True Irish Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 190 pages of information about True Irish Ghost Stories.

True Irish Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 190 pages of information about True Irish Ghost Stories.

“One night I was startled out of my sleep by hearing a dreadful disturbance in the kitchen.  It sounded as if the dish-covers were being taken off the wall and dashed violently on the flagged floor.  At length I got up and opened the door of my bedroom, and just as I did so an appalling crash resounded through the house.  I waited to see if there was any light to be seen, or footstep to be heard, but nobody was stirring.  There was only one servant in the house, the other persons being my host, his wife, and a baby, who had all retired early.  Next morning I described the noises in the kitchen to the servant, and she said she had often heard them.  I then told her about the tramping of horses:  she replied that she herself had never heard it, but that other persons who had occupied my room had had experiences similar to mine.  I asked her was there any explanation; she said No, except that a story was told of a gentleman who had lived there some years ago, and was very much addicted to racing and gambling, and that he was shot one night in that house.  For the remainder of my visit I was removed to another part of the house, and I heard no more noises.”

A house in the North of Ireland, near that locality which is eternally famous as having furnished the material for the last trial for witchcraft in the country, is said to be haunted, the reason being that it is built on the site of a disused and very ancient graveyard.  It is said that when some repairs were being carried out nine human skulls were unearthed.  It would be interesting to ascertain how many houses in Ireland are traditionally said to be built on such unpleasant sites, and if they all bear the reputation of being haunted.  The present writer knows of one, in the South, which is so situated (and this is supported, to a certain extent, by documentary evidence from the thirteenth century down) and which in consequence has an uncanny reputation.  But concerning the above house it has been found almost impossible to get any information.  It is said that strange noises were frequently heard there, which sometimes seemed as if cartloads of stones were being run down one of the gables.  On one occasion an inmate of the house lay dying upstairs.  A friend went up to see the sick person, and on proceeding to pass through the bedroom door was pressed and jostled as if by some unseen person hurriedly leaving the room.  On entering, it was found that the sick person had just passed away.

An account of a most unpleasant haunting is contributed by Mr. W. S. Thompson, who vouches for the substantial accuracy of it, and also furnishes the names of two men, still living, who attended the “station.”  We give it as it stands, with the comment that some of the details seem to have been grossly exaggerated by local raconteurs.  In the year 1869 a ghost made its presence manifest in the house of a Mr. M——­ in Co.  Cavan.  In the daytime it resided in the chimney, but at night it left its quarters

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True Irish Ghost Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.