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Ghosts
Taken from Fairy & Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry
Ghosts, or as they are called in Irish, Thevshi or Tash (taidhbhse,
tais), live in a state intermediary between this life and the next.
They are held there by some earthly longing or affection, or some
duty unfulfilled, or anger against the living. "I will haunt
you," is a common threat; and one hears such phrases as, "She
will haunt him, if she has any good in her." If one is sorrowing
greatly after a dead friend, a neighbour will say, "Be quiet
now, you are keeping him from his rest:" or in the Western
Isles, according to Lady Wilde, they will tell you, "You are
waking the dog that watches to devour the souls of the dead."
Those who die suddenly, more commonly than others, are believed
to become haunting Ghosts. They go about moving the furniture, and
in every way trying to attract attention.
When the soul has left the body, it is drawn away, sometimes, by
the fairies. I have a story of a peasant who once saw, sitting in
a fairy rath, all who had died for years in his village. Such souls
are considered lost. If a soul eludes the fairies, it may be snapped
up by the evil spirits. The weak souls of young children are in
especial danger. When a very young child dies, the western peasantry
sprinkle the threshold with the blood of a chicken, that the spirits
may be drawn away to the blood. A Ghost is compelled to obey the
commands of the living. "The stable-boy up at Mrs. G_____'s
there," said an old countryman, "met the master going
round the yards after he had been two days dead, and told him to
be away with him to the lighthouse, and haunt that; and there he
is far out to sea still, sir. Mrs. G_____ was quite wild about it,
and dismissed the boy." A very desolate lighthouse poor devil
of a Ghost! Lady Wilde considers it is only the spirits who are
too bad for heaven, and too good for hell, who are thus plagued.
They are compelled to obey some one they have wronged.
The souls of the dead sometimes take the shapes of animals. There
is a garden at Sligo where the gardener sees a previous owner in
the shape of a rabbit. They will sometimes take the forms of insects,
especially of butterflies. If you see one fluttering near a corpse,
that is the soul, and is a sign of its having entered upon immortal
happiness. The author of the Parochial Survey of Ireland, 1814,
heard a woman say to a chid who was chasing a butterfly, "How
do you know it is not the soul of your grandfather." On November
eve the dead are abroad and dance with fairies.
As in Scotland, the fetch is commonly believed in. If you are the
double, or fetch, of a friend in the morning, no ill follows; if
at night, he is about to die.
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