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MY OWN TRUE GHOST STORY

       CHAPTER IV

       HAUNTED HOUSES

       THE RECORD OF A HAUNTED HOUSE

       PROOFS OF IMMATERIALITY

       CONDUCT OF ANIMALS IN THE HOUSE

       B—— HOUSE

       WILLINGTON MILL

       THE GREAT AMHERST MYSTERY

       BROOK HOUSE

       CHAPTER V

       GHOST STORIES OF A MORE DRAMATIC NATURE

       DISEASE-PHANTOMS

       THE TALE OF THE MUMMY

       FACE SLAPPED BY A GHOST

       ALONE WITH A GHOST IN A CHURCH

       A HAUNTED HOUSE IN FRANCE

       A HAUNTED HOUSE IN GEORGIA

       SHAKEN BY A GHOST

       THE HOUSE AND THE BRAIN

       APPENDIX A

       HISTORICAL GHOSTS

       ROYAL

       EMPERORS

       FAMOUS MEN

       APPENDIX B

       THE PHANTOM ARMIES SEEN IN FRANCE

       APPENDIX C

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

      PUBLISHER’S NOTE.

       Table of Contents

      HEREWARD CARRINGTON, author of “True Ghost Stories,” is well known in this country, and in Europe, as a prominent scientific writer on psychical and occult subjects. He has been a member of both the English and American Societies of Psychical Research for more than 15 years; has written over a dozen books on the subject—a number of which has been translated into foreign languages (such as Japanese and Arabic), and he has lectured in London, Paris, Rome, Venice, Milan, Genoa, Turin, etc.—before scientific organizations. His writings are well known, and have earned him a high place in psychical circles. He’s a late member of the Council of the American Scientific Society, of the American Geographical Society, and of the American Health League. He collaborated in the “American Encyclopædia,” “The Standard Dictionary,” etc. His experience in the investigation of psychical mysteries is unrivalled. He has travelled all over the country investigating “cases,” spending nights in “haunted houses,” and accounts of his investigations have appeared in the Reports of the various Psychical Societies, and also in his own publications.

      In “True Ghost Stories,” Mr. Carrington presents a number of startling cases of this character; but they are not the ordinary “ghost stories”—based on pure fiction, and having no foundation in reality. Here we have a well-arranged collection of incidents, all thoroughly investigated and vouched for, and the testimony obtained first-hand and corroborated by others. The chapter on “Haunted Houses” is particularly striking. The first chapter deals with the interesting question, “What is a Ghost?” and attempts to answer this question in the light of the latest scientific theories which have been advanced to explain these supernatural happenings and visitants. It is a book of absorbing interest, and cannot fail to grip and hold the attention of every reader—no matter whether he be a student of these questions, or one merely in search of hair-raising anecdotes and stories. He will find them here a-plenty!

       Table of Contents

      The following little book endeavors to bring together a number of “ghost stories” of the more startling and dramatic type—but stories, nevertheless, which seem to be well authenticated; and which have been obtained, in most instances, at first hand, from the original witnesses; and often contain corroborative testimony from others who also experienced the ghostly phenomena. Some of these incidents, indeed, rise to the dignity of scientific evidence; others are less well authenticated cases—but interesting for all that. These have been grouped in various Chapters, according to their evidential value. Chapters II. and III. contain well-evidenced cases, some of which have been taken from the Proceedings and Journals of the Society for Psychical Research (S. P. R.), or from Phantasms of the Living, or from other scientific books, in which narratives of this character receive serious consideration. Chapter V., on the contrary, contains a number of incidents which—striking and dramatic as they are—cannot be included in the two earlier Chapters, as presenting real evidence of Ghosts; but are published rather as startling and interesting ghost stories. Chapter IV., devoted to “Haunted Houses,” contains brief accounts of the most famous Haunted Houses, and of the phenomena which have been witnessed within them. Appendix A gives a list of a few of the important “Historical Ghosts,” Appendix B describes the “Phantom Armies” lately seen by the Allied troops in France—while Appendix C lists a number of books of Ghost Stories which the interested reader may care to peruse. A short Glossary, at the beginning of the book, explains the meaning of certain terms used—which are not, perhaps, ordinarily met with in books of this character.

      In the Introductory Chapter, I have endeavored to explain, very briefly, the nature and character of Ghosts; what they are; and the various scientific theories which have been brought forward, of late years, to explain Ghosts. I hope that this may prove of interest to the reader; in case it does not do so, he is invited to “skip” directly

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