Yeats' The Celtic Twilight
VILLAGE GHOSTS
In the great cities we see so little of the world, we drift into our
minority. In the little towns and villages there are no minorities; people are
not numerous enough. You must see the world there, perforce. Every man is
himself a class; every hour carries its new challenge. When you pass the inn at
the end of the village you leave your favourite whimsy behind you; for you will
meet no one who can share it. We listen to eloquent speaking, read books and
write them, settle all the affairs of the universe. The dumb village multitudes
pass on unchanging; the feel of the spade in the hand is no different for all
our talk: good seasons and bad follow each other as of old. The dumb multitudes
are no more concerned with us than is the old horse peering through the rusty
gate of the village pound. The ancient map-makers wrote across unexplored
regions, 'Here are lions.' Across the villages of fishermen and
turners of the earth, so different are these from us, we can write but
one line that is certain, 'Here are ghosts.'
My ghosts inhabit the village of H-----, in Leinster. History has in no
manner been burdened by this ancient village, with its crooked lanes, its old
abbey churchyard full of long grass, its green background of small fir-trees,
and its quay, where lie a few tarry fishing-luggers. In the annals of entomology
it is well known. For a small bay lies westward a little, where he who watches
night after night may see a certain rare moth fluttering along the edge of the
tide, just at the end of evening or the beginning of dawn. A hundred years ago
it was carried here from Italy by smugglers in a cargo of silks and laces. If
the moth-hunter would throw down his net, and go hunting for ghost tales or
tales of the faeries and such-like children of Lillith, he would have need for
far less patience.
To approach the village at night a timid man requires great strategy. A man
was once heard complaining, 'By the cross of Jesus! how shall I go? If I pass by
the hill of Dunboy old Captain Burney may look out on me. If I go round by the
water, and up by the steps, there is the headless one and another on the quays,
and a new one under the old churchyard wall. If I go right round the other way,
Mrs. Stewart is appearing at Hillside Gate, and the devil himself is in the
Hospital Lane.'
I never heard which spirit he braved, but feel sure it was not the one in the
Hospital Lane. In cholera times a shed had been there set up to receive
patients. When the need had gone by, it was pulled down, but ever since the
ground where it stood has broken out in ghosts and demons and faeries. There is
a farmer at H-----, Paddy B----- by name--a man of great strength, and a
teetotaller. His wife and sister-in-law, musing on his great strength,
often wonder what he would do if he drank. One night when passing through the
Hospital Lane, he saw what he supposed at first to be a tame rabbit; after a
little he found that it was a white cat. When he came near, the creature slowly
began to swell larger and larger, and as it grew he felt his own strength ebbing
away, as though it were sucked out of him. He turned and ran.
By the Hospital Lane goes the 'Faeries Path.' Every evening they travel from
the hill to the sea, from the sea to the hill. At the sea end of their path
stands a cottage. One night Mrs. Arbunathy, who lived there, left her door open,
as she was expecting her son. Her husband was asleep by the fire; a tall man
came in and sat beside him. After he had been sitting there for a while, the
woman said, 'In the name of God, who are you?' He got up and went out, saying,
'Never leave the door open at this hour, or evil may come to you.' She woke her
husband and told him. 'One of the good people has been with us,' said he.
Probably the man braved Mrs. Stewart at Hillside Gate. When she lived she was
the wife of the Protestant clergyman. 'Her ghost was never known to harm any
one,' say the village people; 'it is only doing a penance upon the earth.' Not
far from Hillside Gate, where she haunted, appeared for a short time a much more
remarkable spirit. Its haunt was the bogeen, a green lane leading from the
western end of the village. I quote its history at length: a typical village
tragedy. In a cottage at the village end of the bogeen lived a house-painter,
Jim Montgomery, and his wife. They had several children. He was a little dandy,
and came of a higher class than his neighbours. His wife was a very big woman.
Her husband, who had been expelled from the village choir for drink, gave her a
beating one day. Her sister heard of it, and came and took down one of the
window shutters --Montgomery was neat
about everything, and had shutters on the outside of every window--and beat him
with it, being big and strong like her sister. He threatened to prosecute her;
she answered that she would break every bone in his body if he did. She never
spoke to her sister again, because she had allowed herself to be beaten by so
small a man. Jim Montgomery grew worse and worse: his wife soon began to have
not enough to eat. She told no one, for she was very proud. Often, too, she
would have no fire on a cold night. If any neighbours came in she would say she
had let the fire out because she was just going to bed. The people about often
heard her husband beating her, but she never told any one. She got very thin. At
last one Saturday there was no food in the house for herself and the children.
She could bear it no longer, and went to the priest and asked him for some
money. He gave her thirty shillings. Her husband met her, and took
the money, and beat her. On the following Monday she got very ill,
and sent for a Mrs. Kelly. Mrs. Kelly, as soon as she saw her, said, 'My woman,
you are dying,' and sent for the priest and the doctor. She died in an hour.
After her death, as Montgomery neglected the children, the landlord had them
taken to the workhouse. A few nights after they had gone, Mrs. Kelly was going
home through the bogeen when the ghost of Mrs. Montgomery appeared and followed
her. It did not leave her until she reached her own house. She told the priest,
Father S------, a noted antiquarian, and could not get him to believe her. A few
nights afterwards Mrs. Kelly again met the spirit in the same place. She was in
too great terror to go the whole way, but stopped at a neighbour's cottage
midway, and asked them to let her in. They answered they were going to bed. She
cried out, 'In the name of God let me in, or I will break open the door.'
They opened, and so she escaped from the ghost. Next day she told the priest
again. This time he believed, and said it would follow her until she spoke to
it.
She met the spirit a third time in the bogeen. She asked what kept it from
its rest. The spirit said that its children must be taken from the workhouse,
for none of its relations were ever there before, and that three masses were to
be said for the repose of its soul. 'If my husband does not believe you,' she
said, 'show him that,' and touched Mrs. Kelly's wrist with three fingers. The
places where they touched swelled up and blackened. She then vanished. For a
time Montgomery would not believe that his wife had appeared: 'she would not
show herself to Mrs. Kelly,' he said--'she with respectable people to appear
to.' He was convinced by the three marks, and the children were taken from the
workhouse. The priest said the masses, and the shade must have been at rest, for
it has not since appeared. Some time afterwards
Jim Montgomery died in the workhouse, having come to great poverty through
drink.
I know some who believe they have seen the headless ghost upon the quay, and
one who, when he passes the old cemetery wall at night, sees a woman with white
borders to her cap1 creep out and follow him. The apparition only leaves him at
his own door. The villagers imagine that she follows him to avenge some wrong.
'I will haunt you when I die' is a favourite threat. His wife was once
half-scared to death by what she considers a demon in the shape of a dog.
These are a few of the open-air spirits; the more domestic of their tribe
gather within-doors, plentiful as swallows under southern eaves.
One night a Mrs. Nolan was watching by her dying child in Fluddy's Lane.
Suddenly there was a sound of knocking heard at the door. She did not open,
fearing it was some unhuman thing that knocked. The knocking ceased. After a
little the front-door and then the back-door were burst open, and closed again.
Her husband went to see what was wrong. He found both doors bolted. The child
died. The doors were again opened and closed as before. Then Mrs. Nolan
remembered that she had forgotten to leave window or door open, as the custom
is, for the departure of the soul. These strange openings and closings and
knockings were warnings and reminders from the spirits who attend the dying.
The house ghost is usually a harmless and well-meaning creature. It is put up
with as long as possible. It brings good luck to those who live with it. I
remember two children who slept with their mother and sisters and brothers in
one small room. In the room was also a ghost. They sold herrings in the Dublin
streets, and did not mind the ghost much, because they knew they would always
sell their fish easily while they slept in the 'haânted' room.
I have some acquaintance among the ghost-seers of western villages. The
Connaught tales are very different from those of Leinster. These H----- spirits
have a gloomy, matter-of-fact way with them. They come to announce a death, to
fulfil some obligation, to revenge a wrong, to pay their bills even--as did a
fisherman's daughter the other day--and then hasten to their rest. All things
they do decently and in order. It is demons, and not ghosts, that transform
themselves into white cats or black dogs. The people who tell the tales are
poor, serious-minded fishing people, who find in the doings of the ghosts the
fascination of fear. In the western tales is a whimsical grace, a curious
extravagance. The people who recount them live in the most wild and
beautiful scenery, under a sky ever loaded and fantastic with flying clouds.
They are farmers and labourers, who do a little fishing now and then. They do
not fear the spirits too much to feel an artistic and humorous pleasure in their
doings. The ghosts themselves share in their quaint hilarity. In one western
town, on whose deserted wharf the grass grows, these spirits have so much vigour
that, when a misbeliever ventured to sleep in a haunted house, I have been told
they flung him through the window, and his bed after him. In the surrounding
villages the creatures use the most strange disguises. A dead old gentleman robs
the cabbages of his own garden in the shape of a large rabbit. A wicked
sea-captain stayed for years inside the plaster of a cottage wall, in the shape
of a snipe, making the most horrible noises. He was only dislodged when the wall
was broken down; then out of the solid plaster the snipe rushed away
whistling.
  
Footnotes
1. I
wonder why she had white borders to her cap. The old Mayo woman, who has told me
so many tales, has told me that her brother-in-law saw 'a woman with white
borders to her cap going around the stacks in a field, and soon after he got a
hurt, and he died in six months.'
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