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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 23 Jul 99 - 11:29 PM OK........OK..........FAIR ONE, I guess we will go for a walk, strictly cuz I don't want you to trip..........Uh, Rick, will you hold this 12 string for me............Uh, never mind, ............Rib,would you..........nope, never mind........Alice, I think I should leave this with you for safe keeping. And here is my bodhran........wait, there is a fire here, I better take that with me. C'mon FAIR ONE, I think I saw a nice hill over here a piece........wait, almost forgot the Low D................What's that Obi Wan Offer?.........Uh, no thanks, we will be fine by ourselves. Why don't you lead these fine folks in another cheer until we get back. Then we will sing Liam's Brothers version of "Billy O'Shea"................... |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: bbc Date: 23 Jul 99 - 11:30 PM I'm sure he'd love to, Jeri, but it's pretty light around my area. You'll be able to see the moon, a few planets, & some stars, if it's clear. You'll win his heart, for sure, if you ask (Don't say I said so!). |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 12:11 AM "Starry Starry Night" We are very far from city lights. In the big Montana sky, you can see the milky way, meteors, and, later this year, the northern lights. Any songs about the Northern Lights? (I know about Dr. Tooth singing 'aurora borealis, shining down in Dallas' from the Muppet Movie). Another nice thing about these mountain woods... no bugs. But, I did just hear a coyote call.. or was that a wolf? .... oh, aaaalisoooon.... |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: alison Date: 24 Jul 99 - 12:23 AM OK.. I'll put the pipes away........ |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: DougR Date: 24 Jul 99 - 12:41 AM No, bbc, I'm solo. Velma's idea of roughing it is either the Hyatt Regency or the Biltmore. I guess it will just have to be you, Alison (provided someone will make her some tea while she is gone) and me ... looking up at the black sky with a million points of light. Sounds good to me! My momma raise me right, so I'll behave myself. DougR |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 12:53 AM Now Doug, you are new to these parts he said as he rose up to his full 12' height so I will go easy on you. FAIR ONE, otherwise known as Alison is not by herself under the stars. Here ya go lad, sit down right here by all these other very nice, and very attractive woman, and see if you can use your expansive intellect and lovely voice to charm one of them. There ya go.........good lad.......and by the by..........stay out of the woods.......a fella could get hurt.........hahahahahaha |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Angus McSweeney Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:09 AM First of all, I have great night vision,... And then, Dylan's "On a Night Like This..." We'll make some tea come morning, alison ... And finally - it's Friday night, and here we all are. Maybe we should be sharing a campfire. Penny, isn't it great that I've seen the sky in Tuscon and I've seen the sky in northern Minnesota, and you and I are still looking at the same wondrous sky! |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: bbc Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:21 AM Hey, Mick, lay off Doug! He's a good friend of mine & he's almost old enough to be my daddy! Fair one & I are safe under the stars in his company! It's time to play nice & share! Doug, I do hope you'll bring Velma to the tavern tomorrow. I promise to find her a comfy seat & make her feel at home. Well, it's past my bedtime, folks; just came to say hi & tell you how much I enjoy spending time with you! Goodnight! |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:24 AM OK..........OK.......damn, now even bbc is mad......I think I will just sit here and sing a song.........anyone got a request for a forlorn ballad singer?....... |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: alison Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:24 AM doug is being a perfect gentleman and if you don't back off I'll take the griddle to you... now you wouldn't want that, would you Mick? |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:28 AM Mick, give us a song. Anything you want to sing. |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:29 AM Shite...........an Irish woman, under full sail, and with a griddle..........Is there anything I can get you FAIR ONE, a sandwich, make you a drink? How about you, Mr. Doug?..........nothing, are you sure???.......bbc, I would happy to wait on you for a change................What, Spaw?...........Wimpy!!!!!!!.......She has a griddle for Chrissakes................And she is an Irish woman, they have black belts in griddle swinging...........OK, Smartass, let's see you take her on, but let me move my Guild back a bit. Don't want it spattered........ |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:33 AM Hey, Big Mick. If you're feeling lonely and rejected, I might have the cure -- or at least a little ol' port in the storm. Bring that brass bra over here and sit a spell. Just sing me the sweetest song you know. I'm feeling languid and lovely tonight, hoping we might see the Northern Lights dance on the dome of the sky if we pay attention and don't drift off. Or just lean back and listen, all of you, real quiet-like, and I'll sing you "Night Rider's Lament..." "... But they've never seen the Northern Lights, Never seen a hawk on the wing, Never seen the spring hit the Great Divide, Never heard old camp cookie sing ... " )And then it goes into my high, lilting yodel, the one that makes all the cowboys go, "Ahhh." ) WW
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:35 AM ooohhh, WW, I want to hear that one in person at Mudstock 99. |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:36 AM Well, WW, that is one of my favorite songs and I would love to harmonize..........give me a key..............And even though it is overdone a bit, The Dutchman is still one of the great songs ever.........sit back and let me and the Guild have a go at it.... |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: alison Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:41 AM I want to hear it now...is it in the DB? |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:43 AM A is almost always good for me. Is it good for you? WW |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:46 AM alison, it is in the DT listed two ways
NIGHT RIDER'S LAMENT (WHY DO YOU RIDE FOR YOUR MONEY?) (Mike Burton) and NGHT RIDER'S LAMENT |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:47 AM Then sit right down here beside me, FAIR ONE, and listen up. One night as I was a ridin', graveyard shift midnight to dawn The stars were as bright as a readin' light, for a letter from an old friend back home He said, "last night I ran into Jenny, she's married and has a good life. Ya shore missed a track when you never came back, She's the perfect professional's wife She said, Why does he ride for the money? Why does she rope for short pay? He ain't gettin' no where and he's losin' his sha----are, Lord he must have gone crazy out there. Go ahead, WW, take the next verse.................. |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:52 AM (sneaking in here to add a link NIGHT RIDER'S LAMENT ) |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: alison Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:55 AM Hey Mick, do me a favour.. mediaring it to me? |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:59 AM "Well, I finished up all of my letter, Tore off the stamp for Black Jim, Little Dougie rode up to relive me. He looked at my letter and grinned. (And he asked me) "Why do we ride for our money? Why do we rope for short pay? We ain't gettin' nowhere and we're losing our share. Ah, we all must be crazy out here... "But they've never seen the Northern Lights, Never seen a hawk on the wing, Never seen the spring hit the Great Divide, Never heard a coyote sing, Oh-di-lay-di-oh, Oh-di-lay-di-ah Oh-di-lay-ee, Oh-di-lay-ee-Ohhh...." Ouch! S**t! My boot sole's smokin from the campfire... WW |
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Subject: Lyr Add: RIDIN' DOWN THE CANYON (Autry & Burnett) From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 02:08 AM While we're in the cowboy mode, another one I love was written by Gene Autry and Smiley Burnett. It's not in the DT, but it is at cowpie.
RIDIN' DOWN THE CANYON
When evening chores are over at our ranch house on the plain thread on this song (click) |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 24 Jul 99 - 02:09 AM At the High Plains Old-Time Country Music show in Douglas, Wyoming, in May there were four singers who did "Riding Down the Canyon..." I STILL haven't learned it. WW |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 02:15 AM hey, WW ... neither have I ;-> .. after midnight... we must be addicted |
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Subject: Lyr Add: THE WIDOW'S WALK From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 02:23 AM If I can get this *&($%#*&^ microphone working, I surely will, FAIR ONE. And WW, that was wonderful, here ya go, a great big old Mick Hug. You and I sing well together. And by the way, Alice. I would love to give you a hug while I am at it, and if you don't mind. This campfire is wonderful......thanks for inviting us all. I sure hope it goes on for a while..............Now, how about a song by one of my favorite authors.........it's called "THE WIDOW'S WALK" by Brendan Nolan. FAIR ONE, I would like you to harmonize on the Chorus. Mick begins to play a 3/4 arpeggio on the 12 string.................... She stood by the window, as the waves crashed the shore, To watch him come home, as he had times before. CHORUS: Oh, carry him home to me, Break the sea down for him, Carry my love home to me. It's late in the year, and the storm winds awaken, To the hardiest of sailors, the sea does not beckon CHORUS At their shady cove moorings, the small boats rock gently, Safe from the sea winds, till the new season's plenty CHORUS This room is my refuge from the toils of the day, It's here I find peace, and it's here I can pray, that you'll CHORUS If the sea take my love, to his grave in the ocean, God make me a silkie, that I might lie with him................The guitar fades |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Penny S. Date: 24 Jul 99 - 04:06 AM We only see the Northern Lights very rarely down here. I've seen them once, faintly through the sodium glare (better in the photograph, and missed the best show by being very tired and unable to stay awake. The Aurora prediction pages are on my favourites list so I can get another chance! But it would only be enough tp say I'd seen them, not really to see them, if you see what I mean. You lot are making me jealous! Penny PS I didn't tell you about the ghost that once turned up in my house last night, for obvious reasons. After Kat's lovely story, maybe it wouldn't fit. |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Penny S. Date: 24 Jul 99 - 06:46 AM Angus, isn't it great, with our little world spinning beneath! But I've heard about your American skies from a friend who's travelled in Arizona and California, (but especially the former in this context), and even our darkest areas don't measure up. Penny |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Alice Date: 24 Jul 99 - 09:49 AM alison, I just happen to have a little link to that Night Rider's Song on real audio. Not as good as Big Mick and KC, but here it is.Jerry Jeff Walker |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Big Mick Date: 24 Jul 99 - 10:07 AM Yeah, Alice. Ole Jerry Jeff is great, but he sings it a with a little more twang than I do. Think we can get that old boy to come round the campfire? Mick |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: katlaughing Date: 24 Jul 99 - 10:28 AM I am NOT really here, really! But, I have to say our own ART THIEME did a wonderful version of Night Rider's Lament on one of his early albums. No twang, smooth voice, superb pickin'; the defining version for me. pseudo-Kat |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 24 Jul 99 - 12:22 PM I do a twang-free version myself. And I'm not here right now either. Really. WW, who actually only went online to see if she had email from some really, really important person and when she didn't decided to check out the campfire just ONE second... |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: LEJ Date: 24 Jul 99 - 01:46 PM Penny, please tell us about the attic ghost,ok? |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Jeri Date: 24 Jul 99 - 02:01 PM Penny - I'd like to hear it too! I had a dream once that could have been one of those "ghostly messenger" things when an aunt died, but I don't think visits from the departed count if you're asleep. I love to hear other people's stories! |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Penny S. Date: 24 Jul 99 - 03:22 PM I never said it was in the attic! Can't stop now, as I'm off to the woods with the glow-worms, a bunch of kids and some angling lights (in case we don't see any ofn the real thing). Penny |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: catspaw49 Date: 24 Jul 99 - 03:37 PM While we're all waiting for the tale, let me say a Thank You to Leej and Alice for starting the two best, uh, I hate this word, but let's say "Healing" threads possible. And thanks to everyone for leaping in and playing. You are a very healthy group and have sorted through the chaff without suffocating from the dust. Great combinations of song, opinion, imagination, and humor. What a prescription for mental health here at the 'Cat. So my "Special" thanks to Alice, Leej, and all of you...... Well damn, I was gonna' throw a song at you here, but I forgot what I had in mind. Probably just as well since I'm lousy anyway ........and I've got a nasty case of virtual nausea from last nite.......not from the Jack, but I keep thinkin' about that dance with Banj................... Spaw |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: DougR Date: 24 Jul 99 - 04:17 PM Big Mick, you don't scare me a bit! As long as I have Alison on one side and bbc on the other (both slightly ahead of me of course) I feel completely safe here in the dark. They respect their elders and I know they will take good care of me! bbc, I'll try to get Velma into the Mudcat Tavern sometime today. She likes cheap red wine, if you got any. Alice, I heard an interesting story about that song you referred to. Seems that Gene Autry was auditioning for a side-kick and Smiley Burnet auditioned. Autry heard interviewed several others and listened to Smiley sing. He ask Smiley if he could write songs and Smiley allowed as how he could. He went away and returned the next day with "Riding Down the Canyon," which Autry bought from him for, I believe, $10.00. No wonder Gene Autry died a very rich man. DougR |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: LEJ Date: 24 Jul 99 - 04:56 PM I will stop in later to hear Penn's story. I'll also bring some more Bratwursts if somebody else brings buns. Stop in the Tavern for a half-price umbrella drink tonight! LEJ |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Peter T. Date: 24 Jul 99 - 05:10 PM LEJ, is that one of those umbrellas that turns inside out if a breeze comes up? yours, Peter T. |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Angus McSweeney Date: 24 Jul 99 - 05:18 PM "Did you ever see a night so long, When time goes driftin' by? The moon just went behind some clouds, I'm so lonesome I could cry. "Then silence of a falling star Lights up the purple sky. As I wonder where you are tonight, I'm so lonesome I could cry." You all know I'm not one bit lonesome, really, with this fine group sittin' round and sharing tunes. I'm playing this one in C and doin' a little drop on the A-string with the beat...C,B, A, down to G...you guitar players know what I'm talking about. We could sure use some mouth harp on this one and a few high sweet harmonies...there are a few more verses...someone want to take it? And who's that across the fire from me stirring the red hot coals with a branch? Can't quite make out the face from here...sing us a verse, maybe we'll recognise you. |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: catspaw49 Date: 24 Jul 99 - 05:20 PM That's not a breeze Peter, it's Banj's breath. HEY...Where's Paul G.???? I want some more of his song. Spaw |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 24 Jul 99 - 05:32 PM I've got buns. Um, I mean... THE buns... And I'm harmonizing with you real purty, Angus. C'n you hear me? WW |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Angus McSweeney Date: 24 Jul 99 - 05:54 PM Oh, I can hear you! I'm gettin' chills! Keep it up... |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Penny S. Date: 24 Jul 99 - 08:26 PM LEJ, I'm not really comfortable with Penn... You asked for the story about the ghost in my house. It was some years ago, on a night when I had been finding it hard to sleep. The room was not blacked out well, and the street lights made it possible to see. Each time I started to drop off, there would be some small sound, a beam creaking in the loft (roof space) perhaps, that woke me again. It's not an old house, but what we call a maisonette, built in the sixties, two floors, but with a flat belonging to someone else underneath. There is only one entrance door, at ground level, and it would be noisy if anyone entered it by force. It was built on the site of a Victorian house, and maybe my bedroom occupies the space of its attic. Not that I think that had anything to do with what happened next. At about 1.30, I saw the door of the room open, and a man came in and walked towards me. I was able to see him clearly while a part of me was very rationally trying to work out what to do. He was tall, with longish, lank dark hair, and a worn face with smoker's creases. Not unpleasant, though. He was wearing an old dark greatcoat, with his hands in the pockets. I could not see down below pocket level. He resembled one of my brothers-in-law, or perhaps the actor Jimmy Nail, without being completely like either. There was no doubt in my that a real person was in my room. As he walked towards me, I was thinking that he was between me and the phone, wondering how he had got in without my hearing, and trying hard to think how to defend myself, deciding in the end to sit up, and turn on the bedside light, and try talking. Strangely, in spite of anticipating the worst, I was not afraid. I suppose that it could have been a dream, except that, after I turned on the light, it took a moment for him to fade and disappear. And I was fully awake, awake enough to get out of bed and move the phone. The door, by the way, was shut. Some time later, I found that he also resembled the character played by Alan Rickman in the film "Truly, Madly, Deeply," which existed at the time, but which I had not seen, not even a small clip or publicity photo. I had the feeling that he was a stranger, passing through, who was, for some reason, coming to look at me. Someone familiar with the layout of the house. Just an ordinary fella who happened to be dead. Not malign in any sense. He has never been back. I am not, however, typing this on the usual computer, which is plugged into the extension in my bedroom. This is going on to the Mudcat without being re-read there. Penny
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Lonesome EJ Date: 24 Jul 99 - 11:38 PM PennY... actually I didn't even realize I had mis-typed your name until you called my attention to it. Sorry, it was just my lousy typing, not an attempt to stick you with a nick-name. Very eerie story. I love these! Anybody else? |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: alison Date: 24 Jul 99 - 11:46 PM (Thanks Alice... is the verse the same? if not send it too and I'll put the whole tune in the DB)
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: WyoWoman Date: 25 Jul 99 - 12:09 AM OK. True ghost story from moi: When I was in college in Oklahoma, many years ago, I had a friend, Sarah, who decided to move off-campus into an apartment of her own. The only thing she could afford was a tiny apartment in the corner of the basement of an old, two-story house on the other side of town from the campus. Everyone tried to convince Sarah that this was a bad idea, but she was determined to have her own place. So when the day came for her to move out of the dorm, I offered to help her move in to her new place. We packed her little bunch of earthly goods and drove across town to her "new" apartment. The second I walked in, I got the creeps. It was dank and poorly lit and had simply a terrible feeling to it. But I tried to be cheery and was burbling along in the kitchen with Sarah as we unpacked. The "kitchen" was actually just one end of the long, single room, and after a while the both of us felt something truly dreadful. We looked to the far end of the room, in the far corner and saw an almost human figure about a foot above the floor. We couldn't make out any features, but the figure looked as though it were of brown smoke -- a general human shape, but no identifying arms or legs. We looked at each other for one terrified second and as soon as we were certain the other had seen it, we tore up the stairs, leaped in my car and left as though the Devil were on our tail. She called the landlord the next day and insisted that he give her the rent back ... and she told him why. He seemed very upset, but agreed to send her a check for the full amount, including deposit. We convinced a couple of friends (guys, of course) to go over and get her things and bring them back to the dorm. A few days later, Sarah told this story to a woman in the grocery store where she worked part-time, and the woman got absolutely ashen. That man, she said, had been accused and had stood trial for killing his wife, allegedly in that very basement. There wasn't sufficient evidence to convict, she said, but everyone believed he was guilty. I didn't believe in ghosts, and still don't necessarily. But I believe there was something deeply strange and awful in that house. ww |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Penny S. Date: 25 Jul 99 - 07:25 AM LEJ, sorry about jumping in like that - it was very much the middle night, and as soon as I'd done it, I thought "that was a typo", but I really, really, didn't want to dwell too much on that posting, and I couldn't bring myself to drop back in and say anything. Not because of greatcoat man, but because thinking about him twitched some other memories better left. The nearest anyone will get to an explanation of that is for me to say that after I posted the leprechaun story the other week, and there had been a brief discussion about leaving cream out, I thought it would be a joke to do so, really, so that I could then post and say what happened to it. (Rational me was having conniption fits over this, but I didn't want to joke about it as if I'd done it, if I hadn't.) Anyway, I was on my way downstairs to the front door with a medicine measure of top-of-the-milk with apple spirit when something in my mind said, very strongly, "Don't invite anything in." So I didn't. And if I write any more of these, from my own experience, I will be doing just that. Penny |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: Penny S Date: 25 Jul 99 - 09:05 AM Now down at the Internet Cafe. Some time after I moved in, I became aware of something in my spare room. This was after I had my twin nieces to stay, separately, their first time away by themselves. One of them did have a nightmare or two, but I had put that down to being away from home. When I became aware of this feeling, I worried a bit about their having been in there, but they (now adult) have told me they never noticed anything, so that's all right. Anyway, I became aware of this feeling, and it was very unpleasant. I became increasingly unwilling to go in there. I asked a friend to go in there, and he felt it too, though we can't be absolutely sure that this is independent corroboration, as he knew I was asking for some reason, and knew I wouldn't be doing so for a smell of roses. All I could think of to do was to make sure I went in there to pray. Not to exorcise, just to make sure that whatever it was was aware that I called on God, and also that I was not going to be expelled from a part of my home. In 1987, we had our big wind, and a friend of the friend I mentioned lost his mobile home (the roof peeled off like the lid of a tin of sardines), and I agreeed to put him up until it was replaced. I was a little worried about this. However, it turned out that he was very religious, and made a habit of reading the offices (Matins, Compline, etc) every day. There has been nothing in there since. He never noticed anything. Another friend who has slept there didn't either, and when we asked him, in connection with the phantom doorbell ringer, he said the house had a very good feel about it. But I do sense that something may be about outside sometimes, and I don't want to draw its attention. Does that make sense? The doorbell ringer story may be entirely electronic, and as I was going to try to use it in another leprechaun story, you'll have to wait. But that one is corroborated by a NASA astrophysicist, and some Cambridge physicists, too! Penny (who slept quite weel last night.) |
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Campfire From: katlaughing Date: 25 Jul 99 - 10:01 AM Hi, PennyS. I think that makes perfect sense. When we get such feelings it is usually for a good reasona nd to our benefir to pay attention. we can attract anything which we dwell on or are open to. Some things are best left alone. Sounds to me like you have a pretty good idea of how to handle such things. I have an old wood framed mirror about 4 feet tall. Here's another from when we lived in Massachusetts: It was winter in New England. We'd jst had a cold night of snow, then warmer rain, sleet, then snow. As a result, there was glare ice under a small dusting of snow. Very deceptive. As I stepped down two wooden steps to go into my office that morning, my feet slipped out from under me and I fell flat on my back, hitting my head on the step edge, which knocked me out. Did the whole ambulance bit, concussion, stiches, etc. Anyway, we lived in a very old, for the USA! (1700's,) house which was divided in half. It was a former school. We had the whole attic, and half of the first and second floors. There was a built in bookshelf in the wall of the stairs going up, in the downstairs living room. One of my cats, Miss Pitty-Pat, who was quite fey, used to always stare at that space as if she saw something we didn't. I was sent home from hospital with instructions to my son and brother of what to watch for any complications. Other than feeling like my head was exploding from pain, I began to recover. By the time Roger returned from field work in California, I was on the mend and able to get up, take a bath, etc, without too much help. The door to the attic, where our son's bedroom was, was in our bedroom. One night, just after Roger came home, I was in bed reading. He was takign a bath just across the hall. I felt a rush of air and thought Colin was coming through from his bedroom upstairs. When I looked up, I saw a beautiful woman, rather filmy looking, with her hair piled high and a very Victorian high-necked dress on. She was very genteel looking. I got the impression she wanted to sit in my antique rocker, but I was concerned for her because i knew Rog would be coming in, in his brithday suit, any minute and that it would shock and dismay her to see him that way (NOT because of his looks:-) Anyway, I remember talking to her and urging her to please leave, explaining that he would be in there soon. It seemed to take a bit of convincing, but there was nothing scary about it, just concern and a bit of miscomprehension on her part. She did just fade away in a few minutes. I often wonder if she was a "school marm". Never did figure out what the cat saw. kat |
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