FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   >>  
ht--occupying that erect position which is his as Lord of Creation; but his courage does not well so high if he be supine. We are awakened suddenly by the feel that some superhuman Presence is in the room. We are transfixed with terror, we cannot find either the bell-rope or the matches, while we _dare_ not leap out of bed and make a rush for the door lest we should encounter we know not what. In an agony of fear, we feel it moving towards us; it approaches closer, and yet closer, to the bed, and--for what may or may not then happen we must refer our readers to the pages of this book. But the sceptical reader will say: "This is all very well, but--there are _no_ haunted houses. All these alleged strange happenings are due to a vivid imagination, or else to rats and mice." (The question of deliberate and conscious fraud may be rejected in almost every instance.) This simple solution has been put forward so often that it should infallibly have solved the problem long ago. But will such a reader explain how it is that the noise made by rats and mice can resemble slow, heavy footsteps, or else take the form of a human being seen by several persons; or how our imagination can cause doors to open and shut, or else create a conglomeration of noises which, physically, would be beyond the power of ordinary individuals to reproduce? Whatever may be the ultimate explanation, we feel that there is a great deal in the words quoted by Professor Barrett: "In spite of all reasonable scepticism, it is difficult to avoid accepting, at least provisionally, the conclusion that there are, in a certain sense, haunted houses, _i.e._ that there are houses in which similar quasi-human apparitions have occurred at different times to different inhabitants, under circumstances which exclude the hypothesis of suggestion or expectation." We must now turn to the subject of this chapter. Mrs. G. Kelly, a lady well known in musical circles in Dublin, sends as her own personal experience the following tale of a most quiet haunting, in which the spectral charwoman (!) does not seem to have entirely laid aside all her mundane habits. "My first encounter with a ghost occurred about twenty years ago. On that occasion I was standing in the kitchen of my house in ---- Square, when a woman, whom I was afterwards to see many times, walked down the stairs into the room. Having heard the footsteps outside, I was not in the least perturbed, but turned to loo
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   >>  



Top keywords:

houses

 

encounter

 
occurred
 

closer

 

haunted

 

imagination

 

reader

 
footsteps
 

hypothesis

 

exclude


expectation

 

chapter

 

suggestion

 
circumstances
 
subject
 

conclusion

 

quoted

 
Professor
 

Barrett

 

explanation


individuals
 

ordinary

 
reproduce
 

Whatever

 

ultimate

 

reasonable

 

scepticism

 

similar

 

apparitions

 
difficult

accepting

 

provisionally

 

inhabitants

 
Square
 

kitchen

 
twenty
 
occasion
 

standing

 

perturbed

 
turned

Having

 
walked
 
stairs
 

personal

 

experience

 

Dublin

 

musical

 
circles
 
mundane
 

habits