u quarrel with it, 'cause there's a good many things
in this world turns out like Mis' Elderkin's pitcher."
[Illustration: Ghost in Cap'n Brown House, Page 139]
THE GHOST IN THE CAP'N BROWNHOUSE.
"Now, Sam, tell us certain true, is there any such things as ghosts?"
"Be there ghosts?" said Sam, immediately translating into his vernacular
grammar: "wal, now, that are's jest the question, ye see." "Well,
grandma thinks there are, and Aunt Lois thinks it's all nonsense. Why,
Aunt Lois don't even believe the stories in Cotton Mather's 'Magnalia.'"
"Wanter know?" said Sam, with a tone of slow, languid meditation.
We were sitting on a bank of the Charles River, fishing. The soft
melancholy red of evening was fading off in streaks on the glassy water,
and the houses of Oldtown were beginning to loom through the gloom,
solemn and ghostly. There are times and tones and moods of nature that
make all the vulgar, daily real seem shadowy, vague, and supernatural,
as if the outlines of this hard material present were fading into the
invisible and unknown. So Oldtown, with its elm-trees, its great square
white houses, its meeting-house and tavern and blacksmith's shop and
milly which at high noon seem as real and as commonplace as possible, at
this hour of the evening were dreamy and solemn. They rose up blurred,
indistinct, dark; here and there winking candles sent long lines of
light through the shadows, and little drops of unforeseen rain rippled
the sheeny darkness of the water.
"Wal, you see, boys, in them things it's jest as well to mind your
granny. There's a consid'able sight o' gumption in grandmas. You look at
the folks that's alius tellin' you what they don't believe,--they don't
believe this, and they don't believe that,--and what sort o' folks is
they? Why, like yer Aunt Lois, sort o' stringy and dry. There ain't no
'sorption got out o' not believin' nothin'.
"Lord a massy! we don't know nothin' 'bout them things. We hain't ben
there, and can't say that there ain't no ghosts and sich; can we, now?"
We agreed to that fact, and sat a little closer to Sam in the gathering
gloom.
"Tell us about the Cap'n Brown house, Sam."
"Ye didn't never go over the Cap'n Brown house?"
No, we had not that advantage.
"Wal, yer see, Cap'n Brown he made all his money to sea, in furrin
parts, and then come here to Oldtown to settle down.
"Now, there ain't no knowin' 'bout these 'ere old ship-masters, where
the
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