Famous Modern Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about Famous Modern Ghost Stories.

Famous Modern Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about Famous Modern Ghost Stories.

“But you’re quite right about one thing,” he added, before the subject passed, “and that is that we’re wiser not to talk about it, or even to think about it, because what one thinks finds expression in words, and what one says, happens.”

That afternoon, while the canoe dried and hardened, we spent trying to fish, testing the leak, collecting wood, and watching the enormous flood of rising water.  Masses of driftwood swept near our shores sometimes, and we fished for them with long willow branches.  The island grew perceptibly smaller as the banks were torn away with great gulps and splashes.  The weather kept brilliantly fine till about four o’clock, and then for the first time for three days the wind showed signs of abating.  Clouds began to gather in the southwest, spreading thence slowly over the sky.

This lessening of the wind came as a great relief, for the incessant roaring, banging, and thundering had irritated our nerves.  Yet the silence that came about five o’clock with its sudden cessation was in a manner quite as oppressive.  The booming of the river had everything its own way then:  it filled the air with deep murmurs, more musical than the wind noises, but infinitely more monotonous.  The wind held many notes, rising, falling, always beating out some sort of great elemental tune; whereas the river’s song lay between three notes at most—­dull pedal notes, that held a lugubrious quality foreign to the wind, and somehow seemed to me, in my then nervous state, to sound wonderfully well the music of doom.

It was extraordinary, too, how the withdrawal suddenly of bright sunlight took everything out of the landscape that made for cheerfulness; and since this particular landscape had already managed to convey the suggestion of something sinister, the change of course was all the more unwelcome and noticeable.  For me, I know, the darkening outlook became distinctly more alarming, and I found myself more than once calculating how soon after sunset the full moon would get up in the east, and whether the gathering clouds would greatly interfere with her lighting of the little island.

With this general hush of the wind—­though it still indulged in occasional brief gusts—­the river seemed to me to grow blacker, the willows to stand more densely together.  The latter, too, kept up a sort of independent movement of their own, rustling among themselves when no wind stirred, and shaking oddly from the roots upwards.  When common objects in this way become charged with the suggestion of horror, they stimulate the imagination far more than things of unusual appearance; and these bushes, crowding huddled about us, assumed for me in the darkness a bizarre grotesquerie of appearance that lent to them somehow the aspect of purposeful and living creatures.  Their very ordinariness, I felt, masked what was malignant and hostile to us.  The forces of the region drew nearer with the coming of night.  They were focusing upon our island, and more particularly upon ourselves.  For thus, somehow, in the terms of the imagination, did my really indescribable sensations in this extraordinary place present themselves.

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Famous Modern Ghost Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.