Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Ghost by Madison Julius Cawein
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The Ghost

    By Madison Julius Cawein



    There's a house across the street
    That nobody goes into;
    Say it's haunted, yes, they do;
    Ghosts livethere, they say, or meet:
    Saw one in a winding-sheet
    At a window once, and took
    To my heels and ran and ran,
    Never gave another look,
    Till I met a nigger-man.

    And I told him. And he said,
    "Dat ole house am ha'nted sure.
    'Deed it wuz a ghost! a pure
    Sure nuff ghost, I am afred.
    Better run home; git ter bed;
    Or he'll kotch yer. Lawzy me!
    I won't pass dat house ter-night.
    Onct I pass dar: whut'd I see?
    Why, I seed a walking light.

    "Yep; an' it went up an' down
    Like a fire-bug. I wuz skeer'd
    Wus'n you wuz. An' I heer'd
    Chains a-trompin' all aroun':
    An' I laid dar on de groun'
    Skeer'd to def. An' den I seed
    Whut'd yer reckon? seed my lands!
    Seed a skel'ton! yarse indeed!
    Hulding up two skel'ton hands.

    "Den I run'd jest like you did.
    Ought ter t'ar dat ole house down.
    Hit's disgrace ter dis yere town
    Dat's my sintimints an' rid
    Us ob all de ghosts, instid
    Ob a-letting 'em cavort
    'Roun', an' skeer folks lef' an' right!
    T'ing ter do would be ter start
    Bonfire in it some dark night."
    Then he turned and went away.

    And I hurried home and told
    Father, and he said, "That old
    Negro-man has had his say;
    Mine I'll have another day.
    Come with me now. Let us see
    If that ghost of yours now goes:
    If it's a reality,
    Or a fraud as I suppose."

    And he took his walking-stick,
    And I followed. Sure enough,
    At the window was that stuff,
    Sheet, or piece of old bed-tick,
    Waving in the wind. And quick
    In my father went. And why,
    Heard him laughing; and I saw
    That he had the old ghost by
    A long string that he could draw.

    Was n't anything at all
    But an old white window-blind,
    That the folks had left behind,
    In the window of the hall:
    Had got loosened from the wall
    And the wind kept flapping it.
    I laughed, too; but was almost
    Just put out a little bit
    Wanted it to be a ghost.



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