and hence, as the
-reader already knows, it was handed on to me.</p>
-
-<p>Rouillac was most anxious that I should go with him
-to the haunted office straightaway, but it so happened
-that I had work to finish in a given time, and it was
-therefore arranged that he should call for me one day
-the following week.</p>
-
-<p>At the hour appointed, he came. “I fear it’s no use,”
-he said; “the office is closed, and it is impossible to get
-permission to go there. It’s come about like this. The
-day after Stella Dean returned to work, Mrs. Bell was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-away—ill—and the two girls were alone. Some time after
-they had started work, it might have been eleven o’clock
-or thereabouts, Vera Cummings got up to get a drink of
-water, and in passing chanced to look at Stella Dean.
-The latter was leaning forward in her chair and staring
-with an expression of the utmost horror in her eyes at a
-despatch case on the floor, which was oscillating violently
-to and fro. Vera noticed that the despatch case was
-marked on one side with the letters ‘H.&nbsp;H.’ ‘That’s
-odd,’ she cried. ‘What makes it do like that—it can’t
-be due to vibration, because there’s nothing going by
-outside. How do you account for it, Stella?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t know,’ Stella Dean gasped, making a
-vigorous attempt to appear unconcerned; ‘perhaps
-they’re shunting something heavy downstairs.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But we should hear them,’ Vera Cummings replied.
-‘I believe it’s Hester Holt; she’s dead, and for some
-mysterious reason her spirit haunts this room.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nonsense,’ Stella Dean stammered. ‘How can you
-be so silly! There are no such things as ghosts.’</p>
-
-<p>“After a while, the case stopped shaking, and the two
-girls went on with their work. Lunch time came and
-they both rose to get ready to go out. Vera Cummings
-had put on her hat, and was walking to the door, when
-she heard a sharp cry. She turned round, and there was
-Stella Dean standing in front of the looking glass and
-gazing at the reflection of a pale face, with two dark
-menacing eyes glaring fixedly at her from over her
-shoulder. Vera recognised the face at once. It was that
-of the girl she had so often seen following Stella, the girl
-Pete Simpkins had told her was Hester Holt.</p>
-
-<p>“She was so frightened, for she knew for certain now
-that the thing she was looking at was nothing earthly,
-that she ran out of the room, and as she crossed the
-threshold, the door slammed behind her with a terrific
-crash. Ashamed of her cowardice, she tried the door-handle.
-It turned, but though she pressed her hardest,
-the door would not open. She called to Stella, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-was no reply. Greatly alarmed, she ran to the elevator
-and fetched the man in charge of it. They both pushed
-the door, and still it would not open. They were
-deliberating what to do, when they saw the handle
-suddenly turn and the door gently swing back on its
-hinges. They peered in. Stella Dean was lying on the
-hearthrug in a dead faint. She died that same night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Died!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Some people fancy she committed suicide, but
-her mother declares that her heart had long been affected
-and that she died from syncope. Anyhow, she’s dead,
-and the office is closed, as nothing will persuade Vera
-Cummings to work there till Mrs. Bell is well enough to
-return. I tried to get permission to spend a night there,
-but Mrs. Bell dare not give it. She says the landlord is
-furious with her for allowing the report to get abroad
-that the building is haunted, and threatens her with a
-libel action if he hears anything further.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a great pity,” I said; “for few cases have
-interested me more.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you make of it?” Rouillac asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” I replied, “the same as you. There can only
-be one conclusion. Stella Dean was madly jealous of
-Hester Holt, and during that drive in the buggy she
-killed her. Whether the murder was premeditated or
-done in a sudden fit of blind passion—you tell me her
-temper at times was very uncontrollable—of course we
-cannot say. From your sketch of her, however, I am
-inclined to think she planned the whole thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what could she have done with the body?”
-Rouillac said. “The police searched everywhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“So they say,” I observed; “but the track Simpkins
-was on when he passed the buggy affords countless
-opportunities for concealing a body. It is full of deep
-ditches, creeks, and crevices, covered with a thick and
-rank vegetation, and the police would take at least a
-century to explore it. Besides, from what I know
-of the super-physical I do not think for one moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-that Stella Dean was haunted without some poignant
-reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was haunted!” Rouillac observed.</p>
-
-<p>“You said she was dead, didn’t you?” I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Rouillac replied slowly, “there’s no doubt
-whatever on that point. She’s dead right enough. But
-when Vera Cummings passed by the office this morning,
-she saw Stella Dean enter it—Stella Dean just as she
-looked when alive, only very white and in abject terror.
-She passed right in through the half-open doorway, and,
-as usual, Hester Holt followed her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_6"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-<span class="subt">CASES OF HAUNTINGS IN ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK, AND
-CHICAGO</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">One</span> of the most extraordinary men I have ever met was
-Ephraim B. Vandergooch, who, at the time of my travels
-in America, practised dentistry in 6th Street, St. Louis.
-Dentists are not, as a rule, the people to associate themselves
-with psychical research, and it is just as well for
-their patients, perhaps, that they are not, for sitting up
-all night in dark houses looking for ghosts has an unsteadying
-effect on the nerves—it is apt to make one
-“jumpy”—and if a dentist’s hand were to jump, it is
-more than likely that his patient would jump too. Mr.
-Vandergooch, however, was an exception. He was a
-ghost hunter, and his investigations had but a slight and
-temporary effect on his nervous system. His hand was as
-steady as a rock, his wrists like steel. I went to him to
-have a tooth filled, and during the operation I asked him
-if he knew of any haunted houses in the town.</p>
-
-<p>He was a stranger to me then, and of course I expected
-a superior smile, if not an actual sneer, for, as I have said,
-dentists are, as a rule, anything but psychics. To my
-surprise, however, he took me quite seriously, and said he
-knew of several haunted places in St. Louis, and that
-nothing interested him more than really first-hand ghost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-stories. He told me he had had an experience himself,
-and narrated the <span class="nobreak">following:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“A few years ago,” he began, “I learned of a haunting
-in a street of rather older houses than these, close to here;
-and as the evidence in this case was to a large extent
-corroborative, I decided to investigate it. It was
-Christmas time, and the thought of earthbound spirits
-pacing up and down cold, empty houses, when all around
-was warmth and jollity, depressed me. I felt that I must,
-now that an opportunity had come, try to see them, and
-if possible do something for them.</p>
-
-<p>“I set out on Christmas Eve, and I admit that when I
-left the cheerfully lighted thoroughfare, and plunged into
-the dark silent emptiness of the house, my heart almost
-failed me. Apart from ghosts there were so many possibilities,
-and what more likely than that some tramp or
-criminal had forced an entrance, and was hiding somewhere
-on the premises. For a few seconds I stood and
-listened, and then, feeling a trifle more assured, I closed
-the door gently and advanced cautiously along the wide
-hall. At each step I took I became more and more
-sensitive to an atmosphere of intense sadness and
-desolation—an atmosphere of intense loneliness, loneliness
-that is without hope—that is perpetual and absolute.
-It could be felt in all parts of the house, but more particularly,
-perhaps, in the kitchen, which was built out at
-the back on the ground floor. I had never been in such a
-dreary and inhospitable kitchen. The night was bitterly
-cold and the bare stones sent chilly currents up my legs
-and back, into my very brain.</p>
-
-<p>“To remain in such a hole till morning was assuredly
-courting pneumonia or rheumatic fever. I looked at the
-range, it was covered with rust and verdigris. If only it
-could be lighted! Then I uttered an exclamation of joy,
-for lying in one corner was a pile of wood—boxes, shelves,
-faggots, etc., intermingled with an assortment of
-other rubbish. In my early days I had lived on a ranch
-out west, and the experience I had had there now came in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-useful. In a few minutes there was a loud crackling, and
-the kitchen filled with a ruddy glow. A couple of dresser-drawers
-served me for a seat, and I was soon ensconced in
-a tolerably snug position, from which, however, I was
-prepared to spring at a moment’s notice.</p>
-
-<p>“The hours sped by, and the silence deepened.</p>
-
-<p>“At last, just about two o’clock, when I was beginning
-to think nothing would happen, I heard a door slam
-somewhere upstairs. This was followed by a series of
-creaks, and I heard someone cautiously descending the
-stairs. A great fear now seized me, and had I been able,
-I should doubtless have beaten a hasty retreat. Instead,
-I was possessed with a kind of paralysis, which rendered
-me quite helpless and prevented me from either moving a
-limb or uttering a sound. The creaks came nearer—down,
-down, down, until quite suddenly they stopped,
-and I heard a cough.</p>
-
-<p>“It was repeated—cough, cough, cough. The cough
-of a delicate, neurotic woman. At first it simply startled
-me—it sounded so distinct, so reverberating, so real.
-Then it irritated me, and then it infuriated me—almost
-drove me mad. ‘God take the woman,’ I raved. ‘Will
-she never cease.’</p>
-
-<p>“Cough, cough, cough. A nervous, hacking cough, a
-worrying, grating cough, an intensely silly, murder-instilling
-cough. I could see the owner of it—upstairs,
-hidden from me by impenetrable darkness, and yet quite
-distinct—a slight, pale, excessively plain little woman,
-with watery eyes and a quivering mouth. Heavens, how
-the mouth maddened me! On she went—cough, cough,
-cough! She was still coughing, when I suddenly became
-aware of a presence close beside me, and I saw in the glow
-from the dying embers the figure of a man seated at a
-table in the middle of the kitchen. He appeared to be
-trying to write, but to be unable to collect his thoughts.
-Every now and then he paused, dashed his pen down,
-and clenched his fists furiously. At first I could not
-understand his behaviour, and then it all of a sudden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-occurred to me—the coughing, of course. That perpetual
-noise, that everlasting hacking—it distracted, demented
-him. I watched him with feelings of infinite sympathy.
-At last, unable to stand it any longer, he sprang from
-his seat and dashed upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard him race up two steps at a time. No madman
-would have raced faster or more nimbly. Then came a
-strange variety of sounds—a gratuitous course in
-phonetics—an altercation, more coughing, oaths, bumping,
-a scream, a thud, a little feeble cough, silence, and
-then rapidly descending footsteps—a man’s footsteps.
-I did not wait for them. The spell that had hitherto held
-me limb-tied now abruptly left me, and I fled out of the
-building—home.</p>
-
-<p>“The next day—Christmas Day—I made my report
-to the owner of the house, and told her exactly what had
-happened.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good heavens!’ she exclaimed, ‘and he’s married
-Maisie! Swear that you will never tell a soul, no one, not
-even your most intimate friend, and I will give you an
-explanation of what you witnessed.’ (“All this
-happened years ago,” Mr. Vandergooch remarked, “so
-it’s all right my telling you now.”) I promised, and
-she at once began.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ten years ago the occupants of the house you’ve
-been in were a well-known dramatist and his wife, whom
-I will call Mr. and Mrs. Charles Turner. Mrs. Turner
-was exactly like the woman you imagined—frail, small
-and very plain; whilst her husband would tally with the
-man you saw in the kitchen—a tall, muscular, handsome
-man. He obviously married her for her money, poor
-soul, for there was nothing in her to attract him, and
-everyone could see how she irritated him, especially
-when she coughed—in fact, he often said to me, ‘You
-don’t know, Mrs. Wehlen, how Eva annoys me. Whenever
-I am in the midst of my work, trying to concentrate
-my thoughts, she starts her infernal coughing—I can
-hear her all over the house—hack, hack, hack.’ ‘She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-can’t help it, poor thing,’ I replied. ‘You ought to feel
-sorry for her.’ ‘Feel sorry for her,’ he said. ‘You’d feel
-sorry for her if you were tormented as I am. I believe
-she does it on purpose.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, one evening—to be precise, it was Christmas
-Eve—Mrs. Turner was found at the foot of the hall
-staircase with her neck broken. There was no direct
-evidence as to how she came there, but as one of the
-stair-rods was found loose, it was presumed that she fell
-over it, and, accordingly, a verdict of accidental death
-was returned. Charles Turner left the house directly
-afterwards, and a few months ago married my niece,
-Maisie. As far as I know, what you have seen has never
-been seen by anyone else, but coughing in the house has
-been heard, and it is quite plain to me now that Charles
-Turner murdered his first wife. I only pray to Heaven
-he won’t serve Maisie the same.’</p>
-
-<p>“But he did,” Mr. Vandergooch added, “for she, too,
-was found at the foot of the staircase with her neck
-broken! In all probability she had possessed some
-idiosyncrasy that worried and annoyed him; or, possibly
-having once taken to murder, he felt he must go on with
-it—the habit of homicide being, no doubt, just as
-fascinating as the habit of drugs or of drink.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, however, was proven, and, for all I know
-to the contrary, he may still be alive, still be killing
-people to appease his hyper-sensitive and outraged
-nerves.”</p>
-
-<p>This experience of Mr. Vandergooch made me think;
-and eventually led to my devoting no small amount of
-attention to psychology and criminology. From what a
-variety of influences, it seemed to me, any one act might
-be induced, and to what innumerable and varied causes
-any one crime, for instance murder, might be traced. A
-minute bone pressing on a certain section of the brain, a
-stomach continually overladen with beefsteak and other
-animal food, over-excited nerves, the sight of some
-locality, such as a wood, an object, such as a knife, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-may lead to the same thing—the desire to kill; whilst,
-at the same time, the superphysical, through the agency
-of some evil spirit continually whispering to its selected
-victim the arrestive, the compelling thought, almost
-enforces any and every sort of crime. Seeing, then, that
-in every act of cruelty or violence it is more than likely
-that either one or other of these factors has been at
-work, is it fair that we should so readily condemn and
-therewith rest content?</p>
-
-<p>True, it may be, and, I believe, it is expedient to
-punish the criminal, but surely it is even more urgent
-that we should make ourselves thoroughly acquainted
-with his case, so that we may if possible discover the
-factor that conduces to his crime, and then either destroy
-or counteract it.</p>
-
-<p>From St. Louis I went to New York, where I lodged in
-a fifty cent. hotel in West Quay.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a particularly elevating neighbourhood, but
-it was one that boasted of several haunted houses. I
-was taken to see one of them—a small store that supplied
-seamen’s kits—by a fellow lodger, who, if I remember
-rightly, bore the name of Boxer. The proprietor of the
-store was a Swede; his name I cannot quite recall, it
-was, I believe, Jansen, or something like Jansen. He
-was at first extremely reticent, but on my assuring him
-that I was not in touch with any of the New York
-journals, and would not connive at his story getting into
-print, he agreed to tell me what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>Calling his wife, a plain, stolid-looking woman, dressed
-in a neat and spotlessly clean print gown, he led the way
-upstairs to the top landing. There he stopped opposite a
-closed door, in front of which stood a large oak chest.
-“That’s the room,” he said; “we’ve barricaded it like
-that to prevent the children going in. When we first
-came here, my wife, and I, and our youngest child,
-Bertha, slept there. But we none of us liked the room,
-and we soon began to have very disturbed nights. I had
-ghastly nightmares, and so had my wife.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And Bertha too,” Mrs. Jansen chimed in; “she
-used to dread being left alone in the room even for five
-minutes, and used to cry till one or other of us went to
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right enough,” Mr. Jansen interrupted; “and
-Bertha’s never behaved like that since we moved her
-into another room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we experienced nothing more disturbing than
-bad dreams for the first fortnight or so, and nothing
-happened until we were both aroused one night by
-hearing Bertha scream. We lit a candle and got out of
-bed. ‘What is the matter,’ I asked; ‘are you in
-pain?’ ‘No, Poppa,’ she said. ‘Not in pain, but so
-frightened. I kept hearing the bed creak, and I thought
-one of you was coming out of it to kill me.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, what nonsense,’ I said. ‘You’ve been
-dreaming again, child.’ Then, turning to my wife, I
-remarked, ‘If she has many more of these nightmares we
-had better send for the doctor. Don’t you think so?’
-My wife made no answer, but suddenly gave a cry and
-pointed at the bed. ‘Otto!’ she cried. ‘Look at the
-clothes! We never left them like that. What’s happened
-to them?’ I looked. The clothes were all heaped together
-down the centre of the bed exactly in the shape of
-a human body, with the face turned towards us.</p>
-
-<p>“We all three stared at it in open-mouthed silence,
-and the longer we gazed, the more pronounced grew the
-features, until they at last became so lifelike, so evil,
-that my wife and I instinctively shrank back against the
-child’s cot, and tried to hide the thing from her. My wife
-declares she saw it move.”</p>
-
-<p>“It did,” Mrs. Jansen said. “I saw it distinctly shift
-nearer to us. So did Bertha.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you were both agreed on that point,” Mr.
-Jansen went on. “All I can say is I didn’t see it do
-that, but I started praying, and whether it was the effect
-of my prayers or not, the clothes gradually became
-clothes again, and, after soothing Bertha, we scrambled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-back into bed, feeling rather ashamed we had been so
-frightened.</p>
-
-<p>“The following evening after Bertha had been put to
-bed, we heard her scream again, and we ran up and
-found her quivering under the bedclothes. She said our
-bed had begun rattling, just as if we were moving in it.
-On turning to examine it, we found the clothes just as
-we had seen them in the night, with one of the pillows
-pressed and moulded into the speaking likeness of a face.</p>
-
-<p>“As I looked at it, the features became convulsed with
-such an indescribable expression of hellishness that I
-backed against the table and upset the light.</p>
-
-<p>“On re-lighting it, the thing on the bed had disappeared,
-and the clothes were once again normal. That
-same night, some time after we were in bed, I awoke to
-find myself being roughly shaken by the shoulders. It
-was my wife, but, perhaps I had better let her go on with
-the story.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shook him,” Mrs. Jansen explained, “because a
-feeling had suddenly come over me that I must kill
-Bertha. The very first night we slept in the room I
-became obsessed with a passionate desire to see someone
-die, a desire that I can assure you was absolutely novel
-to me, because I flatter myself I am naturally kind-hearted
-and extremely sensitive to seeing other people
-suffer.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s kindness itself,” Mr. Jansen observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” Mrs. Jansen went on, “the feeling became so
-unbearable, that fearing I should actually be compelled
-to kill someone, I awoke my husband and begged him to
-tie my hands together; which, after some hesitation, he
-did. Bertha was crying bitterly, and told us she had
-again heard creaks in the room, just as if someone was
-getting out of bed to murder her. That was the last
-time we slept in the room. I felt it was a positive danger
-to spend another night in it, and so we removed into the
-one we are sleeping in now.”</p>
-
-<p>“And has it never been occupied since?” I asked.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, for one night,” Mrs. Jansen replied. “A niece
-of mine, Charlotte, came to stay with us, and as we had
-nowhere else to put her, she had to sleep there. We went
-to bed rather late that night, and I dreamed three times
-in succession that Charlotte was creeping down the stairs
-with some strange weapon in her hand, with which she
-intended killing Bertha. Bertha was then sleeping alone
-in the room facing ours.</p>
-
-<p>“The third dream was so vivid that I awoke from it
-bathed with perspiration. I told my husband, and he
-said, ‘Well, that’s curious, for I thought I heard someone
-moving about overhead. I’ll go and see if anything is
-amiss.’ He opened the door, and, going on to the
-landing, discovered Charlotte tiptoeing cautiously down
-the stairs, holding a long, glittering pair of scissors in her
-hand, and with an expression on her face similar to that
-on the face in the bedclothes. ‘What are you doing
-here?’ my husband demanded, and Charlotte at once
-dropped the scissors and began crying. She told us that
-no sooner had she got into bed, than she felt like another
-person. It was just as if someone else’s soul had crept
-into her body. All her old sentiments and ideals
-vanished, and the maddest and most unholy ideas
-presented themselves in rapid succession to her mind. A
-blind hatred of everyone in the house possessed her, and
-she was seized with the most ungovernable craving to
-kill. For a long time she fought against this mania, until
-at last, unable to restrain it any longer, she got out of bed
-and sought some weapon. Cold hands, she declared,
-seemed to guide her to the scissors, and armed with them,
-she crept downstairs, just as I had seen her in my sleep,
-determined to butcher Bertha first, and then, if possible,
-my husband and myself.</p>
-
-<p>“She pleaded our forgiveness and begged to be
-allowed to go home first thing in the morning. ‘I do not
-feel I am responsible for my behaviour,’ she said. ‘I
-never had the slightest inclination to do anything of the
-sort before. I am sure it’s that room. There’s some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-sinister influence in it, and if I go back to it, I’m certain
-I shall do something dreadful.’</p>
-
-<p>“She spent the rest of the night on the sofa in the
-parlour, and shortly before noon returned to her parents.</p>
-
-<p>“After that we locked up the room and had this chest
-placed against the door, as you now see it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know the history of the house?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Only that before we came here,” Mrs. Jansen said,
-“there were several sudden deaths. I do not think any
-of them were actually attributed to murder, though they
-were all due to rather extraordinary accidents. Originally,
-I believe, the house was an inn, kept by a woman
-who bore a very evil reputation, and we have always
-wondered if the hauntings had anything to do with her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you couldn’t tell whether the face formed
-by the bedclothes was a man or a woman’s?” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not, perhaps, by the actual features,” she responded,
-“only by the expression. I can’t explain how, but it
-was an expression which at once explained to me its sex,
-and that sex was not masculine.”</p>
-
-<hr class="l3" />
-
-<p>As I have said, this was not the only case of haunting
-in West Quay that I heard of during this visit of mine to
-New York, but it is the only one of sufficient interest
-to note here. Two equally interesting cases, perhaps,
-came my way when I was travelling West. The one was
-in Boston, the other in Chicago. I will deal with the
-Chicago one <span class="nobreak">first:—</span></p>
-
-<p>A banker in Chicago, to whom I had a letter of introduction,
-hearing that I was interested in ghosts, showed
-me a house close to Michigan Avenue where he had had
-a somewhat novel experience.</p>
-
-<p>“Some years ago,” he said, “that house had the
-reputation for being very badly haunted, and not by one
-ghost, but by dozens. It was then occupied by an eccentric
-old millionaire, whom I will call Mr. Hoonigan. Mr.
-Hoonigan had a very curious hobby. In a room, which he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-named Duckdom, he had a collection of the most exquisitely
-wrought models of women, clad in costumes
-which must surely have cost thousands of pounds. They
-were all made in Paris, and many of them had once stood
-in windows in the Rue de Rivoli. I have never seen anything
-to equal them; their eyes, hair, and finger nails
-were not only beautifully coloured and moulded, they
-were most natural and life-like. Mr. Hoonigan worshipped
-them. He used to spend hours a day sitting
-before each of them in turn, fondling their hands and
-making love to them in the most exaggerated fashion.
-Mad! Yes, of course, he was mad; but his madness did
-not always take such a harmless form. In a room
-opposite Duckdom, which he named Devildom, he had
-collected the models—some fifty or more—of murderers,
-and other criminals of the lowest type, besides a heterogeneous
-assortment of the most revolting objects.
-Amongst these objects were images of the South Sea
-Islands and Mexican gods; figures in wood and stone,
-representing ghosts and demons; cases full of mummies
-and skeletons; weapons that had once belonged to
-murderers and still bore traces of their victims’ blood;
-scalping and flaying knives; and a variety of ancient
-instruments of torture; whilst to accentuate the horror
-of the room as a whole, paintings such as only a brain in
-the most advanced stage of morbid disease could have
-conceived covered the walls. Mr. Hoonigan did not
-make a practice of showing his collections promiscuously,
-he was far too jealous of them, and I do not suppose there
-were ten people in Chicago who knew of their existence.
-Indeed, it was only with the very greatest difficulty that
-I got his permission to view them. He allowed no
-servants to sleep in the house, and when I went there one
-evening to see his treasures, he opened the door to me
-himself. ‘Do you see this?’ he cackled, pointing to the
-brown muzzle of a revolver, which showed itself from
-under his coat. ‘Well, I have two more of them, and the
-house is full of pitfalls, all admirable inventions of my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-own, and warranted to upset the calculations of even the
-most experienced cracksman.’ ‘Have you ever been
-troubled by burglars?’ I asked, glancing over the
-shoulders of the queer old figure before me, and letting
-my eyes wander round the great hall, dimly lighted and
-full of many suggestive nooks. ‘Yes, several times,’ he
-said, ‘and once, one actually got in. He is here now.’
-‘Here now!’ I cried. ‘Why, you surely don’t mean to
-say that you’ve reformed him and kept him as your
-servant?’</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Hoonigan chuckled, and his yellow fangs reminded
-me unpleasantly of the blunt and rusty teeth of a
-saw. ‘Not exactly,’ he said. ‘He fell into one of my
-traps. You will see him later in my little chamber of
-horrors. He’s been there ever since.’ (This seemed a
-trifle indiscreet; but Mr. Hoonigan knew he could trust
-me. You see, I was his banker, and business means
-business in Chicago.)</p>
-
-<p>“‘But come,’ he continued, ‘I will show you Duckdom
-first, because you will then the better appreciate its
-opposite. There is nothing like contrasts to teach you
-true enjoyment.’ He stepped into an elevator, and we
-went up, passing storey after storey, all dark, silent and
-deserted. At last we stopped, and getting out, entered a
-brilliantly illuminated room. ‘Here they are!’ Mr.
-Hoonigan exclaimed. ‘Let me introduce you to my fair
-women friends.’ I looked round, and there before me
-was a vast assemblage of women, all of them richly
-dressed in the very latest fashion. All beautiful, however,
-and all most artistically posed; some sitting, some
-standing, some lying at full length on rugs and sofas.
-They were so absolutely natural that it took me some
-seconds to realise they were only models—models in
-wax. Mr. Hoonigan approached one, and taking its
-hand, pressed it reverently. ‘When I die,’ he said, ‘I
-shall be placed here, and the room shall be hermetically
-sealed. I want no other heaven.’ He then took me
-across the landing to another room. I had been prepared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-for a shock, but not for the kind of shock I got when the
-door opened, and a hell, seething with devilry—ten
-thousand times more devilish than the devilry of Dante’s
-Hell—was suddenly thrust under my very nose. I
-recoiled, and Mr. Hoonigan, perceiving my fright, playfully
-pushed me in. When we were well in the midst of
-them, he pointed with great glee to several of the most
-notorious murderers, and insisted upon my picking up
-and examining their weapons. He then made me sit on a
-garotting chair, which he had quite recently purchased in
-Cuba, and when I was thus seated, he thrust a skull on
-my knee, which he said was that of a Red Indian Chief,
-who had for certain skinned alive with his own hands a
-whole family of whites.</p>
-
-<p>“By this time, as you may think, I had had enough of
-it, but, as Mr. Hoonigan truly remarked, there was so
-much to be seen; besides, he must, he said, whilst I was
-there, show me a stock of engravings which he had just
-bought in Madrid. They dated from the reign of Philip
-II., and represented, in grim detail, all the horrors of the
-Spanish Inquisition. But this was not all. Their chief
-interest, according to Mr. Hoonigan, lay in the fact that
-the inquisitors—to quote Mr. Hoonigan’s own words—‘just
-as an appetiser—an hors d’œuvre, don’t you
-know,’ used to give them to their victims to examine
-before they commenced to torture them.</p>
-
-<p>“At the conclusion of this exhibition I managed somehow
-to get away, and was walking to the elevator, when I
-saw something slink past us. I turned round, and in the
-gloom could only see, indistinctly, the form of a man of
-medium height, with a thick-set, brutal figure, and
-ambling gait. I could not see his face. He seemed to
-walk right through the door, which was shut, into the
-room we had just vacated. ‘What is it?’ Mr. Hoonigan
-asked. Somewhat nervously, I told him. ‘Ah,’ he said,
-‘that’s only one of them, and one of the least terrifying.
-You didn’t know, I suppose, that the house is haunted.
-From your description I should say that what you have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-just seen is the ghost of the burglar I told you about.
-But there are other ghosts—if you like to term them so—that
-are most troublesome. I have had to give up
-sleeping on this landing. I sleep on the ground floor
-now, with the electric light full on, all night.’”</p>
-
-<p>The case of the Boston ghost came to my notice in a
-very direct fashion. I only stayed in the town two
-nights, and chance led me to put up in an hotel which I
-learned bore an undeniable reputation for being haunted.
-It was in rather a poor neighbourhood—at least poor for
-Boston—and there were few visitors; indeed, on the
-landing where I slept, no one. I spent all my first day in
-the town sight-seeing and visiting relatives whom I had
-never met before, and I did not get back to the hotel till
-very late. The place was dimly lit and oppressively
-silent.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I the last in?” I asked the night porter, who
-rubbed his eyes wearily and yawned.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” he said; “the other guests have been gone
-to bed two hours or more. It’s close on one.”</p>
-
-<p>“What part of Ireland do you come from?” I enquired.</p>
-
-<p>“County Limerick, to be sure,” he said; “but you
-couldn’t tell I was Irish!”</p>
-
-<p>“At once,” I said. “What were you over there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was working on the roads,” he said, “and before
-that I was in the Army—in the Inniskillings.”</p>
-
-<p>“What date?” I enquired.</p>
-
-<p>He told me, and it then transpired that he had enlisted
-in that regiment when one of my uncles was a major in it,
-and he remembered him well. We were thus talking
-away and recalling episodes of the long past, when I
-heard a familiar sliding kind of noise, and broke off in the
-middle of a sentence.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely, that’s the elevator,” I exclaimed. “I hope
-our talking has not disturbed anyone.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill3"></a>
-<img src="images/ill3.jpg" width="439" height="627" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“But there are other ghosts—if you like to term them so—that
-are more troublesome”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so, sir,” he said. “At any rate, I
-shouldn’t trouble myself about it.” His voice sounded so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-strange, I thought, and there was such an odd, furtive
-look in his eyes, that I became curious, and walking
-across the hall, arrived on the other side, just in time to
-see the elevator come slowly and softly down.</p>
-
-<p>To my astonishment there was no one in it.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that happened?” I remarked. “No one
-called it, and had they done so we must have seen them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say, sir,” the porter replied, looking very
-uneasy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s certainly rather odd,” I ejaculated. “Anyhow,
-it’s chosen to come down at a very convenient
-moment.” And, getting in, I went up.</p>
-
-<p>The following night I returned late, and entered the
-vestibule of the hotel just as the elevator stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Does it come down at the same time every night?”
-I asked the porter.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” he muttered, “every night.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the reason?—there must, of course, be some
-reason. An elevator can’t start off unless someone or
-something starts it.” He was silent. “I see there’s
-some mystery attached to it,” I persisted. “What is
-it? Tell me.” He remained obdurate for some seconds,
-but eventually succumbed.</p>
-
-<p>“For goodness sake, don’t let on, sir,” he said,
-“because the boss has forbidden any of the staff to
-mention it, and if he found out I’d told you, he’d sack me
-at once. This hotel is haunted. Several years ago,
-before my time, a visitor arrived here late one night and
-was found by the day porter dead in the lift. How he
-died was never exactly known; it was rumoured he had
-either committed suicide or been murdered. It was never
-found out who he was or where he came from, and, as he
-had no money on him, he was buried like a pauper. Well,
-sir, ever since then that elevator has taken it into its head
-to set itself in motion at the same time every night.
-Sometimes the gates clang just as if someone were getting
-in and out. At first I usedn’t to like it at all. You can
-imagine, perhaps, what it’s like to know that you are the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-only person about in a place of this sort—and then to
-hear the elevator suddenly beginning to descend. However,
-by degrees, I got accustomed to it, and if that was
-all that happened, I shouldn’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else does happen?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you, sir. Would you like a bit of
-exercise?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind,” I said. “Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you try the staircase, then, instead of the
-elevator? Count the stairs and note carefully when you
-come to the forty-first.”</p>
-
-<p>I agreed. The stairs were narrow and tortuous, the
-light meagre, and soon I began to feel very, very far from
-my friend the porter, and very much alone in the building.
-This feeling increased the further I proceeded, until,
-at last, it became so unbearable that I involuntarily
-halted. I had conscientiously counted the steps. I was
-at the thirty-ninth. I looked around me. High over
-head was a kind of funnel formed of black, funereal, and
-apparently never-ending banisters; below me was a
-similarly constructed pit. The flickering gas-light
-brought into play innumerable shadows. I tried to look
-away from them, for their gambols were unpleasantly
-emphasized by the ominously oppressive silence, but they
-fascinated me to such an extent that I was forced to
-watch them, and, whilst I was thus engaged, I became
-suddenly aware of a presence. Something I could not
-see was standing on the staircase, a few steps ahead,
-barring my way. I advanced one step, and with a
-tremendous effort I struggled on to the next one. Then
-the most frightful, the most overwhelming, diabolical
-terror seized me, and turning round, I tore downstairs.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” the door porter said, “you’ve come back.
-Couldn’t pass it. No one who tries to do so at this time of
-night ever can.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” I gasped. “What is the beastly
-thing?”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” he replied; “no one knows. This
-place was once a madhouse, I believe, and <span class="nobreak">perhaps——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ah, well,” I said, “I can understand it now. Thank
-goodness I’m leaving to-morrow, and as it’s a choice of
-two evils, I’ll go up in the lift.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_7"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="subt">A HAUNTED WOOD AND A HAUNTED QUARRY IN CANADA</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">All</span> my ghostly experiences in the United States were of
-indoor hauntings, consisting mostly of the visitation of
-phantasms of the dead, who in earthly form had either
-suffered or committed some deed of violence. I never
-met with a psychic experience out-of-doors, though I
-only too well realised the possibilities of such when I was
-sleeping by myself on the ranche in Oregon, or riding
-alone through the giant forests of the Cascades mountains.</p>
-
-<p>I believe all the loneliest parts of America, the great,
-bold Rockies, the vast Californian and Oregon forests are
-periodically visited by ghosts—ghosts of murdered
-soldiers, of scalp-raising Indians, of tramp suicides—of
-all manner of evilly-disposed white and red people, and of
-neutrarians, spirits that have never inhabited earthly
-bodies, and which are as grotesque and awe-inspiring as
-the fantastically carved boulders and queerly shaped tree
-trunks with which those parts are so lavishly bestrewn.</p>
-
-<p>America, indeed, affords one of the wildest fields in the
-world for the genuine ghost hunter. I use the word
-genuine advisedly, for I would differentiate between the
-ghost hunter who is genuine, and the professor of physics,
-who expects the Unknown to be subservient to his beck
-and call. I say, then, for the ghost hunter with a kindly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-sympathetic nature, the ghost hunter whose thoughts are
-more often on the spiritual than the material plane, and
-who would earnestly seek the chance to succour and
-comfort a lost soul, the United States of America gives
-the greatest scope.</p>
-
-<p>From what I have heard, for I have never been there,
-Canada also is a much haunted country. An account of a
-haunting there was given me by a French Canadian,
-Bertram Armand, whom I met with his wife one day at
-an hotel in New York. Though born and educated in
-Canada, he had served in the French Army, and had
-spent a considerable portion of his life in France and
-Algiers. He had now retired, and it was on the occasion
-of his quittal of the Army and return to Canada that the
-event I am about to narrate, and which I give as nearly
-as possible in his own words, <span class="nobreak">occurred:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“My home,” he began, “was in a small town called
-Garvois,<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> to the South-West of Winnipeg, which, at the
-time of my adventure, some ten or twelve years ago, was
-nothing like the size it is now.</p>
-
-<p>“I had got out of the train at Winnipeg, and dined at
-an hotel, and the evening was well set in before I rose
-from my comfortable seat before the fire and prepared
-for my long tramp.</p>
-
-<p>“‘If you take my advice, sir,’ the landlord said, ‘you
-will avoid the wood of Garvois after dark.’ ‘And why,
-pray?’ I asked. ‘Because, sir,’ he responded, ‘because
-it bears an evil reputation.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘An evil reputation!’ I laughed. ‘Ma foi! it must
-bear a very evil reputation, a positively devilish reputation,
-to frighten an old soldier like me. Why, man alive,
-I have served in the French Army in the wildest regions
-of Algiers for years. A wood with an evil reputation,
-mille tonnerres,—that’s a joke I shan’t forget in a hurry.’
-Then seeing him look glum, I remarked, for I had no wish
-to hurt his feelings, ‘I can appreciate your intended kindness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-but you see I have been away from home for ten
-years—ten whole years, and I am dying to see my father.
-He is the only relative I have—therefore you can gather
-that I want to go by the quickest route, and the road
-through the wood, if I remember rightly, is twice as
-short as that by the plain. Is it not so?’</p>
-
-<p>“The landlord shrugged his shoulders. ‘Yes,’ he said,
-‘the road over the plain is longer—certainly it is longer—and
-if you go by it you won’t arrive at your father’s
-house till morning, but, monsieur, if you go by the wood
-you may never reach home at all.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I will risk it,’ I laughed; ‘there can only be robbers
-or wolves, and I am prepared for either. I have these!’
-And I tapped the ends of two six-shooters. ‘At all
-events, if anything happens, I will haunt the wood, and
-you may come and see me. Au revoir!’ I waved my
-hand as I spoke, and putting my pack in the proper
-place on my back, I stepped airily on to the broad, brown
-track leading to Garvois.</p>
-
-<p>“Within an hour of my departure, the weather, which
-had been abominably cloudy for the time of the year,
-took a sudden turn for the worse, and the rain descended
-in torrents. I chuckled grimly, Mr. O’Donnell, for what
-after all are the discomforts of sodden clothes and
-squishy boots compared with what a soldier has to
-undergo in Africa—in the Sahara, where the sun is hell
-and the insects—devils. Rain, Mon Dieu! What’s rain!
-On and on I tramped, whistling gaily and running my
-hand over my pack now and again to see that everything
-was safe. I had a present there for my father, whom I
-loved more than anyone else in the world. ‘You see,’ he
-added with a smile, ‘I hadn’t met Jacqueline then.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so long as I kept to the main track there was
-not much to complain about—it had recently been
-attended to, but the moment I turned off it, and on to the
-side one leading to the wood, my troubles began. Deep
-ruts, big holes, huge earth mounds, and sharp-edged
-stones made it bad enough in dry weather; it was now a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-quagmire—a quagmire that afforded every possibility of
-soon becoming dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>“I had seen nothing like it since I was in Algiers, but,
-bah! a soldier can get used to anything. ‘It is a mere
-nothing,’ I said to myself. ‘I can dive, I can swim; it
-will take more than cold water to kill me; and if it were
-twenty times as bad I would face it.’ Ten years is a long
-time to be away from one’s home, Mr. O’Donnell. I
-trudged on, and was soon ankle-deep in black mud. At
-eight o’clock I was confronted by a long line of huge,
-black trees, that bent their dripping tops as if they had
-orders to salute me. Coming to a halt, and leaning
-against a slender, isolated pine, that creaked and
-groaned in the rough night air, I ruefully surveyed the
-prospect in front of me. The track through the wood
-was twelve miles—nothing of a walk if I had been fresh
-and the weather dry, but in my present condition a
-seemingly impossible one. For the last hour or so I had
-experienced nothing but a recurrence of slips and falls,
-I had done nothing but plunge in and out of abysses, and
-I had been completely battered to pieces by the wind.
-And the rain! I can stand any amount of heat, Mr.
-O’Donnell, but wet, no, it gets into every pore of my skin
-and completely demoralises me. I was exhausted,
-almost at the end of my tether, and I felt a very little
-more would see me on the ground, absolutely done.
-Now, of course, I am used to sleeping out of doors all
-night; but, then, Canada is not France, neither is it
-Africa, and the warmth and dryness of the Sahara had
-made me terribly susceptible to chills. A night in this
-wood would mean for certain either pneumonia or
-rheumatic fever—and I might never get home to see my
-father. So what alternative was there? Only to tramp
-back again over that dreadful track, and take the long
-route over the plains. I couldn’t do it; I hadn’t the
-strength. I would struggle on. I did so—I took the
-plunge. The desert, with the lights twinkling far away on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-its extremities, was speedily hidden from view; trees shut
-me in on all sides; I was at last in the forest. I had never
-known what it was to be nervous, but the silence I now
-experienced disquieted me. I had never felt anything
-like it. It struck me as an assumed silence—assumed
-purposely to cloak a deep-rooted and universal resentment.
-Moreover, I had an uncomfortable suspicion that
-it was the prelude to something hostile—to some
-peculiar antagonistic demonstration, the very nature of
-which was at present enigmatical. It was a silence
-savouring of a world other than ours—of a world I knew
-nothing about—indeed, at that period of my life I was an
-atheist, and neither believed in a God or a future existence.
-The rain pattered heavily on the foliage overhead,
-and the wind groaned, but the voices—the voices of the
-beings in this Unknown World—were still, absolutely
-still. In the gloom the trees assumed strange shapes;
-their motions, too, were strange—so strange that I did
-not think they could possibly have been caused by the
-wind. You may think I am hyper-imaginative, Mr.
-O’Donnell, but I do not think I am; my wife would tell
-me if I were, for she has never been slow in pointing out
-my faults, have you, Jacqueline?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Armand smiled. “No, Mr. O’Donnell,” she said,
-“he has many faults, but exaggeration is not one of
-them; indeed, he is so precise as to be sometimes dull.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Armand continued: “I saw lights, too, Mr.
-O’Donnell,” he said; “all kinds of coloured lights, which
-I did not then attribute to possible spirit agency. I
-simply did not know what they were. I was not afraid,
-but I became wary, and moved furtively forward, as if I
-had been scouting in some enemy’s country. Every now
-and then I fancied I heard soft steps that I could associate
-with nothing human, stealing surreptitiously behind me.
-I paused and looked carefully over my shoulder, but there
-was nothing visible—only the gloom. At length the
-darkness became so intense that I could no longer see the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-track. I continued to advance, however, and after
-plunging through a succession of bogs and briars was
-finally brought to a peremptory halt by a stone wall.
-This wall was four feet or so in height, but what lay on
-the other side of it, or where indeed it began or ended, it
-was impossible to decide, and I was wondering what on
-earth I had better do next—for my energy was nearly
-spent—when a voice suddenly called out, ‘Keep along by
-the wall and I will meet you at the wicket gate!’ Overjoyed,
-I obeyed. The wall swerved sharply round, and a
-few yards beyond, with one hand on the gate and in the
-other a dark lantern, stood the slight, muffled-up figure of
-a woman. In a few words I explained the situation—how
-in the blinding rain and darkness of the forest I had
-lost my way, and was too exhausted to go any further.
-‘I don’t mind sleeping anywhere,’ I pleaded, ‘so long as
-I can lie where it is dry and rest till morning. An attic,
-barn, anything will do.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I think I can offer you something better than that,’
-the woman responded, as she led me through the gate and
-along a narrow winding path to a large, low, rakish-looking
-house, whose black walls, rising suddenly out of
-the ground before me, seemed startlingly familiar. My
-guide halted—a key turned, a door flew open—there was
-a rush of strange, musty air, and almost before I had
-time to realise it, I was inside the building. ‘I must
-apologise for the absence of light,’ the woman said, ‘but
-under the circumstances the omission is unavoidable. If
-we had been expecting you, it would, of course, have been
-different. If you will follow me, I will take you to your
-room.’ I tried to see her face, to make out what she was
-like, but I was frustrated in my desire by the way in
-which she held the lantern. Nor was I any more fortunate
-in the discernment of my surroundings; I could
-see the ground at my feet, but no more; all—everything—was
-shrouded in an impenetrable, sable mantle. The
-curious feeling that I had been there before, that I knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-the house well, again came over me, although prior to
-now I had never seen any habitation in the wood, nor
-even known that one existed. I argued it was probably a
-scent—some peculiar odour in the atmosphere that had
-conjured back memories of some other and quite distinct
-place; but I had not much time for speculation, as the
-woman’s movements were very quick, and I had barely
-scraped the thickest of the mud from off my feet before
-she had begun to ascend a luxuriously-carpetted staircase.
-We crossed what I took to be a landing, and
-stepped some score or so paces down a corridor, finally
-halting before a half-open doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There is your room,’ she said. ‘You need have no
-fear—the linen is well aired, and of course,’ she added,
-slightly sniffing, ‘you may, if you like, open the windows.
-We have been obliged to keep them closed, owing to the
-damp. Good-night!’</p>
-
-<p>“She turned to go, and just for the fraction of a
-second I saw her face. It was exquisite. My wife will
-pardon me for saying my wildest dreams of woman’s
-beauty were not merely rivalled, they were surpassed. I
-doubt even if so great a painter of feminine charms as
-Richter could have done her credit. Who was she? I
-kept asking myself that question long after she had left
-me, and the echoes of her high-heeled shoes along the
-passage and down the stairs had ceased. Who was she?
-Ma foi! The vision of such loveliness would never leave
-me. I would enjoy them over and over again in my
-sleep. Indeed, I was so obsessed with her face that I paid
-little or no heed to the novelty of the situation. At other
-times I might have queried the desirability of being in a
-strange bedroom in a strange house—in the dark. But
-the knowledge she was near at hand was quite enough for
-me. I was already in love with her—and the queerest, the
-most perplexing of predicaments were as nothing to me.
-I soared above—God alone knew how high above—dilemmas.
-Still, when I came to argue it out with myself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-it was a bit of a nuisance my matches were sodden and I
-could not use them. I would have preferred seeing the
-bed upon which I was to lie, and a spot where I could lay
-my clothes. I was so afraid of soiling the upholstery that
-I undressed where I stood, and then, making a guess at
-the direction of the bed, walked cautiously forward. By
-a piece of luck, which struck me as somewhat extraordinary,
-I collided with the bedstead—a large brass one—almost
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the work of a second to throw back the sheets
-and scramble in between them, and then, with my mind
-full to overflowing with visions of my newly-found
-goddess, I entrusted both her and my father to the safe
-keeping of the Virgin and the Saints—this though I had
-no faith in a future for myself—and sank into a deep
-refreshing sleep.</p>
-
-<p>“How long I remained in that condition I never knew.
-I woke with a start to find the room no longer dark, but
-partially illuminated with a fitful red glow which proceeded
-from the stove, now full of lurid logs. Thinking I
-must be dreaming, I rubbed my eyes. But no; the fire
-was still there, and even as I gazed at it I caught the
-sound of approaching footsteps—the sharp rat-tat of
-high-heeled shoes. Nearer and nearer they came, right
-up to the entrance of my room, when, to my astonishment
-and no little embarrassment, the door gently
-opened, and in tip-toed the object of my admiration. In
-one hand she carried a long-handled iron spoon, and in
-the other a candle. I was entranced. Now that she had
-taken off her hood and cloak, beauties hitherto concealed
-stood out in dazzling fulness and bewitched me.
-Never had I seen such a wealth of rich golden hair, such a
-perfect nose and chin, such tiny ears, carmine lips, white
-teeth, black-lashed, china-blue eyes, white tapering
-fingers, rosy, almond-shaped nails, and such a heavenly
-figure. My wife, Mr. O’Donnell, bears me no animosity.
-You don’t, do you, Jacqueline?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” Mrs. Armand laughed. “I understand you.
-All men are the same. Go on and tell Mr. O’Donnell
-more about your goddess.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are right,” Bertram Armand exclaimed. “She
-was a goddess—at least my idea of one, then. What did
-she want? I sat up in bed, and was about to speak to
-her, when she laid a finger on her lips and smilingly bade
-me be silent. She then glided to the grate, and taking
-from her pocket a small lump of lead, carefully put it into
-the spoon, which she balanced with the utmost care on
-the brightest of the faggots. That done, she again
-smiled meaningly at me, and walking to the dainty
-dressing-table, strewn profusely with rings and bracelets,
-looked long and critically at herself in the mirror. It
-was while she was thus occupied that I suddenly became
-conscious of something or someone close to me. In a
-moment my heart ceased to beat; in deadly fear I
-glanced round, and perceived, lying by my side, an old
-man with long, grizzled hair and beard, whose features
-were somehow vaguely familiar to me. He was sound
-asleep—a fact betrayed by his breathing, which was loud
-and stertorious. A slight movement from the other part
-of the room attracting my attention, I looked up, just in
-time to see the girl flash me a look of subtle warning.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t wake him, whatever you do,’ her eyes said;
-‘he <em>must</em> sleep on.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t wake him,’ I repeated to myself; ‘why, of
-course I won’t. I wouldn’t do anything—no matter what—if
-you told me not to; I would obey you even at the
-risk of life and soul!’ Dieu en ciel! How lovely!</p>
-
-<p>“Cautiously—first one daintily clad foot and then the
-other—the girl approached the stove. She lifted the
-spoon carefully from the fire, bore it steadily before her
-to the bed, and gaily motioning to me to keep quiet, she
-gently turned the sleeper’s head over on the pillow, and
-with a dexterous movement of her clever, supple fingers,
-poured the seething, hissing lead into his ear. There was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-an agonising scream—the eyes of the old man opened
-convulsively, and in the brief glimpse I caught of them, I
-recognised my father.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill4"></a>
-<img src="images/ill4.jpg" width="437" height="621" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“I looked up, just in time to see the girl flash me a look
-of subtle warning”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“Almost simultaneously came a loud crash, blinding
-darkness, and I was once again in the forest—God knows
-how—pursuing my way laboriously along the mud-laden
-track.</p>
-
-<p>“At early dawn I arrived within sight of Garvois—Garvois
-bathed in a cold grey mist, and a little later I
-dragged myself with difficulty towards the wicket gate
-leading to my father’s house. To my intense surprise it
-was padlocked, but the mystery explained itself at once—standing
-upright in the garden was a notice-board, bearing
-the inscription, ‘To be Let or Sold.’ I swayed on my
-feet as I looked at it, and with a bursting heart reeled
-away to the nearest house—the house of my old friend,
-Henry Crozier.</p>
-
-<p>“Henry had just awakened—he invariably got up at
-five—and shuffling downstairs, he opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Le diable!’ he exclaimed, ‘if it isn’t Bertram!
-Ma foi! I was dreaming of you last night. So you’ve
-come back!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come back to find the place empty!’ I murmured.
-‘But, tell me, my friend, where’s my father?’</p>
-
-<p>“Henry’s eyes grew round with astonishment.
-‘What!’ he said. ‘What! you don’t know?’ Then,
-seeing my look of utter stupefaction, he added: ‘My
-poor Bertram! Your father is dead! He died a fortnight
-ago, the very day after his marriage with Mademoiselle
-Marie Dernille, the niece of his last housekeeper.
-What killed him? Apoplexy. It does not do to dispute
-the doctor.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But the woman—the woman? What was she
-like?’ I stuttered.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why,’ Harry enunciated slowly, ‘she was what
-some people would call beautiful, though, as God is my
-judge, I did not admire her. Fair, very fair, a mass of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-washed-out yellow hair, painted lips—oh, yes, anyone
-could see they were painted—and big, very big eyes—china-blue
-and smiling—name of a name—eternally
-smiling.’”</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>This was Bertram Armand’s account of his experience.
-In answer to my questions he told me that he had
-searched the wood thoroughly, but there was no house of
-any sort in it, and afterwards, having had his father’s
-body secretly exhumed, and finding lead in the ear, he
-had obtained an order for the arrest of his step-mother.
-She was, however, nowhere to be found, and he supposed
-that, having got wind of the affair, she had escaped out
-of the country.</p>
-
-<p>Armand told his story with every appearance of
-sincerity, and as I could see that his wife believed it, I
-have no doubt at all that it was true.</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>The case of another haunting in Canada was told me on
-my way out to the States, on board one of the White Star
-Liners.</p>
-
-<p>My place at table was next to a Doctor and Mrs.
-Fanshawe, both Canadians, who, hearing that I was
-interested in everything connected with the superphysical,
-told me that they had had several rather
-curious experiences. The doctor took from his breast-pocket
-a small leather purse, and, opening it, showed me
-a dull, blue stone.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you a geologist?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I replied. “I know nothing whatever about
-stones. What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No one has ever been able to tell me,” he said. “I
-have shown it to several Professors at the English
-Universities and they have each classified it differently.
-Not one of them, I believe, had ever seen or even heard of
-a stone like it. And for a very simple reason. In Canada
-there is much soil that has never been disturbed, and
-many tracts of land no white man has ever trod.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But let me explain how the stone came into my
-possession. Five years ago we took a house situated
-about four or five miles from Montreal. It was a long,
-low, two storey house, standing a little back from the
-road, and connected with it by a semi-circular sweep of
-gravel road. Opposite the house was a large pit, where
-quarrying had recently been begun, but had been discontinued,
-owing to the calcinous nature of the rock,
-which rendered it of little use for building purposes.
-Incessant rains had formed a deep pool in the bottom of
-the pit, and the water possessed this idiosyncrasy—the
-weather made no difference to its temperature—it was
-icy cold in summer and winter alike.</p>
-
-<p>“Viewed in the day-time, the quarry struck one as
-ordinary enough. It was at dusk, when the shadows
-from the trees and bushes swept across the road and
-dimmed the mouth of the great pit, that it impressed one
-as unsavoury. I remember marvelling at this metamorphosis
-the first day of our arrival. It was July, and the
-landscape was vividly aglow with brilliant, scintillating
-sunbeams. A more radiant scene you could not imagine.
-‘One might make a capital swimming bath of this,’ I
-remarked to my wife, as we wandered to the edge of the
-pit and peered down into the silent, sparkling water.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ she laughed. ‘Supposing we start right
-away. I never appreciate a bath more than after a
-journey.’</p>
-
-<p>“That was in the morning. In the evening the place
-produced a very different impression. We had dinner—the
-sort of scratch meal one must expect when one is
-‘moving in,’ and I had strolled out alone. I first of all
-explored the premises. There was a big garden with an
-orchard alongside, and a small field beyond; and I
-pictured to myself how nice it would all look when
-the grass was properly cut and the flower-beds
-planted by my wife, who, by the way, thoroughly
-understands landscape gardening. You do, don’t you,
-Mabel?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Fanshawe nodded, and her husband resumed his
-story.</p>
-
-<p>“I lit another cigar and walked out into the road to
-have a look at the quarry. I hardly recognised it. It
-seemed, since the morning, to have undergone a complete
-change. The banks appeared higher and more
-precipitous, the water blacker and infinitely deeper, and
-there was a cold dreariness about the place that made me
-shiver. I thought I had never viewed anything so
-utterly forlorn and murderous. On the opposite bank
-were a few rank sedges and several white trunks of
-decayed trees. I had not noticed them before, but now,
-as I gazed down at the pool, I saw their re-modelled and
-inverted images outlined with a clearness that more than
-rivalled that of their material counterparts.</p>
-
-<p>“I was pondering over this phenomenon, when I
-suddenly felt I was being watched, and, raising my eyes,
-I perceived on the bank facing me, just out of reach of
-the water, a boulder of ebony-black and grotesquely-wrought
-rock. I could not see anything behind it, but I
-was convinced that something was there, something that
-was crouching on its haunches and glaring savagely at
-me. I also felt convinced that this thing, which I could
-not actually see—though I knew for certain it was there—was
-some strange hybrid of a man and animal; a
-thing with limbs like ours, but the face of some fantastic,
-mocking, malevolent beast.</p>
-
-<p>“Filled with a great uneasiness and all manner of
-vague fears, I hurried back to the house, where all was
-bright and cheerful, but I could not rid my mind of the
-impression it had taken from the pool, and that night
-my dreams were troubled and alarming.</p>
-
-<p>“I said nothing about it to my wife, but two days
-later, when I was mending my fishing-rod in the study,
-she came to me in a great state of agitation. ‘Why,
-what’s the matter, Mabel?’ I asked anxiously; ‘you
-look very white! Are you ill?’ ‘No,’ she said. ‘I’ve
-only had a shock.’”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the doctor’s request, Mrs. Fanshawe then took up
-the thread.</p>
-
-<p>“I was walking down one of the side-paths of the
-garden,” she said, “looking for Ephraim (Ephraim was
-our gardener), when I heard a great rustling of leaves. I
-turned round and saw a violent agitation going on in the
-branches of an apple-tree. Much mystified, as I could
-see no cause for it, I approached nearer, and as I did so
-I distinctly heard some heavy body drop to the earth
-with a thud; I then felt something brush past me. I
-can’t exactly describe the sensation it caused, because it
-is beyond words. I can only say I felt I was being
-touched by something immeasurably foul and antagonistic.
-I reeled right back, and that moment someone
-spoke. It was the gardener who came running towards
-me to ask if he could go home, as his wife had suddenly
-been taken ill.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was all that happened, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Mrs. Fanshawe replied. “That night, after we
-had been in bed some time, we were awakened by hearing
-our Newfoundland dog, Pat, bark. I went downstairs to
-see what was the matter with him—he slept in the house—and
-found him standing in the hall with his hair all
-erect, looking at the window by the front door.</p>
-
-<p>“I called to my husband, and he came down with his
-revolver. We then both went to the window and looked
-out, but could see no one. ‘I’m sure Pat sees something,’
-I observed; ‘he is beside himself with terror.’ ‘What is
-it, Pat?’ Dick said, and was about to stroke him, when
-there came a violent hammering at the door. We looked
-at one another in dismay. ‘Who’s there?’ Dick cried,
-and, there being no reply, he fired—the bullet going
-right through the door. We threw it open—there was no
-one there. We then searched the garden (nothing would
-persuade Pat to accompany us), but we found no one.</p>
-
-<p>“For a week after this incident we were undisturbed;
-then all sorts of noises were heard in the house—soft
-footsteps, heavy breathing, the rattling of door handles,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-and—most alarming of all—loud crashes on the door
-panels. The servants were terrified. One of them
-roused us one night by loud shrieks, and going to her
-room, we found her in hysterics. All the clothes had been
-stripped off her bed and thrown in a promiscuous heap on
-the floor. When she recovered sufficiently to speak, she
-told us something had come into her room and tried to
-suffocate her—she felt just as if all the breath in her body
-was being forcibly sucked out of her. She had seen
-nothing. We told her it was a nightmare, and tried to
-soothe her, but our endeavours met with little success,
-and in the morning she was seriously ill. She died within
-a fortnight, and on the same day as the gardener’s wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the gardener’s wife live on the premises, too?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Practically,” Mrs. Fanshawe replied. “She and her
-husband occupied a cottage close to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did both women usually have good health?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather,” Dr. Fanshawe laughed; “they were as
-tough as horses—rosy-cheeked, strong-limbed, typical
-young Canadians. Heart and lungs absolutely sound. I
-diagnosed their cases and was much puzzled. On the
-top of violent shocks, which had apparently upset their
-whole constitution, they had developed acute anæmia.
-Why do you ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Merely because of an idea,” I replied; “but pray let
-Mrs. Fanshawe finish her story, and then, if you like, I
-will tell you what my idea is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” Mrs. Fanshawe continued, “I haven’t much
-more to relate. On the night after our maid’s funeral,
-we were again disturbed by Pat barking. I got up and
-went to the bedroom window. The weather was very
-unsettled. Clouds scurried across the moon, that hung
-like a great silver ball over the St. Lawrence River,
-which I could see winding its mighty course in the
-distance; spots of heavy rain were falling, and the wind
-whistled dolefully through the leaves of the maples.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill5"></a>
-<img src="images/ill5.jpg" width="396" height="629" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“The Thing came right up to the window, and then raised
-its face”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“Suddenly I heard the sound of heavy footsteps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-crunching their way along the gravel drive. ‘It will be
-nothing visible,’ I said to myself, and then I got a pretty
-acute shock. Coming towards the house with short,
-quick steps was a tall figure, with its head bowed low.
-Its arms and legs were very long and bony, the feet and
-hands enormous. It was quite nude, and from all over
-its body, which was of an exaggerated whiteness, there
-emanated a strange, phosphorescent glow. I called to
-Dick, and he at once joined me. The Thing came right up
-to the window, and then raised its face. If I live to be a
-thousand years old I shall never forget what I saw. The
-proportion of the face was not human, and it was partially
-covered with hair, but the eyes were the same
-shape as ours, only very much bigger. They were pale,
-almost white, I thought, and their <span class="nobreak">expression——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk of it,” Dr. Fanshawe interrupted. “One
-can only say it was too damnable, too utterly vicious and
-loathsome for words.”</p>
-
-<p>“We were so overcome,” his wife went on, “that for
-some seconds neither of us could articulate a syllable.
-We both stared at it in hideous fascination. At last it
-made some slight movement, and Dick, released from the
-spell that held him, fired at it. The bullet must have
-gone right through it, for we saw the gravel on the path
-immediately behind it spurt up and scatter. However,
-the figure was unharmed, and it moved on towards the
-front door. Dick fired again, but with no better result.
-A fearful horror now seized us, lest it should get into the
-house. I am not a religious woman, but I prayed, and as
-I did so I saw Dick throw something. What he threw
-seemed to strike the thing full in the face, and it vanished.
-As we got back into bed, I said to Dick, ‘That
-was very odd! What did you throw?’”</p>
-
-<p>“‘A stone I picked up near the quarry this morning,’
-he replied. ‘I don’t know why I threw it, but directly
-you started praying, a feeling came over me that I must.’</p>
-
-<p>“We were not disturbed again that night, but slept
-better than we had done for some time, and in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-morning Dick found and showed me the stone—the stone
-you are looking at now. We had it fixed to the front
-door, and after that we were not troubled again.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was no history attached to the place,” Dr.
-Fanshawe added, “and no one we spoke to had ever
-heard of its being haunted. Now, what do you make
-of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“A fairly satisfactory case,” I replied, “because I
-think this stone affords a clue to part of the mystery at
-least. When I was out in the West, I was told by some
-Indians of the Rogue River tribe, whom I was delighted
-to fall in with, that when a place of theirs was haunted,
-they kept the ghost quiet by burying a piece of blue rock,
-which is to be found in the lava beds of that district, but
-is very rare. Now in all probability this custom is not
-confined to the Indians of one tribe, but is more or less
-universal; therefore we need not be surprised to find a
-piece of this blue rock buried elsewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there are no Indians in this neighbourhood,”
-Mrs. Fanshawe remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not now,” I said, “but undoubtedly there were
-once. My supposition is that this place has a history. It
-was once badly haunted by spirits of the most dangerous
-type, which, for want of a better name, I will style
-neutrarians.</p>
-
-<p>“These neutrarians are spirits that have never inhabited
-material bodies, and are only to be found in very
-remote and isolated districts, where the soil has rarely if
-ever been disturbed. They are invariably antagonistic
-to all forms of animal life, probably, because, if they were
-created first, which is quite feasible, they regard man as
-an interloper, and, probably, also because they covet
-man’s body and are jealous of him. Many of the Indians
-believe that man is descended from the gods, and neutrarians
-from devils, and that the latter feel the distinction
-and hate man accordingly. Neutrarians vary
-considerably both in appearance, habits and constitution.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-Whilst some can apparently reveal themselves at will,
-others can only do so by stealing vitality from human
-beings or animals. Let us now see how all of this applies
-to the present case. When you came to your house you
-did not get the impression it was haunted; it was only
-when you looked at the quarry—it was there you received
-your first impressions—and they were, in all probability,
-correct. I believe a great deal in first impressions, particularly
-with regard to the superphysical. This theory,
-too, namely, that the hauntings originated in the quarry,
-finds support in the fact that you found the blue stone
-close to the quarry, and that the figure you both saw
-coming along the carriage drive was coming from that
-direction. The blue stone, I believe, had been buried
-there and was dug up when the quarry was made; thus
-the stopper, so to speak, which kept the ghost in check
-being removed, the hauntings of course recommenced.
-Belonging to the species that cannot manifest itself without
-drawing vitality from some form or other of animal
-life, this neutrarian first attacked the gardener’s wife, and
-then the maid, selecting these two on account of their
-unusual robustness. Had you not thrown the blue stone
-at it, and afterwards fixed the stone to your door, it is
-more than likely that you would both have succumbed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then many diseases that have defied diagnosis, and
-there are countless such,” Dr. Fanshawe exclaimed,
-“may very probably be due to neutrarians.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think it is very likely,” I said. “I have noticed,
-for example, houses, where several people have been
-medically stated to have died of cancer, have been
-haunted by disturbances of a parallel nature to those you
-experienced.”</p>
-
-<p>“But are such hauntings to go on for ever?” Mrs.
-Fanshawe asked. “Is there no means of putting an end
-to them, saving by blue stones? How about exorcism?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not sure on that point,” I said. “I certainly do
-not think that neutrarians or the spirits of imbeciles can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-be exorcised satisfactorily, as I have known several cases
-of hauntings by these spirits in which exorcism has been
-practised, and in no instance has it had any effect whatsoever.
-I should say hauntings by neutrarians might
-last indefinitely; I see no reason why they should not.
-Have you made any enquiries lately about the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Mrs. Fanshawe replied, “not for some time.
-When we get back to Montreal, we will do so, and let you
-know.” The conversation ended here.</p>
-
-<p>A year later I received a letter from her husband.
-“I have been to the house,” he wrote, “and the present
-occupants are leaving almost immediately. There have
-been three deaths there during their tenancy, and they
-complain of exactly the same disturbances that alarmed
-us. I have lent them the blue stone.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_8"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="subt">HAUNTINGS IN THE EAST END</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Having</span> come to the conclusion that it was quite impossible
-to earn a living in America, I returned to England
-as a steerage passenger on the German liner “Elbe.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the last homeward journey she was destined to
-go, for she was run into on her next outward voyage by
-the “Crathie,” several hundred miles off the East Coast
-of England, and sunk with an appalling loss of life. The
-weather being particularly rough, we were about nine days
-at sea; and the fact that our quarters were extremely
-close, consisting of little more than a square foot to each
-person, coupled with food that I could not eat, made me
-sincerely thankful when the time came to go ashore.
-Apart from these details I had nothing to complain of in
-the way I was treated, for the crew—though barely concealing
-their hearty contempt for all but the first-class
-passengers—were to me civil enough. At the same time
-the experience—an experience I had not bargained for—was
-one I certainly do not desire to go through again.</p>
-
-<p>I shall never forget how glad I was to find myself once
-more in an English restaurant, sitting down to a good,
-square English meal. I spent two nights in Southampton,
-travelling thence to London.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On arriving at Waterloo, I found myself almost as
-embarrassed as I had been in New York, for my knowledge
-of London was extremely limited. I had only been
-there—excepting when I was up for my Sandhurst Exam.—for
-an odd day occasionally, and then I had always
-stayed at a private hotel in Cambridge Street, Hyde
-Park. Now, however, my funds being no longer equal
-to the West End, I was forced to look elsewhere for a
-lodging. After a wearisome search, I at last found a
-room in Tennyson Street, S.E. That room will take a lot
-of forgetting. It was very small, very dark, and very
-beetly. I could hear whole armies of blackbeetles
-parading the floor and scaling the walls. Occasionally,
-one dropped with a thud seemingly close to me, and I
-sprang out of bed in terror, lest it had landed on the
-counterpane. I honestly believe I am as much afraid of
-cockroaches as I am of ghosts.</p>
-
-<p>I only stayed in that house three days, and then moved
-into the attic of a coffee tavern in York Road. That was
-midway in the ‘nineties, and York Road then was very
-different from what it is now. In the day-time it was full
-of frowsily dressed men and women and the fœtid steam
-from the cheaper kinds of restaurants.</p>
-
-<p>I well remember one shop that boasted of hot rabbit
-dinners for fourpence; and big pork pies, that had a
-peculiar fascination for blue-bottles, were sold there, all
-the year round, for threepence. I often wondered how
-many people those pies killed, and how any man could be
-such a villain as to sell them.</p>
-
-<p>But if York Road was mean and squalid in the day-time,
-it was infinitely worse at night. I have never in any
-other street in London seen such an endless procession
-of women of the unfortunate class. They were nearly
-all German, and their hard, cruel faces should have
-been a sufficient warning to anyone to give them a
-wide berth. I haven’t the slightest doubt that many of
-the young men who were foolish enough to be enticed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-by them were ruthlessly robbed, and not infrequently
-murdered.</p>
-
-<p>One very nasty incident took place just under my
-window. It was in the depths of December, and the snow
-lay thick on the ground. Will anyone who experienced
-it ever forget that Christmas of 1894. I was laid up with
-influenza, and was lying awake coughing, when I heard a
-loud shriek, followed by an oath, and a series of groans
-and gurgles. Then someone whistled, and a cab came up,
-after which all was quiet for a few minutes, when a crowd
-collected and a babel of voices arose.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning my landlady, with a very white face,
-told me she had seen it all through her window; she
-slept in the basement, and had been too horrified to
-move. It appears that, shortly before midnight, a man
-had hidden in the doorway of the house, as if waiting for
-someone, and about ten minutes later a woman had
-come along, whom he hurled to the ground, and
-stabbed. When the woman had ceased groaning, the
-man whistled, and a cab came up. The driver, getting
-down from his seat, helped lift the woman into the
-vehicle; he and the murderer then climbed into the box,
-there was the crack of a whip, and the cab was gone. A
-few minutes afterwards a couple of policemen appeared
-on the scene, talked for some time, and then walked away,
-after which the street remained silent till dawn.</p>
-
-<p>I went out and looked at the scene of the incident.
-There was abundant evidence on the doorstep and
-window-sill as to what had taken place, and seeing the
-people next door looking at it, I asked them if they had
-heard anything in the night. They shrugged their
-shoulders. “It’s quite a common occurrence in this
-neighbourhood,” they said, “and it would never do for
-us to take any notice of it. If we did, we should certainly,
-sooner or later, share the same fate as that woman.”
-Thus, no attempt was made to bring the miscreant to
-justice, and the matter ended.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>During the time I was with her, my landlady was
-robbed twice. On the first occasion two boys came into
-the front part of the shop and asked for some sandwiches.
-Whilst the landlady’s daughter, who was alone behind
-the counter, was serving them, one of the boys snatched
-up a ham, the other threw down a chair, and both flew
-out of the shop. The girl rushed after them, but of
-course fell over the chair. Her cries brought her brother
-Bert and me to the rescue, and we set off in pursuit of the
-thieves. Although they had got some distance, Bert,
-being an astonishingly fast sprinter, had nearly caught
-them up, when the foremost of the boys abruptly halted,
-and, whirling round, flung the ham right at him. He
-ducked, and the ham landed with a splash in a puddle of
-rain water. Picking it up, we bore it triumphantly home,
-and it was soon resting on the counter, I hope—since it
-was to be sold as usual—none the worse for its adventure.</p>
-
-<p>Episode number two did not end quite so happily. A
-young man with a clean-shaven face, and innocent, big
-blue eyes came to look for rooms. He spoke with a
-strong American accent, and said he was travelling for a
-well-known firm of jewellers in Boston. Whether it was
-the eyes, or thoughts of gold bracelets and pearl pendants,
-I cannot say—perhaps it was both; anyhow, the
-landlady’s daughter beamed on him, and from that day
-forth I became a person of second importance, if, indeed,
-of any importance at all. Whatever he said was law, and
-whatever he chose to wear was “most elegant.” Then
-something happened, for which I was not altogether unprepared.
-He came down one morning carrying a somewhat
-bulky parcel, which he told the landlady’s daughter
-was his dress suit. “It’s too small for me,” he said.
-“This bracing climate of yours has given me such an
-appetite, I’ve grown fat. I’m going to take it to the
-tailor down the street to see if he can enlarge it for me.
-By the way, can you change me this sovereign?” He
-handed her a coin, and I saw him smile tenderly. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-he went out of the shop with a pile of silver in his hand—and
-never came back. The sovereign was of course a bad
-one, and, worse still, the dress clothes were a new suit of
-Bert’s, one for which he must have given at least three
-pounds.</p>
-
-<p>I was not idle all the time I stayed in York Road. I
-was thrown on my own resources and had to find some
-means of making a livelihood. Expensive though my
-education had been, it was of little practical use to me
-now. The only subjects I knew anything about were
-those required for the Sandhurst and R.I.C. Examinations,
-and they in no way fitted me for business. A
-board-school youth with a knowledge of book-keeping
-and shorthand stood a much better chance of obtaining
-a clerkship than I did. It was a bitter revelation to me.
-I had always been brought up with the idea that breed
-and manners were a valuable asset.</p>
-
-<p>I now discovered that without money and influence
-they were a handicap rather than otherwise. The
-majority of employers I interviewed were certainly not
-gentlemen, nor apparently did they care to have anything
-to do with such; all they wanted was smartness in
-figures and the capacity of standing prodigiously long
-hours and any amount of bullying. I worked for a week
-in an office in Lewisham. My employer was a kind of
-jobbing stockbroker with a florid face and yards of gold
-watch-chain. My hours, as far as I can remember, were
-from nine to six, with twenty minutes interval for luncheon.
-The second day I was there I was kept at work till
-after seven, and the following day, by way of retaliation, I
-took a good hour over my lunch. When I got back to the
-office, I thought my employer would have died of
-apoplexy. I have never seen a man in such a fury.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think I pay you for?” he shrieked;
-“to eat?”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t paid me yet,” I responded; “it will be
-time enough to give way to your emotions when you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-have. You kept me here last night an hour longer than
-the time agreed. Very good! You get an hour less work
-out of me to-day. What’s sauce for the goose is sauce
-for the gander.”</p>
-
-<p>He raised his thick, podgy hand, and I thought he was
-going to strike me, which I hoped he would do, for I have
-always been very fond of boxing, and a scrap with him
-just then would have been as nectar to me. To my
-astonishment, however, he suddenly subsided, and,
-walking out of the room, left me to go on with my work
-undisturbed. I left the office punctually at six that
-evening, and for the few remaining days I was with him,
-the prearranged hours were rigidly adhered to. That was
-my one and only experience in business. I tried to get on
-the staff of a newspaper, but although I wrote to almost
-every editor in London, I did not succeed. I am convinced
-that no post, outside that of a reporter, for which
-I had neither the training nor the inclination, can be
-obtained without the investment of money or colossal
-influence.</p>
-
-<p>I managed, however, to do some free lance work, and I
-derived no little interest and amusement, though not
-much remuneration, interviewing for a weekly journal
-called “Theatricals.” The first man of any note I met
-was the late Sir Augustus Harris, to whom I introduced
-myself on the stage of Drury Lane. It was during a
-rehearsal of the pantomime, at which, if I remember
-rightly, Harry Nicholls, Herbert Campbell, Dan Leno,
-and many other favourites of those times were present.
-Sir Augustus listened to what I had to say with great
-courtesy, and told me to go to Mr. Neil Forsyth. I did so,
-with the result that I was offered a small post on the staff
-of the theatre. I was grateful to Mr. Forsyth, who was
-one of the very kindest men that ever breathed, but apart
-from the smallness of the salary, there were obstacles in
-the way, and so I had to refuse.</p>
-
-<p>About this time I met a girl with whom I became<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-madly infatuated, and when she refused to marry me, I
-seriously contemplated suicide. It was this episode that
-gave me the central idea for my first novel, “For Satan’s
-Sake,” in which I introduced the girl, and which is
-written very much round my own life.</p>
-
-<p>I am only too thankful now that she did not accept me,
-for I do not know how I should have kept her, and that,
-apparently, as far as she was concerned, was the only
-thing that mattered.</p>
-
-<p>I fought a desperate battle with myself for some time,
-and in the end came to the grim resolution to go on
-living. It was when I was recovering from this state of
-excessive mental dejection that I came in contact with an
-old acquaintance, a public schoolman, at whose suggestion
-I decided to try schoolmastering, and consequently
-obtained a post at Daventry Grammar School.</p>
-
-<p>But I must now return to the principal subject of this
-narrative, namely, ghosts.</p>
-
-<p>During the year I was in York Road I thoroughly
-explored the East End, and in the coffee houses and
-restaurants of Poplar, Deptford, Tilbury and Whitechapel
-I heard many first-hand accounts of hauntings.
-Though it is not generally known, the East End of
-London is far more haunted than the West. On one of
-my nocturnal rambles, I made the acquaintance of a
-Russian Jew, who had an extraordinary mania for
-spiders, which he kept in specially designed boxes with
-glass lids. On their half-holidays he used to set his
-children to work collecting flies and other insects, and the
-whole family used to revel in watching the spiders gorge
-themselves on their victims. You could see he was
-innately cruel by the hard twinkling of his little black
-eyes, and the spasmodic twitching of his flat, greasy,
-white fingers, but he was something of a scholar and he
-had a devout dread of ghosts. “There is a haunted
-house close to here,” he said to me one evening; “if you
-like to come with me I will introduce you to the owner.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-He is a Chinaman, called King Ho, or some such outlandish
-name, and he keeps an opium den.”</p>
-
-<p>King Ho did not require much of an introduction, for,
-as soon as we entered, he fixed his little slit-like eyes on
-me and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what do you want? A smoke?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I said. “I’ve come to hear about your ghosts.
-I’m interested in them.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are plenty of them here,” he murmured;
-“the house is full of them. Sit down!”</p>
-
-<p>I obeyed, and the Russian Jew went back to his
-spiders and left me alone with the Chinaman.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dirty, sordid, ill-ventilated place, reeking with
-a dozen different odours, and suggestive of vermin <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ad
-libitum</i>, and diseases of an Oriental origin and unspeakable
-nature. A curtain was drawn across one end of the
-room, and noticing that my eyes wandered off in that
-direction, King Ho got up and pulled aside the drapery.
-Two wooden berths, one above the other, were discovered;
-the top one was empty, and the lower occupied by a
-corpse-like Chinaman, who was lying on his side, facing
-us, with absolutely no expression in his eyes or
-mouth. He might have been dead the best part of a
-week.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s away in the rice fields of his native home,” King
-Ho said, “talking to his wife and playing with his
-children. He goes there every night at this time”—and
-he glanced at the big, round, wooden clock hanging on
-the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean he is dreaming,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t,” King Ho retorted. “I mean he’s there—his
-spirit, his intelligence is there. That thing you are
-looking at is only his material body. He, and I, and
-others we know, don’t set much value on that, we can
-get out of it so easily. It’s the immaterial self we
-esteem.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, seeing I was interested, he resumed his chair,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-and stretching out his long, thin, yellow hand, he
-touched me on the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” he said, “we, Chinamen, who come from the
-fields and mountains, and grow up in close touch with
-Nature, can concentrate. From our infancy upwards we
-think deeply. We think of the sky, the stars, the sun, the
-moon, the mighty Hoang Ho River and the vast range of
-the Pelings. We think of them in a sense quite different
-from the sense in which you Londoners would think of
-them. You would regard them as so many objects only—sky
-and land-marks. We think of them as spirits that
-can act as magnets to our spirits—as intelligences akin to
-ourselves, that can, when once we become thoroughly acquainted
-with them, draw us to them. The Pelings live
-just as much as you and I live—you might pull down
-their body, that great, elevated frame you style the
-mountains, just as you might overturn that bench; but
-the real, the spiritual Pelings would still remain. When
-once you grasp the idea that all Nature lives—that everything,
-even to the chairs and tables, have immaterial
-representatives, then you will begin to understand the
-principle of the concentration we practise. You must see
-the Pelings, the Hoang-Ho, the rice fields, not as they
-would appear to the man in the street here, here in
-London, Piccadilly, but as we, who live near them and
-know them, see them—as figures that can see and hear,
-figures with intelligence, expression—intense expression
-in their eyes. When you see them like that, you will get
-to love them, and, when you love them, you will unconsciously
-concentrate on them, as you do on all
-things that you love. Your love will not be in vain, it
-will be reciprocated, and the love that reciprocates yours
-will, as a magnet, draw you—you—your immaterial
-ego—your true self—towards it. Now you begin to
-understand, I can tell by your face. The Chinaman—the
-Chinaman of the plains and hills—like myself,
-<em>thinks</em>—he knows Nature, and when he leaves China<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-and comes over here, he concentrates until he hears the
-voice of that Nature calling to him; and when he
-hears it, his spirit is gently freed from his material
-body, and borne silently and instantaneously to his
-home.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, he can think best when he can get some at least
-of the conditions of his native surroundings—and the
-most important of them is silence. Not silence such as
-you may understand it, but the silence of the conscious,
-inanimate hills, and rivers, and plains—and the only way
-to procure it is through opium—the opium I supply.
-Hence he comes here, takes it, and lies over yonder, and
-thinks, till he hears the call and his spirit is released.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the ghosts,” I interrupted, “the ghosts you
-spoke about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait,” he said. “Listen! Sometimes men have
-come here who have lost the love of the spirit of the
-mountain and river. They have lost it because they
-have liked too much this London of yours, and have imbibed
-too deeply of that detestable immorality, which so
-weakens the spirit that it cannot, even if it heard the call,
-get away from the flesh. I tell those men that my
-opium will do them no good, but they take it; they take
-it, and dream as Englishmen would dream—with their
-spirits chained to their material bodies. When these
-depraved Chinamen awake and realise that they can
-never, never again, be drawn by the mighty, majestic
-love of the Spirit of the Mountain and River, and that
-they can never again revisit the home of their childhood,
-so bitter is their disappointment that they kill themselves—not
-always here, but anywhere—in their lodgings,
-in the river, or in the docks. Their spirits then
-invariably come here, where, undoubtedly, they renew
-their vain efforts to get back to China—to the mighty,
-majestic Spirit of the Mountain and River, whose love
-they have lost. Look in that top berth and tell me what
-you see there?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s empty,” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“Look again,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p>I did so, but still there was nothing there, only just
-the bare, dingy panelling.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he asked, “what now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing,” I said; “absolutely nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go up to it and put one hand inside,” he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>I did so, and sprang back with a loud cry. I had
-touched a face!</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he said, as I stepped out into the semi-darkness
-of the causeway, “it frightens some people, but it never
-frightens me, because I know that the only consolation
-possible for these unhappy spirits is to lie next to, or to
-come in contact with, the bodies of those whose spirits
-are walking and talking with their fond ones in distant
-China.”</p>
-
-<p>Whilst I was at York Road I became acquainted with
-an Irish doctor, whom I will call Flynn. He ran a surgery
-not far from King Ho’s house. Flynn belonged to a
-famous secret society, whose fundamental object was to
-carry on a doctrine of surreptitious hatred to England and
-all things English. Though I had no sympathy with such
-a society—for I have always held the opinion that, however
-badly England behaved to Ireland in the past, the
-majority of the English people of to-day are only too
-anxious to act fairly to her, and therefore it is better to let
-bygones be bygones—I found Flynn a very original and
-entertaining character. All his patients were either Irish
-or of foreign extraction, and whenever any English person
-came to the surgery, he flatly refused to attend them.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, when I was sitting chatting with him in
-front of a blazing peat fire—Flynn would never burn
-English coal—two Swedish engineers came into the
-surgery, and Flynn, who, for some peculiar reason, was
-particularly partial to the Swedes, asked them to join us
-at supper. The meal certainly was not in the approved
-style of the West End, nor, perhaps, would it have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-appealed to the nouveau riche; for there was no snowy
-tablecloth, no serviettes, no champagne, no liqueurs; it
-consisted of boiled beef, suet dumplings, potatoes—boiled
-in their skins, of course—and plenty, yes, plenty,
-of stout and whiskey; and it was very welcome to the
-four hungry, healthy men, who did ample justice to it.
-After we had finished, and pipes were produced, I
-brought up the subject of ghosts—never very far from
-my mind—and one of the Swedes laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ghosts,” he said, “there are no such things. Neither
-ghosts nor fairies. I believe in nothing. There is no
-God, no devil, no heaven, no hell. When we die, we
-die—there is no future life whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s have a séance,” Flynn said, “and see if we
-can’t convince him. I have the skeleton of a murderer
-in the room overhead. I will fetch it down, and it shall
-sit round the table with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right!” the sceptical Swede, whose name was
-Nielssen, said. “Fetch it down; fetch twenty skeletons
-you like, the more the merrier. Nothing will convince me.”</p>
-
-<p>Flynn ran upstairs, and presently reappeared with a
-tall skeleton in his arms. The table was cleared, and we
-all sat round it with our hands spread out after the usual
-manner of table turners, the skeleton being placed
-between the two Swedes, each of whom had hold of one of
-its hands. Flynn then turned down the lights, and we
-started asking the table questions, many of which, I fear,
-were of a very ribald and frivolous nature. Every now
-and then it gave a big tilt, and Nielssen shouted, “That’s
-for me! It’s my mother-in-law—she’s found out I’ve
-been making love to my landlady’s daughter.” Once
-there was a rap, and for the moment I was taken in.
-Then the other Swede, Heilborn, cried out, “It’s only
-Nielssen. He did it with his foot; he’s incorrigible!”
-This sort of thing went on for some time, Flynn and
-Nielssen constantly playing some prank, and Heilborn
-and myself not always too serious.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the atmosphere of the room seemed to undergo
-a change, and, as if by common consent, we were all
-silent. Then Nielssen uttered a sharp cry of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“Strike a light quickly,” he cried; “my hand is
-being hurt frightfully!”</p>
-
-<p>We did so, and Nielssen gave vent to an expression of
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>“How did it happen?” Heilborn asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” Nielssen said faintly. He was
-evidently much shaken, and spoke with the emotion of a
-man who has undergone some violent shock. “I was
-only holding the skeleton the same as you, when I suddenly
-felt its fingers close like a vice on mine. It was a
-grip of iron. See, my hand is crushed almost out of
-shape!” He held it out, and we all bent over it
-curiously. Compared with the other hand, it looked
-singularly white and limp, and when Flynn touched
-it, Nielssen very perceptibly winced.</p>
-
-<p>Flynn gave him some brandy, and after a little while
-he seemed himself again; but he would not continue
-the séance. “There’s something very odd about the
-skeleton,” he said. “I don’t believe in spirits, as you
-know, but there must be something closely akin to one
-attached to this thing,” and he gave it a vicious kick
-with his foot.</p>
-
-<p>A week later, when I called at Flynn’s house, he told
-me that Nielssen was in bed. He had fallen downstairs
-and badly bruised his spine, besides breaking a leg.
-“He’ll get over it all right,” Flynn said, “but it will be
-some time before he can do anything. His account of the
-accident is most remarkable; in fact, he declares that it
-wasn’t an accident, that he was deliberately thrown. He
-swears that he distinctly saw a skeleton hand suddenly
-catch hold of him round the ankle, and that the next
-moment he felt himself whirling through the air. He is
-most emphatic in his declaration that he will never again
-scoff at ghosts or play with the invisible. And now,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-Flynn added, “the wretched thing has begun to plague
-me. I can’t get a decent night’s sleep. As soon as I
-begin to doze I am visited by the most disturbing
-dreams. I invariably hear knocking at the door, and
-when I open it, something rushes in and strangles me.
-But the worst of it is, I hear the knocking when I’m
-awake, too. Sometimes it begins directly I get into bed,
-before my head has touched the pillow. Knock, knock,
-knock!—the hard, sharp knock of bony knuckles on
-door, walls and furniture. I am not actually frightened,
-but I don’t like it. What do you make of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“If it’s not the skeleton, the spirit of some depraved
-human,” I replied, “it’s some other equally low and
-vicious earth-bound, one of the class that visit séances
-and attach themselves to the unlucky sitter. You might
-try getting rid of the skeleton—have it cremated and
-see what effect that has.”</p>
-
-<p>Flynn took my advice; the skeleton was reduced to
-ashes, and the ashes buried many miles away from
-Limehouse Causeway, after which, the disturbances, as
-far as Flynn was concerned, at any rate, entirely ceased.
-Whether Nielssen was victimised again I cannot say. He
-rejoined his ship as soon as he had recovered, and since
-then he has completely passed out of my existence.</p>
-
-<p>There was a house I used occasionally to go to in
-Whitechapel, a rendezvous of itinerant free lance writers
-like myself, where, although I never actually saw any
-ghostly phenomena, I always had very extraordinary
-impressions. The moment I crossed the threshold, I
-fancied I was in a big funeral procession following a
-hearse. It was a dull, winter’s day, I thought; there were
-inches of slush on the ground, and the cold was intense.
-I could not see the faces of the people walking beside me,
-but I instinctively knew that they wore an expression of
-extreme relief, and that some even of them should-be
-mourners laughed. We tramped on till we came to a
-steep hill, then there was a loud report, and at once<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-everything became chaotic. After this my mind gradually
-cleared and the impressions abruptly ceased. There
-was no variation in these impressions, they always began
-and ended in precisely the same way; moreover, I
-invariably received them whenever I entered the house.
-I mentioned my experience one day to an habitué of the
-place, and he quite casually informed me that several
-men who went there had had similar experiences, and he
-thought the landlord, if approached tactfully, might offer
-some sort of explanation. Acting upon this suggestion, I
-spoke to the landlord, and learned from him that half a
-century or more ago the house was owned by a wealthy
-tradesman, who, it was generally supposed, had made his
-money by sweating his employés. When he died, all the
-hands had to attend his funeral, but far from looking sad,
-as they followed the coffin, they had exhibited every
-manifestation of joy. Just as the procession had reached
-the summit of a steep hill, a half-witted man fired a gun
-from a cottage window, and the horses drawing the
-hearse, taking fright, dashed down the incline and into a
-wall at the foot of it. Strange to say, no one was injured,
-but the coffin was thrown out and broken to pieces. The
-event made a great impression upon the minds of all who
-witnessed it, and the landlord informed me that I was
-by no means the only person who, upon entering the
-house, had received a vivid mental picture of the
-scene.</p>
-
-<p>I am often asked if I am a consistent medium. No, I
-am not. It is only at times I see ghosts, only at times I
-receive vivid impressions, and I do not believe that any
-person, however mediumistic, can depend upon his or her
-psychic faculty for consistency. I have been to several
-public séances, where professional mediums have had the
-audacity to say they see spirits standing beside practically
-everyone in the assembly. They rattle off the
-description of an alleged spirit, as if it were a part in a
-well-rehearsed play—and play it undoubtedly is to anyone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-who pauses to reflect. Genuine phantasms do not
-come to order quite so readily.</p>
-
-<p>In olden times, when people were really psychic, those
-versed in the art from their childhood upwards could only
-raise a ghost with great difficulty, and often, only by
-resorting to spells, many of which were of a very subtle
-and complex nature. And when, in the end, they did
-succeed, such manifestations invariably had a very
-alarming effect on the medium as well as the spectator.
-How is it, then, that so many of the professional mediums
-of to-day can not only see visitants from the other world,
-whenever they like, all around them, but can view these
-ghostly visitants without being in the least disconcerted,
-without—as the saying is—turning a hair? Have
-they really stronger nerves than had Saul, and a closer,
-far closer intimacy with the Unknown than had the
-Witch of Endor, or can it be that the Spirit World has
-so participated in our age of quickness—our rapid forms
-of locomotion—that a medium has only to raise his or
-her eyebrows and a host of spirits at once whiz into the
-room? I do not think so. I believe that such mediums—the
-mediums whose psychic vision is apparently
-inexhaustible, and can be turned on and off to order—are
-either unmitigated humbugs or hysterical dupes,
-who mistake the baldest impressions for actual spiritual
-phenomena.</p>
-
-<p>The unmitigated humbug has only to describe the
-alleged presence with a little elasticity, and the description
-will surely fit—albeit somewhat loosely—one or
-another of our departed friends. Who amongst us does
-not know someone on the other side passably good-looking,
-rather tall, of medium colouring, and somewhat
-stout? And if we plead that we do not, it is of no consequence—the
-medium glibly asserts that the spirit he or
-she describes has got behind our chair by mistake, and is
-really searching for someone else. But apart from this
-obvious fraud, can we believe that any one of those whom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-we have loved and lost would so degrade themselves and
-us as to appear at a public séance before a company of
-strangers. Surely we would rather not see them at all,
-than see them in such circumstances. At any rate, we
-would rather—much rather—possess our souls in
-patience, until our departed loved ones can appear to us
-in private—as they sometimes can—without the intervention
-of any medium whatsoever.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to automatic or spirit writing, there is, I
-believe, just as much fraud practised. The mere fact that
-Sir somebody or other has a touching belief in one or two
-of these automatic scribes is quite enough for most
-people, and, consequently, they never dream of questioning
-the integrity of any medium who professes to convey
-to them messages from the dead. It is sufficient that the
-man with the title, the great man of science, believes.
-But they forget, often wilfully forget, that the cleverest
-man is often the most simple; that a great judge has not
-unfrequently had his pockets picked; and that eminence
-in one direction by no means denotes ability in another.</p>
-
-<p>Snobbishness is responsible for much. The big man is
-credulous, and because he is credulous the little man is
-credulous too. Hence, consistency in the spirit world, in
-clairvoyance, in automatic writing, is, for the moment,
-almost universally accepted, and direct communication
-with the spirit world erroneously looked upon as an
-every-day occurrence. It will be otherwise when the
-man in the street wakes up and discovers the occult for
-himself. Experience will, I think, teach him, as it has
-taught me, that although ghosts may on very rare
-occasions come to order—and when they do, their coming
-is, I believe, quite as surprising to the medium as it is to
-the audience—by far the greater number of superphysical
-phenomena appear spontaneously; and it is through
-such spontaneous appearances only that we can hope to
-make any progress in our communication with the other
-world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_9"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="subt">NIGHT RAMBLINGS ON WIMBLEDON COMMON AND
-HOUNSLOW HEATH</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">If</span> there are any places in London that should be more
-haunted than others, assuredly those places are the
-parks and commons. When I was living on the south
-side of the river, I spent many nights tramping about
-Wimbledon, Clapham, Wandsworth, Tooting and
-Streatham Commons. Since then I have lived at Blackheath,
-Hampstead, Hounslow and Dulwich, so that I
-may say I know pretty nearly every inch of these places.
-I can see myself now standing on Wimbledon Common
-close to a pool, in the dead of night. No one about, and
-the reflection of the moon staring at me from the
-unruffled surface of the water. I am trying to get
-impressions of any event that may have taken place
-there. I got none. Suddenly a hand falls on my
-shoulder; I swing round, and peering into my face is
-the white, haggard face of a tramp.</p>
-
-<p>“You ain’t going to drown yourself, are you?” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” I asked, anticipating a severe rebuke from
-this withered and worn scarecrow of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he said, “because don’t do it here! I can
-show you a much better spot, where the water is deep,
-and where, when once you get in, you can’t very easily
-get out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But how will that benefit you?” I enquired, wondering
-why he was so eager.</p>
-
-<p>“You can let me have your clothes, can’t you?” he
-explained; “you won’t want to take them with you into
-the next world. From what I hears about it, sperrits
-don’t need neither coats nor trousers, and the few
-shillings I shall get for them will do me a bit of good,
-and won’t hurt you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I wasn’t contemplating suicide,” I remarked.
-“I’m not tired of life yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you,” he said, in extremely disappointed tones.
-“Then why are you out here at this time of night?”</p>
-
-<p>“If it comes to that,” I observed, “why are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t got nowhere else to go,” he said; “and there
-are no police out here to disturb anyone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor ghosts?” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Ghosts!” he chuckled. “I’m not afraid of ghosts.
-I shall soon be one myself, I expect; but there is one
-spot here I don’t go near after dark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he said. “Come along with me, and maybe
-you’ll guess.”</p>
-
-<p>Had he been anything like my size I should not have
-gone, for his appearance was very far from assuring, but,
-as he was a small man, I felt comparatively safe. We
-walked side by side over the grass, crossed a gleaming,
-white path, and steering in a slightly northerly direction—I
-could tell that much by the stars—abruptly halted in
-front of a shallow pit, on the other side of which was a
-big bush.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s there,” he said, pointing at the pit. “I’ve tried
-to sleep there twice, and each time I’ve been woken up
-by hearing something heavy fall close to my head. It
-seems to come from the bush. It’s the bush that skeers
-me,” he added, “and though I don’t mind passing it
-in the day-time, nothing on earth will persuade me to
-look behind it after dark.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Not even sixpence,” I said, fingering that coin in my
-waistcoat pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on,” he said, “you haven’t sixpence, otherwise
-you’d not be here. You’re joking. If anyone really did
-offer me sixpence now to do it, well, I don’t say but what
-I mightn’t try.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke so hungrily and looked so famished that I
-decided to part with it, though sixpence to me just then
-had a particularly real value. I showed it him. “Look
-behind that tree,” I said, “and I’ll give it you.”</p>
-
-<p>He set off at once. “No,” I called out, “that won’t
-do; you must go through the pit.” He proceeded to
-obey, and was in the middle of the hollow, when I distinctly
-heard something very heavy strike the ground
-apparently close to him. I ran round the bush, just in
-time to see what I thought was a black shadow shoot
-across the ground and disappear in a neighbouring cluster
-of trees. When I returned, the tramp was still in the pit,
-but I could see nothing there to account for the noise.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said. “Did you hear it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard something,” I replied, “and there’s your
-sixpence.”</p>
-
-<p>I often went to Wimbledon Common afterwards, but
-never again saw the tramp, nor found the hollow.</p>
-
-<p>My Blackheath and Greenwich Park experiences, or at
-least most of them, are narrated fully in my “Haunted
-Houses of London,” so that I can only refer briefly to
-them here.</p>
-
-<p>From the impressions I got, when walking on the
-Common at Blackheath, I shall always believe that the
-superphysical influences there are particularly demoralising.
-It always seemed to me that Blackheath—by the
-way a curiously appropriate name—might be the rendezvous
-of the very worst type of earth-bound phantasms of
-the dead, and of the most vicious neutrarians.</p>
-
-<p>After leaving London and entering on my scholastic
-career, I was first of all a master at Daventry, then tutor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-in an Irish family at Aldershot, and then, in succession, a
-master in preparatory schools at Wandsworth, Hereford
-and Blackheath. Of these various posts, I liked that at
-Blackheath the least, partly because the headmaster
-there was the most unmitigated snob, and my pupils
-hopelessly spoilt, and partly because I had such a
-detestation of the heath after dark.</p>
-
-<p>My only consolation in those days was cricket and
-writing. Every evening, after my work with the boys
-was done, I repaired to a room over a library in Blackheath
-village, and it was there that I completed my first
-novel, “For Satan’s Sake.”</p>
-
-<p>The book deals with the soul of a suicide, and was
-based, as I have already stated, on my experiences in
-America and York Road, Lambeth. I tried it with
-various publishers, but without success, and it was not
-until six years later, when I was living in a small fishing
-town in Cornwall, that I eventually got it taken. It so
-happened that a well-known novelist came to see me one
-day, and when I told him that I had attempted a book,
-he said he would like to see it. I fished it out of the box,
-where it had lain undisturbed for years, and he went off
-with it, subsequently showing it to a reader of a publishing
-firm—also a well-known novelist—who was staying
-in the town at the time, and who was so impressed with
-it, that he advised his firm to accept it. It did not even
-then come out for over a year, and the anxiety of awaiting
-my début as an author can better be imagined than
-described. The success I prayed for was not showered
-upon me, but the book was well received on the whole,
-and paved the way for other works to follow.</p>
-
-<p>And now, let me hie back to London and its commons.
-Though Hampstead has, in all probability, its share of
-phantasms, my impressions there have been of a more
-agreeable nature than at Blackheath. I spent the greater
-part of several consecutive nights one summer sitting on
-a bench in a very rustic glade on the heath, waiting for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-anything that might happen. Once or twice between one
-and two something seemed to be making a violent effort
-to materialise, and I fully expected to see a figure suddenly
-appear before me. My impressions were that it
-would be the figure of a woman, and that she would be
-carrying a white bundle in her arms. I felt that she was
-in great trouble and wanted to ask me for advice. I
-associated her worries with a big house that used to stand
-somewhere near the summit of Hampstead Hill. I felt all
-this very acutely, and I used to repeat aloud my willingness
-to do anything I could to assist her.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, a few years later, I met a lady who told
-me that she had had a curious experience in the same
-spot. She was walking through it rather late one autumn
-evening, accompanied by her dog, a big black retriever.
-When she came to the seat where I used to sit, the dog
-started barking and showed signs of great terror. Somewhat
-alarmed, she was about to hurry on, when a voice
-close to her said, “It’s only me, Winifred; don’t be
-frightened. The boat I sailed in to America was wrecked,
-and only the child was saved.”</p>
-
-<p>The lady looked round, but there was no one in sight.
-On reaching home, she mentioned the incident to her
-mother, who exclaimed in astonishment, “Well, that is
-odd! I was sitting on a seat, I should think in that very
-spot, about forty years ago—we were living in D——
-House, on Haverstock Hill, at the time—when a letter
-was brought me announcing the loss of a big sailing
-vessel in the Atlantic, on which my maid, Winnie, as we
-used to call her, had sailed with her husband to America.
-Only a very few of the passengers and crew survived, and
-Winnie and her husband were both drowned. But I
-never knew they had a child.”</p>
-
-<p>Hounslow Heath should teem with ghosts, for it once
-swarmed with foot-pads, who, after committing every
-conceivable act of violence on and around the heath,
-usually ended their career there on gibbets. I once had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-rooms near the Bath Road, and spent many nights
-rambling about the Heath in quest of ghostly adventure.
-One evening I kept fancying I was followed everywhere
-by a tall, muffled figure, and when, in alarm, I hastened
-over the grass on to the roadway, I heard a low, cynical
-laugh. All the way home the steps seemed to pursue me,
-and when I got into bed and prepared to blow out the
-light, I saw the curtains by the window rustle and swell
-out, as if someone was behind them. It was a long time
-before I ventured to blow out the light, and, when I slept,
-I dreamed a dark, hooded figure was bending over me.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion, as I perambulated the heath,
-where the trees were thickly clustered and the undergrowth
-had become the densest tangle, I caught a glimpse
-of two men playing dice. I heard their laughter and the
-rattling of the box, as they shook it in the air and threw
-out the dice. Then suddenly their gaiety was turned to
-wrath—there were oaths and blows, cries and groans, and
-all became silent, save for the soughing and moaning of
-the wind through the lofty tree-tops. But as I came
-away from the heath, there was again that cynical laugh,
-and again footsteps seemed to follow me home, and again
-the curtain by the window of my room shook and swelled.</p>
-
-<p>I did not go to the heath one night; I lay awake in bed
-instead, and about the hour I had usually returned I
-heard steps, long, swinging steps coming down the little
-side road towards the house. My memory at once went
-back to that night in Dublin, and I strained my ears to
-catch the accompanying sound. I had not long to wait—it
-soon came, the same old familiar click, click, click! In
-an agony of fear, lest the steps should stop at the house
-and there should be a repetition of the terrible knocking
-at the door, I lighted a candle and sat up. Nearer and
-nearer they came, and then, when I felt certain they
-would stop, to my infinite relief they went on. On past
-the house, the echoes ringing out loud and clear in the
-keen, frosty air, until they reached the Bath Road.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I fully expected some misfortune would happen to me
-after this occurrence, as the last time I had heard the
-steps had been at the time of my failure to pass the
-medical for the R.I.C., and shortly before my disastrous
-trip to America. Yet nothing of a specially untoward
-nature happened. Apparently, the steps on this occasion
-merely heralded another change in my vocation, for I
-shortly afterwards became imbued with the desire to be
-an actor, and commenced what was destined to be a
-lively, though very brief theatrical career, as a pupil in
-the Henry Neville Studio, Oxford Street.</p>
-
-<p>Before, however, passing on to subsequent events, I
-must relate one other—the only other—ghostly happening
-I experienced at Hounslow. In a remote corner of
-the heath there was one spot that had a peculiar fascination
-for me, and, whenever I returned from it, I dreamed
-the same dream—that a beautiful girl in an old-world
-costume, with fair hair, large, blue eyes and daintily-moulded
-lips, approached my bed and leaned over me.
-She had the most appealing expression in her face, and
-seemed to be anxious to make me her confidant. I was
-always about to address her, when some extraordinary
-metamorphosis took place, and I awoke, palpitating
-with terror.</p>
-
-<p>The dream greatly impressed me, and I tried my best
-to discover a reason for it. I did eventually, but not until
-the year I published “Some Haunted Houses of England
-and Wales,” when I got into correspondence with a very
-old lady, whom I will call Miss Carmichael. Miss Carmichael
-lived at Ealing, close to the Parish Church, and
-wrote to me to the effect that, if I liked to call on her, she
-could tell me a curious tale about an old house that used
-to stand on the outskirts of Hounslow Heath. Of course
-I accepted this invitation.</p>
-
-<p>I found Miss Carmichael, when I called, lying on
-a sofa, crippled with rheumatism, but otherwise in
-the full possession of all her senses, and wonderfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-vivacious, despite the fact that she was well over
-ninety.</p>
-
-<p>“The house I want to tell you about,” she said, “was
-called ‘The Gables.’ It was a large, old-fashioned manor
-house with very extensive grounds, and at the beginning
-of the last century it belonged to my aged relative, Miss
-Denning. She never lived in it herself, but she kept it in
-excellent repair, and at her death, in or about 1820, her
-nephew inherited an apparently valuable property. Now,
-Tom Denning had a great friend, Dick Mayhew, and it
-was from Dick Mayhew, who was also a great friend of
-mine, that I heard the most detailed account of the
-hauntings. I will try and tell you the story just as my
-friend told it to me.”<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="l3" />
-
-<p>“I was sitting in my stuffy office in Jermyn Street one
-spring morning, when, who should suddenly walk in but
-Tom Denning, whom I had not seen for some time.
-‘Why, Dick,’ he said, ‘how fagged and run down you
-look. A spell in the country is what you need, it would do
-you all the good in the world. Supposing you come down
-to my place at Hounslow, and have a blow on the Heath.
-I keep a couple of horses, and you can ride all day if you
-like.’</p>
-
-<p>“What surprises you spring on one,” I ejaculated.
-“I didn’t know you were living so near London—and at
-Hounslow, too! Aren’t you afraid of highwaymen. I
-hear they still visit the place occasionally. How long
-have you been there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t been there yet,” Dick replied with a
-laugh; “at least, not to stay. The property has just
-been left me by my aunt. It’s a queer old house, just the
-kind of place a romantic beggar like you would like, and
-if any house ought to be haunted, it ought. They say a
-murder was once committed there by an ancestress of
-mine, a girl whose face was as beautiful as she herself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-was evil, and that her spirit still roams the house and
-grounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should certainly like to see her,” I said, “and so,
-I am sure, would Greg.” (Greg was Dick’s bloodhound).</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll give you both an opportunity,” Tom
-laughed. “Take Greg with you, and a friend too, if you
-like, for I may not be able to join you at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“I accepted, and in due course arrived at ‘The
-Gables,’ accompanied by my cousin Ralph, who was then
-a Lieutenant in the Buffs, and Greg.</p>
-
-<p>“The grounds surrounding ‘The Gables,’ which stood
-near the edge of the heath, were encompassed by a very
-high, red-brick wall, and consisted of a broad, well-kept
-lawn in front, a small spinney on one side, an extensive
-shrubbery on the other, and big kitchen gardens at the
-back. The house itself, seventeenth century and covered
-with ivy from tip to toe, was picturesque in the extreme.
-There were no servants, only the caretakers, a middle-aged
-man and his wife, who occupied rooms in the east
-wing. The west wing was reserved for us.</p>
-
-<p>“After dinner, in a hall so enormous that it made us
-feel positively lilliputian, we wandered out into the
-garden. It was a glorious night, the sky one mass of
-silver, scintillating stars, the air redolent with the odour
-of spring flowers. ‘By Jove,’ Ralph remarked to me, as
-we strolled across the lawn, ‘By Jove! No one would
-think we were so close to that God-forsaken heath; why,
-it was only a few years ago that a fellow in my regiment
-was set on there, and, after being robbed of all he had on
-him, half beaten to death with bludgeons. It’s one of the
-worst cut-throat spots round London.’ Then he uttered
-an exclamation of surprise and jogged my elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“Coming towards us from the house was the figure of
-a young girl. She wore a white dress with a dark cloak
-flung loosely over her shoulders, and the moonlight playing
-over her face revealed a countenance of extraordinary
-delicacy and beauty. Her eyes were large and childlike
-in their expression, her lips daintily modelled, her teeth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-wonderfully white and even, her hair golden. Whether
-it was the effect of the moonlight on them or not, I cannot
-say, but her cheeks were absolutely devoid of colour,
-almost strikingly pale, whilst I fancied I detected in the
-slightly open mouth an expression of pain. I saw every
-detail most distinctly, even to the shape of her fingers,
-which were very pointed. She came on without apparently
-noticing us, and we watched her trip past us and
-disappear in the spinney.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What a stunner!’ Ralph exclaimed. ‘I don’t
-know when I’ve seen a prettier face! Sly fellow,
-Denning! I wonder who she can be!’ He had hardly
-finished speaking when we heard the most awful scream,
-a shriek of terror and despair, such as sent all the blood
-in my body to my heart, and left the rest of me like ice.</p>
-
-<p>“‘My God! What’s happened to her?’ Ralph
-gasped. ‘She’s being murdered. Quick!’ We dashed
-into the spinney, but despite the fact that we searched
-everywhere, no girl was to be found.</p>
-
-<p>“Returning to the house, we made enquiries of the
-caretakers, who were vehement in their denial of knowing
-the girl or of having heard her cries. Much puzzled, we
-then retired to our night quarters. The room that had
-been assigned to us, for we preferred to share one between
-us, was situated about midway down a long, narrow
-corridor, lighted at the further end by a casement
-window, across which sprays of ivy blew to and fro in
-the cool breeze.</p>
-
-<p>“For a long time we sat in front of the fire chatting,
-but at one o’clock Ralph got up, and exclaimed that it
-was high time we turned into bed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Hullo, look at Greg!’ he said, pointing to the dog,
-who was crouching on the floor in front of the door
-showing its teeth in a series of savage growls. ‘What’s
-the matter with him?’</p>
-
-<p>“Before I had time to reply, we suddenly heard a
-regular, measured tap, tap, tap, as of high-heeled shoes,
-coming along the corridor towards our door.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘That can’t be either the caretaker or his wife,’
-Ralph whispered. ‘I wonder if it’s the young lady!
-Perhaps she’s going to pay us a surreptitious visit. I
-only wish she would—the little darling!’</p>
-
-<p>“Nearer and nearer came the steps, until they seemed
-to stop just outside our door. Greg’s hair bristled, he
-gave a deep growl, and retreated half way across the
-room. Then there came a loud knock on the door,
-followed by the sound of a violent scuffle. Springing
-forward, Ralph threw the door wide open. There was
-nothing there, only the cold light of the moon, and the
-white, motionless faces of the Dennings’ ancestors
-hanging on the walls.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s deuced odd,’ Ralph said. ‘I swear I heard
-steps and a knock, and yet there’s nothing to account for
-it. Could it have been rats?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t think so,’ I said; ‘rats wouldn’t have
-frightened Greg. Look at him now; he has quite recovered.’
-Greg had come to my side and was licking my
-hand and wagging his tail.</p>
-
-<p>“In the morning I asked the caretaker’s wife if the
-place was haunted.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Haunted,’ she stammered. ‘No. Whatever made
-you think of such a thing, sir! There ain’t no such
-things as ghosts. It’s them howls you ’eard.’</p>
-
-<p>“Seeing there was nothing to be got out of her, Ralph
-and I did not refer to the subject again, but spent our
-time reading in the library, and wandering about the
-heath.</p>
-
-<p>“In the evening we sauntered out into the garden and
-tried to coax Greg to come with us, but he resolutely
-refused, and so we had to leave him behind. Just about
-the same time as on the previous evening, and in identically
-the same place, we again saw the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ll speak to her, hanged if I don’t,’ Ralph muttered,
-and taking off his hat, he stepped forward and accosted
-her. Without apparently perceiving us, she passed
-resolutely on, and, entering the spinney, was speedily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-lost to sight. Almost directly afterwards, the same
-awful, wailing scream rose shrill and high on the still
-night air. This time we did not rush after her, but,
-walking hurriedly back to the house, we sought the companionship
-of the bright and cheery fireside.</p>
-
-<p>“At one o’clock we were again seated in our bedroom,
-and the events of the preceding night were repeated in
-every detail.</p>
-
-<p>“On the morrow Tom joined us. When we told him
-of the ghost, he became intensely interested.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It must be my ancestress,’ he said. ‘The girl who
-was supposed to have murdered somebody. I’ll sit
-up with you two fellows to-night and we’ll have the
-door open.’</p>
-
-<p>“After dinner we all three went into the garden.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s here we first caught sight of her,’ Ralph exclaimed,
-as we halted on the lawn, ‘here, and precisely at
-this hour. Yes—by Jove!—and there she is!’</p>
-
-<p>“I looked, and there was the figure I knew so well,
-tripping daintily towards us, her yellow hair and silver
-shoe buckles gleaming furiously in the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>“‘She wears a hood,’ Tom cried, ‘and it completely
-hides her face.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What!’ Ralph retorted; ‘she has no hood, you
-must be dreaming.’</p>
-
-<p>“As before, the girl passed us and we lost sight of her
-amongst the trees. The next moment, and we again
-heard her scream. Then we searched everywhere, but
-with no result. She was certainly not on the premises,
-and as there was no avenue of escape save by scaling a
-ten foot wall, we could only conclude she had melted into
-fine air, in other words—vanished.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ll get to the bottom of this mystery,’ Tom growled
-between his teeth, ‘if I root up every tree in the garden.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What you’ve seen so far,’ Ralph observed, ‘is only
-the prelude. There’s more to come, and I’m not sure if
-Act II. is not the most exciting. What do you think,
-Dick?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Ask Greg,’ I replied. ‘I believe he knows more
-about it than we do.’</p>
-
-<p>“On arriving indoors, we all three retired to the
-bedroom we had agreed to share. The night was so
-exquisite that I sat by the open window. Directly
-beneath me was the gravel drive, which lay like a broad,
-white belt encircling the house, and beyond it, on the
-level sweep of lawn, danced the shadows from the larch
-and fir trees in the paddock; the only sign of life came
-from the bats and night birds that wheeled and skimmed
-in silent flight in and out the bushes. There was very
-little breeze, sufficient only to make the ivy rustle and the
-window in the corridor outside give the faintest perceptible
-jar. I gazed at my companions. Ralph lay on
-the sofa, sound asleep, a half-serious, half-amused look
-on his handsome features, while Tom sat in an armchair
-directly in front of the fire, his head buried in the palms
-of his hands, as if wrapt in profound thought. A distant
-church clock boomed one. Greg growled, and Tom, at
-once springing up, flung the door widely back on its
-hinges. ‘There,’ he said. ‘Come what may, we’re
-ready for it.’ As he concluded, there came a tapping.</p>
-
-<p>“Tap, tap, tap; someone in high-heeled shoes was
-walking over the polished oak boards of the corridor in
-our direction. To me there was a world of stealth and
-cautiousness in the sounds, that suggested a host of
-conflicting motives. As the steps drew nearer, the door
-suddenly swung to with a loud crash, and before we had
-time to recover from our astonishment, someone rapped.
-With a shout of baffled rage, Tom leaped to his feet and
-tore at the handle. The massive door at once flew open.
-The corridor was empty—only moonbeams and pictures—nothing
-more.</p>
-
-<p>“The following day was wet, and we stayed indoors,
-all the morning and afternoon, reading. As it cleared up
-a little towards supper-time, Tom proposed going for a
-short walk. We slipped on our overcoats, and were
-crossing the big entrance hall to the front door, when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-Tom suddenly exclaimed, ‘Hang it! I’ve left my pipe
-upstairs. I say, wait a minute, you fellows, till I get it.’
-He started running, and then stopped short, giving vent
-to a loud exclamation. Ascending the broad staircase in
-front of us was a form, whose back view exactly resembled
-that of the golden-haired beauty we had seen in the
-garden. Where she had sprung from we could not say.
-We only knew she was there.</p>
-
-<p>“‘By Jove! I’ll see her face this time,’ Tom said.
-‘I’ll see it, even if I have to force her to turn round.’ He
-ran after her, and, mounting the stairs two at a time,
-stretched out his hand to pluck at her sleeve. She
-turned, and her face was to us a blank. What Tom saw
-we never knew. Shouting, ‘Take the damned thing
-away from me!’ he stepped back and fell; and when we
-ran forward, we found him lying at the foot of the stairs—dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The property, Miss Carmichael informed me, passed to
-a distant relative, who, after trying in vain to let it,
-pulled it down. The ghost, it was rumoured, was that of
-a very beautiful ancestress of the Dennings, who, after
-leading a life, evil even for those times, disappeared.
-What happened to her material body no one ever knew,
-but her spirit was supposed to haunt the house and
-grounds in dual form. To the stranger, that is to say,
-to those outside her own family, she appeared in all the
-radiant beauty of her earthly body, but to the Dennings
-she seldom revealed her face. When she did, they beheld
-something too terrible for the mind to conceive—and live.</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard,” Miss Carmichael added, “that the
-ghost has been seen quite recently haunting the site once
-occupied by the house and grounds, and also the borders
-of the heath.”</p>
-
-<p>And as Miss Carmichael was very emphatic on this last
-point, I may not unreasonably conclude that the girl of
-my dreams was the actual ghost of “The Gables.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_10"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="subt">MY VIEWS ON A FUTURE LIFE FOR THE ANIMAL AND
-VEGETABLE WORLDS</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">I mentioned</span> in one of my former works that I believe
-many of the figures we pass by in the streets are not men
-and women like ourselves, but phantasms—phantasms
-of the living, that is to say, spirit projections of people
-consciously or unconsciously thinking of being where we
-see them—phantasms of the dead, and impersonating
-neutrarians.</p>
-
-<p>Mingling with the crowds in the parks and gliding in
-and out the trees, I have often seen people with the
-pallor of corpses; I have followed them, and they have
-unaccountably vanished. I believe Hyde Park, particularly
-the northern side, to be as full of ghosts as any
-spot in London, and I have heard many strange tales
-from the outcasts, the tattered and torn brigade, who
-have slept all night under its trees and bushes. The
-police are, I believe, expected to clear the Park before
-locking-up time, and I’ve no doubt they try to do so,
-but they cannot possibly look into every nook and
-cranny in that vast expanse, and there are many in which
-one could easily hide and defy detection. I have tried
-the experiment once, and I am not anxious to try it
-again; there is no place so terribly depressing, so
-strangely suggestive of suicide, and hauntings by the
-most grotesque type of neutrarians, as London’s premier
-park by night.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Some twelve or fifteen years ago, in my nightly
-rambles there, I noticed that the seat beneath a certain
-tree, mid-way between the Marble Arch and Lancaster
-Gate, was rarely occupied, whereas all the other seats in
-that vicinity were invaded by couples. One evening, the
-weather being warm and sultry, I went and sat there.
-I dozed off, and eventually fell into a deep sleep. I
-dreamed that an old man and a young girl stood under
-the tree, whispering, and that as I watched them they
-raised their eyes, and looked in a horribly guilty manner,
-not at me, but at the space next me, which I perceived,
-for the first time, was occupied by a tiny child. Moving
-stealthily forward and holding in their hands an outspread
-cloth, they crept up behind the child, the cloth
-descended, and all three vanished. Then something
-made me gaze up into the branches of the tree, and I saw
-a large, light, colourless, heavily-lidded eye peering down
-at me with an expression of the utmost malevolence. It
-was altogether so baneful, so symbolic of cruelty, malice,
-and hate that I could only stare back at it in mute
-astonishment. The whole shape of the tree then seemed
-to alter, and to become like an enormous dark hand,
-which, swaying violently to and fro, suddenly dived down
-and closed over me. I awoke at once, but was so afraid
-of seeing the eye, that for some minutes I kept my own
-eyes tightly shut. When I opened them, I saw, bending
-over me, a very white face, and to my intense relief a
-voice, unmistakably human, croaked, “No wonder
-you’re scared, sitting here at this time of night by yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>The speaker was merely one of the many hundreds of
-tramps for whom the Park was reception and bedroom
-combined. His hat was little more than a rim, and his
-trousers cried shame on the ladies I saw every day with
-their skirts plastered all over with buttons. His cheeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-were hollow, his eyes preternaturally bright, and his
-breath full of hunger. Still, he was alive, and anything
-alive just then was very welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“I never sleep here,” he said; “none of us do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Because it’s haunted,” he said. “You may laugh—so
-did I years ago, afore I took to this sort of thing. But
-sleeping out-of-doors all night has taught me more than
-any politicians, bishops, or schoolmasters know; or any
-of those fine ladies that swell about in their carriages
-know; I’ve seen sights that would make an hangel
-afraid; I’ve seen ghosts of all sorts. They’re not all like
-us, neither. Some of them ain’t human at all, they’re
-devils. You may laugh when you read about them in
-them library books, but it’s no laughing matter when you
-see them, as I’ve seen them, all alone and cold, in some
-wayside ditch. This tree, I tell yer, is ’aunted—and it’s a
-devil that ’aunts it. Ask my mates, any of them that
-you’ll find sleeping in the parks. There’s many of them
-that ’ave experienced it. They’ve seen something hiding
-in the branches, and when they’ve seen it, they’ve felt
-they must either kill themselves or someone else. There’s
-a devil in the tree that tempts one to do all kind of
-wicked things, and if you take my advice, young man,
-you’ll sit somewhere else.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I will,” I said; “and here’s something for
-your warning.” I gave him threepence, the only coins I
-had on me just then, and, overwhelming me with thanks,
-he shuffled away.</p>
-
-<p>Since that night I have often thought that the poor—the
-very poor—know far more of the other world or
-worlds than do the rich, and that they know more—far
-more—on other points than the rich. The statesman
-talks of the people and the people’s needs, but what does
-he know of the people and their needs? He rarely, if
-ever, goes amongst them. Except in electioneering
-times, I doubt if any Member of Parliament ever goes
-into the more squalid of our London districts. I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-seen one Member of the House of Lords eating whelks in
-a tavern in the Limehouse Causeway, but he is an exception.
-Journalists go there—but the leisured folk—never.</p>
-
-<p>It bores them; and yet how much they might learn,
-how much not only of urgent human needs, but of coming
-storms. They might learn that the East End brews
-whilst the West End sleeps, and that as surely as the
-long-talked-of German war cloud—that war cloud they
-affected to ridicule—has at last burst, so undoubtedly
-will the war cloud of revolution; revolution hatched by
-malcontents of all nationalities in East End doss houses
-and crowded coffee taverns.</p>
-
-<p>This is no empty prophecy. The cinders of the volcano
-have been hot for some time—they are now burning hot—and
-the hour is fast approaching when they will arise
-mightily in a red conflagration. Are we prepared for it?
-It takes a very sound constitution to face a revolution
-with perfect confidence. Are we sound? Can any
-constitution be sound when the rich daily grow richer,
-and the poor, poorer. Where Art—all that cries out for
-beauty, real beauty, beauty as it is seen and worshipped
-by souls uninspired by lucre—is starved to death and
-crushed, limp and lifeless, by the thumbscrews of a vain,
-shallow, mercenary mushroom aristocracy on the one
-hand, and an equally selfish, crude, ignorant, money-grabbing
-working class on the other. But let me say
-again it is the East End, the ever watchful, never
-slumbering East End, that is the thermometer of future
-events. And why? Because it is here that the lean,
-hungry men of letters, who seldom, if ever, get their
-thoughts transferred to print, are even now threshing
-out the nation’s destiny. Threshing it out, consolidating
-it, whilst the monied men and women, the present all-powerful
-nouveau riche—the beer, whiskey and tobacco,
-peers and peeresses—the lords of the Stock Exchange,
-Banks and Divorce Courts—those who have made their
-money out of the sins and follies of the world, or by
-sweating and usury, are lolling in their soft, upholstered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-chairs, smoking luxurious cigars and quaffing liqueurs.</p>
-
-<p>The war has done much: it has aroused patriotism,
-it has given rise to self-sacrifice, but it has not touched
-the root of the gangrene, it has not lessened our worship
-of the dollar. Individualism, as we know it to-day, must
-collapse, and some better and purer system—a system
-that does not encourage selfishness—must prevail. The
-people are dying for change—for some great change that
-will give them fair play. This is the people’s need—the
-need that you may hear voiced throughout the length
-and breadth of the squalid East End. “We want a
-Government that remembers its primary duties,” they
-cry. “A Government that is father to its children, that
-loves, fosters and protects them. We have never had
-one yet, but the hour may not be far distant when we
-shall demand one.” This is what the people of leisure
-might learn, if they visited the haunts I visit; and they
-might learn more beside. They might learn of another
-world, a spirit world, such as is never alluded to in the
-pulpits, with which people in the poorest parts—people
-who are too poor to pay for beds—are forced to live in
-contact. Nights in the parks and commons have taught
-these vagrants more, a thousand times more, than they
-ever learned in Sunday or County Council Schools.
-They have seen sights—spirits in the form of man and of
-beast, of both and of neither—that have revealed to
-them how closely the other world borders on this, and to
-what close supervision the inhabitants of the other
-world subject some of us. They have learned, I say,
-what no priest or preacher would, or could, teach them,
-namely, that the hell of spirit-land lies on this earth,
-and that the worst of all punishments is that of the poor
-phantasms of the dead, that glides in and out the trees
-nocturnally, never meeting those it knew and loved, but
-ever encountering the most terrifying of the spirits that
-are hostile to man.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill6"></a>
-<img src="images/ill6.jpg" width="403" height="626" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“What gives me the worst fright is a tree....”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Our vagrants know, too, the power of these neutrarians,
-they know they can adopt any shape, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-tempt and goad man on to the committal of any crime,
-however heinous. They have, moreover, acquired a
-further knowledge—a knowledge denied and scoffed at
-by the ministry of all Christian denominations—namely
-that all forms of animal and vegetable life, all forms of
-flora and fauna, pass into the superphysical, and live
-again.</p>
-
-<p>I myself first learned of a tree ghost from an old
-tramp, who came and sat by my side on a seat on
-Clapham Common.</p>
-
-<p>“Do I ever see anything strange here at night?” he
-repeated in answer to my question. “Yes, I do, at
-times, but what gives me the worst fright is a tree that I
-sometimes see close to the spot where that man was
-murdered some ten or twelve years ago. I never saw it
-before the murder, but a few nights afterwards, as I was
-passing the spot, I saw a peculiar glimmer of white, and,
-on getting a bit closer, I found, to my astonishment,
-that it was a tall, slender white thing with branches just
-like a tree, only it was not behaving like a tree. Although
-there was not a breath of wind, it kept lurching with a
-strange, creaking noise, and I felt it was watching me,
-watching me furtively, just as if it had eyes, and was
-bent on doing me all the harm it possibly could. I was
-so scared, I turned tail, and never ceased running till I
-had reached home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Home!” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a clump of bushes near the ditch, where I
-always turn in of nights. It ain’t much of a home, to be
-sure, but it’s the only one I’ve got, and I can generally
-count on lying there undisturbed till the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>I gave him a few coppers, and he blessed me as if I
-had given him a fortune.</p>
-
-<p>On Tooting Common I met a Northumberland miner,
-who had come to London for the first time on a holiday,
-and, having had his pocket picked, was obliged to spend
-the night out-of-doors. “Ghosts,” he said, when I
-asked him if he had any experiences with the supernatural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-whilst engaged in his underground work.
-“Ghosts! Yes, but of a nature you don’t read about in
-books. Me and my mates, when working in a drift at
-night, have heard the blowing of the wind and a mighty
-rustling of leaves, and have found ourselves surrounded
-on all sides by numerous trees and ferns that have
-suddenly risen from the ground and formed a regular
-forest. They have not resembled any trees you see now-a-days,
-but what you might fancy existed many thousands
-of years ago. There has been no colour in them,
-only a uniform whiteness, and they have shone like
-phosphorous. We have heard, too, all the noises, such
-as go on daily in forests above-ground—the humming
-and buzzing of insects, and the chirping of birds; and
-shafts and galleries have echoed and re-echoed with the
-sounds, till you would have thought that those away
-above us must have heard them, too.”</p>
-
-<p>I do not think the miner romanced, for what he said
-was only a corroboration of what other miners have
-often told me.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, it is not every mine that is haunted in this
-way, or every miner that sees such sights, for the
-Unknown confines its manifestations to the few, but I
-firmly believe such phenomena do happen, because as I
-state in my “Byways of Ghostland” (W. Rider &amp; Sons),
-I have seen several tree ghosts myself. If one form of
-life possesses a spirit, why should we not assume that
-other forms of life possess a spirit, too? Why should
-man have the monopoly of an immaterial self, and alone
-of all creation continue his identity after physical
-dissolution? On moral grounds? No! For man,
-generally speaking, is in no sense superior morally to the
-so-called beasts around him. He is often the reverse.
-Oddly enough, we have so long accustomed ourselves to
-using the term immorality exclusively in reference to our
-illegal relations with the other sex, that we have come to
-regard these illegal relations as the only immorality
-existing. It is a curious error. Immorality comprises<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-theft, and theft not only comprehends depriving people
-of their material goods, it comprehends slander and
-gossip—<abbr>i.e.</abbr>, depriving people of their character; sweating—<abbr>i.e.</abbr>,
-depriving people of the just rewards of their
-mental and manual labour; and bread-snatching,—<abbr>i.e.</abbr>,
-depriving people of their only means of existence;
-beside many other acts of an equally odious nature.
-The average drawing-room is invariably the rendezvous
-of immoral people; nine out of every ten of the ladies
-one meets there are robbers—they steal, almost at very
-breath, someone’s good name and reputation, a far
-worse crime than the purloining of a loaf, for which act
-of desperation a poor man would be sent to prison, and
-a hungry dog beaten. In the drawing-room, too, one
-meets the girl with a few hundred a year, who announces
-her intention of taking some post—maybe on the stage,
-or on the staff of some paper, or in a business house,
-“just to make a little money.” A little money at the
-expense of someone else’s life! For that is what the
-want of occupation to the person with no private income
-literally means. We see none of this mean immorality
-in the animal world. Dogs steal bones from one another,
-it is true, but they do not lie, and cheat, and intrigue;
-nor do they, when they have a sufficiency themselves,
-snatch away the little that constitutes another person’s
-all.</p>
-
-<p>Animals are accused of being cruel—of barbarously
-murdering one another, as in the cases of the cat and
-mouse, the lion and deer, etc. But they rarely kill,
-saving when they are hungry, and for food man kills, too,
-in a fashion and with a method which is truly disgusting.
-By studiously looking after the daily wants of certain
-animals, such as cows and sheep, and by caring for them
-when they are ill, man leads them to suppose he is their
-friend, and they learn to trust him. Vain faith. He is
-kind to them only to suit his own ends. He out-Judas’s
-Judas, and after nonchalantly accepting their most
-lavish tributes of affection, he takes them unawares and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-kills them, either with a poleaxe, or some other weapon
-entailing an equally painful and lingering death. Do any
-animals behave quite so basely? Besides, there is no
-cruelty in the animal world—not even the most excruciating
-suction of the octopus, nor the sharp, agonising bite
-of the flesh-eating parrot of New Zealand—that can for
-one moment compare with the coolly planned and
-leisurely executed horrors of the Spanish Inquisition;
-and the tiger, at its worst, is but a tyro in savagery
-compared with the creature God is said to have made in
-His own image.</p>
-
-<p>From vices turn to virtues, and pause for a moment in
-reflection on the many lovable qualities of the dog.
-Where in man do we find such affection, forgiveness,
-general amiability, constancy and patience; and in the
-case of the horse, such a willingness to labour without
-any thought of recompense. It makes me positively ill,
-when I hear hopelessly immoral men and women—gossips,
-slanderers, breadsnatchers, usurers, sweaters—speak
-condescendingly of animals—of dogs and horses that
-are on an infinitely higher moral plane than ever they
-have been, or ever will be. But moral superiority is not
-the only superiority that man fallaciously assumes. He
-lays claim to an intellectual superiority, which is equally
-fallacious, equally a myth. No one who has ever studied
-animal and insect life can but have been impressed with
-the marvels of ingenuity and skill displayed therein.
-The web of the common garden spider and the nest of
-the wren, for example, are every whit as wonderful in
-their way as the architectural works of Inigo Jones or
-Christopher Wren. On the grounds of a moral and
-mental inferiority, therefore, the argument of a future
-life for the human species only, fails. Another argument,
-an argument advanced by the most bigotted of the
-religious denominationalists, is “that man only has a
-conscience, and that conscience which he alone possesses
-is the only passport to another world. Without conscience
-there can be no soul, and without soul there can be no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-hope of a continuation of life after death.” This, of
-course, is merely assumption, as is nearly all the teaching
-of the Churches. Conscience, like religion, depends to a
-very large extent on climate. A man born in the centre
-of Africa might not think it wrong to do things that
-would appear appalling to a Plymouth Brother, and
-vice versa. There is at present no fixed and universal
-standard of right and wrong, any more than there is a
-fixed and universal standard of beauty—for as each eye
-forms its own idea of feminine loveliness, so each heart
-forms its own conception of honour and dishonour,
-virtue and vice. We know that this is the case as far as
-mankind is concerned, and we have nothing beyond
-assumption to assure us that it is not so throughout the
-animal and insect world. If the animals have no conception
-of a moral standard, how is it that they do not
-destroy one another? That the instinct to injure people
-is innate in us is readily proved by the joy nearly all of
-us take in saying disparaging things of our neighbours.
-We go so far, and we would undoubtedly go the whole
-hog and kill those we hate, if something more, perhaps,
-than the mere fear of hanging did not hold us back.
-That restraining something is unquestionably the fear of
-the Future, and it is that fear which I am inclined to
-think is the origin of what we term our consciences.
-Were we sure there was no future existence, there would
-be no moral restraint (it would only be the prospect
-of legal punishment that would deter us from injuring
-other people to our heart’s content), we should have no
-consciences; and if this is applicable to mankind, why is
-it not applicable to other forms of animal life?</p>
-
-<p>Is it not feasible to suppose that it is this same fear of
-the future that acts as a preventive to animals killing
-one another indiscriminately? That they do at times
-rob and kill for other motives than to satisfy their
-hunger is indisputable, but these exceptional cases prove
-what I am trying to maintain—that there is some
-restraining influence that keeps the vast majority highly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-moral; and I see no feasible arguments for not supposing
-this influence to be a conscience begat by a deep-rooted
-fear of what may await them on physical dissolution.</p>
-
-<p>And if this applies to the mammals, why not to the
-whole animal, insect, and vegetable worlds—to everything
-that has life, for Science has yet to prove that
-where there is life, there is not also intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>The superior morality of animals to man, then, may be
-considered as due to their more powerful consciences,
-and to their stronger fear of the possibility of the superphysical.
-And why should they have a much stronger
-fear? Because, unquestionably, they have a more
-intimate knowledge of the Unknown than has man. No
-one who has had much to do with dogs and horses can
-doubt this. Who that has ridden through woods and
-jungles, or lonely country roads at night, has not seen
-their horse suddenly stop and evince every evidence of
-fear. Though the human eye has seen nothing to
-account for it, the horse obviously has seen something,
-and it has only been by dint of the utmost coaxing and
-petting that the sagacious animal has been persuaded
-to continue its course. It is the same with dogs. Over
-and over again I have had dogs with me in houses
-alleged to be haunted, and they have suddenly manifested
-symptoms of the greatest, the most uncontrollable fear.
-I have endeavoured to pacify them, to urge them to
-follow me, but it has been in vain; though obedient and
-fearless as a rule, they have suddenly become the most
-disobedient and incorrigible of cowards. Why? Because
-I am certain they have seen and heard things which, for
-some unaccountable reason, have been held back from
-me.</p>
-
-<p>If knowledge, then, of another life is any plea for the
-bestowal of an unperishable spirit, animals should live
-again even more surely than man. And so also should
-the vegetable world, for I have myself seen trees violently
-agitated, as if with paroxysms of the most sublime
-terror, before the advent of superphysical phenomena.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And stronger than any of these arguments is that of
-the ghosts themselves. There are innumerable and well-authenticated
-cases of hauntings by the phantasms of
-dogs, horses, birds, insects, and trees, and it is, perhaps,
-chiefly through these hauntings that we can disprove
-the theory that man possesses a monopoly of the immaterial
-planes; a theory which, were it not for his insufferable
-egotism and conceit, he would never have
-advanced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_11"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="subt">A HAUNTING IN REGENT’S PARK, AND MY FURTHER
-VIEWS WITH REGARD TO SPIRITUALISM</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Before</span> concluding my experiences in the parks and
-commons of London, I will cite one other case, a case
-which serves to illustrate the theme I have just been
-discussing.</p>
-
-<p>I was visiting the Zoological Gardens in Regent’s Park,
-one day in the summer of 1898, and was so struck with
-the look of yearning in the eyes of one of the lions, the
-desperate look of yearning to have just five minutes’
-gambol on the sunny lawn outside, five minutes in which
-to stretch its poor, cramped-up limbs, and sniff, perhaps
-for the first time, the fine fresh air of freedom, that I
-could not refrain from mentioning what was passing in
-my mind to a white-haired old man and a plainly dressed
-young woman, who were standing near.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” the old man said. “It does seem hard on
-these huge animals to be confined within the limits of
-such a very small space and to have to pace up and down
-these little boxes, tantalised by the sight of other
-creatures enjoying the privileges that are denied to them.
-It is worse treatment than any meted out to criminals;
-in fact, the biggest ruffian in jail does not suffer in anything
-like the same degree as these animals. They have
-one thing to be thankful for, however—life cannot last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-for ever. Death will be their kindest friend. It is the
-rich man’s purgatory, but it is Paradise for all these
-creatures as well as for the poor man.”</p>
-
-<p>“You believe in another world, then?” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Believe in another world?” he answered sharply,
-“why, of course I do. I have seen far too much of it to
-do otherwise, haven’t I, Minnie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Grandad,” the girl said simply.</p>
-
-<p>“We both have, Minnie and I,” the old man went on.</p>
-
-<p>“Spirits?” I enquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, spirits. Ghosts, if you like,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me. I’m not one of the scoffers,” I pleaded.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at me searchingly, and then said: “I used
-to be a keeper here many years ago. I was devoted to
-the animals, and when they died, I invariably saw their
-ghosts. So did some of the other keepers. Now don’t
-run away with the idea that the Gardens are haunted,
-sir. As far as I know, they are not. It was only to us
-who had so much to do with them when they were alive
-that the spirits of these animals appeared. I remember
-one instance in particular, about twelve years ago, just
-before I left the Zoo. A young lion came here from
-East Africa. It wouldn’t let any of the keepers go near
-it excepting myself, and it was generally regarded as
-having a very uncertain temper. But I never found it so.
-I knew that the reason of its restlessness was its hatred
-of confinement. I knew it hated its cage, and I used to
-do all I could to comfort it. There was a sort of mutual
-understanding between us. When it saw me looking a
-bit anxious and worried, for my wife was often ill, it used
-to come and rub its great head against me, as if to cheer
-me up, and when I saw it looking more than usually
-dejected, I used to stop and talk to it for a longer time
-than I talked to any one of the other animals. Well, one
-day it fell ill, caught a chill, so we thought, and evinced
-a strong dislike to its food. I discussed its case with the
-other keepers, and they agreed there was nothing to be
-alarmed about, as it was young and to all appearances<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-healthy. We all thought it would be well again in a few
-days. I had gone home as usual one night, and was
-sitting in the kitchen reading the evening paper, when
-something came over me that I must go for a walk. I
-told Minnie, who was a little girl then, not more than
-nine or ten years of age, and she begged her mother to let
-her go with me. We started off with the intention of
-going to the Caledonian Road, as Minnie liked looking at
-the shops there, but we hadn’t gone far before Minnie
-suddenly exclaimed, ‘Grandad, let’s go to Regent’s
-Park.’ ‘Regent’s Park,’ I ejaculated; ‘whatever do
-you want to go there for at this time of night!’ ‘I don’t
-know,’ she said, ‘but I feel I must.’ ‘Well now,’ I
-replied, ‘that’s odd, because the very same feeling has
-come over me.’</p>
-
-<p>“We struck off down Crowndale Road—I was living
-in the neighbourhood of the St. Pancras Road then—and
-got to Gloucester Gate just about dusk. We had
-passed through, and were walking along the Broad Walk
-by the side of the Zoo, when Minnie suddenly caught
-hold of my arm, and said, ‘Look, Grandad!’ I followed
-the direction of her gaze, and there coming straight
-towards us from the Zoo walls was a lion. I can tell you
-it gave me a jump, as I naturally thought one of the
-animals had escaped. It aimed straight for us, and upon
-its getting close to I recognised it at once—it was the
-young lion that had been taken ill. To my astonishment,
-however, there was nothing of the invalid about it now.
-The expression in its eyes was one of infinite happiness.
-It seemed to say, ‘I have attained my ideal; I am out in
-the open, in the sweet, fresh air, and the wide darkness of
-the fast approaching night.’ It came right up to us, and
-I stretched out my hand to touch it, wondering what the
-passers-by would do when they saw it, and how on earth
-we should get it back into the gardens. It bitterly
-grieved me to think it would have to lose its freedom. I
-stretched out my hand, I say, to touch it, and to my
-surprise my fingers encountered nothing—the lion had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-vanished. I then realised what Minnie had known all
-along—that what we had seen was a ghost. A ghost,
-and yet it had appeared to me so absolutely real and
-life-like.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know it was a ghost?” I enquired of
-the young woman.</p>
-
-<p>“By the curious kind of light that seemed to emanate
-from all over its body,” she replied. “I can only
-describe it as a kind of glow, something like that of a
-glow-worm. It was not a bit natural.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you saw the figure distinctly?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she responded, “very distinctly, and I wasn’t
-the least bit afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me tell you the sequel, sir,” the old man interrupted.
-“On my arrival at the Zoo in the morning, one
-of the men came running up to me. ‘It’s dead!’ he
-said. ‘Dead!’ I cried. ‘Who’s dead?’ ‘Why, that
-young lion of yours,’ was the reply; ‘it died at eight
-o’clock last night.’</p>
-
-<p>“And, sure enough, when I went into the lion-house,
-there was the animal lying stretched out at full length in
-its cage—dead. It had died at eight o’clock, which was
-the exact time we had seen it in the park.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>And now to pursue the thread of my own life, which
-must of necessity run through this volume. While I
-was teaching at Blackheath, I not only completed my
-first novel, “For Satan’s Sake,” but studied for the
-stage at the Henry Neville Studio in Oxford Street. I
-shall never forget with what joy, when my duties with
-the spoilt and tiresome boys were over, I exchanged the
-terrible monotony of the schoolroom for the delightful
-and interesting atmosphere of the Studio. Henry
-Neville did not teach there himself, but periodically
-came to watch and help us with his criticisms, which were
-always as kindly and instructive as they were utterly
-free from pomposity and egotism. Easy and natural
-himself, he tried to infuse something of his spirit into us,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-and with many of us, I believe, he succeeded; for even
-those who did not believe that acting could be taught,
-were bound to admit that the pupils of Henry Neville
-were singularly free from the staginess almost always
-seen in amateurs, and sometimes in professionals as well.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Neville’s brother, Fred Gartside, who gave me
-my first lesson in elocution—an abler or more persevering
-instructor could not have been found—left off teaching
-at the Studio soon after I joined. Mr. G.&nbsp;R. Foss took
-his place, and is, I believe, still at the head of it.</p>
-
-<p>I have always looked upon G.&nbsp;R. Foss as one of the
-greatest stage geniuses I have ever met. He is that
-rarest of all individuals—the born actor—the man who
-can perform almost any <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rôle</i> with equal success. He is
-the ideal stage manager, a past master in the knowledge
-of all the technicalities adhering to the theatre, and the
-possessor of a never-ceasing flow of wit and good humour.</p>
-
-<p>Among the pupils who were at the Studio with me,
-several have performed in London. I toured with George
-Desmond, who was quite recently playing in the West
-End, and I met Miss Yvonne Orchardson again, some
-two or more years ago, when she was also acting in a
-London theatre, whilst I constantly see that charming
-and talented old Nevillite, Miss Lilian North, who
-delights London audiences with her sweetly told stories
-and good recitations. Apart from many other personal
-attractions, Miss North has the most beautiful hands;
-the fingers are long and tapering and the nails exquisitely
-shaped. It is the rarest combination of the psychic and
-dramatic hand, and such as I have very seldom seen
-saving among Orientals.</p>
-
-<p>If I have spoken somewhat extravagantly of the
-Neville Studio, its instructors and pupils, it is only what
-I genuinely feel, and I repeat, again, that the hours
-there were some of the most delightful I have ever
-experienced. When I had completed my course of
-instruction, I went on tour in “A Night Out.” I then
-came back to London and remained nearly a year in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-Town, writing in the day-time and playing in one or
-other of the suburbs in the evening. I lived, for the
-most part, in St. James’ Road, Brixton, where I wrote
-my second and third books, both novels, and entitled
-respectively “The Unknown Depths” and “Dinevah
-the Beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Unknown Depths,” founded to a large extent
-upon my own life, introduces the subject of Spiritualism,
-or, as it is now more often termed, Spiritism, and, whilst
-I was engaged on it, I attended many séances.</p>
-
-<p>I am often asked to express an opinion on Spiritualism.</p>
-
-<p>I am very averse from any attempt to invoke spirits,
-either through the aid of spells or mediums, by table-turning,
-or by automatic writing. As I have already
-said, I believe that genuine spirits do occasionally
-manifest themselves at séances, but that, when they
-do, the medium is quite as surprised at the manifestation
-as the sitters, and in no greater a degree, perhaps,
-responsible for it. I believe the spirit I have named
-neutrarian is the only type of spirit that takes advantage
-of a séance, that is to say, takes advantage of the peculiar
-magnetic atmosphere created at a séance. It adopts the
-form, or attributes, of some relative or friend of one of
-the sitters, and, thus disguised, manifests itself merely
-for the sake of deceiving and misleading over-credulous
-men and women. But unfortunately these spirits do not
-stop at mere mischief. Having once gained a footing,
-so to speak, they can attach themselves to certain
-people, and by tormenting them continually, drive them
-in the end to madness and suicide.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the danger of attracting undesirable
-neutrarians at séances, there is the risk of being duped
-by mediums. I have met a good many professional
-mediums—so-called clairvoyants, aura tellers, psychometrists,
-materialising mediums, and the like, and none
-of them have convinced me that they can do all that they
-profess to do. Besides, even if they could, the mere
-suggestion that one’s spirit friend or relative is tapping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-on a wall or blowing through a trumpet, presumably to
-satisfy the curiosity of a number of strangers, and
-incidentally to fill the coffers of an illiterate man or
-woman, only fills one with disgust. If any departed
-friends of mine wish to visit me, I am sure they could do
-so without the assistance of a so-called medium and all
-their paltry paraphernalia. The usual argument in
-defence of these mediums is that some well-known
-scientific man believes in them. “If Sir somebody or
-other says I am genuine,” the clairvoyant exclaims,
-“then I am genuine, and you’ve no right in the world to
-doubt me.”</p>
-
-<p>The medium is wrong. I have every right. Scientists
-may be very shrewd, perhaps infallible in their own
-legitimate calling, but, outside it, their opinion need
-carry no more weight than mine, or yours, or anyone
-else’s.</p>
-
-<p>It by no means follows that because a man is a
-Professor of Physics he is also a great student of character.
-Poring over chemicals or figures all day is a very
-poor training for reading the human mind. An actor is a
-far more able exponent of psychology than any chemist
-or mathematician, and this being so, it is the actor who
-should play a prominent part in psychical research and
-not the scientist. If a veteran actor were to say to me,
-“Look here, I have watched that woman very carefully
-when she was supposed to go into a trance, and to speak
-in an entirely different voice from her own, and I am
-convinced she is merely acting,” I should be inclined to
-believe him. In his wide experience of facial expression,
-posing, and assumed voices, it would be comparatively
-easy for him to tell whether the medium was shamming
-or not. A clever actress can disguise her voice effectually,
-and no one would know it. She can speak with a French
-accent one moment and broad cockney the next, and so
-naturally that few people would know she was the same
-person. That is why, when I have listened to a clairvoyant,
-in an alleged trance, speaking in the voice of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-Tommy Jones or some other presumed obsessing spirit,
-I have been unmoved. There are a dozen actresses of
-my acquaintance who could easily do the same. But
-someone exclaims, “She actually spoke in Russian, a
-language she knows nothing about.” “How do you
-know she is unacquainted with Russian?” is my answer;
-no one can possibly tell that but herself. She has most
-likely acquired a smattering of it, simply for this purpose.
-What could be easier? I have a smattering of a good
-many languages, but I could easily stimulate complete
-ignorance of any one or all of them; I repeat, no one
-knows but ourselves how much we have seen, and read,
-and heard, where we have been, and what we have
-studied, and, if we are sufficiently clever, we can let the
-outside world know just as much as we want it to know
-and no more. Some mediums are said to act in one
-manner when they are obsessed, and in an entirely
-different manner when in their normal condition. What
-futile rubbish! Who knows when they are in their
-normal condition, or what their normal condition really
-is? Most of us are complex. I myself have several
-distinct personalities—and I defy anyone to enumerate
-them—any one of which might be equally my true,
-my normal self. Moreover, I might go into a trance,
-speak with the voice of a Spaniard, and behave like
-a Red Indian, and those who saw me would think
-me obsessed. Yet they might easily be mistaken. I
-might have secretly acquired a smattering of Spanish,
-and one of my hobbies might be that of imitating,
-in private, the ways and habits of a Sioux or Crow
-Foot.</p>
-
-<p>I know a clergyman who attracts large congregations
-by reason of his eloquence and apparent piety, and who
-is believed in his parish to be most moral and sincere. I
-also know him to spend several evenings a week in an
-East End tavern, singing ribald songs and playing poker.
-Which is his true self, which his normal condition? His
-congregation believe him to be one thing, his East End<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-cronies another, and he is apparently quite as much at
-home in the church as he is in the tavern.</p>
-
-<p>Then, apart from the question of personalities, I
-believe another evidence of trickery lies in the non-usefulness
-of any of the communications alleged to be
-made by the spirits. If professional mediums could
-receive bona fide communications from the other world,
-I am quite sure that they would acquire some knowledge
-of a practical nature, and that we should, in consequence,
-soon see them all multi-millionaires. That they are not
-all Vanderbilts and Rothschilds is, I think, a very strong
-argument that their alleged spirit friends have told them
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>And that is what it all amounts to—nothing. Automatic
-writing, table-turning, and trances have taught us
-absolutely nothing concerning either this or the other
-world, and the messages purporting to come from the
-spirits have hitherto, at all events, consisted of trivialities
-and commonplaces of such an unedifying nature that we
-cannot dissociate them from factory girls and nursemaids.</p>
-
-<p>Our friends on the other side, who have passed through
-the valley of the shadow of death, might reasonably be
-expected to know something that we do not; and yet
-not even the smallest fragment of their knowledge has so
-far been transmitted to us through any of the channels
-resorted to by Spiritualists. Neither, as far as I know,
-have the police benefited by any information imparted
-to them by mediums or automatic writers. On the other
-hand, although the Unknown has refused to confide to
-those claiming to be its chosen few any messages that
-would right the wrong, bona fide phantasms of the dead
-have certainly been known to appear spontaneously, to
-other than professional mediums, with this intent.</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>I am acquainted with an old lady, who tells me that
-she often talks with Charles Dickens, Napoleon
-Bonaparte, Cardinal Newman and other eminents. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-have enquired how, and she has reluctantly admitted
-that the spirits of these eminents come to her at a
-séance conducted by a professional medium, who, of
-course, is paid very liberally for her services. The
-medium, I gather, sits behind a screen, where she is
-supposed to wait, until she is obsessed. When everything
-is ready, she glides out, and in a voice purporting
-to be that of Napoleon, or of someone equally distinguished,
-she converses with this foolish and conceited
-old lady. It seems incredible that anyone outside a
-lunatic asylum could believe that the spirits of such
-great men as Napoleon, Newman and Dickens should
-take the trouble to obsess a medium, in order to chat with
-some nonentity, who is neither extraordinarily clever nor
-particularly interesting. And yet there are dozens of
-people, apart from the old lady I have mentioned, who
-know so little of genius and eminence, and even ordinary
-talent, as to believe this incongruous happening to be
-possible. I, myself, have heard a Spiritualist, who lays
-down the laws respecting the Unknown, as if he were
-actually the Creator, declare that, whenever he lectures,
-the hall is full to overflowing with spirits. Amongst
-them, he says, are the shades of Charles Dickens—there
-must be at least a hundred shades of Dickens, for there is
-hardly a spiritualistic meeting or séance that I hear of
-at which Dickens is not alleged to be present—Sir Isaac
-Newton and Napoleon. (Soon, perhaps, there will be
-the Kaiser and the Crown Prince. I hope so.)</p>
-
-<p>Family séances are, of course, quite another matter.
-I have not the least doubt that when the friends and
-relatives of some departed person meet together, and,
-concentrating very earnestly on that dead one being
-present, create the right magnetic atmosphere, that
-sometimes a real spirit manifestation does take place,
-and the phantasm of the deceased, or what at any rate
-purports to be the phantasm of the deceased, does
-actually appear.</p>
-
-<p>The phenomenon may possibly be a neutrarian—for,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-of course, there is always that risk—or it may really be
-the soul, spirit, or whatever else we like to call it, of the
-dead person. And here let me urge again, the utter
-absurdity of attempting to dogmatise on the Unknown.
-At one time it was the parson, who unfolded to us, with
-all the sageness of one who had been there, the mysteries
-of the other world. He not only told us what we must
-do and not do in order to ascend to Heaven, but he went
-a step further: he told us what Heaven was like, and
-what actually was taking place there. The parson of
-to-day, however, does not seem quite so sure of his knowledge
-on these points as he was formerly, and his statements
-have become far less assertive; indeed, they have
-become somewhat tentative. It is the Occultist now who
-dictates. He talks with an air of absolute authority of
-Astral Planes, Elementaries, Elementals, vitalised shells,
-Karmas, and goodness knows what besides, and uses
-such a variety of high-falutin’ terms, that our brains at
-last become bewildered, and we begin to wonder with
-Goldsmith how it is possible that one small head can
-carry all he knows. But when we have boiled it all down,
-when we have analysed his dissertation, we find that it
-is, in the last resort, merely a repetition of all the old
-doctrines with which we have been familiar from our
-earliest youth. The only difference is that our Occultist,
-chiefly by discarding the old names of dogmas, and
-adopting a superfluity of new ones, has made of these
-same doctrines a hotch-potch of such rare quality, that
-few—if indeed any—of us can digest it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_12"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="subt">A HAUNTED MINE IN WALES</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">While</span> I was at Brixton, paying daily visits to various
-well-known theatrical agencies in search of work, I
-ran across the manager of a fit-up company, who
-wanted a man of about my age and build to play
-second lead in a melodrama. I closed with his offer, and
-for the next four weeks, which was as long as his funds
-held out, I paid three night visits to various towns in
-Wales, winding up at Llandudno, no better off financially
-than when I commenced, and having to pay my own
-fare back to London.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, my excursion into Wales was unprofitable
-from the monetary standpoint, it was by no means
-lacking in other respects, for, apart from the experience
-I gained from playing four entirely different parts a
-night, with two electric changes, I came across several
-interesting cases of hauntings.</p>
-
-<p>One of my landladies, a kindly old soul to whom I had
-chatted about ghosts, introduced me to an old man,
-Clem Morgan, whom she said had had a curious experience
-in one of the neighbouring mines. The incident had
-taken place some fifty years ago, shortly after a dreadful
-explosion, whereby many scores of the miners had been
-killed and injured. I will narrate the experience—merely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-altering the wording of it here and there—just as
-Clem Morgan narrated it to <span class="nobreak">me:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“A thousand feet down, close to the site of a great
-tragedy that had thrilled the whole country to the very
-core, my mate and I were at work. Pick, pick, pick;
-shovel, shovel, shovel; the sound of our instruments
-must have been heard hundreds of yards away.</p>
-
-<p>“‘George,’ I said suddenly, leaving off work, ‘was
-it like this afore the accident?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Like what?’ George grunted. He was a middle-aged
-man with a black, stubby beard, and arms like the
-gnarled and knotted branches of an oak. ‘Like what?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, as lonely as this? Were you working with
-just one other man, or were you with the rest of the
-gang?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘With one other,’ George responded, ‘and just as
-soft as you. Why can’t you let the matter drop? I’m
-sick to death of hearing about it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s a marvel to me how you escaped,’ I went on;
-‘whereabouts were you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Just where we are now,’ George growled, ‘and
-that’s all I’ll tell you, so you’d best shut up!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And you went up them steps with all the hell of the
-explosion ringing around you?’ I observed, advancing
-to the edge of the black shaft close to where we were
-working, and looking at the slender wooden ladder
-leading up to the dark vault above. ‘It’s a wonder to
-me you didn’t miss your footing in your hurry, and fall.
-I should have done.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve no doubt you would,’ George sneered, ‘but
-I’m no tenderfoot; I was at this game when you were in
-your cradle, which you never ought to have left.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How many feet down is it?’ I went on, peering
-below me, much fascinated.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Fourteen fathoms. We don’t reckon by feet here.
-Done with that way of doing things in the schoolroom.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘So that you would be killed outright, if you fell?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Try and see,’ George jeered.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s my brother I was thinking of, not myself,’ I
-observed. ‘Where was he exactly, when the explosion
-took place?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How can I say, boy,’ George replied, irritably.
-‘I don’t know where half the folk are.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘They told me he was in an adit leading into the
-main shaft.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘He may have been, for all I know—and for all I
-care,’ George answered gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do you suppose it was here he was working?’ I
-said, after a moment or two’s pause, during which I
-again went to the shaft and peered down.</p>
-
-<p>“‘This is not the only adit on the main,’ George
-growled. ‘He wasn’t here—leastways not when I was.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I heard he was with a man he unintentionally
-injured, and who ever after bore him a grudge.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, oh!’ George exclaimed; ‘so you know as
-much as that, do you? And what, pray, was this man
-like?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I couldn’t say,’ I replied, ‘excepting that he was
-much older than Dick, and very ugly.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A description that would fit in with dozens
-down here. If he was working with your brother, and
-your brother was killed, the odds are he was killed
-too.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You think so?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It seems reasonable enough, don’t it?’ George said.</p>
-
-<p>“‘He might have escaped like you did.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘He might,’ George laughed, ‘just in the same way
-as pigs might fly. Supposing you get on with your work
-and let me do the same.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I had a queer dream about that man,’ I went on.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Dreams! Pooh! Who believes in dreams!’
-George said. ‘What was it?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, I dreamed he had something to do with Dick’s
-death and with the accident.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You had better tell the Inspector,’ George sneered.
-‘And maybe he’ll alter his verdict. You seem to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-been very fond of this brother of yours. You’ve done
-nothing but carp about him all the morning.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I was,’ I replied. ‘So were we all. He kept the
-home going for the last six years.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Kept the home going! Why, where was you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘At College, studying for a teacher. I gave it up
-after his death.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A schoolmaster! Well, I’m blowed. Then you
-didn’t see much of Dick?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Only in the holidays.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And who told you about this fellow who was
-supposed to have had a spite against him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Mother.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It was your mother, was it? Only hearsay evidence
-after all. Well, they’re both dead, anyhow—good and
-bad, and bad and good—all went together—in a moment,
-boy! What do they call you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Clem.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, Clem, get on with your shovelling for mercy’s
-sake. I’ve had enough of talking to last me to the end
-of the week.’</p>
-
-<p>“I took up my spade, and for the next hour there were
-no other sounds but the steady, mechanical pick, pick,
-pick, and scrape, scrape, scrape. Every now and then
-George sprang aside, there was a crash, and a huge block
-of coal fell on the rocky floor, mid a blinding shower of
-dust. A fraction of a second later, and George would
-have been under it—his head a jelly. Yet the narrowness
-of his escape did not seem to affect him; he treated it
-with the utmost indifference, and, wiping away the
-smuts from his eyes, took up his pick and resumed his
-hitting. I regarded him in silent wonder. When the
-dinner-hour arrived, I groped my way to one of the big
-galleries—the idea of eating alone with George did not
-appeal to me—and, an hour later, I set out on my way
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“A terrible sense of isolation hung over that part of
-the mine whither I bent my steps. It was so far away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-from the other adits—so tremendously deep down—so
-alarmingly dark, so sepulchrally silent. Up above, in
-the fields, woods, valleys, even far away in the primitive
-parts of the world, one is never quite alone, for the voice
-of Nature makes itself heard in the birds and insects.
-One knows one is in the midst of life. But here!—here
-in the bowels of the earth, encased in the dead vegetation
-of a long-forgotten world, there is absolute, all paramount
-stillness—a thousand times stiller than the stillness of a
-closed sepulchre. As I pressed on, the crunching of my
-feet on the scattered fragments of coal awoke the echoes
-of the galleries, and I paused every now and then to
-listen in awe to the long reverberating echoes as they
-rolled round and round me. Once, I nearly slipped;
-another foot, and I would have plunged into a sable
-labyrinth, the cold draught from which wound itself
-round me and choked the air in my lungs.</p>
-
-<p>“I drew back in horror, and clinging to the knobbly
-surface of the black wall by my side, pressed frantically
-forward. God, supposing I should ever lose my way
-down here—be left behind when all the men went home—what
-would become of me? The perspiration rose on
-my forehead at the bare idea of it. Presently, to my
-relief, the sound of picking fell on my ears, and an abrupt
-turn of the passage brought me within sight of George,
-who had already recommenced work. I hastened to his
-side, and, picking up my shovel, began to make a neat
-stack of the rapidly accumulating chunks.</p>
-
-<p>“‘George,’ I said, after an emphatic silence, ‘why
-didn’t you tell me it was you who was working along
-with Dick?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘So you’ve been asking questions, have you?’
-George growled, without, however, showing the slightest
-inclination to leave off working. ‘Who told you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Jim and Harry Peters.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, and what of it?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But why didn’t you say so, when I asked
-you?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘What odds if I had, it wouldn’t have done you any
-good.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did you have a quarrel with him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Did the boys tell you I had? Because if so, it’s no
-use my saying anything.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But what do you say?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No! Dick and me never had no quarrel.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is that true?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Gospel.’</p>
-
-<p>“After this there was another silence unbroken save
-by the monotonous handling of the implements. Then I
-suddenly uttered an ejaculation and pointed at my cap.
-It was lying on the ground, some few feet from where we
-were working, close beneath a projecting block of coal,
-and it was moving—moving as if it were being violently
-agitated by something inside it.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What is it?’ I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What is what?’ George growled, resting for a
-moment on the handle of his pick.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, that!’ I said, pointing to my cap. ‘What
-makes it move like that?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘The wind, of course,’ George said.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There’s not enough draught for that. See!’ I
-placed a piece of paper on the ground within an inch or
-two of the cap, and it remained perfectly still. ‘Something
-must be underneath it.’ I picked the cap up,
-there was nothing there. ‘What do you think of it
-now?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“George made no reply. He turned round, so
-that I could not see his face, and plied his pick
-vigorously. After a few minutes I stopped work
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“‘George,’ I cried, ‘what’s the matter with your
-coat? Look! It’s doing just as your cap did.’</p>
-
-<p>“George threw down his pick with an oath.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What do you want to keep worrying me for?’ he
-said. ‘What’s wrong now?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, your coat! Look! it’s moving—rising up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-and down as if the wind were blowing it—and there’s
-not an atom of draught.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s your fancy,’ George said hoarsely. ‘The
-coat’s not moving.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What,’ I cried, ‘do you mean to say you can’t
-see it moving?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ George replied. ‘It’s not, I tell you.’ And
-picking up his tool he set to work again, even more
-vigorously than before.</p>
-
-<p>“Some minutes later I again stopped. ‘Heavens!’ I
-exclaimed. ‘Look at my lamp! It’s burning blue!
-What makes it do that?’</p>
-
-<p>“George paused—his pick shoulder high—and looked
-round. ‘Nonsense,’ he said savagely. ‘You are——’
-Then he left off and his jaws dropped. ‘It must be
-some chemical in it,’ he stammered. ‘Let the damned
-thing be; it’ll soon right itself.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘This is a strange place, George!’ I said slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why strange?’ George snapped.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, first of all there was my cap, then your coat,
-and now the lantern—all doing something queer. Have
-you ever known the likes of it before?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Often,’ George muttered. ‘Scores of times. Funny
-things is always happening below ground; you’ll get
-used to them in time.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And yet you look a bit scared.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do I?’ George grunted. ‘Well, I’m not. By ——,
-I’m not. You can’t always judge by looks, you know.’
-And, raising his pick, he attacked the coal furiously.</p>
-
-<p>“The afternoon was now waning. Outside, away on
-the top, where the only roof was the heavens, the sun had
-sunk to the level of the pine-trees, from whose straight
-and gently-swaying bodies the grotesque shadows of the
-night were beginning to steal. It is a peculiarity of the
-mines that, however deep down they may be, they yet
-feel the influence of time, and the departure of the
-sunlight from above creates an immediate increase in
-the gloom below.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“On this afternoon in particular I felt the change
-acutely. A darkness, that did not seem to be merely the
-darkness due to time, stole down the pit’s mouth and
-permeated adits, shafts, galleries—everywhere and
-everything.</p>
-
-<p>“My light was still burning blue, but beyond it, down
-in the great, gaping chasm, not ten feet from him, and
-away along the narrow, winding passage separating me
-from the rest of the gang, all was black—a denser black
-than I had conceived possible. I was staring around,
-too fascinated to go on with my work, when something
-icy cold gripped my fingers, and, looking down, I saw
-a big, white hand lying on the top of mine. I gave
-a yell and dropped my shovel—whereupon the hand
-vanished.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What’s the matter now, curse you!’ George said
-angrily. ‘If you keep on hindering me like this, I’ll tell
-the overseer. See if I don’t.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘The place is haunted,’ I gasped. ‘A hand caught
-hold of mine just now.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A hand! Rot. What next?’ And George forced
-a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m certain it was a hand,’ I said, ‘and it had a
-ring on like my brother Dick’s.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You’ve got Dick on the brain, which is only natural,
-seeing that you was fond of him, and he only just dead.
-In a few days’ time you will get over it and laugh at
-your present fears. There’s no hands here but yours and
-mine, lad!’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Aren’t there?’ I said quietly. ‘Then what is that
-just below yours on the pick.’</p>
-
-<p>“George looked down. Instead of two hands—his
-own two hands—on the pick, there were three, and the
-third was white and luminous. With a shriek, George
-dropped the pick, and sprang away from it, as if it had
-been a serpent.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill7"></a>
-<img src="images/ill7.jpg" width="394" height="620" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“My God! There’s Dick! He’s just behind you”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“‘Do you believe me now?’ I remarked. ‘If that
-wasn’t Dick’s hand, I’ve never seen it. Besides, I could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-swear to his ring among a thousand. Have you noticed
-how dark it has been getting?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve noticed nothing,’ George muttered, picking up
-his tool. ‘It’s all your talk that has done it—you’ve
-upset my nerves.’ He raised his pick and began to work
-again, but his hands shook so much he struck his leg and
-dropped the implement with a cry of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s nothing,’ he growled, as I sprang to his side;
-‘only the skin grazed. But I reckon I’ll sit down a bit—I’m
-all of a tremble.’</p>
-
-<p>“He had moved nearer to the edge of the pit, and
-was about to sit down with his back towards it, when I
-cried, ‘My God! There’s Dick! He’s just behind you.
-He’s pointing at you, George. I see it all now! George,
-you devil—you murdered him!’</p>
-
-<p>“George looked round—and there, bending over him,
-was a tall figure, with a strangely white face. He threw
-out his hands to keep the figure off, and, as he did so, he
-slipped, and fell, with one loud yell of terror, into the pit.
-I heard him strike the side of the great abyss once—then
-thud—that was all!</p>
-
-<p>“Sick at heart, I reeled back to the safety of the
-niche where we had been working, and, as I did so, my
-eyes fell on the lamp—the flame was now white and
-normal.</p>
-
-<p>“A rescue party that went in search of George found
-him in a dying condition at the bottom of the shaft. The
-fact that he was not killed outright was due to his having
-fallen in a foot or two of mud and water, which had
-somewhat broken the force of the concussion. He was
-fatally injured, but he lingered just long enough to
-confess that he, and he only, was to blame for the recent
-disaster. He had had a violent quarrel with Dick, whom
-he had hated, and, when Dick’s back was turned, he had
-struck him over the head with his pick and killed him.
-Seized with horror, he then dragged Dick’s body into
-the passage, and, in order to minimise the risk of discovery,
-had saturated it with paraffin and set fire to it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-He had had just time enough to reach the ladder leading
-up from the shaft, and climb up it, before the explosion
-had taken place.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>The Welsh miners are at times magnanimous, and on
-this occasion they agreed to keep George’s crime a
-secret. To give publicity to the affair, they argued,
-would not give them back the relatives they had lost,
-and would only do harm to the dead man’s widow and
-family, who were left almost penniless. Thus the matter
-ended, and to the outside world the cause of the explosion
-remained, as before, a mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, it may be said of this case that it has no
-great value from the evidental point of view, no one
-having witnessed the ghostly happening but Morgan
-and the man who was subsequently killed. This may be.
-At the same time much depends upon the character of a
-witness, and the evidence of one man, who is reliable, is
-surely worth more than the evidence of several men who
-are not reliable.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan told his story in a simple, straightforward
-manner, and I believed him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_13"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="subt">THE POOL IN WALES THAT LURES PEOPLE TO DEATH</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">I think</span> there is very little doubt that two of the mediums
-through which the occult forces “get at” humanity are
-colour and locality. Red, for example, being the colour
-of blood, is made the medium for instilling thoughts of
-murder; green, in a similar manner, is used to suggest
-suicide by drowning; yellow suggests madness; pink—vice
-of the most alluring and attractive nature; and so
-on, until, by a careful study of human crimes in their
-relation to colour, one might tabulate a complete list.</p>
-
-<p>And so with localities. Certain spots attract certain
-types of spirits, and these, in turn, suggest certain
-thoughts, some beautiful and some the reverse.</p>
-
-<p>I was still in North Wales, when, a week or so before
-the expiration of the tour, I did a day’s tramping on the
-hills, and, being caught in a heavy rain-storm, I had to
-take shelter under one of those low stone walls with
-which the whole country-side is intersected. The afternoon
-was drawing to a close, and the fading light made
-me a bit anxious as to how I should find my way back
-to my lodgings. As I was crouching there, praying to
-heaven that the storm would soon cease, so that I could
-continue my way, I suddenly heard a loud cry, as of
-someone in distress, and, on its being repeated, I scrambled
-up and hastened in the direction of the sounds.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-About a hundred yards further on there was a break in
-the wall, and I caught the glimmer of water. It was one
-of those roadside pools, not uncommon in Wales, and
-usually of great depth. As I drew nearer, I saw it was
-fringed on the far side by a cluster of tall pines, that
-creaked and groaned dismally as the strong west wind
-drove volumes of water through their bowed branches.</p>
-
-<p>I was noticing all this, when the form of a man in a
-mackintosh rose from the gorze close by my side, and,
-thrusting his head forward so that I could not see his
-face, walked with great swinging strides towards the
-pool. I thought this rather queer, but I thought it still
-queerer when the cries I had heard before broke out
-again with increased violence, unmistakably this time
-from the trees, and the man, breaking into a run, rushed
-up to the margin of the pool, where he abruptly disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>I was close behind him at the time, and am positive
-he did not enter the water. His whole body seemed to
-melt away as he stood on the bank. What became of
-him I could not say, I only know he vanished. The
-incident so unnerved me that it was only with a considerable
-effort of mind I went on. I threaded my way
-through the trees, and looked everywhere, but there
-was no one about and nothing whatever, as far as I
-could see, to account for the sounds. I looked at the
-water: it was inky black, and there was something
-sinister about it, something that strangely suggested to
-me, that away down in its cold, still depths was life—some
-peculiar, venomous, repellant living thing that
-was watching me, and longing to entwine its arms round
-me, and drag me ruthlessly down. I was appalled.
-The apparent loneliness of the spot was frightful, and,
-as I tore myself away and renewed my journey home, I
-fancied I heard laughter—laughter in which all the trees
-seemed to join in chorus. On arriving at my rooms, I
-enquired about the pool, and my landlady informed me
-it bore a very evil reputation. Several people had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-found drowned there, and no one would go near it after
-dark. This stimulated me to make further enquiries. I
-came across one or two men who testified to having
-heard cries there, and one old woman, who declared she
-had seen a curious figure, half human and half animal,
-vanish in the pine trees; but I could get nothing in the
-way of details for some months, not until I had returned
-to London, when, quite by chance and under rather
-extraordinary circumstances, I was introduced to a man,
-long since dead, who many years before had had a
-somewhat harrowing experience there. The gist of what
-he narrated to me was as <span class="nobreak">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“Philip Delaney was a member of the London Stock
-Exchange, and at nine-thirty one August evening was
-sitting before the empty grate in his study, smoking.
-Though not naturally a pessimist, his thoughts were at
-that moment excessively gloomy; business during the
-past few years had been steadily getting worse and
-worse, and it now seemed as if the day of general stagnation
-must be very near at hand. From an average of
-fifteen hundred a year his income had fallen to less than
-eight hundred. Consequently, he could not as usual take
-his holiday abroad; he could only just afford to send
-his wife and children to Hastings, where he might
-possibly be able to join them for week-ends. As a
-fitting accompaniment to his thoughts, the weather was
-vile, cold and wet—eternally wet. He could hear the
-raindrops beating against the glass, and falling on the
-window-sill with an incessant, wearying and worrying
-patter. He was too depressed to read, it was too early
-to sleep, he could only sit and think, everlastingly
-think. Indeed, he was deeply engaged in thought—thought
-in which two, and two and a half percentages
-were paramount—when, hearing someone cough, he
-turned sharply round. No one was there.</p>
-
-<p>“This was odd. He could have sworn the sound
-came from just behind him. With his eyes focussed on
-the door, he listened. The cough was repeated, footsteps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-accompanied it, and from out of the wall stepped
-the figure of a man. Philip Delaney gasped in astonishment.
-He recognised the figure at once. It was Markham
-Davidson, a very old friend of his, the author of
-several well-known works on Metaphysics and Psychology.
-There was nothing peculiar about him—features,
-complexion, expression, clothes, and walk were all
-perfectly natural. They belonged to the Markham
-Davidson he knew, but whom he had not seen for ages.
-And yet, how, if he were flesh and blood, had he passed
-through several inches of solid brick and mortar? How?
-Unquestionably he could not have done so, unless—well,
-unless he had suddenly acquired superphysical
-properties, and projected his immaterial body after
-the manner of one of the phantasms about which he
-was so fond of writing. Walking across the room
-with a quick tread, the figure displayed certain mannerisms—a
-forward poke of the head, a prematurely old
-stoop of the shoulders, and a bend of the arms—unmistakably
-those of Davidson. Delaney noted, too,
-that Markham looked remarkably well—his cheeks
-were ruddy and full, his eyes were bright, his movements
-full of energy. In one hand he carried a stamped
-envelope, and in the other an umbrella, with which
-he tapped the ground vigorously as he walked. He
-moved in a straight line without looking to the right
-or left, and, stepping into the wall a few feet from
-the window, disappeared before Delaney could utter
-a sound.</p>
-
-<p>“As the whole occurrence had occupied so short a
-space of time—three or four seconds at the most—Delaney
-tried hard to persuade himself that the phenomena
-was an hallucination, but, try as he would, he
-could not bring himself to believe that what he had
-seen was entirely subjective. There on the wall was
-the very spot where the figure had emerged, and there,
-exactly opposite, the very spot through which it had
-vanished. No hallucination, he argued, could have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-been so vivid, nor could it have embraced so many
-graphic and minute details. Details! Yes, crowds
-of details. He remembered them all distinctly, especially
-the tie. There was a redness about it—a very peculiar
-redness he did not recollect seeing in any other tie.
-It impressed him greatly, and he could not eradicate it
-from his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“He noticed the envelope, too, not so much because
-it was addressed to P. Delaney, Esq., as because it
-was white, startlingly white, whilst the stamp was
-the same very pronounced red as the tie. Long after
-the figure had gone, Philip pondered over these idiosyncrasies,
-and the more he thought of them, the more
-perplexed he grew. What he had seen was, without
-doubt, the phantasm of Markham Davidson—of the
-living Markham Davidson, identical with his old friend,
-Markham Davidson, in all but the colour of the tie.
-Red, blood-red! What one earth could have possessed
-Davidson to wear such a colour! He pondered over
-this as deeply as though it had been one of the
-most weighty problems of the Stock Exchange, and
-when he went to bed that night and looked in his
-mirror, he saw, instead of his own tie, a blood-red
-one.</p>
-
-<p>“His dreams took disturbing forms. Three times
-following he saw Markham Davidson struggling for
-dear life in a dreary looking pool, situated by the
-side of a very lonely mountain road, and overshadowed
-by tall pines, that creaked and groaned like lost souls
-every time the wind smote them. With such perspicuity
-were the details in these dreams stamped
-on his mind, that each time he awoke he saw them
-again; there they were, everywhere he turned—the
-glimmering white road with the wide expanse of snow
-on one side and on the other the long line of low stone
-wall, beyond which lay darkness and the pool. Heavens!
-what a pool it was—inky black, unfathomably deep,
-and hideously suggestive of an antagonistic, insatiable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-something that lay crouching in its bosom, ever on the
-look-out for prey.</p>
-
-<p>“Delaney was fascinated. Although he realised
-that the very atmosphere of the place was intensely
-evil, that it had a wholly demoralising effect and contaminated
-everybody and everything that came near
-it, although absolutely he understood all this, yet he
-allowed himself to be drawn unresistingly towards
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“When he awoke from one vision of it, he craved
-heaven and hell to permit him to see another. And
-in this manner he passed the whole night.</p>
-
-<p>“On coming down to breakfast, the first thing that
-arrested his attention was an envelope—an envelope
-addressed to him in the well-known writing of Markham
-Davidson. He tore it open, and with breathless excitement
-read as follows:—‘Dear Phil,—It is a very
-long time since I heard from you.... An irresistible
-craze has just come over me to go to North Wales.
-Strange, because, as I daresay you remember, I have
-always detested Wales. Now, however, I am eaten
-up with a mad desire to go to Llanginney, an out-of-the-way
-spot somewhere near Cader Idris. I never
-heard of it till yesterday, when it suddenly attracted
-my attention as I was gazing at an atlas. Will you
-join me there for a day or two? I go to-morrow
-(Wednesday), and intend staying a week. It would
-be very pleasant once again to tramp the country-side
-with you....’</p>
-
-<p>“Delaney looked at the postmark; it was stamped
-11.30 p.m. Could Davidson have been on the way
-to the pillar-box, when he (Delaney) had seen his
-phantasm? If that were so, then, undoubtedly, it
-was a case of unconscious projection. Markham,
-whilst thinking of him (Delaney) in connection with
-the invitation to Llanginney, had unconsciously
-separated his immaterial from his material body and
-projected it. Delaney had read one or two works<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-on psychic phenomena, and understood from them
-that spirit projection was not only quite feasible but
-far from uncommon. However, he could not accept
-Davidson’s invitation. He had not the money. Go
-to Llanginney, indeed! Why, Davidson might as
-well have asked him to travel to Petrograd. And
-yet—the pool, that white road, those shaking pine-trees,
-that lurking invisible something. Could he
-resist? For a solid hour he battled with himself,
-battled till the sweat rose to his brow and poured
-down his throat and chest. Then he decided. To
-join Davidson was utterly out of the question. He
-had neither the time, money, nor inclination. Like
-the majority of writers, Davidson was a creature of
-impulse—erratic and irresponsible. He, Philip Delaney,
-was different. He was a materialist, wholly practical
-and level-headed. He never acted on the spur of the
-moment, never chased wild geese. In a very superior
-frame of mind he sat down and wrote to Davidson,
-expressing his extreme regret at not being able to accept
-his invitation. Then he got up, breathed a sigh of
-relief, and, clapping on his hat, went off to business.</p>
-
-<p>“All that day, however, whilst he was brooding
-over figures in his office, and listening to the ceaseless
-babble at the ‘Change, his mind reverted to the pool.
-It was that black piece of water, always that water,
-and Davidson in his red tie, always that particular
-red tie, struggling in it. At last he could stand it no
-longer. He felt that even if he had to sell his wife,
-and house, and children, he must yield to this attraction—this
-damnable attraction—and go!</p>
-
-<p>“Darting out of his office, shortly after luncheon, he
-hurried to the railway station and took the first train
-home. In less than half an hour he had made all the
-necessary arrangements for a brief absence, packed
-his valise and secured a hansom. (All this happened
-long before the advent of taxis.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The train was an express to Chester, but the rest
-of the journey was slow, and it was nine o’clock before
-he found himself on the single platform of Llangelly,
-the nearest station to Llanginney.</p>
-
-<p>“Delaney enquired as to how he was to reach his
-destination, and was informed by the solitary porter
-that, if he wished to get there, he must walk.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There ain’t no vehicles for hire in this part of
-the country,’ the porter said. ‘Everyone that comes
-here has to use their feet. You can’t mistake the road.
-You’ve only to keep straight on—and you are bound to
-arrive there.’</p>
-
-<p>“Delaney smiled grimly. He felt as little like walking
-as he had ever done in his life, and, besides his gladstone,
-he had a raincoat and umbrella.</p>
-
-<p>“Fortunately the night was fine, and ere he had
-covered his first half-mile, the moon broke out from
-behind a cloud and illuminated the entire landscape.
-For the next mile or two the road was fairly flat, and
-then it gradually began to rise, the scenery becoming
-wilder and wilder. Every now and then he paused,
-and, throwing back his head, drank in deep breaths of
-the heather-scented air. Delicious! What a change
-from London! He calculated he must have done
-about three-quarters of the distance, when he arrived
-at a turning—the entrance to a lane—a lane that at
-once made him shudder. He paused opposite the
-turning, and tried to find some explanation for his
-fear.</p>
-
-<p>“It was certainly very lonely, and the white patches
-of moonlight on the footpath and hedgerows suggested
-much; but, after all, it was only suggestion—suggestion
-which a few sunbeams would at once dissipate.
-He was standing within the shadow of a clump of
-firs facing the lane, and looking intently ahead of him,
-when, at a distance of some fifty or so yards, the figure
-of a man in a mackintosh slowly emerged from a gap in
-the hedge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The man merely glanced in Delaney’s direction,
-and then, turning round, moved on down the lane.
-But the glimpse, momentary though it had been,
-was sufficient to enable Delaney to identify the person.
-It was Davidson; he knew him at once by his mannerisms,
-and he instinctively felt he had on that tie—that
-flagrantly vulgar, blood-red tie. In an instant
-he formed a resolution. He would give his friend
-a surprise. With this intention in view he dropped
-his valise, and, stepping noiselessly forward, he followed
-Davidson. On and on they went, the one keeping
-fifty or so yards behind the other, till there came a
-sudden bend in the lane, and then Delaney received
-a shock. Spread out before him, exactly as he had
-seen it in his dreams, was the panorama of the white
-glimmering road with the wide, wild expanse of moorland
-on one side, and on the other the long line of
-wall, and—the pool. Nothing could have been more
-like, and it was intensified by the brilliancy of the
-moonbeams. Crouching in the heather, Delaney watched
-Davidson slowly walk up to the edge of the water,
-fold his arms, and gaze in a reflective manner into
-the shadowy depths. The moments flew by, and
-still he gazed. Then there came a brief, distracting
-interval, during which the moon disappeared behind
-a bank of black, funereal clouds. When it emerged,
-the figure of Davidson had vanished, and Delaney
-occupied the spot where he had stood.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The pool, the greedy, insatiable pool!’ he muttered.
-‘Dark, deep and devilish. The three D’s.
-I might even add a fourth—damnable!’ And turning
-round with a chuckle, he was preparing to go, when
-someone vaulted the stone wall to his left and rapidly
-approached him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You don’t mean to say you are still pottering
-about here,’ the stranger, a man about Delaney’s
-own height and build, panted. ‘I thought you had
-returned to the inn long ago.’ Then, perceiving his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-mistake, he said in amazement, ‘Why, it’s someone
-else! I beg your pardon, sir; I quite thought you
-were an acquaintance of mine.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Davidson, by any chance?’ Delaney asked
-pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, Markham Davidson,’ the stranger said in
-astonishment. ‘Do you know him, too?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am his old friend,’ Delaney laughed, ‘and I am
-on my way to join him at Llanginney. I merely stopped
-here to look at the pool.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘The pool,’ the stranger ejaculated, eyeing him
-curiously. ‘It is not the pleasantest place in the world,
-is it?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ Delaney replied, ‘but it has its fascination.
-Where did you leave Davidson?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘At the entrance to this lane half an hour ago,’
-the stranger answered, scanning the dark surface of the
-water anxiously. ‘I wanted to get as far as the brow
-of the hill over yonder, but, as Davidson complained of
-feeling tired, I set out alone. He said he would follow
-me slowly and wait for me somewhere about here.
-Did you by any chance hear a cry?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A cry!’ Delaney exclaimed. ‘A cry? No.
-Did you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I thought I did,’ the stranger said, moving away
-from the edge of the water; ‘that is why I hurried
-here. Perhaps he is somewhere about. Supposing we
-call.’</p>
-
-<p>“They shouted till they were hoarse, and the great
-hills opposite hurled back the echoes of their voices, but
-there was no other reply. Not a sign of Davidson.
-At last the stranger touched Delaney on the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come,’ he said with a shiver, ‘the night air is
-cold. Davidson must have gone back to the inn, and
-unless we make haste we shall be locked out. They go
-to bed at eleven.’</p>
-
-<p>“Very reluctantly Delaney gave up the search,
-and the men were soon tramping along the road in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-silence—each apparently too pre-occupied with their
-own thoughts to speak. Occasionally Delaney glanced
-covertly at his companion, and whenever he did so,
-he surprised the latter in the act of peeping cautiously
-at him. Eventually the lights of Llanginney hove in
-view, and several of the other visitors at the inn strolled
-out to meet them.</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, Davidson has not returned,’ was the reply to
-their enquiries. ‘We have seen nothing of him since
-you left. It’s not eleven yet, however; he has still
-half an hour, and on such a night as this it would be
-practically impossible to lose one’s way.’</p>
-
-<p>“Delaney engaged his bed, and half an hour later, as
-Davidson had not yet come back, he made his way
-to the landlord’s private parlour. On the threshold
-he met his recent companion.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who is he?’ he enquired of the landlord, directly
-the door was closed, and he heard the stranger’s footsteps
-echoing softly down the passage.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who is he?’ the landlord sleepily exclaimed.
-‘Why, Mr. Hartney, a London lawyer. Quite a well-known
-man in town, so I’m told. No, he has never
-been here before, and as far as I’m aware he had never
-met Mr. Davidson till to-day. Will I send someone to
-look for Mr. Davidson? Why, that is what Mr. Hartney
-has just asked me! No, sir, I have no one to send,’
-and he spoke somewhat testily. ‘Some of my men
-have gone—those who sleep out, and the rest are in
-bed. I shall leave the door open. We aren’t afraid
-of burglars in this part of the country. No, as I told
-Mr. Hartney, there is no fear of the gentleman being
-lost—he has gone a little further than he intended,
-that is all.’ And the landlord yawned so emphatically
-that Delaney beat a hasty retreat.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m going to bed,’ he said, as he passed Hartney
-in the hall. ‘The landlord assures me there is no fear
-of any harm having befallen Davidson, and that he is
-sure to turn up all right.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Do you think so?’ the lawyer queried.</p>
-
-<p>“Delaney nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I know Davidson,’ he said; ‘I have known him
-since boyhood. He is the least likely person in the
-world to meet with mishap.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am glad to hear you say so,’ Mr. Hartney responded.
-‘Very glad. I fancied somehow—but there, it
-must have only been fancy. Being intimately acquainted
-with Mr. Davidson, you would of course know his voice,
-and had he really called out, you would certainly have
-heard him. It is doubtless a mere fancy on my part.
-Good-night!’</p>
-
-<p>“As Delaney wearily climbed the staircase and
-peeped through the bannister, his eyes encountered
-those of the lawyer steadily following him. Dog-tired,
-he lost no time in undressing, but when he got into bed
-he found sleep would not come to him. He lay first
-on one side and then on the other, he tried not to think,
-he resorted to every possible device, but it was all of
-no avail. It was the pool, always the pool, the pool
-and the blood-red tie. He kept seeing them before him,
-and they continually bade him get out of bed and
-come to them. At last, unable to resist them any
-longer, he got up, and after slipping on his clothes,
-stole noiselessly out into the still and narrow country
-road.</p>
-
-<p>“When he had gone a few yards, he thought he
-heard a door shut behind him, but, on turning round
-and perceiving no one, he attributed it to fancy and
-went ahead at a brisk pace. At last, to his relief,
-the pool came in view. There it was, just as he had
-seen it, moon-kissed and silent, with the huge firs
-shaking their heads ominously on the far side of it, and
-the long line of glittering white wall casting its black
-shadow on the grass and gorse, running away from it,
-in an apparently interminable line, on the side nearest
-him. It was a sight he knew he would never forget
-as long as he lived.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Approaching the brink of the pool, he walked
-slowly round it, peering anxiously into the water.
-Suddenly he gave a start. Something white abruptly
-bobbed to the surface. He looked closely at it, and
-fancied he discerned a face. He was about to attach
-a name to it, when he heard something behind him.
-Swinging sharply round, he confronted Hartney.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good heavens! You here!’ he exclaimed.
-‘Whatever brought you out at this time of night?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I might say the same to you,’ the lawyer replied.
-‘What brought you here?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Davidson,’ Delaney said. ‘Do you know, I can’t
-help associating him with this pool. It is damnably
-fascinating.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I can’t help associating him with that cry,’ Hartney
-remarked. ‘I am certain it was his voice! Good
-God! what’s that?’ And he pointed frantically at
-the white thing bobbing up and down in the water,
-just where the moonbeams fell thickest, and not half a
-dozen yards from where they stood.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where?’ Delaney said, pressing close to him
-in a great state of excitement. ‘Where? Ah! I see
-it now. It’s looking towards us. That—well, if you
-wish to know what it is——’ He left off abruptly.
-There was a wild scream, a heavy splash, and he continued
-his sentence. ‘That, Mr. Hartney, is the solution
-you seek to the mystery.’ And he went back to the
-inn alone, chuckling.</p>
-
-<p>“The sequel to this narrative comes as a surprise.
-Hartney was not drowned. Being a very powerful
-swimmer, and lightly clad, he got to the other side of
-the pool, and, clambering up the bank, he wrung the
-water from his clothes and ran all the way to the inn.
-On arriving there, to his intense astonishment, he found
-Davidson, safe and sound, and dressed in clothes two
-or three sizes too small for him. Davidson’s experience
-had been very similar to his own. Delaney had suddenly
-seized him round the waist and hurled him into the middle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-of the pool. There, he declared, he felt something like
-very big and icy cold hands trying to pull him down.
-He cried for help and prayed, and, as he prayed, the
-hands relaxed their grasp, and he managed to struggle
-safely to shore. The shock of what he had gone through,
-however, was so great that he felt too ill to get back to
-the inn, and he was compelled to rest awhile at a farm,
-where he obtained a hot bath and a suit of clothes.
-As Davidson knew Delaney’s wife and family, he begged
-Hartney, for their sake, to keep the affair as secret as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor, who was called in to examine Delaney,
-could not certify him as being actually insane. However,
-he strongly recommended him to go into a private
-home for a time, where he would be kept under constant
-supervision, and Delaney did as the doctor advised.
-But after being in the home about a month he escaped,
-and was eventually found drowned in the lonely pool
-near Llanginney.</p>
-
-<p>“From the description given me of Delaney, I am
-under the impression that the figure I saw in the mackintosh
-was his ghost. But what about the figure
-Hartney was positive he saw floating in the water?
-Was it the phantom of someone who had perished
-there, or had Davidson again unconsciously projected
-himself? I incline to the latter. This is the case in
-toto, and it was told to me by Hartney, who got all
-the details, apart from those he had himself experienced,
-direct from Davidson and Delaney.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_14"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<span class="subt">I GO ON WITH THE HISTORY OF MY LIFE, AND NARRATE
-A GHOSTLY HAPPENING IN LIVERPOOL</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">I gave</span> up acting directly I became engaged to be
-married. I had no alternative, as my fiancée’s parents
-strongly disapproved of the Stage, and so long as I
-was on it, they would, I knew, never consent to my
-union with their daughter. But it was rather a wrench,
-for I really liked acting, and, with the exception of
-the Sunday travelling, the life suited me well. What
-other occupation to choose was a poser. All the difficulties
-that had faced me on my return from the States
-once again presented themselves, and were aggravated
-by the fact that I was many years older. I was racking
-my brain to know what to do for the best, when I
-received a letter from an old friend in Cornwall, who
-suggested that I should go down there and open up a
-small Preparatory Boys’ School. It was Hobson’s
-choice, and in due course of time I found myself once
-again engaged in the profession I loathed. I started
-with four or five pupils, and had worked up my connection
-till I had nearly thirty, when someone, with more
-money than I, set up on a much bigger scale, and my
-numbers gradually decreased.</p>
-
-<p>I was never an orthodox pedagogue; very much
-the reverse. I aimed rather at making my pupils<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-manly than at cramming their heads with book work,
-and, I think, I succeeded. There were exceptions, of
-course, but my pupils as a whole developed a fondness
-for games, both cricket and football, that bore subsequent
-fruit when they left me and went on the public
-schools. The out-of-door occupation that formed part
-of my life now was delightful, but the dry and dull
-monotony of the schoolroom, and the eternal interference
-of certain of the parents of my pupils, who wanted
-everything for nothing, for my fees were ridiculously
-small, took it out of me so much, that I simply longed
-to throw up the whole thing and get back to my dearly-beloved
-stage or writing.</p>
-
-<p>It was while I was in Cornwall that I got my first
-book, “For Satan’s Sake,” taken. Mr. Ranger Gull,
-who was at that time reader for Mr. Arthur Greening’s
-publishing house, read the MS., and was so pleased
-with it, that he recommended it strongly for publication.
-It was accepted, but did not appear in print for fully
-a year.</p>
-
-<p>“The Unknown Depths,” which I had written in
-St. James’ Road, Brixton, followed; then “Jennie
-Barlowe,” which I wrote between school hours in
-Cornwall in the Spring of 1906; then “Dinevah the
-Beautiful,” the last of my efforts in Brixton. The latter
-appeared in 1907.</p>
-
-<p>In the winter of 1908 my wife was ill, and in the
-evenings, when my harassing duties in the schoolroom
-were over, I used to sit by her bedside evolving
-fresh plots. It was then that I first conceived the idea
-of writing a ghost book.</p>
-
-<p>In my holidays, which I usually spent in London or
-the Midlands, never in Cornwall—I always flew away
-from the precincts of the schoolroom the moment we
-broke up—I had often gone ghost-hunting, and I now
-determined to make use of my experiences. Consequently,
-I mapped out a synopsis of a work on haunted
-houses, which was at once accepted by Mr. Eveleigh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-Nash, who commissioned me to write a book on those
-lines. I did this in the Summer of 1908, and the book,
-which appeared in the Autumn of that year and was
-entitled “Some Haunted Houses of England and
-Wales,” created something of a sensation. It was not
-only extensively reviewed by the London papers, but
-by many of the American and Colonial ones as well.
-From that time onward my pen has rarely been idle,
-and, apart from compiling some dozen or so works on
-the Superphysical, I have written innumerable short
-stories and articles. Indeed, so associated has my
-name become with everything appertaining to the
-psychic, that publishers are inclined to the idea that
-I cannot write upon any other subject. In this, however,
-I venture to think they are mistaken; for my
-two works, “The Reminiscences of Mrs. E.&nbsp;M. Ward”
-and “The Irish Abroad,” both published by Sir Isaac
-Pitman &amp; Co., have been very favourably received by
-both the Press and public.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, the success of this first work of
-mine on ghostly phenomena that made me realise that
-what I had long hoped for had at last come within
-measurable distance of attainment. I could give up
-teaching and devote my time once again, wholly and
-solely to writing. Never shall I forget with what joy—with
-what unbounded and infinite joy—I hailed the
-prospect of leaving for ever behind me all those weary,
-dreary hours in the schoolroom, where I had been
-forced to display a patience I never had, and where I
-had been forced to assume a virtue I never really
-possessed, namely, a love of teaching.</p>
-
-<p>I made public my intention of giving up the school
-in the summer of 1908, and the following winter saw
-me snugly ensconced in a little house in Upper Norwood,
-where I have been ever since.</p>
-
-<p>Several writers, one of whom I had the pleasure of
-meeting in London quite recently (his brilliant character
-studies of young and charming girls figure monthly in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-certain of the popular magazines), have been credited
-with introducing to the public, none too favourably,
-this Cornish Colony amongst whom I lived. If they
-have done so, I can certainly endorse their sentiments.
-In no other town that I have been in have I ever met
-people who laid themselves open to such unfavourable
-criticism. I lived there nearly eight years, and during
-that time I received the bare minimum of hospitality.
-I found the greater number of the inhabitants bigoted
-and pharisaical and the townfolk and labouring people
-not only extremely ignorant, but very unforgiving and
-vindictive. That they were still—that is to say, at
-the time I am writing of—in a tribal state was proved
-by their puerile attitude of hostility to strangers,
-whom they used frequently to insult and annoy. I
-signed two petitions relative to the throwing of stones
-at visitors, which petitions were forwarded to the
-Home Secretary. The result was nil. The local
-authorities, in dealing with such cases, displayed the
-most woeful apathy, and apparently this state of affairs
-was irremediable, since the magistrates, with few exceptions,
-were related to half the people in the town.</p>
-
-<p>With the Art Colony I had very little to do. The
-few artists I knew at all intimately I liked. I found
-them congenial and generally sympathetic, though
-displaying an avidity in criticising authors, which,
-considering their touchiness with regard to any criticism
-of their own work, was distinctly amusing; all the
-same, apart from this and one other harmless peculiarity,
-namely, an exaggerated and unblushing deference to
-titles, I found them very good fellows, and nearly all
-the hospitality I received in the town I received from
-them.</p>
-
-<p>I think I am right in saying there was never a very
-friendly feeling between the townspeople and the
-artists. The townspeople looked upon the artists as
-intruders, “foreigners,” whose ways and habits were
-diametrically opposite to theirs, especially with regard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-to the treatment of the Sabbath; whilst the artists
-showed a none too well concealed contempt for the
-townspeople, whom they seemed to regard not only as
-hopelessly inartistic, but of an utterly inferior breed.</p>
-
-<p>In most small towns there is a good deal of unkind
-gossip and scandal, but I really think that in this
-respect the town I refer to was unrivalled. It seemed
-to me that the people were never so happy as when
-saying malicious things about each other, and they
-meanly victimised those whose limited means would
-not permit of their taking legal action against them.</p>
-
-<p>I have often wondered what made these people so
-peculiarly unkind.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as I had settled down in Norwood, I wrote
-“Ghostly Phenomena,” which was reviewed at length
-by Andrew Lang in the “Morning Post.” About that
-time I had the great pleasure of meeting Mrs. E.&nbsp;M.
-Ward. The rencontre happened thus. The Misses
-Enid and Beatrice Ward, Mrs. Ward’s youngest daughters,
-were getting up some theatricals, and, being short
-of a man, asked a lady, with whom I was acquainted,
-if she knew of anyone who would help them out of
-the difficulty. She wrote to me, with the result that
-I took part in the play, and thus had the good fortune
-to meet the Wards, with whom, I am happy to say, I
-have kept in touch ever since.</p>
-
-<p>A year or so afterwards I edited Mrs. Ward’s reminiscences,
-which was, almost without exception, well
-received by the Press. Some papers, “Vanity Fair”
-and the “Weekly Graphic,” for instance—the “Graphic”
-has always been very kind and fair to me,—giving the
-book several lengthy and highly eulogistic notices.
-Mrs. Ward is a believer in ghosts, and in her reminiscences
-there is a very interesting first-hand experience
-of hers with the Superphysical. Mrs. Ward’s children,
-apart from the fact that they inherit talent from their
-mother and father, and grandfather, their great-grandfather,
-James Ward, R.A., and their great-great-uncle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-George Morland, R.A., are very interesting in themselves
-and possess exceptional personal attractions.</p>
-
-<p>A year after I first visited their house, I was commissioned
-by the Editor of “The Weekly Despatch,”
-Mr. Beuley, to write a series of ghostly experiences for
-that paper. In order to do this I made pilgrimages to
-all parts of the country, and in my zeal to find ghosts
-occasionally encountered objects of a very different
-nature. On one occasion, in Brighton, I had taken
-advantage of a slightly open window to enter a tiny
-house I had been told was very badly haunted. It was
-a very dark night, and being unable to find my matches,
-I had to grope my way about. I was in a room with
-apparently never ending walls—they seemed to go
-round and round without any outlet at all. At last,
-however, I managed to discover a doorway, and, passing
-through it, I felt my way to a staircase, which I climbed
-up, till I came to what I judged to be a landing. There
-all further speculations were brought to an abrupt
-end by my suddenly falling over some large, soft object
-on the floor. In an instant, there was a loud yell, and
-I found myself rolling over and over clawing and
-clutching at some foul and unsavoury mass, that seemed
-to have fastened itself on to me with the intention of
-first probing out my eyes, and then throttling me. The
-small flask of whiskey that I happened to have on me
-undoubtedly saved me from total annihilation. The
-moment the claw-like hands touched the flask, I was
-free.</p>
-
-<p>I staggered to my feet, searched again, and, this
-time, fortunately found the match-box and struck a
-light.</p>
-
-<p>Crouching on the floor in front of me was a long,
-thin, scraggy creature with an absolutely bloodless face
-and two big, round, protruding black eyes. Its hair
-was matted like a mop and tossed about anywhere;
-its clothes, or rather rags, were buttonless, and only
-held together, here and there, by pieces of filthy string.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-A more disgusting, and at the same time pitiable,
-spectacle could not be imagined.</p>
-
-<p>It was fortunate for me that I had had previous
-experience of such sights in the parks and commons of
-London, otherwise I should have been terrified out of
-my wits. As it was, I only just managed to pull myself
-together, and realising that what I saw before me was
-not a ghost, but a material and now, as far as I was
-concerned, harmless being, I spoke to it.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I said, “at any rate you seem to like my
-whiskey. How long have you been here?”</p>
-
-<p>The flask was gradually lowered, and a voice, which
-I decided was that of a woman—for up to the present I
-hadn’t been able to decipher its sex—gurgled, “I sleep
-here every night. This is my house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then the enigma is solved,” I said. “You are the
-ghost!”</p>
-
-<p>“I soon shall be,” the creature replied, “for I’ve
-eaten nothing for more than two days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m afraid I cannot give you any more than
-this,” I said, “for it’s all I have with me.” And I
-handed her some biscuits and bread and cheese.</p>
-
-<p>Never shall I forget the savage joy with which she
-snatched the food from my hand and crammed it into
-her big, gaping, fleshless jaws. No animal in the Zoo
-was half so voracious. When she had finished it all, and
-drained the last drop of whiskey, she drew her lean
-and dirty, albeit well-shaped, fingers across her mouth,
-and cursed me.</p>
-
-<p>“Get you gone,” she snarled, “and leave me here.
-I tell you this is my house. I’ve as much right to it
-as you or anyone else. Get you gone, or I’ll spit at
-you.” And not wishing to be spat upon, I picked up
-my flask and departed.</p>
-
-<p>I encountered another ghost of this order three
-nights later in a house in Manchester. The house
-was furnished, but was untenanted, as the owner, a
-rich and eccentric old lady, believed it to be haunted.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-She wrote to me, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">àpropos</i> of my book, “Ghostly
-Phenomena,” and suggested I should try and exorcise
-the ghost. Now I do not altogether believe in exorcism.
-There are occasions upon which it has been practised
-with success, mostly in cases of haunting by phantasms
-of the sane dead, but there are also many cases, within
-my own experience, in which it has been practised with
-no result whatever.</p>
-
-<p>At all events, with my elastic views regarding denominational
-religion, I did not feel disposed to try it, and
-so I wrote and told her. She replied, “Come in any
-case, and give me your opinion as to the nature and
-cause of the phenomena.”</p>
-
-<p>I went. The house was in a quiet, sleepy thoroughfare,
-not three minutes walk from the Whalley Road. It
-was big and roomy, and would have been attractive
-but for the walls, the papers of which had obviously
-been chosen by someone who did not possess even the
-most elementary conception of what is pleasing in
-colour and design. As it was, my artistic susceptibilities
-were so grossly outraged, that I could well have imagined,
-the place haunted by neutrarians of the most undesirable
-order.</p>
-
-<p>I visited the house in the early evening, and the
-subdued light from the fast-fading sunshine, filtering
-through the drawn Venetian blinds, produced a singularly
-sad, and, at the same time, ghostly effect. I had come
-unaccompanied, for nothing on earth would persuade
-the old lady or any of her domestics to set a foot in the
-house, and as I wandered through room after room,
-the intense hush began at length to tell on my nerves.
-When I was on the staircase leading to the top storey,
-I fancied I heard a slight noise, and a sudden faintness
-coming over me, I had to clutch hold of the banisters
-to prevent myself falling. I went on, however, and
-opening a door at the top of the stairs, found myself
-in a large room communicating with two other rooms
-by means of doors, both of which stood slightly ajar.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-I had passed through the first, and was half across
-the floor of the second, when I suddenly felt one of
-my ankles caught hold of. The shock was so great
-that all the blood in my body seemed suddenly to dry
-up, and again I all but fainted. Forcing myself to
-look down, however, I perceived a skinny hand and
-arm protruding from under the dressing-table, and
-assured by the appearance of it that it belonged to
-nothing ghostly, I struck at it with my stick, kicking
-out vigorously at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>With terrible howlings there now crawled from under
-the table a long and lanky idiot boy. It transpired
-that he was the son of one of the old lady’s servants,
-and that he was enjoying a nice, comfortable home at
-her expense. His mother used to visit him every
-evening, and this evening he had hidden under the
-table with the intention of frightening her. Unfortunately
-for them both, however, he had frightened
-me instead. The servant, of course, lost her post,
-and the old lady, assured that there was no longer
-any fear of ghosts, came back to the house, and, at
-my suggestion, had all the walls re-papered.</p>
-
-<p>The following week I had another rather strange
-experience in Liverpool. I was getting dozens of letters
-weekly at that time, as the first of my series of ghost
-stories had appeared in the “Weekly Despatch,”
-and my fame as a spook hunter had spread far and
-wide in consequence. A lady in Liverpool wrote to
-me, saying that her daughter, Emily, was tormented
-by a man coming into her bedroom every night at
-the same time and walking off with her bedclothes.
-He said nothing, merely opened her door, and, approaching
-the bed on tip-toe, caught hold of the clothes and
-hurriedly retreated with them. Spirit lights, my correspondent
-added, were constantly seen in the room, and
-at times figures like angels, and she would be glad if I
-would visit the house, and discover for her, if possible,
-some explanation of the occurrences. The nature of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-manifestations being somewhat extraordinary, I thought
-it discreet to take a friend. The house was in a crescent,
-close to Clayton Square. We were shown into the
-drawing-room, where all the family were assembled,
-and we were at once regaled with detailed accounts of
-all that was alleged to happen. Then we were taken
-to the bedroom that was haunted, and the young lady
-whose bed the ghost stripped, at our request, sat there
-with us. As soon as the electric light was switched
-off, she began to see spirit lights. We saw nothing.
-No man appeared, and, on taking our departure, we
-both agreed that the phenomena were subjective, and
-that it was simply a case of hallucination. Accordingly,
-I advised her mother to consult a good general practitioner,
-as, in all probability, her daughter needed a
-tonic and change of air. I strongly warned her against
-consulting any professional Spiritualist.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I returned to London, and thought no more
-of the matter till the following Christmas, when, quite
-by chance, I ran against a young doctor, to whom I
-had mentioned the incident. Evidently eager to communicate
-something, he remarked, “You remember that
-Liverpool case you told me about—the case of the
-young lady whose bedclothes used to disappear, and
-which you thought was hallucination? Well, you
-were mistaken. Since I saw you, I have become acquainted
-with the doctor who attends her, and he
-told me that, whilst he was there one day, the bedroom
-door opened and in walked a young man. He says
-the girl immediately exclaimed, ‘Here is the man
-who haunts my room at night. For goodness sake,
-Doctor, do something!’ Whereupon, the man, muttering
-some words in German, abruptly left the room.
-My doctor friend immediately ran after him, but he
-was nowhere to be seen, and although the house was
-at once searched, no traces of him could be found.
-Now, what do you think of the case?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is certainly a very unusual one,” I replied,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-“and, as you say, this sequel quite upsets my theory
-of hallucination. It may be a case of projection.
-Someone who knows the girl and wishes to torment
-her is experimenting in visiting her in his immaterial
-ego. I have heard of similar cases.”</p>
-
-<p>“But she knows no one like him,” my friend responded.</p>
-
-<p>“Probably not,” I said. “The image she sees may
-be, and very likely is, merely an assumed one. Does
-she know any Indians, or anyone who is an earnest
-student of the occult? Find out if you can.”</p>
-
-<p>I have not yet heard from my friend, but I still incline
-to the idea that the ghost in this case was a phantasm
-of the living, rather than a phantasm of the dead.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_15"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<span class="subt">SOME STRANGE CASES IN BIRMINGHAM, HARROGATE,
-SUSSEX AND NEWCASTLE</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Whilst</span> I was still writing for “The Weekly Despatch,”
-I happened to visit an old friend of mine, a Captain
-Rupert Tennison, who was staying with an aged relative
-in the Hagley Road, Birmingham.</p>
-
-<p>“This is hardly the house you would expect to see
-a ghost in, is it?” he remarked to me after luncheon.
-“And yet I can assure you I had a very remarkable
-psychic experience here, in this very room. I’ve often
-wanted to tell you about it. It happened one New
-Year’s Eve three and a half years ago. My aunt had a
-nephew, on her husband’s side, called Jack Wilmot, and
-he and I used to meet here regularly at the commencement
-of every New Year. On this occasion, however,
-my aunt informed me that Wilmot was unable to
-be present, as he was detained in Mexico, where he
-had a very good post as a mining engineer.</p>
-
-<p>“I was much disappointed, for Wilmot and I were
-great pals, and the prospect of staying here alone
-with the old lady struck me as perfectly appalling.
-I resolved to make the best of it, however, for I was
-genuinely sorry for my aunt, whom I could see was
-quite as disappointed as I was. I arrived late in the
-afternoon of December 31st. We dined at seven, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-at nine my aunt went off to bed and left me in this
-room by myself.</p>
-
-<p>“For some time I read—no, not one of your books,
-O’Donnell—a Guy Maupassant; but the light being
-rather bad, and my eyes tired, for I had been travelling
-all the previous night, I was at last obliged to desist
-and devote myself entirely to a pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“The servants went to bed at about ten. I heard
-them tap respectfully at my aunt’s door on their way,
-and wish her good-night. After that the house was
-absolutely silent, so silent, indeed, that the hush began
-to get on my nerves, and I was contemplating retiring
-also, when heavy footsteps suddenly crossed the hall and
-the door of this room was flung wide open. I looked round
-in amazement. Standing on the threshold was Wilmot.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, Jack!’ I cried. ‘I am glad to see you,
-old fellow. Your aunt told me you could not come.
-How did you manage it?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Quite easily,’ he said in the light, careless manner
-which was one of his characteristics. ‘Where there’s a
-will, there’s a way, you know. I’ve taken French leave.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Taken French leave!’ I ejaculated. ‘Then there’ll
-be the deuce to pay when you get back. Anyhow,
-that’s your affair, not mine. You’ll have some supper?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No,’ he said; ‘I had a very good meal a short
-time ago, and I’m not the least bit hungry. We will
-chat instead.’</p>
-
-<p>“He pulled his chair up to the table, and, leaning
-his elbows on it, stared right into my face.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You don’t look very well, Jack,’ I said. ‘Maybe
-this strong light has something to do with it, but you
-are as pale as a sheet. Is it the voyage?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not altogether,’ he replied. ‘I’ve had a lot of
-trouble lately.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tell me,’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Won’t it bore you?’ he replied. ‘After all, why
-should I bother other people with my woes. Oh, all
-right, I will if you like.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Some months ago there came to the town where
-I am working a wealthy Spaniard and his wife. Their
-name was Hervada. He was a tall, lean, sour-faced
-old curmudgeon, and she one of the most beautiful
-young creatures you can imagine. You can guess what
-happened?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘You fell in love with her, of course,’ I cried.</p>
-
-<p>“‘From the moment I saw her,’ Jack replied.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You got introduced,’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Trust me,’ he laughed. ‘I found out where she
-lived, and the rest was so easy that before the end of
-the week I had dined with them, and also had had
-one clandestine meeting in the Park. At first her old
-villain of a husband suspected nothing. But it is
-infernally hard to keep up a pretence for long, when
-one is really madly consumed with passion. Eyes are
-sure indicators of what the heart feels, at least mine
-are, and when Hervada suddenly looked up and caught
-me gazing at his wife as if I could devour her, the cat
-was completely out of the bag. I give him credit for
-one thing, however: he took it very calmly. Despite
-his unprepossessing exterior he could at times be extremely
-courteous and dignified.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You will oblige me by settling this matter in
-the way customary to gentlemen in this country,’
-he said. ‘You must remember you are not in England
-now; you are in Mexico. Have you a revolver?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am never without one,’ I replied.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then,’ he observed, ignoring the intervention of
-his wife, whose apprehensions were only too plainly
-more on my account than on his, ‘we will step on to
-the verandah.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What!’ I said. ‘You don’t mean to say you
-actually fought a duel?’</p>
-
-<p>“Jack nodded. ‘Yes!’ he said. ‘We measured off
-twenty paces, and then, turning round, fired.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And you killed him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘That would be your natural surmise,’ was the reply.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-‘But you are mistaken. It was I who was killed.’</p>
-
-<p>“The moment he had said these words, he seemed
-to fade away, and before I could recover from my
-astonishment, he had completely disappeared, and I
-found myself staring not at him but the blank wall.
-And now comes the oddest part of it. I naturally
-expected to hear Jack was dead. I said nothing to my
-aunt, but I wrote off to his address at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Judge, then, of my relief when I received a letter
-from him by return of post to say he was absolutely
-fit and well, and getting on splendidly. That was in
-February. In the following August my aunt wrote to
-me saying a very tragic occurrence had taken place.
-Jack was dead. He had been found on the verandah
-of an hotel in Mexico shot through the heart. Though
-the identity of his murderer was generally suspected,
-there was no actual proof, and as the man was very
-rich and influential, it was thought quite useless to
-take up the case. Now what kind of superphysical
-phenomenon do you call that?” Captain Tennison
-concluded.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t exactly say,” I replied. “It is one of
-those strange prognostications of the future that happen
-more often on New Year’s Eve than on any other day
-of the year.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think the phantasm you saw was actually
-Wilmot’s spirit. I don’t see how it could have been.
-I think it was an impersonating neutrarian, one of that
-order of phantasms that have never inhabited any
-kind of material body, and whose special function is
-apparently to foretell the end of certain people, and
-certain people only.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>When I had finished my articles for “The Weekly
-Despatch,” which I was writing in alternation with
-“The Reminiscences of Mrs. E.&nbsp;M. Ward,” I took a
-brief holiday, visiting for the first time Matlock and
-Harrogate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Learning that there was an alleged haunted house
-in the latter town, I sought, and managed to obtain,
-permission to spend a night in it. It was a modern
-edifice of a great height, situated about ten minutes
-walk from St. James’ Hall.</p>
-
-<p>I went there alone, and, on entering the premises,
-encountered an almost death-like air of stillness, which
-contrasted oddly with the world outside, where all was
-life and gaiety. But a moment before I had mixed
-with the streams of ultra-fashionable people heading
-for the Spa Concert, the Theatre, and the Valley Park,
-and, so free had they seemed from all trouble and
-responsibility—so full of sparkling, spontaneous fun
-and flippancy—and above all, so full of the flamboyant
-spirit of sheer life, that one could not help feeling, as
-one looked at them, that after all there could be no
-such thing as death for them—that such pronounced
-vitality must go on for ever.</p>
-
-<p>But this house—this forsaken house, void of furniture,
-of everything, save the soft summer evening sunlight,
-the shadows, and my presence—how different! Wandering
-from room to room, and floor to floor, I at length
-completed my preliminary search, and being somewhat
-tired, I sat down on the floor of the hall, and, taking a
-newspaper from my pocket, started reading. As the
-hours passed by and darkness came on, I began to
-be afraid. No amount of experience in ghost hunting
-will ever enable me to overcome that awful, hideous
-fear that seizes me when I see the last glimmer of
-daylight fade, and I realise I am about to be brought
-into contact with the superphysical, and that I must
-face it—alone.</p>
-
-<p>Noises in empty houses I have noticed usually commence
-in the basement, and I was not at all surprised
-when presently I heard a faint tapping proceeding
-from one of the kitchens. This was followed by a long
-spell of silence, and then one of the stairs creaked.
-My heart gave a big thump, and I gazed expectantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-into the darkness before me, but there was nothing to
-be seen. Silence again, and then more tapping, and
-more creaking. Something then tickled my hand,
-and a moment later my fingers touched a blackbeetle.
-In an instant I was on my feet, for I dread beetles
-more than I dread ghosts, and, on my striking a light,
-I found the whole floor swarming. I wondered very
-much at this, because beetles do not as a rule frequent
-houses that have been empty for any length of time,
-especially in a climate like that of Harrogate. I have
-since, however, arrived at the conclusion that where
-there are hauntings, there are, more often than not,
-plagues of beetles, but whether attracted by the ghost,
-or not, I cannot say.</p>
-
-<p>As I could no longer tolerate the idea of remaining
-in the hall in the dark, I lighted four candles, and,
-placing them on the floor, sat in the midst of them.</p>
-
-<p>It was only eleven o’clock by my watch, and the
-idea of keeping up my vigil till the morning did not
-strike me as particularly pleasant. I took up my paper
-and again began to read. Half an hour or so passed,
-and then I received a start. A door opened and shut
-downstairs, and bare footsteps pattered their way along
-the stone passage and up the wooden stairs.</p>
-
-<p>The nearer they drew, the more intolerable became
-my suspense. What should I see? A white-faced,
-glassy-eyed phantasm of the dead, or some blood-curdling,
-semi-human, semi-animal neutrarian. Which
-would it be? I confess I would have given all I possessed
-to be out in the road, but, as is usually the case with
-me when in the presence of the superphysical, I was
-quite powerless to speak or move. Then, to my unfeigned
-astonishment, instead of anything grotesque and
-awful, there appeared before me a little fair-haired girl,
-clad in a much-soiled pinafore and without either shoes
-or stockings.</p>
-
-<p>Though not actually crying, she appeared in great
-distress, and feeling around on all sides, as if anxiously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-searching for someone, she ran past me, and commenced
-to ascend the stairs. Picking up a candle, I followed
-her, and, as the patterings of her poor, chilled feet
-spread their echoes far and wide through the vast
-deserted house, I thought I had never experienced
-anything half so pathetic. On and on we went, the
-little thin legs leading the way, till we reached the top
-storey, when she ran into a room facing me, and slammed
-the door. I immediately followed, but the room was
-quite empty. There were no signs of the child; there
-was only a particularly vivid beam of moonlight, and
-a virile and overwhelming atmosphere of sadness.</p>
-
-<p>During the next few days I was told a story that fully
-accounted for the hauntings.</p>
-
-<p>It appears that about thirty years before my visit
-to the house a little girl had lived there with her father
-and step-mother. Her nurse, to whom she was very
-much attached, being summarily dismissed by her
-step-mother, she became ill, and very soon died, so it
-was rumoured, of a broken heart.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after her death the house was to let, and no
-tenant, I found out, has ever occupied it since for very
-long.</p>
-
-<p>I have often wished that I had spoken to the sad
-little spirit, but I was too fascinated by it, and too
-much engaged watching its movements, to think of
-anything else. And I have found that this same fascination
-and preoccupation have prevented me from trying
-to communicate with the ghost in nearly all the cases
-of haunting that I have ever investigated. On the few
-occasions that I have spoken to a phantasm, I have
-received no reply, no indication even that it has heard
-me.</p>
-
-<p>In a very famous haunted house in the West of
-England, during my investigations which were spread
-over a period of nine, not uninterruptedly consecutive,
-nights, manifestations took place twice, and on both
-occasions I stood up and spoke, but in neither case was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-there any response whatever. This same ghost had been
-subjected to exorcism by a well-known ecclesiast, but,
-far from being exorcised, the ghost so scared his exorciser
-that he all but fainted. These demonstrations were
-visual. In a haunted house that I was asked to visit
-in Sussex I saw nothing, but heard knockings, and by
-means of them tried, though without success, to establish
-a code. I heard of the case in this way.</p>
-
-<p>A young lady, whom I will call Miss Hemming, wrote
-to me. She and her mother occupied a modern and
-picturesquely situated house at the foot of the Downs,
-and were very frequently disturbed, she said, between
-nine and ten in the evening, by sounds, such as might
-be made with a muffled hammer, on the wall of her
-mother’s room. Simultaneously the figure of a young
-man moved noiselessly across the lawn, from the
-direction of a swing. He usually approached her window
-and came to a halt immediately beneath it. He had
-never replied when spoken to. She had fired at him
-several times, but the bullets had had no effect whatever.
-It seemed as if they had passed right through
-him, because he still stood there, whilst the gravel
-was splattered up immediately behind him. On one
-or two occasions he shone a bicycle lamp on his face,
-so that she could distinctly see his features. It was
-the face of no one she knew, though she fancied it bore
-a close resemblance to a notorious murderer, whose
-photos had been in the papers, and who had expiated
-his crime on the gallows. These were not the only
-manifestations. Stones had been repeatedly thrown at
-Mrs. Hemming, and, although the house was being
-closely watched by the police, the stone-throwing still
-went on, and so far the culprit had not even been seen,
-let alone caught.</p>
-
-<p>I visited the house once by myself, and once with a
-party of men. On the former occasion I hid in a little
-copse at the furthest extremity of the lawn, and watched
-the house and swing closely, but I neither heard nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-saw anything. Returning to the house, I was told by
-Miss Hemming that both she and her mother had
-heard the knockings, and that she herself had, at
-the same time, seen the figure on the lawn.</p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of my second visit, we all heard the
-knockings on the wall of Mrs. Hemming’s room, and
-one of us, who was looking out of her daughter’s window,
-saw what he fancied were two shadows of human beings
-cross the moonlit lawn and vanish in the direction of
-a hedge. Trickery was practically impossible, as the
-garden was protected on all sides by barbed wire, and
-there were on the premises four or five dogs, including
-a young bloodhound. We had of course made a thorough
-search of the house and grounds previously.</p>
-
-<p>One or two other incidents happened during the
-night. When I was in the hall alone, a light, as from a
-bicycle lamp, was suddenly shone in my face, apparently
-from a blank wall, and when we were all seated in
-front of the dining-room fire, we heard heavy footsteps
-cross the hall, and although we ran out at once we
-could see no one. We were shown the stones that were
-alleged to have been thrown, but none were thrown
-whilst we were there. They were a peculiar kind of
-flint, which certainly did not belong to the neighbourhood.
-Mrs. Hemming had several times narrowly
-escaped being hit by them, and one had crashed through
-the bedroom window as she was looking out of it.</p>
-
-<p>I did not continue my investigation of the case,
-because there were certain features in connection with
-it of a private and family nature, which greatly added
-to its complexity, and which would, of necessity, have
-rendered any attempt at solution incomplete and
-unsatisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>Cases of complex haunting, although, for obvious
-reasons, seldom admitting of any satisfactory explanation,
-always interest me the most. Here is one I chanced
-to hit upon in Newcastle.</p>
-
-<p>A house in —— Street had stood empty for seven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-or eight years, and on my making enquiries about it,
-I was told to apply to a Mr. Black, the last tenant.
-I did so, and Mr. Black very kindly gave me a detailed
-account of what had taken place there during his
-tenancy. It was as <span class="nobreak">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“A day or two after our arrival I happened to be
-going upstairs, and, as I passed by one of the bedrooms,
-the door of which was slightly open, I glanced
-in, and saw the figure of a lady, whom I had never
-seen before. She was dressed in green, and standing
-in front of the looking-glass, engaged apparently in
-putting on her hat. Wondering who on earth she
-could be, for I knew the room had not been slept in,
-I spoke to her, and receiving no reply, I was advancing
-towards her, when she suddenly disappeared. I did
-not know what to make of the affair, but, thinking
-that possibly it was an hallucination, I resolved to
-think no more of it, and to say nothing about it to any
-of my family or household.</p>
-
-<p>“Some days later, however, when out walking with
-my wife, I met a friend who asked me where I was
-living. I told him, and he exclaimed excitedly:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good gracious, not in that house! Why, my dear
-fellow——’ At a sign from me he stopped. I had guessed
-what was coming, and as my wife is extremely nervous I
-thought it best she should not hear what I knew he
-was going to say, namely, that the house was haunted.</p>
-
-<p>“That night I went round to see my friend. He
-made no bones about it; he told me that the house
-I had taken was haunted—that he knew it for a fact.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Some months ago,’ he said, ‘I was thinking of
-taking it myself, and, obtaining the key from the agent,
-went to look over it. It was quite light, not more than
-five o’clock in the afternoon, and the house seemed
-bright and cheerful. Closing the front door carefully
-behind me, I commenced a tour of the premises. I
-had reached the top floor, and was standing in the
-centre of one of the rooms, when I heard a slight noise.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-I started, and, turning round in the direction from
-which the sound came, perceived a lady and a little
-girl standing in the doorway watching me. There
-was nothing at all remarkable about them. The lady
-was dressed in green, the child in white, both modern,
-or at least comparatively modern, costumes. I was
-so surprised at their being there, however, as I knew
-I had shut the hall door, that I simply stood and stared
-at them. Then something much more extraordinary
-happened—they vanished. It was not an hallucination—that
-I can swear to—and thoroughly scared, I tore
-downstairs and out of the house. After this I gave
-up all idea of taking the place, and I can’t help feeling
-sorry, old fellow, that you’ve taken it.’</p>
-
-<p>“In spite of this warning,” Mr. Black continued,
-“I did not give up the house immediately. After we
-had been there a week or so, a cousin of mine came
-to stay with us; and one evening he and one of my
-children, who were in the drawing-room, together heard
-a soft, cautious whistle—as if someone were giving a
-signal, coming, they thought, from just behind them.
-The whistle was repeated, and a few minutes later
-they heard a loud cry, half human, half animal, and
-wholly ominous. My cousin pretended it was one of
-the servants, but my child would not be convinced,
-and begged to be taken to bed at once, as she dared
-not remain in the room any longer. After this, phenomena
-of all kinds happened; steps used to be heard
-bounding up and down the stairs at all hours of the
-night; one of the maids declared she saw something
-that was a man and yet not a man come out of the
-drawing-room with a run, and race up the staircase
-two or three steps at a time; heavy pantings and
-sighs were heard, and several of the household were
-awakened by a cold hand being laid upon their face.
-But I think the most remarkable thing that happened
-is this:—I was sitting in my study one evening, when
-the maid rapped at my door and said that a clergyman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-(whom she had shown into the drawing-room) wished
-to see me on some very urgent matter. I at once put
-down the book I was reading, and, hastening to the
-drawing-room, found it empty. Wondering what had
-become of the clergyman, I was about to ring the bell
-to enquire, when I suddenly caught sight of a large
-eye, human in shape and horribly sinister, glaring at me
-from behind an arm-chair. I was so frightened that
-I could do nothing but stare back at it, and then, to my
-intense relief, my wife entered the room with a friend,
-and the phenomenon disappeared.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><a id="ill8"></a>
-<img src="images/ill8.jpg" width="439" height="627" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-<p>“I suddenly caught sight of a large eye”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“And the parson?” I observed.</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard anything more of him,” Mr. Black
-remarked. “The maid assured me on her honour that
-she had shown him into the room, but no one saw him
-leave the house, so he, too, might have been a ghost;
-but supposing him to have been a living person, his
-disappearance would not be unnatural. He had doubtless
-seen the eye and precipitated himself into the street
-through the open window.</p>
-
-<p>“The following day, my children being badly frightened
-by something in one of the passages, I decided
-to leave the house; and, although I afterwards made
-every possible enquiry, I could never hear of anything
-particularly tragic that had ever happened there.
-We were the first tenants, so I was told, that had ever
-complained of disturbances, and it was suggested that
-we might have brought the ghosts with us, but as none
-of us had ever seen a ghost before we entered that
-house, and we had no old furniture, at least none that
-we had not always had, and not one of us had ever
-attended a séance or in any way dabbled with Spiritualism,
-I do not think that theory at all possible. How
-do you account for the hauntings?”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot,” I replied, “nor can anyone else. The
-sheer complexity of such a case renders any definite
-conclusion with regard to it extremely difficult, and
-any positive solution of it utterly out of the question.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_16"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<span class="subt">WAR GHOSTS</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Of</span> late years the increase of interest taken in things
-psychical, particularly among the more educated classes,
-the classes that were at one time incorrigibly sceptical,
-has been enormous. I believe this to be mainly due
-to the fact that people are no longer satisfied with
-the scriptural declaration of another world. They want
-proof of it—that is to say, absolutely authentic and
-corroborative evidence that it exists—and they feel that
-they can only obtain such evidence by witnessing
-superphysical manifestations themselves. Psychical
-Research Societies, perhaps, convince them even less
-than the Bible. And naturally, for the scientist, even
-though he be titled, can hardly hope to accomplish in
-one generation what theologians, of an equal if not
-superior intelligence, have attempted and failed to
-accomplish throughout the ages. Hence, I am of the
-opinion that one can learn more from one spontaneous
-ghostly manifestation in a haunted house than from a
-thousand lectures, or a thousand books. Experience
-is the only medium of conviction, and so long as people
-are without a personal experience relating to another
-world, they can never really believe. The boy in rags
-and tatters may be far more conversant with—may
-know far more about—a future life than the more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-learned Professor at the University. But no one can
-logically claim to be an absolute authority on the
-Unknown; the most any of us can do—even those of
-us who have actually seen and heard spirit manifestations—the
-rest do not count—is to speculate. When we
-attempt to do more, we label ourselves fools.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the professions, none, I believe, is more interested
-in this question of another world than the theatrical.
-I have a great many friends amongst actors and
-actresses, and I find them not only keenly interested
-in my work, but always ready—even when working
-hard themselves—to share my vigils in a haunted house.</p>
-
-<p>Only the other day, at a concert given by the Irish
-Literary Society in Hanover Square, I was introduced
-to Miss Odette Goimbault, who recently delighted
-London audiences by her impersonation of the child
-“Doris” in “On Trial” at the Lyric Theatre. Odette
-Goimbault is unquestionably pretty—but there is much
-in her looks besides mere prettiness. She has eyes
-that are extraordinarily spiritual, eyes that seem to
-look right into the soul of things and see things that
-are not generally seen by ordinary mortals.</p>
-
-<p>When a very small child, Odette Goimbault lived
-with her mother in a house at Thornton Heath. A lady
-died of consumption in the flat immediately beneath
-Mrs. Goimbault’s, and after the burial, Odette, though
-previously very fond of staying up late, used, every
-night, precisely at seven o’clock, to beg her mother
-to take her upstairs to bed, declaring, in a great state
-of terror and with tears in her eyes, that she saw an
-old man with only one leg standing in a corner of the
-room shaking his stick at her. When once she was
-taken out of the room her fears subsided.</p>
-
-<p>In my opinion she is an ideal young actress for the
-pourtrayal of soul, for the transmittal of a sense of
-soul to the audience, and I think there is no one, either
-on the stage or off it, who looks more in touch with
-the spiritual world than Odette Goimbault.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But stronger even than its hold upon the theatrical
-profession is the stand that psychism has taken with
-regard to the present war.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since the fighting began I have heard speculations
-raised as to whether our soldiers at the Front have
-been witnessing ghostly manifestations or not. So far,
-I must own that I have elicited very little reliable
-evidence on this point, but the circumstances have
-established at least one interesting fact, and that is,
-that to the man in the street the question of another
-world has at last become a matter of some importance.</p>
-
-<p>The wife of a very eminent official at the War Office
-told me a few weeks ago that officers who took part in
-the Dardanelles Expedition assured her that figures
-believed to be ghosts were on several occasions seen
-gliding over the ground after an engagement, especially
-where the dead bodies of the Turks lay thickest. The
-same lady also told me that when a certain regiment
-formed up after a brilliant charge, in which it had
-suffered very severe casualties, some of the gaps in the
-ranks were observed to be filled by shadowy forms—forms
-which disappeared the moment anyone attempted
-to touch them.</p>
-
-<p>Neither my informant nor any of the soldiers from
-the Front that I have met have been able to give me
-any information as to the alleged superphysical demonstrations
-in the sky during the retreat from Mons.
-But I should like to record here, in connection with the
-war, a case I heard in Paris. I published an account
-of it in the November, 1915, number of “The Occult
-Review,” and now reproduce it through the courtesy
-of Mr. Ralph Shirley:</p>
-
-<p>“The mention of Ferdinand of Bulgaria brings
-vividly back to my memory two stories I heard about
-him, when I was dining one evening in June, 1914, at
-the renowned Henriette’s Restaurant in Montparnasse.
-Two men were seated at a table close beside me, and I
-eventually got into conversation with them. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-informed me they were journalists, and that their
-names were Guilgaut and Bonivon respectively.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You would laugh, if you knew where I spent last
-night,’ I observed. ‘I was in an alleged haunted flat
-in Montrouge. I don’t suppose either of you believes
-in ghosts?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I do,’ Guilgaut said. ‘I have had more than one
-experience with an apparition in my life, and so has
-my friend.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ chimed in Bonivon, ‘we have good cause
-to remember ghosts, since we stayed six weeks in a
-haunted hotel in Bucharest, and never had such an
-infernally uncomfortable time either before or since.
-We never saw the ghost ourselves, but one of the other
-lodgers declared he did, and used to wake us every
-other night by the most unholy screams.’</p>
-
-<p>“They then talked a lot about their adventures
-in the Balkans, and finally alluded to Ferdinand of
-Bulgaria. ‘If ever a man is haunted, he is,’ Guilgaut
-remarked. ‘I believe he never leaves his room at night
-without the shadow of Stambuloff, whose death he
-brought about in 1895. It simply steps out from the
-wall and follows him.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘That is a lot of exaggeration,’ Bonivon said with
-a laugh. ‘But, quite seriously, we heard on very
-excellent authority that on more than one occasion a
-figure has been seen accompanying Ferdinand sometimes
-when dining and sometimes when walking, and
-that it has been recognised by the spectators as Stambuloff,
-the dead Minister. Once, we were told, Ferdinand
-visited a certain Princess, and it was remarked that
-Her Royal Highness appeared strangely embarrassed and
-perturbed. At last someone ventured to enquire of the
-lady-in-waiting, who also appeared to be greatly perturbed,
-what was the matter. “It’s that man,” was
-the whispered reply, “that man who persists in standing
-beside His Majesty. He never takes his eyes from our
-faces, and he looks just like a corpse.” Her interrogator<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-asked her to describe the figure, which he said was
-quite invisible to him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘She did so, and the description tallied exactly with
-that of Stambuloff.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tell him about Ferdinand and the fortune-teller,’
-Guilgaut said.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, that happened when we were staying close
-to his Kohary estates,’ Bonivon responded. ‘Ferdinand
-is notoriously sly and mean, and one day, as he was
-passing through the village where we were staying, he
-chanced to encounter a charming Hungarian maiden,
-who eked out a very precarious livelihood hawking
-ribbons and telling fortunes. Ferdinand had his hand
-read, and, thinking to trap the girl, disguised himself
-and went to her again the following evening. To his
-astonishment, although the make-up was skilful, for
-Ferdinand is a born actor in more senses than one, the
-girl recognised him at once as the gentleman who had
-been to her the previous evening. “I was expecting
-you,” she said. “Expecting me?” Ferdinand stammered.
-“How is that? I’ve told no one.” “Oh, fie!”
-the girl remonstrated, shaking her finger at him. “The
-gentleman who accompanied you last night came here
-himself an hour ago and told me you were coming.”
-“What was he like?” Ferdinand asked, shaking all
-over. “Like,” the girl retorted pertly. “Why, you
-know as well as I do,” and she rattled off a description
-of the man, which tallied exactly with that of the dead
-Stambuloff, whom, by-the-way, Guilgaut and I had
-seen many scores of times in the early eighties. “Your
-friend,” the girl continued, “left a message for you.
-He said—tell him when he comes that he will perish
-in very much the same manner as I have done; and he
-showed me his hand.” “And what did you see?”
-Ferdinand asked. “I saw the same ending to the
-life line in his hand as I see in yours,” the girl
-replied. “Why, there is your friend! He is beckoning
-to you. You had better go to him.” And, to her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-astonishment, Ferdinand walked off in the opposite
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We had the story first hand. She told it us two
-or three days afterwards, and expressed great anxiety
-as to the identity of the two men who had behaved so
-strangely to her.’”</p>
-
-<p>Only one case of haunting at the actual Front has
-been related to me. I will state it in my own words.</p>
-
-<p>It happened during the retreat from N——.</p>
-
-<p>The O——’s had suffered heavily, and, in the scramble
-to get out of the deadly fire zone, small parties of them,
-owing to the nature of the country, had got isolated
-from the main body and left behind. This was the case
-with a dozen or so men of B Company, who, after racing
-across a field amid a hail of shrapnel, had clambered
-over a formidable barrier of barbed wire into a dense wood.</p>
-
-<p>Under cover of a thick cluster of trees they sat down
-and doctored their wounds. There was not a sound
-man amongst them. Sergeant Mackay had been struck
-in three places in his right leg; Corporal MacIntyre
-had had a good square inch of flesh taken off his thigh;
-Private Findlay had lost three of his fingers; and
-Bugler Scott—an ear; while, in addition to these slight
-inconveniences, they were all ravenously hungry and
-parched with thirst.</p>
-
-<p>“I suggest,” said Sergeant Mackay, after a brief lull
-in their conversation, “that we push on again and see
-if we can find some sort of habitation where we can
-get a mouthful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, mon!” Corporal MacIntyre replied, for during
-such “sauve qui peuts” all formality of rank is dropped,
-“It’s the wee drappie I’m thinking after, and unless we
-get some of it pretty soon there’ll not be any of us left
-to need it. I’m bleeding like a pig, and so are a good
-many more of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then,” Sergeant Mackay observed, rising
-with difficulty, and wincing in spite of his efforts to
-appear comfortable. “Let us press on.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The men were all absolutely ignorant of their surroundings.
-They had seen nothing of the country save from
-the train, and during a few hours’ tramp from the
-railway depot to the lines they had just evacuated.
-Consequently, for all they knew to the contrary, the
-wood that lay in front of them might stretch for miles,
-or might be inhabited by anything from grizly bears
-to hyænas—for the knowledge of the British “Tommy”
-with regard to the fauna and flora of Belgium is extremely
-limited.</p>
-
-<p>Threading their way through the thick undergrowth,
-they stole stealthily forward, the roar of artillery still
-sounding faintly in their ears, till at length they emerged
-into a wide clearing, at the far extremity of which stood
-a neatly thatched white cottage. It was so home-like
-with its small plot of flower-bedecked garden, its walls
-covered with clematis and honeysuckle, and its tiny
-spiral column of smoke curling heavenwards, that the
-bleeding and exhausted men gave deep sighs of relief.</p>
-
-<p>“Reminds me of Scotland,” Private Findlay whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s as like my mother’s cottage as two peas,”
-Private Callum retorted.</p>
-
-<p>They halted, and were looking at Sergeant Mackay
-to see what he would do—for bold as the O——’s are in
-battle, they are often among the most bashful of His
-Majesty’s troops in time of peace—when suddenly the
-door of the cottage opened and an old woman appeared
-on the threshold, armed with a blunderbuss. Glaring
-fiercely and shouting, she put the weapon to her hip
-and fired. There was a loud bang, and one or two of
-the men uttered ejaculations of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“God save us!” Sergeant Mackay cried. “The gude
-wife takes us for Germans.” Then addressing the
-woman, who was pouring another handful of shot into
-the muzzle of her infernal piece of antiquity, he called
-out, “Are ye daft or glaikit? Dinna ken that we are
-Scots. Anglais.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was the only word of French the Highlander knew,
-and, on shouting it three times in rapid succession, and
-with increased emphasis, it had effect. The old woman
-lowered her weapon, and shading her eyes with a lean,
-brown, and knotted hand, exclaimed. “Ah, moi dieu,
-les Anglais! On me dit que les Anglais sont les amis des
-Belgiques. Et je vous aurai tué! Pardonnez-moi
-messieurs.”</p>
-
-<p>This speech was of course lost upon the Highlanders,
-who would have laughed—so comic was the picture of
-this old woman with the ancient gun—had they not
-been faint from exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p>Now, as she beckoned to them to approach, they
-doffed their caps and filed in at her gate, Sergeant
-Mackay leading the way.</p>
-
-<p>The interior of the house was as they had expected—scrupulously
-neat and clean.</p>
-
-<p>“Wipe your boots, boys,” Sergeant Mackay whispered.
-“We mustn’t put the old lady out more than we can help.”</p>
-
-<p>They all trooped in. As soon as they were seated the
-old woman vanished through a low doorway, reappearing
-a few seconds later laden with bread and cheese and wine,
-which she watched them eat and drink with perfect satisfaction,
-and when they had finished, conducted them to
-a loft at the back of the cottage, where she made them
-understand by signs they could lie as long as they pleased.</p>
-
-<p>“I kinna think,” Sergeant Mackay said, as soon as
-their hostess had retired, “where the Germans are. It’s
-passing strange they have not put in an appearance here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe they’ve gone by and missed this spot. It’s
-nae sae handy,” Private Findlay said. “Anyhow, I’m
-for sleeping—for it’s ten days since I shut my eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the same with me,” ejaculated Private McCallum.
-“I hae not slept a wink since we left Plymouth.”</p>
-
-<p>Apparently they were all of the same opinion—namely,
-that they needed rest; and, without further
-ado, every man selected a place in the hay, stretched
-himself out at full length, and was soon fast asleep.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-The afternoon wore away, the sun set, and one by one
-the stars made their appearance, but still the men slept.</p>
-
-<p>The gloom of the forest thickened, and with the long
-and waving shadows of the elms and beeches crept
-forth forms of a more tangible and sinister nature.
-Sergeant Mackay awoke with a start, and, springing to
-his feet, strained his ears and listened.</p>
-
-<p>“Nightmare!” he said. “I made certain the
-Germans had got hold of me. Weel, weel, it’s nowt but
-a dream. I will go and see what the gude wife is about,
-and, perhaps, if she hae not gone to bed, she will gie
-us some hot tea or milk—that red wine of hers hae
-made me uncommon thirsty.” He scrambled down
-on to the ground, and, leaving the rest of the men
-still asleep, crossed the yard and pushed open the
-door leading to the kitchen. He was about to
-enter, when there came a half-choking cry and the
-front of the house filled with soldiers. Sergeant Mackay
-knew them at once—they were Germans! Shrinking
-back into the shadow of the doorway he stood and
-listened. Though he could not understand their jargon,
-he soon formed an idea of what was taking place. They
-had caught the old woman by surprise and were discussing
-what they should do with her. Had the O——s
-been armed, Sergeant Mackay would not have hesitated—he
-would have staked anything on a win against
-odds at six to one, but in their hasty flight the men had
-left their rifles behind them, and it would be sheer
-suicide for them to attack the Germans with their bare
-fists. Therefore it at once entered his mind to slip out
-quietly and warn his comrades, so that they could
-escape without their presence being detected. A cry
-of pain, however, made him hesitate.</p>
-
-<p>Two Germans had hold of the old woman’s arms and
-were twisting them round.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty of his position was not lost on Sergeant
-Mackay. If he played the knight errant and helped the
-old woman, he would not be able to give his comrades<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-the necessary warning, and they would all be taken
-prisoners—perhaps shot. On the other hand this gude
-wife had been extremely kind to them, and was proving
-her loyalty by maintaining an absolute silence as to
-their presence in the cottage. Could he stand by and
-see her abused? He could not. There was too much
-of the Gael in him for that, and as the old woman gave
-another gurgle, he stepped out from his hiding place,
-and picking up a kitchen chair, rushed at her captors,
-both of whom he stunned. He was, of course, eventually
-borne down by numbers, and dragged to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we do with him?” one of the men who
-were holding him asked. “The dog! He has broken
-Fritz’s head, and more than half killed Hans. He has
-arms like a bullock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hang him,” the sergeant in charge of the men
-replied. “Tie him and the old woman together and
-hang them from this beam.” And he pointed to a
-great, white rafter running across the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant Mackay’s uniform should, of course, have
-protected him, but, then, as the German sergeant put
-it, this cottage was well hidden in the woods, the English
-were evacuating the country, and no one was likely to
-come across the bodies, saving Belgian peasants who
-dare not say anything, and German soldiers who would
-not say anything. So Sergeant Mackay was dragged
-up from the floor, beaten and bruised till there was very
-little of him left, bound tightly to the old gude wife, and
-hanged with her. The Germans then ransacked the
-house, and were preparing to explore the outer premises,
-when a bugle rang out, and they hurriedly left the
-cottage. Ten minutes later, when all was quiet, into
-the house, on tip-toe, stole the rest of the O——s.</p>
-
-<p>“God save us!” ejaculated Private Findlay, starting
-back and pointing to the grim figures swaying gently
-from the ceiling. “God save us! Sae what the deils
-hae done!”</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Halt!” The word of the Colonel, transmitted by
-his adjutant to the head of the column, brought the
-O——s to a dead stop.</p>
-
-<p>For this they were not altogether sorry, as they had
-been footing it for eight or nine hours on end—and
-every little respite was welcome. But the Colonel in
-this instance, at least, was not intentionally a good
-Samaritan. He had halted, not for the purpose of resting
-his men, but because he was fogged as to his whereabouts.
-The night was inky black, the country difficult—all
-hills, deep depressions and thick woods—and the
-Colonel, relying implicitly on the guidance of his intelligence
-officer, whom he supposed had made himself
-thoroughly familiar with the locality, found himself
-obviously going astray. He should now be at a railway
-bridge, which was six miles from the village of Etigny,
-the last landmark. But no such bridge, as far as he
-could judge, was anywhere near, and Lambert, the
-intelligence officer, on being questioned, admitted he
-did not exactly know where they were. That is why
-the Colonel had halted. His object was to make a flank
-attack on the German outposts, who were supposed to
-be in hiding in a wood, some three miles to the south
-of T——, where the extreme right of their main army
-lay, and obviously it was of no use advancing any
-further until he had ascertained the direction in which
-he must steer.</p>
-
-<p>In this wood was a cottage, that had been enlarged
-and fortified, and hitherto used as a place of internment
-and hospital for English prisoners, until they could be
-transported to Potsdam. Reports had reached the
-English C.O. that the Germans intended killing all
-their prisoners, if compelled to evacuate T——, and so
-the O——s were to endeavour to rescue these prisoners,
-whilst at the same time outflanking and cutting off the
-German outposts. The movement had, of course, to
-be in the nature of an entire surprise, and the hospital
-to be rushed, if possible, without any firing. According<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-to Lambert, the wood was about one mile due east of
-the railway bridge, and there was a tiny path near a
-mill, on the outskirts of it, that led to the rear of the
-cottage. To miss this path would be dangerous, as the
-wood elsewhere was covered with morass and full of
-quarries.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Lambert,” the Colonel said, “you have led
-us into a deuced rotten hole, and you must get us out
-of it somehow. Surely you have some idea of our
-whereabouts.”</p>
-
-<p>Lambert peered again into the darkness and shook
-his head. “On a night like this,” he argued, “it is
-easy to make mistakes. We must have come much
-further to the west than I intended.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, we had better veer round and make for
-the extreme east,” the Colonel said tartly.</p>
-
-<p>“Would it not be as well to return to Etigny, sir,”
-the Adjutant suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“What, six miles—lose all that time—and with our
-men already pretty well exhausted!” the Colonel
-retorted angrily. “No, that is utterly out of the question.
-Lambert has brought us here, and, egad, he must
-take us on to our destination.”</p>
-
-<p>Lambert took a few paces into the darkness, and was
-again peering round, when a young lieutenant approached
-the Colonel and saluted.</p>
-
-<p>“If you please, sir,” he said, “a man has just arrived
-who says he will act as our guide.”</p>
-
-<p>“A man! A German, I suppose you mean? What
-language does he speak?”</p>
-
-<p>“English. At least in part. He is a Scot. Shall I
-bring him to you?”</p>
-
-<p>The Colonel gave a gruff assent, and in a few minutes
-the subaltern returned, followed by a tall figure enveloped
-in a long black cloak. With one accord the Colonel, the
-Adjutant and Lambert all swung round and eyed him
-curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Who and what are you?” demanded the Colonel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I’m an inhabitant of these parts,” the stranger
-answered, “and I have come to offer you my services
-as guide.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re in the pay of the Germans, of course,” the
-Colonel retorted sharply. “How did you know we
-wanted a guide?”</p>
-
-<p>“I overheard your conversation.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” the Colonel cried furiously. “You have
-been listening to what we were saying. Take him away,
-Anderson, and have him shot at once.”</p>
-
-<p>No one moved. A sort of spell stole over Lambert,
-the Adjutant, and Anderson, and held them rooted to
-the ground. The Colonel repeated his order, and was
-about to lay hands on the stranger himself, when the
-latter waved him back.</p>
-
-<p>“In an emergency like this, Colonel R——,” he said,
-“you must take what Providence sends you. I am no
-more a German spy than is your son, Alec, who is,
-probably, at the present moment returning from an
-afternoon’s march out with the O.T.C. at Cheltenham.”</p>
-
-<p>“Great Heavens,” the Colonel gasped, “how do you
-know I have a son Alec, and that he is at Cheltenham.
-Who are you, sir? A renegade?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Colonel, I’m not,” came the reply. “I’m someone
-in whom you can place perfect confidence. Trust
-yourself to me and I will conduct you at once to the
-cottage in the wood.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s very extraordinary. I don’t for the life of me
-know what to make of it,” the Colonel muttered, turning
-to the group of officers by his side. “What do you
-advise, Lambert?”</p>
-
-<p>“Under the circumstances, sir,” Lambert replied
-slowly, “I should trust him. You can have him shot
-if he leads us wrong.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” the Colonel murmured, and turning to
-the stranger, “Did you hear what Major Lambert
-said? I can have you shot, if you lead us astray. And,
-by Jove, I will. Take your position at the head of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-column. If we are successful, I will see that you are
-adequately rewarded; if you betray us—you die. Do
-you understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do, Colonel,” the stranger replied, “and I accept
-your conditions willingly.”</p>
-
-<p>He stepped back, and, at a signal from the Colonel,
-followed Lieutenant Anderson to the head of the column.
-A sergeant and a corporal—two old and tried veterans—took
-up their positions a pace or two behind him, and,
-at a word from the Colonel, the whole battalion was
-once more on the move. On and on they went. A dull
-tramp, tramp, tramp, but in a completely different
-direction from the one in which they had previously
-been going. It was all so pitch dark that the corporal
-and the sergeant had to keep very close to the stranger
-to see him.</p>
-
-<p>“He marches just like one of us,” the Sergeant
-whispered, “and yet I kenna hear the sound of his
-feet. What do you make of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” the Corporal replied. “I seem to
-know him, and yet I haven’t seen a feature of his face.
-Something about him reminds me of the night I escaped
-from N——. It strikes me, Sergeant, that the cottage
-the Colonel is after is the very one in which we took
-shelter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you know the way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nae,” Corporal Findlay replied. “I was too rushed
-and scared that night to remember much. The only
-thing I can remember seeing plainly is those two corpses
-swinging from the beam—Sergeant Mackay’s and the
-gude wife’s—and the scene comes back to me vividly
-now as I look at this guide of ours. Why, I dinna ken.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be ready to shoot him, mon, the instant there’s
-treachery,” the Sergeant whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Aye!” Corporal Findlay replied, tapping the
-barrel of his rifle knowingly. “He’ll nae want a second
-dose.”</p>
-
-<p>On and on they tramped, till presently they forsook<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-the highway for a field, and then, plunging down and
-down, eventually found themselves upon level ground
-facing some trees. “This is the wood,” the guide
-observed, “and here is the path. After we have travelled
-along it in Indian file, and on tiptoe, for two miles, we
-shall emerge into a small clearing, where a low mud wall,
-overtopped by a machine gun, will confront us. The
-soldiers supposed to be on duty there have been drinking
-red wine all day, and are now sleeping. If you approach
-noiselessly you will be able to climb the wall and take
-them by surprise. The cottage is then yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there are sentries in the wood.”</p>
-
-<p>“One! He will be leaning on his rifle dozing. You
-must creep up to him and settle him before he has time
-to make a sound. I will tell you when we approach
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>The guide advanced, and the whole battalion of
-O——s stalked along behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be gay glad when this job is over,” Corporal
-Findlay murmured. “I would as soon spend the night
-in a kirkyard.”</p>
-
-<p>However, although every now and then a rustling of
-leaves that heralded a rabbit made them start, and the
-ominous screech of an owl caused the hair on the scalp
-of more than one superstitious Celt to bristle, so far
-there was no real cause for alarm, and on and on the
-battalion stole. At last their guide halted, and every
-man behind him instantly followed suit. He whispered
-to Corporal Findlay and the Sergeant, and, making way
-to let them pass, kept close to their heels, guiding them
-by what appeared to be a minute bull’s-eye lantern.</p>
-
-<p>On turning a sharp bend in the path, Corporal Findlay
-and the Sergeant saw the sentry, as their guide had
-described him, asleep, and, before he had time to awake,
-Corporal Findlay had dashed him to the ground with a
-swinging blow from the butt-end of his rifle. Three
-minutes later, and the head of the column found itself
-facing the mud wall and the machine-gun. This was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-the critical moment. If their guide meant mischief, now
-was his opportunity. Following closely at his heels,
-their rifle and revolver at his head, the Sergeant and
-Corporal crept up to the wall, and, one by one, the rest
-of the O——s filed into the open space after them.
-Holding their breath the Highlanders laid hold of the
-top of the wall, then with a sudden stoop, they swung
-themselves upwards. The sleeping sentinels awoke, but
-only to feel one short, sharp thrust—and the pangs of
-death. The outer position won, the Highlanders next
-turned their attention to the cottage and the enclosed
-space in front of it. There, a strong body of German
-infantry were stationed, and, as they came rushing out
-to meet the intruders, they shared the same fate as their
-companions. In ten minutes there was not a German
-left alive, and the O——s, their bayonets dripping with
-blood, were busy liberating the English prisoners.
-When it was all over, and the Colonel and his staff were
-sitting down in the front parlour of the cottage enjoying
-some refreshment, Colonel R—— suddenly remembered
-the guide. “Anderson,” he said, “fetch that fellow—our
-guide—in here. It’s not very gracious behaviour
-on our part to leave him outside, for, egad, if it had
-not been for him we should not be where we are. Moreover,
-I want to see him—I’ve an idea he’s someone I
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>The subaltern departed, and after an interval of some
-minutes returned, followed only by Corporal Findlay.</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloa!” exclaimed the Colonel, looking up sharply
-from his meal. “This is not the man I wanted. Where
-is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you please, sir,” the subaltern said, in a voice full
-of suppressed excitement, “Corporal Findlay can tell
-you all about it—he was the last to see him.”</p>
-
-<p>“The last to see him,” growled the Colonel. “Why,
-what the deuce do you mean. Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say, sir,” Corporal Findlay began. “After
-the fight was over I followed him into this cottage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-right into this room. And he halted just where you are
-sitting, under that beam,” and he pointed to the great,
-white rafter immediately over the Colonel’s head. “He
-then turned round, sir, and drawing aside the cloak,
-that had hitherto hidden his face, showed himself to
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good God, man, you needn’t look so frightened!”
-the Colonel cried. “He wasn’t the devil, was he?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, he wasn’t the devil,” Corporal Findlay
-responded. “He was Sergeant Mackay of the first
-battalion—and the last time I had set eyes on him was
-in this room on the night of the retreat from N——, when
-I and several others of the O——s found him hanging
-from that rafter—dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then,” said the Colonel, after a long pause,
-“and then what happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, sir,” Corporal Findlay replied, “he smiled, as
-if something had pleased him mightily, and waving his
-hand—disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you expect me to believe such a cock and bull
-story as that,” the Colonel said slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the truth, sir,” Corporal Findlay said slowly.
-“Sergeant Scott can corroborate it, for he was with
-me all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no need to do that,” the Colonel answered,
-“for I know you have spoken the truth. This is by no
-means my first experience with ghosts—only—for
-goodness sake do you and Sergeant Scott say nothing
-about it to the other men. If you do there won’t be
-an ounce of nerves left among them by the morning.
-Germans are one thing, but ghosts another! It was a
-splendid revenge for Sergeant Mackay!”</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>The stories I have just narrated must be taken for
-what they are worth. Though I believe they were told
-me in good faith, I cannot vouch for them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter" id="chapter_17"></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<span class="subt">A CASE FROM JAPAN</span></h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Since</span> Japan is a country in which I believe many
-people are intensely interested, I do not think I need
-apologise for introducing here the following account of
-a Japanese haunting.</p>
-
-<p>Never having been to Japan, I cannot lay claim to
-having had any ghostly adventures there myself; but
-as this is copied, word for word, from the MSS. of
-Mr. G. Salis, which was very kindly lent me for the
-purpose by Mrs. Salis (Mr. Salis’s mother), I can most
-certainly answer for its authenticity.</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>“In the spring of 1913, I settled in the village of
-Akaji, in the southern Island of Japan, in order to work
-a colliery. The country in this part is mountainous and
-quite off the track of any tourists, and the inhabitants
-remain in a very primitive condition. All the people
-are either farmers, miners, or the keepers of very small
-shops, and there is not a single hotel nor even an inn.
-I stayed at first in one of the rooms of a farm house,
-and, after a little while, was able to lease an old thatched
-farm house, standing in a small orange orchard, quite
-close to the colliery.</p>
-
-<p>“Its owner lived in a little house at the back. My
-house was one-storied, but very high, the pitch of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-thick thatch being very steep. On entering, one found
-a kitchen with various cooking places, but no chimneys:
-the smoke curling and losing itself among the huge
-rafters that supported the roof. The rest of the house
-was raised, and consisted of four rooms divided from
-each other by sliding paper-covered screens or fusuma,
-and with thick padded straw mats or tatami on the
-floor. I got a table and chair, and put up some book
-shelves, and made the best room as habitable as possible.
-This room had a tokonoma, or recess, painted a dark
-grey; and a scroll, a crystal and a vase of flowers put
-in it gave the necessary decoration to the severely bare
-interior. For the first few months I slept in one of the
-back rooms, but later, when it got very hot, I only used
-the one room. I had one servant, and as we got up at
-dawn, we also went to sleep very early, and usually by
-nine o’clock the house was in darkness and silence.
-One night I was awakened, and heard talking and
-laughing in the next room, only separated from me by
-a thin screen. Someone was telling a story in an animated
-voice, and his auditor every now and then
-ejaculated ‘naruhode’ (to be sure) and ‘sodesuka’ (is
-that so), but the voices were kept low and the laughs were
-subdued. Just then the kitchen clock struck two. I was
-annoyed at my servant having friends in at that hour,
-and in the room next mine, and determining to have it
-out with him in the morning, I fell asleep. Next morning
-he absolutely denied that anyone had been in the house,
-and became very indignant when I insisted on what I
-had heard.</p>
-
-<p>“Two nights later, I again heard a conversation
-going on, and reluctantly got out of bed and from under
-the mosquito curtains to investigate. A low chuckling
-laugh and then a snatch of song—and I pushed back the
-sliding fusuma. The room was in darkness, but I had
-a little electric torch which I used in the colliery, and,
-pressing its button, the room was brightly lit. Inside
-the mosquito curtain, Tanaka lay soundly sleeping—no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-one else was in the room; indeed, but for the futon or
-mattress covered by the net it was completely bare,
-and the talking still went on, seeming now to come from
-the room behind me. I awoke Tanaka, and we went
-out into the garden. No one was stirring, and the sounds
-came from inside the house. Away, down the road,
-three miners were returning from a night shift, and my
-servant wanted to run and fetch them, but I did not
-see the object of doing so. The mosquitoes were very
-bad, and I wanted to get back under the nets, conversations
-or no conversations, and so we re-entered the
-house. Silence reigned, and I went back to bed—but
-not to sleep—for the remainder of that night. Tanaka
-took the opportunity, while I was at the colliery the
-next morning, to pack up his few belongings and decamp,
-leaving a letter saying he could not stay in a house
-frequented by demons. I got a girl in from the village
-as a makeshift, and afterwards another servant, but
-no one would stay in the house after nightfall. I moved
-my bed into a room at the back, but still used the other
-room as a living room, and soon became used to the fact
-that it was haunted. Often, during the day, there were
-noises coming from near the tokonoma or recess—as
-though someone was cracking his finger joints, a habit
-the Japanese have; on several occasions, flowers put
-in the vase below the hanging scroll were taken out of
-their vase and arranged lying on a tray. One afternoon
-I brought my bed into the room, as the autumn was
-now getting cold, and I had been unwell for some days
-and wanted the benefit of the afternoon sun. I sent
-the servant to buy some stamps at the Post Office, a
-mile away, and stepped into the garden to gather some
-late dahlias. Looking up I distinctly saw a movement
-in the room I had left, through the pane of glass let into
-the paper-covered shoji. Dropping my flowers, I
-pressed my face against the pane, and saw the bedclothes,
-which the servant and myself had arranged,
-only five minutes previously, had been whisked off and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-were lying on the floor. Twice after this, coats hung on
-a peg near the tokonoma were found almost immediately
-lying on the floor at some distance, one having
-been pulled from its peg with such force as partly to
-tear it.</p>
-
-<p>“On many nights, when I woke up, I heard talking
-in the next room, and gradually came to distinguish a
-man’s voice, sometimes I thought two men’s, and
-certainly that of a woman and a baby. All the village
-were now talking of the haunted house, and, now and
-then, neighbours came in to listen to the mysterious
-sounds that came, from time to time, from the tokonoma,
-but they took good care to be gone before sunset.</p>
-
-<p>“Winter had now come, and I fell ill, and as the
-only really pleasant room in the house was made impossible
-during the long sleepless nights, I redoubled
-my endeavour to find another house. A baby’s wailings
-were very distinct, then it was hushed by its mother,
-and then long conversations ensued between her and
-one or two men—sometimes there were little taps, as
-though a tobacco pipe were being emptied of its ashes,
-but more often a curious noise was heard which sounded
-like ‘putter putter.’ About this time, an account
-appeared in all the Japanese newspapers of a bridge in
-Tokejo, which was haunted by a woman, and how this
-spirit had been laid by priestly intervention, and it was
-suggested that the same might be tried in the present
-case. I thought it rather a good plan, but, seeing that
-it was rather expensive, said that the landlord and not
-his foreign tenant should defray the cost and arrange
-the matter. But my landlord, who was very unpopular
-in the village, and with whom I was not on very good
-terms, would do nothing; and as, just then, another
-house near the colliery became vacant, I was able to
-move, and so at last be free of my ghostly visitants.
-Everyone knew of the reason for my leaving, and the
-landlord felt sure he would never find another tenant.
-After the house had been empty for some time, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-landlord himself determined to live in it for some months,
-in order to demonstrate that things were not so bad
-after all. He, and his wife, and their two grandchildren
-accordingly moved their things across from their other
-house, but did not at first occupy the room with the
-tokonoma. Seeing, however, that their object in being
-in the house at all would be defeated unless this room
-was used, they hung some pictures in the recess, placed
-a bronze flower vase on a carved stand below them,
-and also moved in a gilt shrine containing an image of
-Buddha. A few friends were asked in, but all left at
-sunset. Next morning I heard that there had been
-considerable disturbance at the house, and that the
-younger grandson had been taken with convulsions.</p>
-
-<p>“The same day a move was made again to their
-former abode, the house was closed, and still remains
-empty. A temple on a hill near by was being repaired,
-and, on the completion of the work, a priest came to
-hold a service. The head man of the village took the
-opportunity of consulting with him, and together they
-went to see my late landlord. The facts brought to
-light, many of which were vaguely known in the district,
-are as follows:—The house had been built about one
-hundred and fifty years previously by the head of the
-family, which was then of more consequence than at
-present, although it still owned considerable property in
-pine forests and rice fields. A younger brother of the
-original builder had conspired against his feudal lord
-and had committed suicide—hara-kiri. It was not
-known in which room, but probably it was in the
-principal one. The next tragedy, that was known of,
-had happened some fifteen years before, when the son-in-law,
-the father of the two boys already mentioned,
-was found hanging from a hook near the wooden ceiling
-of the room with the tokonoma. He had been away
-for some time in Tokejo, had spent a great deal of
-money, and, on his return, had quarrelled violently with
-his wife. She had run out of the house with her children,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-and had stayed on the hillside all night. Next morning
-her husband was found as above stated. Some months
-later, again in the same room, on the eve of the birth
-of her posthumous child, this woman killed herself by
-drinking poison, made from the leaves of a shrub still
-growing in the garden. During the convulsions which
-preceded her death, the child was born, but dead.</p>
-
-<p>“The priest said there was no doubt that the spirits
-of these various people, related by family ties, and lives,
-passed among the same surroundings, and who had all
-come to a dreadful violent end in the same house, and,
-probably, the same room, were earthbound, and were in
-the habit of assembling and conversing in the room
-where their lives had come to an end. Each addition
-would strengthen and intensify their bondage, and the
-priest expressed his surprise that the spirits were not
-actually visible. There was a good deal of discussion
-as to the terms for a service and ceremony to free the
-house from these ghostly tenants and to give them rest,
-I offered a small sum, but as they were, after all, the
-relations of the landlord, it was upon him that the bulk
-of the expense fell, and he refused to provide the
-necessary funds. His argument was that, even were
-the spirits ‘laid,’ no one now would rent the house, and
-so he would not spend any money on it. Whether he
-also thought that the spirits were as happy holding
-their ghost-parties round the tokonoma as they would
-be if they were at rest, he did not say, as such thoughts
-would be contrary to all Japanese ideas on the subject.
-Anyway, the house is now closed, the heavy wooden
-shutters are rolled across the verandahs and bolted,
-the garden is overgrown and choked with weeds, and
-the only time when there is human activity about it, is
-when the orange trees, burdened with fruit, yield their
-golden harvest.</p>
-
-<p class="lttr">
-“<span class="smcap">G. Salis.</span>”<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span><span class="sp2">.</span></p>
-
-<p>To revert again to my own experiences. I am often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-sorry, extremely sorry, I was ever brought into contact
-with the Unknown. As I said in one of the early chapters
-of this book, I did not go out of my way to seek the
-superphysical—it came to me. And it has never given
-me any peace. I feel its presence beside me at all times.
-In the evening, when I am writing, the curtains that
-are tightly drawn across the closed windows slowly
-bulge, the candlestick on the mantel-shelf rattles, a
-picture on the wall swings out suddenly at me, and,
-when I go to bed and try to sleep, I frequently hear
-breathings and far-away whispers. Some of these
-“presences” no doubt have been with me always—most
-probably they were with my ancestors—whilst
-others have attached themselves to me in my nocturnal
-ramblings.</p>
-
-<p>My wife, who was a confirmed disbeliever before our
-marriage, has long since thrown aside her scepticism,
-and for a good reason. She has had many startling
-proofs of the power the spirit has of making itself
-manifest. The night a near relative of mine died both
-she and I heard a loud crash on the panel of our bedroom
-door, and I, though I only, saw a hooded figure
-standing there. Also, besides having heard the banshee,
-my wife has seen objects moved by superphysical
-agency, seen them fanned by a wind that is apparently
-non-existing, had small stones and other articles thrown
-at her, and heard all sorts of queer, unaccountable
-sounds—laughs, sighs, and moans.</p>
-
-<p>Three ghostly incidents have happened to me within
-the past twelve months. The first was in Red Lion
-Square. It was twilight; I was alone on the top floor
-of the house, and no one else was in the building, saving
-the daughter of the caretaker, who was in the basement.
-Suddenly footsteps, slow, ponderous footsteps, began
-to ascend the stairs—which, being uncarpetted and of
-oak, carried the sound—from the hall. Wondering who
-it could be, I called out. There was no reply, and the
-steps drew nearer. On the landing immediately beneath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-me they halted. I went out and looked down. No one
-was to be seen, and the steps immediately began to
-descend. I followed them right down—a few stairs
-behind—till they reached the hall, when they abruptly
-ceased. I learned afterwards that these footsteps were
-quite a common phenomenon in the house, which had
-long been haunted by them.</p>
-
-<p>My second experience occurred in the Moscow Road,
-Bayswater. Feeling a heavy weight on my bed one
-night and wishing to remove it, I put out my hand. It
-was immediately seized and held in a warm grip. I sat
-up in bed, but could see no one. The hand that clasped
-mine was very soft and small—unmistakably that of a
-woman. I felt the wrist and forearm, but beyond the
-elbow there was nothing.</p>
-
-<p>I was rather alarmed at this occurrence at the time,
-as I have a friend who died shortly after experiencing
-a similar phenomenon. In my case, however, the
-lady, whose hand I immediately identified as the hand
-that had clasped mine, and this lady solemnly declared
-that upon the same night—we compared dates—she had
-dreamed of a hand which was the exact counterpart of
-mine, and that, upon shaking hands with me that
-afternoon, she had been instantly reminded of her
-dream.</p>
-
-<p>That there was nothing in common between us, her
-tastes and outlook on life being absolutely at variance
-with mine, makes the occurrence, in my opinion, none
-the less interesting, though somewhat difficult to account
-for.</p>
-
-<p>My last experience occurred only a few days ago, as I
-was sitting on the stairs of a haunted house near Ealing.
-I had applied to the landlord for permission to spend
-the night there, and, pending his reply, had obtained
-the keys from the agent, in order to see what the house
-was like by daylight. Having just finished jotting down
-some notes—a memorandum of something I had suddenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-thought of—I paused, still holding the pencil in my
-hand, whilst my note-book lay open on my knee. I
-had not sat thus for more than a minute, when, with a
-thrill of surprise, I felt the pencil suddenly taken from
-my hand, and, looking down, I distinctly saw it, of its
-own accord, scrawl right across my book. Whether
-what I afterwards found written in my note-book was
-written by the spirit that haunted the house, or by a
-projection of one of my own personalities, I cannot
-say; neither can I, myself, nor anyone to whom I have
-shown the symbolic writing, tell what it means. The
-appended is a facsimile.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/writing.png" width="436" height="49" alt="Facsimile" title="Facsimile" />
-</div>
-
-<p>I might add that this is my one and only experience
-of spirit-writing, and also that it was my one and only
-experience in the haunted house near Ealing, as I did
-not succeed in getting leave to spend a night there.</p>
-
-<p>Although I must confess I have made little progress
-so far in my investigations, for my failure to decipher
-spirit-writing is not the only set-back that I have
-encountered, I still have hopes. I hope that some
-day, when I am brought face to face with the Unknown,
-in a haunted house or elsewhere, I may be able to hit
-upon some mode of communication with it, and discover
-something that may be of real service both to myself
-and to the rest of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>If only I could overcome fear!</p>
-
-<p>It is March 28th, midnight, and as I pen these concluding
-words, my mind reverts to the symbols and the
-date—March 28th, twelve o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly I hear footsteps—distant footsteps on the
-road outside—coming in the direction of the house.</p>
-
-<p>I glance at my wife, wondering whether she hears
-them too. She is asleep, however, and, as I covertly
-watch her, I see a look of terror gradually steal into her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-face. Clicking steps. They come nearer and nearer.
-They stop for a moment at our door, and then—thank
-God—pass slowly on.</p>
-
-<p>I look out of the window—the road is absolutely
-deserted, but from close at hand the sounds are wafted
-to me—click, click, click, fainter, fainter, fainter—until
-they abruptly cease.</p>
-
-
-<p class="end">THE END.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="l5" />
-<p class="center"><i>Printed by W. Mate &amp; Sons, Ltd., Bournemouth.</i></p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> See “The Oriental Zig-zag,” by C. Hamilton.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> I am not sure of the proper spelling of the word, as the writing
-in my original notes has become so very illegible in places.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> I have reproduced the gist of this narrative in my own
-language.</p></div></div>
-
-
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="tn">Transcriber’s note</p>
-
-<p>Small errors in punctuation were corrected without note, also the
-following changes were made, on page<br />
-
-11 “ancester” changed to “ancestor” (Niall Garbh, the ancestor
-of Red Hugh)<br />
-16 “ill” changed to “will” (to wander about at will?)<br />
-27 “generation” changed to “generations” (with Irish soil for many
-generations.)<br />
-28 “i.” added “i.e.” (<abbr>i.e.</abbr>, to announce a death)<br />
-33 “remanied” changed to “remained” (and so I remained with my neck
-craned over)<br />
-42 “genialty” changed to “geniality” (about them all there was an air
-of geniality)<br />
-44 “wiife” changed to “wife” (my wife met this Mr. Dekon at a ball)<br />
-49 “financies” changed to “finances” (in which my finances forced
-me to)<br />
-59 “lift” changed to “left” (which left me with)<br />
-62 “Be” changed to “Bell” (Mrs. Bell asked Stella if she had)<br />
-69 “physical” changed to “psychical” (the people to associate
-themselves with psychical research)<br />
-77 “overheard” changed to “overhead” (I heard someone moving about
-overhead)<br />
-86 “fo” changed to “of” (of tramp suicides)<br />
-99 “happned” changed to “happened” (That was all that happened)<br />
-103 “parellel” changed to “parallel” (disturbances of a parallel
-nature)<br />
-118 “dose” changed to “doze” (As soon as I begin to doze)<br />
-164 “his” changed to “my” (pointing to my cap).</p>
-
-<p>Otherwise the original was preserved, including inconsistencies
-in spelling, hyphenation, etc. Additional: “the ’98” on page 17
-probably refers to the Irish rebellion in 1798.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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