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As a kid, I was traveling with Mom in UK, and staying in one of her favorite places, Burford, Oxfordshire. This is, BTW, 1961. She always stayed in black and white Tudor hotels if at all possible. We hadn't been in England for many days when we entered the interior courtyard of just such a place, driving in our green Morris wagon through the narrow made-for-carriages entryway.
There was no double room available. After a bit of discussion, they put me upstairs on the 3rd floor which was right under the eaves of this venerable building. A steep stairway went up, and on the way the porter said they only put the young and spry up here.
Then as now, I was history mad, so I scouted around, really
enjoying the feel of the place, the dark beams, the crooked walls, the
off-kilter floors, the heavy dark antiques which filled the hallways and public
rooms. All this carved, blackened antiquity was new and delightful, the stuff of travel books, and now--I was actually here! After supper, I went up to bed to read, leaving Mom in the salon bar downstairs talking to other guests.
The roof, with beams bare, slanted down over the bed, which was a formidable four poster with carved posts and broad box feet. It, my mother had said was "probably Jacobean." Even if it wasn't, it was making a credible effort to look even older. I remember the smell, too, of polish, of damp and of the ages since the house had been built. Clearly, this room wasn't used often. I finally fell asleep listening to footsteps below coming and going and a blurry mumbling sometimes interrupted by laughter seeping up from the floor below.
I didn't have the suitcase which contained my bathrobe with me. Dressed only in a flannel nightgown, I didn't want anyone to see me, but when
I opened the door, it was now entirely dark in the hallway. That pitiful dim light, I
thought, must have gone out.
Then, just as I finished locking the door behind me, I turned and saw the ghost. I knew enough English History to know this was a cavalier, a fine one, too, with long locks and a trimmed beard which came to a nice Charles I point. He had high leather gloves and a hat with a red plume. His collar was of lace, and he had on a long waist coat, but no outer jacket.
Since we'd begun to travel in the UK, if a thing wasn't medieval, well, it was barely worth looking at. In fact, I had been anticipating the next day, when Mom and I were to drive to see what remained of the home of Lord Lovell, who'd been King Richard’s dearest friend. His home was now a ruin beside the nearby River Windrush.
The ghost put one hand on his hip. His lips
moved and I understood what he said, although there was no actual auditory
sensation involved. He said he was an ancestor of mine, who
had come here to raise a company to fight for the King, and that he had been waiting for me for a
very long time. The oddest thing about him was that he appeared
to be almost up to his knees in the floor, no boots were visible.
We leaned heads together over the table and continued the conversation quietly. Our host went on to explain that he’d had a parapsychologist visit, an investigator who’d also, after staying upstairs for a few days, had had an encounter with the third floor ghost, though it hadn't spoken to him. Our host said that the investigator had explained that we only saw the ghost down to the knees because “he is standing on the old floor—the way it was before remodeling,” an event which had apparently taken place just after the last war.
Juliet Waldron
All my historical novels:
Interesting bit. Keep writing
ReplyDeleteThank-you, Janet! Old person re-telling a story.
DeleteI love ghost stories. This is a great one! I've had my own ghostly encounters so I could relate. It sounds like something you could write a book about - hint, hint!
ReplyDeleteI still "owe" the Cavaliers a book--altho the Stuarts were so feckless.
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