Animal Ghosts eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 239 pages of information about Animal Ghosts.

Animal Ghosts eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 239 pages of information about Animal Ghosts.

But to proceed.  The phenomenon of the big bear, provided again it was really objective, may have been the phantasm of some prehistoric creature whose bones lie interred beneath the Tower; for we know the Valley of the Thames was infested with giant reptiles and quadrupeds of all kinds (I incline to this theory); or it may have been a Vice-Elemental, or—­the phantasm of a human being who lived a purely animal life, and whose spirit would naturally take the form most closely resembling it.

* * * * *

Judging by the number of experiences related to me, hauntings by phantom hares and rabbits would appear to be far from uncommon.  There is this difference, however, between the hauntings by the two species of animal—­phantom hares usually portend death or some grave catastrophe, either to the witness himself, or to someone immediately associated with him; whereas phantom rabbits are seldom prophetic, and may generally be looked upon merely as the earth-bound spirits of some poor rabbits that have met with untimely ends.

Hauntings by a White Rabbit

Mr. W.T.  Stead, in his Real Ghost Stories, gives an account of the hauntings by a phantom rabbit in a house in ——­ Road.  He does not, however, mention any locality.  After describing several of the phenomena which disturbed various occupants of the place, he goes on to say, in the language of Mrs. A., who narrates the incident:—­

“A dog which lay on the rug also heard the sounds, for he pricked up his ears and barked.  Without a moment’s delay she flew to the door, calling the dog to follow her, intending as she did so to open the hall door and call for assistance, but the dog, though an excellent house dog, crouched at her feet and whined, but would not follow her up the stairs, so she carried him up in her arms, and reaching the door, called for assistance; when, however, the dining-room doors were opened, the rooms were in perfect quiet and destitute of any signs of life.”

The behaviour of the dog here accords exactly with the behaviour of dogs I have had in haunted houses, and substantiates my theory that dogs are excellent psychic barometers.

“After the family had been in the house a few weeks, a white rabbit made its appearance.  This uncanny animal would suddenly appear in a room in which members of the family were seated, and after gliding round and slipping under chairs and tables, would disappear through a brick wall as easily as through an open door.”

This is the invariable trick of ghosts; they seldom, however, open doors.  Mrs. A. adds:—­

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Animal Ghosts from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.