Happy Hallowe'en! |
As promised, I have a scary tale alleged to be true. From TEXAS TEARS AND TEXAS SUNSHINE: VOICES OF FRONTIER WOMEN, edited by Jo Ella Powell Exley, this is the book's only incident involving a this sort of fright. Are you ready?
Amelia Edith Barr 1880 |
Tiny frogs by the thousands filled Galveston's streets (Yes, this is a tree frog, but he's so cute I used his photo) |
By July, the fever had progressed within two or three blocks behind the house. Soaking downpours alternated with distressing heat. The result was streets full of grass alive with tiny frogs in such quantities that pedestrians could not avoid crushing them as they walked.
In August, Amelia strolled with Robert into town. The beds of the dying were drawn to open windows. Hardly a dwelling remained without someone in the process of expiring. Everywhere they walked, the fetid smell of yellow fever greeted them.
Jean Lafitte |
Mr. Hall continued, "...for I know what fiends once made Galveston Island their home. Do you think they have forgotten the place of their sins and cruelties? No, Furies of ancient crimes are here, revengeful souls full of unsatisfied hatreds..."
After midnight on the 20th of August, Amelia was too restless to sleep. She sat in a rocking chair facing an open window screened by green blinds made of thin wooden slats. She heard a faint stir among the leaves of the Japonica hedge that surrounded the place.
“There fell upon the closed blinds--on which my eyes were fixed--a blow so tremendous, that I was sure they must be shattered...before I could rise, another blow of less intensity followed, and then a third not quite as crashing as the second. I never for an instant thought the blows were made by any instrument. I was sure they were made by a hand.”
Afraid to approach the window, Amelia kept her back to it. She checked on her husband and children, but they were sleeping. Until dawn, she prayed for God’s mercy. When Robert awoke, she told him what had happened and together they examined the window. The thin wooden slats were not broken. The shape of a hand twice as large as any human's left an indention in the slats!
Yellow Fever Victim |
Don't eat too many treats. Have a Happy Hallowe'en!
Thanks for stopping by!
3 comments:
That is a creepy tale. Don't think I would of looked out the window either. I can believe they had something there. That is so interesting that the blinds didn't break. I have heard stories of things being broken one minute and next put back together although I have never seen this. I always need proof. I do believe in ghosts, spirits, demons.
Sue B
katsrus(at)gmail(dot)com
Interesting tale! I'm not sure that I would be able to put much stock in it, though. After all, these people were suffering from high fevers and were possibly delirious, too. But, it's fun to wonder, isn't it?
reading_frenzy at yahoo dot com
I love tales like this. As it was passed down , I'm sure it was embellished. But still a good yarn,
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