<h2 class="nobreak chap0"><SPAN name="X" id="X">X</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead">OF HAUNTED HOUSES, PERSONS, AND PLACES</span></h2>
<div class="center-container b1"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“Three times all in the dead of night,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">A bell was heard to ring.”—<i>Tickell.</i><br/></span></div>
</div>
<p class="drop-cap3"><span class="smcap1">Haunted</span> houses have proved an insuperable
stumbling-block to those wiseacres
who no sooner insist that superstition has
died out than the familiar headline in the daily
paper, “A haunted house,” stares them full in
the face. It is believed that many such houses
stand tenantless to-day because of the secret
fear they inspire in the minds of the timid or
superstitious, who, quite naturally, shrink from
living under the same roof with disembodied<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</SPAN></span>
spirits. It has already been noted that M.
Camille Flammarion is a firm believer in
haunted houses. Here is what he has to say
upon that much debated <span class="locked">subject:—</span></p>
<p>“There is no longer any room to doubt the
fact that certain houses are haunted.</p>
<p>“I began the scientific studies of these questions
on November 15, 1861, and I have continued
it ever since. I have received more than
four thousand letters upon these questions from
the learned men of every land, and I am glad
to be able to say that some of the most interesting
letters come from America.”</p>
<p>For every haunted house there must, of
course, be an invisible intruder who comes
only in the small hours, when the effects of
its unwelcome presence would, of course, be
most terrifying to weak nerves. But it is to
be remarked that we hear nothing nowadays
of the old-time, hair-raising, blood-curdling
ghost whose coming forebode something terrible
about to happen, or who had some awful
revelation to make. That type of ghost has<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</SPAN></span>
passed away. The modern ghost never makes
set speeches in a sepulchral voice or leaves a
palpable smell of brimstone behind. It comes
rather in a spirit of mischief-making, shown in
such petty annoyances as setting the house bells
ringing, overturning articles of furniture, twitching
the bedclothes from off a sleeping person in
the coldest of cold nights, putting out the lights,
or making a horrible racket, first in one room,
then in another, as if it revelled in pure wantonness
of purpose. In short, there is no limit
to the ingenious deviltries perpetrated by this
nocturnal disturber of domestic peace and
quiet.</p>
<p>After two or three sleepless nights, followed
by days of quaking apprehension, the occupants
usually move out, declaring that they
would not live in the house if it were given
to them. And so it stands vacant indefinitely,
shunned by all to whom its evil reputation has
become known, a visible monument of active
superstition.</p>
<p>That all these things have happened as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</SPAN></span>
lately as in this year of grace (1900) is too
well known to be denied. And as most people
would desire to shun publicity in such a matter,
there are probably very many cases that never
reach the public eye at all. One such is reported
of a family at Charlestown, Massachusetts,
being disturbed by strange noises, as of
some one pounding on the walls or floors at
all hours of the night. Even the police, when
summoned, failed to lay hands on the invisible
tormentor, who, like the ghost in Hamlet,
was here, there, and nowhere in a jiffy.</p>
<p>One of the most singular cases that have
come to my knowledge, perhaps because the
unaccountable disturbances happened in the
daytime, whereas they habitually occur only in
the night-time, when churchyards are supposed
to yawn, was that of a haunted schoolhouse.
This was downright bravado. If we do not err,
in this case a bell was repeatedly rung during
the regular sessions, by no visible agency, to
the amazement of both teachers and scholars.
After a vain search for the cause, the schoolhouse<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</SPAN></span>
was shut up, and so remained for a considerable
time, a speechless but tangible witness
to the general belief that the devil was at the
bottom of it all.</p>
<p>Not many generations ago, when ghosts were
perhaps more numerous than at present, there
were professional exorcists who could be hired
to clear the premises of ghosts or no pay; but
this is now a lost art. As Shakespeare <span class="locked">says:—</span></p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“No exorciser harm thee!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Nor no witchcraft charm thee!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Ghost unlaid forbear thee!”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>While upon this interesting subject it may be
instructive to know what our ancestors sometimes
suffered from similar visitations. We
take the following extract from Ben Franklin’s
<cite>New England Courant</cite>, of 1726:—</p>
<p>“They write from Plymouth, that an extraordinary
event has lately happened in that neighborhood,
in which, some say, the Devil and the
man of the house are very much to blame.
The man it seems, would now and then in a
frolic call upon the Devil to come down the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</SPAN></span>
chimney; and some little time after the last invitation,
the goodwife’s pudding turned black in
the boiling, which she attributed to the Devil’s
descending the chimney, and getting into the
pot upon her husband’s repeated wishes for
him. Great numbers of people have been to
view the pudding, and to inquire into the circumstances;
and most of them agree that so
sudden a change must be produced by a preternatural
power. However, ’tis thought it will
have this good effect upon the man, that he will
no more be so free with the Devil in his cups,
lest his Satanic Majesty should again unluckily
tumble into the pot.”</p>
<p>But houses are by no means the only things
subject to these astounding visitations. Dark
and secluded ponds, thick swamps, and barren
hillsides often bear that unsavory reputation
to-day, it may be from association with some
weird tale or legend, or mayhap because such
places seldom fail, of themselves, to produce a
certain effect upon an active imagination. Let
any such person, who has ever been lost in some<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</SPAN></span>
thick forest, recall his sensations upon first
making the unwelcome discovery. The solemn
old woods then seem all alive <span class="locked">with—</span></p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“The dim and shadowy armies of our unquiet dreams,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Their footsteps brush the dewy fern and print the shaded streams.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>As regards haunted ships, the following incident,
taken down as literally as I could transcribe
it at the time, from the lips of a seafaring
friend, speaks for <span class="locked">itself:—</span></p>
<p>“‘Twas some dozen year ago, may be less,
may be more—beats all how time travels when
you’ve turned the half-century post—I was
aboard of the old <i class="ship">Paul Pry</i>—queer name, now,
warn’t it? We was a lyin’ in Havana harbor,
all snug, about a mile from shore. Well, the
mate he was on watch. In port, you know,
ships always keep slack watch. Our’n was light,
nothin’ in her, hold all swep’ out clean that very
day, ’cause we was to begin takin’ in sugar and
molasses in the mornin’. All hands were off in
the ship’s boat visitin’ another ship—all ’cept
the steward. The old man, he was ashore.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</SPAN></span>
“I’m slow, but you just hold your hosses.
All to once’t the mate thought he heern somebody
walkin’ back’ards and for’ards plumb down
in the hold. He walked to the open hatch and
called down, ‘Who’s there?’ No answer. He
listened. No sound. Thinkin’ it might possibly
have been the steward getting his firewood,
the mate went for’ard to the steward’s room to
see if it was so, and found him fast asleep in his
bunk. That settled it. Nobody aboard but
them two.</p>
<p>“The mate he said nothin’ to nobody, but got
a lantern and slipped quietly down the ladder
into the hold, determined to find out who was
skylarkin’ there, for I tell you the mate he was
a game one all the time, and don’t you b’leeve
he warn’t!</p>
<p>“He hunted high and low, from the fore-peak
to the run, but not a soul was to be seen
anywhere; but just as soon as he stood still
he would hear those myster’ous footsteps go
trampin’ fore and aft, fore and aft, as plain as
day, right by him, where he stood.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</SPAN></span>
“By this time the mate had got pretty well
worked up, I want you to know, so he just gin
one kinder skeered look around him, and then
hustled himself off up that ladder just a leetle
mite faster than he came down, wonderin’ to
himself what it all could mean, and thinkin’ all
sorts of things to once’t.</p>
<p>“Then he went and woke up the steward, and
both on ’em went and listened fust at one hatch,
then at t’other, and sure enough that consarned
tramp, tramp, tramp, was a-goin’ on agin just
the same as before. Then they pulled on the
hatches. But, Lor’ bless you, it warn’t no use.
Them critters down below had the bulge on ’em
every time.</p>
<p>“The mate he said nothin’ ’cept to the old
man, who looked as black as a new-painted
deadeye with the lanyards unrove when he
heerd it; but somehow it leaked out among the
crew before we sailed, and one or two ran away
and laid low till the ship was clean out of the
harbor.</p>
<p>“It was gen’lly b’leeved fore and aft that them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</SPAN></span>
there footsteps was a warnin’. Hows’ever, the
thing quieted down some in a day or two, so
nothin’ more was heerd of the walkin’ match
down below; but on the third day out, I think
it was, we was struck by one of them northers,
and in spite of all we could do we was drove
ashore on a reef off the Bermudys, where the
<i class="ship">Paul Pry</i> brought up all standin’, and there she
left her old bones. The wreckers they came
and took off the crew, and fetched ’em all safe
into Nassau. Now if that ship warn’t haunted,
I miss my guess. You can’t most always tell
about them things, I know; but ef it was skylarkin’,
all I’ve got to say is, it was a purty neat
job, and don’t you forget it.”</p>
<p>There are also places, as well as houses,
which have the reputation of being haunted,
sometimes through the commission of a horrible
crime in that particular locality, sometimes
through the survival of some obscure
local tradition. It matters not. Once give the
place a bad name, and local tradition preserves
the memory of it for many generations. Every<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</SPAN></span>
schoolboy is familiar with the weird legend of
Nix’s Mate, a submerged island at the entrance
to Boston Harbor, where pirates were formerly
hung in chains. Appledore Island, on the
coast of New Hampshire, once had the name
of being haunted by the uneasy ghost of one
of Captain Kidd’s piratical crew. The face of
the spectre was said by those who had seen it,
or who thought they had seen it, to be dreadful
to behold, and the neck to bear the livid mark
of the hangman’s noose. Once, no islander
could be found hardy enough to venture himself
on Appledore after dark. Indeed, such places
of fearsome reputation are found all over New
England. For example, there is the shrieking
woman of Marblehead, a remarkable spook,
who at certain intervals of time could be heard
uttering the most heartrending cries for mercy
to her inhuman murderers. Then, again, there
is the legend of Harry Main, reputed pirate and
wrecker, who, by means of false lights, decoyed
simple mariners to destruction on the shoals of
Ipswich Bar, to which for his many crimes the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</SPAN></span>
wretch was doomed to be chained down to the
fatal spot to which he had lured his unsuspecting
<span class="locked">victims.<SPAN name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Quite naturally these legends mostly cluster
about the seacoast, but now and then one is
found in the interior. One corner of the town
of Chester, New Hampshire, lifts into view an
eminence known as Rattlesnake Hill, one rocky
side of which is pierced entirely through, thus
forming a cavern of great notoriety in all the
country round. This cavern is known as the
Devil’s Den, and many were the frightful
stories told around winter firesides of the
demons who, of yore, haunted it, and who, all
unseen of mortal eyes, there held their midnight
orgies within the gloomy recesses of the
mountain.</p>
<p>There are two entrances to this cavern, both
leading to an interior, subterranean chamber,
whose vaulted roof is thickly studded with
pear-shaped protuberances that are said to
shine and sparkle when the flame of a torch<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</SPAN></span>
sheds a ruddy glow upon them. According to
popular tradition the path leading to the cavern
was always kept open, summer and winter.
Many years ago the poet Whittier put the
legend into <span class="locked">verse:—</span></p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“’Tis said that this cave is an evil place—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The chosen haunt of a fallen race—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">That the midnight traveller oft hath seen<br/></span>
<span class="i0">A red flame tremble its jaws between,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And lighten and quiver the boughs among,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Like the fiery play of a serpent’s tongue:<br/></span>
<span class="i0">That sounds of fear from its chambers swell—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The ghostly gibber,—the fiendish yell;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">That bodiless hands at the entrance wave—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And hence they have named it the Demon’s Cave.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>The persistent life of such local traditions as
these fully attests to the belief of former generations
of men in the active agency of the Evil
One in human affairs. And not only this, but
this omnipresent devil has actually left his
mark, legibly stamped, in so many places, and
his name in so many others, that to doubt his
actual presence were not only unreasonable but
ungenerous. Even his footprints are found<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</SPAN></span>
here and there, yet strange to say, few represent
a cloven foot. The sonorous names,
Devil’s Pulpit and Devil’s Cartway, are found
within a few miles of each other on the coast
of Maine. Moreover, do we not know from a
perusal of the testimony given at the celebrated
witchcraft trials, that the arch-fiend had been
both seen and spoken with <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">in propria persona</i>?</p>
<p>It used to be a not uncommon threat with
quick-tempered people to say that if their
wishes or expectations were not gratified to
their liking, they would “haunt you” when
they died. I myself have often heard this
expression used either in jest or in earnest;
and when used it never failed to leave a disagreeable
impression on the listener.</p>
<p>It is not a great many years ago since an
account was telegraphed all over the country,
and duly appeared in the daily newspapers, of
an honest citizen, a resident of one of the largest
towns in Pennsylvania, whose wife “while
yet in good health, frequently admonished her
friends that she did not wish her body to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</SPAN></span>
buried in a certain wet graveyard. She threatened
to ‘speak to them’ if her wish was not
granted, and went so far as to tell them how
she would haunt them by coming back in
ghostly form. The wife died, and her body
was buried in the graveyard she had disliked.
Now, strange as it may appear, her husband
alleges that, since the funeral took place, she
has appeared at his bedside several times each
week, always looking at him, and always making
motions with her bony hands, as a mark of
her displeasure. The husband says he is unable
to sleep, and also that he is sure the strange
midnight visitor is none other than his wife.
He declares that whatever other people may
think of it, he himself firmly believes that he
has brought the enmity of the spirit upon himself
and children by their refusal to grant the
wife’s last request. The children’s beds are
also visited by her, as they say, and as a consequence
the family is kept in constant alarm.
One of the nearest neighbors has also seen the
‘spook’ several times, and corroborates the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</SPAN></span>
family in every particular. The terrified husband
relates the facts himself, and it is the
responsibility of the man that warrants publishing
his story of the appearance of the
spook. He gives the account of the strange
happenings in a straightforward manner, which
impresses a person with its truth, and he further
says it is not imagination, a dream, or an
attack of nightmare, but that the spook always
comes when he is wide awake. The women
and children of the neighborhood are in great
terror, and the people hardly venture out of
doors after dark.”</p>
<p>Upon the heels of this experience comes the
following telegram to the Associated Press,
thus disseminating, through its thousand channels,
superstition <span class="locked">broadcast:—</span></p>
<blockquote>
<p class="center">[“Copyright, 1899, by The Associated Press.]</p>
<p>“<span class="smcap">London</span>, March 4, 1899. Another link in
the chain of illfortune which has followed
the famous Newstead Abbey was forged this
week. It seems that a curse rests on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</SPAN></span>
abbey, and that the eldest has never succeeded
to the estate.</p>
<p>“Byron sold it to Col. Wildman in 1808, who
died childless. The trustees sold it to Webb,
the famous sportsman, whose eldest son died
this week. Byron had the skull which was
reported to have belonged to the ghost that
haunted the abbey, and he used it as a punch
bowl. Webb buried the skull, hoping to lay
the ghost.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>As related to the general subject, it is too
well known that certain persons to-day profess
the power of conversing with disembodied
spirits, to need more than a passing reference
to this particular form of belief, which some
hold to as firmly as to an article of religious
faith, while others consider it a delusion or
worse. Forty odd years ago spirit rappings
convulsed society from one end of the country
to the other. Spiritual séances were vehemently
denounced from the pulpit, and while
fully reported also by the press, the mediums<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</SPAN></span>
were charged with being rank impostors, humbugs,
and the like. Alleged exposure followed
exposure. Yet somehow the belief, such as it
is, has contrived to outlive ridicule, calumny,
and persecution—the common lot of every
new and startling departure from the older
beliefs—until to-day it has acquired not only
the right to live, but also that of calm discussion.</p>
<p>Dr. Samuel Johnson once asked the pertinent
question, “If moral evil be consistent with the
government of the Deity, why may not physical
evil be consistent with it?” The solemn declaration
that the sins of the fathers shall be visited
upon the children unto the third and fourth
generations, sometimes recurs to us with startling
force, more especially when the awful
anathema is brought so near home to us as it is
by the following veracious <span class="locked">incident.<SPAN name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There is a certain well-known locality in
Essex County, Massachusetts, which has long
borne the evil reputation of being haunted,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</SPAN></span>
owing to the tradition that a cruel murder was
committed there. According to some of the
old people from whom I had the story, strange
sights and sounds have been both seen and
heard near the spot where the crime took place.
For instance, a child would be heard crying out
most pitifully, though nothing could be seen.
One belated horseman positively declared that
when passing this accursed place he had seen
a child’s coffin moving along the road, as
he moved; and that the spectre followed
him almost into the town of Ipswich. It is
said to be a fact that many of the old folks
were afraid to pass this place of dread after
dark.</p>
<p>As to the origin of the story, with its highly
dramatic features, accounts differ somewhat;
but considerable pains have been taken to arrive
at the truth, since it is a matter of general notoriety
in the neighborhood referred to, although
the actual facts may have no relation whatever
to the “skeleton in the closet” disclosed by the
story itself.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</SPAN></span>
The story goes back to colonial times, and
chiefly has to do with the two daughters of a
family in good social standing. These young
women had for a serving-maid a negro slave,
who was treated with marked severity by her
haughty mistresses.</p>
<p>In time, the slave woman bore a child.
Angered at the coming of the luckless little
waif, the cruel sisters resolved to put it out of
the way. One day the mother found it hid
away in a hogshead of flax, in the garret. Failing
in this attempt, the sisters then took the
child, stuck pins into its veins, and tried to
smother it between two feather beds. When
the infant was thought to be quite dead, the
body was thrown into a brook, under a nearby
bridge which spanned it. Life, however, was
not quite extinct, so that the child’s cries were
heard by a passing traveller, who rescued it, but
it soon after bled to death from the wounds
inflicted upon it.</p>
<p>Half crazed by this dastardly act, the forlorn
mother then and there called down the curse of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</SPAN></span>
God upon the inhuman sisters and their sons to
all future generations.</p>
<p>This is substantially the legend. Now for
the sequel. It is said to be a fact that all the
sons of the daughters of that family, and no
others, have ever since been afflicted with a
strange and incurable malady, the principal
feature being a tendency to profuse bleeding
from the most trifling cuts or wounds. After
some days have elapsed, a mere scratch will
begin to bleed copiously and so continue until
the sufferer has lost so much blood that in some
cases it is said he has bled to death. From
this circumstance the persons so afflicted are
known by the name of “bleeders.”</p>
<p>Mr. Felt asserts that the family in which this
singular hemorrhage first appeared brought it
with them from England; which, if true, would
summarily dispose of the legend; but his statement
does not accord with the story as told on
the spot. It is here related as it was told to
me.</p>
<p>Reference was earlier made to the old-time,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</SPAN></span>
respectable ghost of our fathers, who like the
ghost in Hamlet, made his unwelcome appearance
only to subserve the ends of justice. This
practical generation hardly realizes, we think,
how lately the ghost was accepted in that character,
or how trustworthy his evidence was
deemed by the purveyors of public intelligence.
On turning over the files of the <cite>New England
Weekly Journal</cite> of December 1, 1729, we came
across the following ghost story, here reproduced
<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">verbatim</i>:—</p>
<p>“Last week, one belonging to Ipswich came
to Boston and related that some time since he
was at Canso in Nova Scotia, and that on a
certain day there appeared to him an apparition
in blood and wounds, and told him that at
such a time and place, mentioning both, he
was barbarously murdered by one, who was at
Rhode Island, and desired him to go to the
said person and charge him with the said murder,
and prosecute him therefor, naming several
circumstances relating to the murder; and
that since his arrival from Canso to Ipswich<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</SPAN></span>
the said apparition had appeared to him again,
and urged him immediately to prosecute the
said affair. The abovesaid person having
related the matter was advised and encouraged
to go to Rhode Island and engage
therein, and he accordingly set out for that
place on Thursday last.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</SPAN></p>
<p>Dr. Timothy Dwight, in his “Travels,” records,
with approval, the following singular
superstition relative to the barberry, which is
so common in New England. “This bush,”
he remarks, “is, in New England, generally
believed to blast both wheat and rye. Its
blossoms, which are very numerous, and continue
a considerable time, emit very copiously
a pungent effluvium believed to be so acrimonious
as to injure essentially both these kinds of
grain.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“In Southborough, a township in the county
of Worcester, a Mr. Johnson sowed with rye
a field of new ground. At the south end of
this field also grew a single barberry bush.
The grain was blasted throughout the whole
length of the field, on a narrow tract commencing
at the bush and proceeding directly
in the course, and to the extent, to which the
blossoms were diffused by the wind.”</p>
<p>Certes, that was a most extraordinary belief
held by the simple country folk in a
certain quiet corner of New England, that
candles made of the tallow obtained from a
dead body, would, when lighted, render the
person carrying them invisible; and furthermore
that a lighted candle of this description,
if placed within a bedroom, would effectually
prevent a sleeping person from waking until
it should be extinguished. This I had from
the lips of a most intelligent and estimable
lady, who knew whereof she spoke.</p>
<p>I confess that on hearing this statement I
realized that I had now found more than I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</SPAN></span>
was looking for. But incredible as it may
seem at first, all doubts were set at rest by the
following article found among some fragments
of old superstition in a certain treatise on that
subject. Here is the article <span class="locked">verbatim:—</span></p>
<p>“The Hand of Glory is a piece of foreign
superstition common in France, Germany, and
Spain; and is a charm used by housebreakers
and assassins. It is the hand of a hanged man,
holding a candle made of the fat of a hanged
man, virgin wax, and siasme of Lapland. It
stupefies those to whom it is presented, and
renders them motionless, insomuch that they
could not stir, any more than if they were
dead.”</p>
<p>I do not find any recent mention of the
appearance of that ancient bugbear known as
the Will-o’-the-wisp, or magical Jack-o’-lantern,
associated with the unearthly light sometimes
seen flitting about ancient graveyards. Science
has practically accounted for this natural
phenomenon to the general acceptance; but
science has not yet been able to do away with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</SPAN></span>
the instinctive dread with which the vicinity
of a graveyard is associated in most minds. I
well remember how, when a lad, I dreaded to
pass a graveyard after dark. There was a
sickly feeling of something lurking among
those ghostly looking tombstones. I looked
another way. I whistled, I looked behind me.
Vain effort! I ran from the spot as if all the
ghosts my fears had conjured up were close
at my heels.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</SPAN></span></p>
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