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Written for The Flag of Our Union

The Haunted Church

An Old Sexton's Story


by Arthur L. Meserve

Such a commotion as there was in town when it came to be fully believed that our church was haunted I never saw in my life before, and hope and trust I never may again. It was all that was talked about, from one end of the community to the other, until at last not a child dared to go to bed alone in the dark, and many a grown person was in the same predicament. The church you know is surrounded on three sides by a large number of evergreens, so that even in the broad daylight it is gloomy and solemn in and around it; and since it had got about that it was haunted few there were that cared to pass it after dark; and even in the daytime people took pains to cross to the opposite side of the street so that they might be as far from the ghosts as possible. 

As you can see, it is but a little way from my cottage here to the church; yet even the walls can only be seen in one spot, and about half of one of the windows, owing to the evergreens of which I have spoken, growing so close about it, and there, perhaps, it was little wonder that I saw nothing of the ghosts (there were more than one, people said,) until it was noised all about the town that strange sights and sounds had been seen and heard coming from within at late hours in the night or very early in the morning.

The first word that I heard about the ghosts came from my wife. A relative had died in a distant town, and I had been summoned there, and found it impossible to return for a week. My wife… Read More