[Written for The Flag of our Union]
Branch Bridge’s Ghost
by Arthur L. Meserve
"There, Uncle Ben, how are you going to get round that?” I said, in a half-joking, half-triumphant tone, as I laid down a paper in which I had been reading aloud a well-authenticated ghost story. What the paper stated could be vouched for by a half score of respectable citizens, who the editor declared were ready and eager to give their oaths to what they had seen with their eyes and heard with their ears.
Uncle Ben, to whom I had addressed the question, was an old man, one of the first settles of our part of the country; and, unlike a great many other old men, he took a great interest in what was going on in the world; and now that his eyesight had in a measure failed him, he was dependent upon others to read to him the news, and for his edification I had read the current ghost story that was then going the rounds of newspaperdom, and then demanded his opinion on the subject, as I have already chronicled.
“There is a way to get round everything of that sort, if you only go the right way to work, and aint afraid of seeing anything, be it in the flesh or not. A man sometimes sees that which he is afraid he shall, even with his eyes shut. I don’t believe that there was ever one of these stories but what could be sifted to the bottom and found that natural causes had to do with it. In my young days, just after I settled here, we had a ghost that frightened half of the people out of their wits; but I unraveled the mystery after awhile, when it had got so that nobody dared to cross the bridge after dark, for fear of seeing or hearing something from the other world.”
“Was the bridge thought to be haunted?”
“Yes. Branch Bridge; and people had seen and heard things that they could not account for, and it was not to be wondered at. Strange… Read More