FOLKLORE: Ghost Stories: Haunted
Rooms - From The Enchanted World Of Ghosts
In Denmark, ghosts that had been exorcised -- forced down
into the earth and pinned in place with a stake driven through the heart -- did
not rest easily. They lay in the dark, waiting for a chance to escape, and
for that reason, people who ventured into lonely fields and meadows were warned
not to disturb unmarked posts. Too often, those who touched the wood heard
an eager, muffled voice demanding freedom from the post that held it down.
"You pull," the voice would whisper, "and I will
push..."
***
"Song of the Sorrowing
Harp"
On the East coast of Scotland, in a castle
hard by the North Sea, lived a lord who had two daughters, the elder one dark,
the younger fair. As sometimes happens, the maidens were rivals --
although the younger sister did not know it and the elder would not admit it ---
and something occurred between them that caused a ghost to
speak.
A young lord came courting. Quite
properly, he paid formal address to the elder sister, but his eyes always
strayed to the younger. He rode by her at the hunt, he danced with her in
the hall. And all the while, the dark gaze of the elder sister followed
him. She made no complaint, biding her
time.
Early one morning, the elder maiden asked
her sister to walk by the seashore. As they strolled, the fair sister
spoke guilelessly about the dashing visitor. The elder siad little, but at
a place wher ethe waves beat against the massive rocks, she acted. With a
swift blow, she knocked her sister off balance and into the foaming
sea.
The waves closed over the fair maidens head
and clawed at her hair with icy fingers. She rose gasping to the surface
and screamed to her sister, but there was no response. She heard only the
roaring of the waters and the sharp cries of gulls as they wheeled in the sky
above. The dark sister stood on the shore rocks, motionless as a carved
statue. With a steady, unperturbed gaze, she watched her sister's hopeless
struggle. The young maiden sank, rose again for a moment and cried out
pitifully, then sank again beneath the surging skirts of
foam.
The dark one kept her vigil there for a
time, observing the violence of the waves with satisfaction. Then she ran
home to her father's hall and, weeping, told a false tale, saying how her sister
had slipped on the rocks and drowned. The people searched the shore for
her, but they could not find her body. They made great mourning in teh
months that followed. Afterward, the young lord, bereft of the fair
sister, sought consolation with the dark, and this was gladly
given.
But the fair sister's body, drawn by wind
and tide and cradled in the killing waves, drifted along the Scottish shore and
into a calm loch, far from her father's lands. A miller at the loch's edge
spied the golder hair stirring beneath the surface and gently pulled the body
from the water.
It happened that a wandering
minstrel -- a harper famed throughout Scotland -- was staying with the
miller. he helped the man to give her burial, and moved by her beauty, he
cut three strands of the golden hair and strung them into his
harp.
Eventually the harper took leave of the
miller and went on his way, traveling from castle to castle to sing before the
lords of the land. In the months that followed, the harp played for the
minstrel with a tenderness that brought tears to the eyes of its listeners, and
the harper grew to cherish the golden strings.
At length he came to the stronghold of the maiden's father, although he did not
know it for what it was. The minstrel was welcomed and feasted, as was the
custom then. In the evening, when the fires were lit and the flames cast
flickering shadows in the hall, the man drew out his harp and set it before him,
making ready to sing. The dark sister settled on a bench to listen,
flanked by her father and by the young lord she
loved.
But before the harper could touch them,
the golden strings shimmered in the firelight; they trembled of their own
accord. A sweet, familiar voice eddied around the comapany, and when the
dark sister heard the words it sang, her face grew pale and tight. Her
fate had come upon her, and well she knew it.
"Farewell to the lord, my father," sang the harp softly. "Farewell to my
lady mother."
The harp paused and the company
watched it in horrified silence. Then the strings spoke once more, loud
and wailing this time.
"And woe to my sister,
who murdered me!!"
*** ***
Some tales
of haunted rooms are long, but many more are short, and the shortest tale of all
concerns a man startled from a deep sleep. He lay in a pitch-dark, silent
room and longed for the comfort of a lighted candle. The story runs, in
its entirety, as follows: "He woke up frightened and reached for a match,
and a match was put into his
hand."
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