In Britain, there are ghosts
everywhere. Here in Los Angeles, there are none. My house is nevertheless infestata (haunted), according to my Italian
client.
Apparently, the Devil and his
cohorts are busy 24/7 casting malefici
(evil spells) on me and Ditto (the
cat). Who else, for example, but Il
Grande Disturbatore (The Great Disturber) himself could have deposited
those strange bones outside our front door the other day? Ditto again, perhaps? Maybe, but if it’s Ditto, the lethal barn cat,
she was obviously acting on the orders of
L’Astuta Serpe. The client says I am not exactly posseduto (possessed) but am clearly un portatore sano (a symptom-free carrier) of nasty malefici.
In Italy, Virgin Mary statues
weep tears of blood all the time and miracles are two a penny. Sometimes, but
only in Catholic countries, the Virgin Mary herself appears to peasants and
talks to them. In the Bosnian town of
Medjugorje, the Blessed Mother has apparently appeared regularly since 1981 to
local Catholics. Anja has taken me
there more than once, but the only miracle I spotted was that you can still
smoke in bars and restaurants. But who am I to say? I’m an agnostic Methodist
heretic and therefore worse off even than a Jehovah’s Witness according to my
client.
Yet in Italy I cannot remember
anyone ever talking about any house, however old, that is haunted by a ghost.
It is all so different than the English countryside, where ghosts were as
common as muck.
Near Canterbury in Kent my
eccentric mother and I visited a dilapidated 17th-century country house called
Broome Park. It had once belonged to Field Marshal Lord Kitchener of Khartoum. I never once managed to get a decent night’s
sleep in that vast decaying old place whose pitch-black unlit corridors and
locked doors to secret rooms terrified me. Its ornamental gardens contained
huge urns which had goat’s heads for handles. Among the rumored resident ghosts
was the late wife of the building’s owner, Major Gel. The Major drove an old
Bentley and looked like a ghost even though he was alive. It was said that his
wife had once been a glamorous avant-garde artist who had known Hemingway in
Paris. She died mysteriously after falling down the house’s huge main
staircase. Her paintings were everywhere and I was petrified of seeing her
ghost, but I never did. Broome Park is now a swanky golf club and holds no fear
because the soul of its past has been ripped out of it.
(Moon rising at Broome Park. The devil made them do it?)
I had assumed there are no ghosts
in Italy because when Catholics die, their souls do not hang around here on
Earth but go either straight to heaven or to hell.
Italian ghosts, according to the
client, are not ghosts but are instead demons the Devil deploys to vex and
possess human beings. If I understand her correctly, ghosts cannot be the souls
of dead humans marooned in purgatory. They are therefore in no way human.
Purgatory? That place between heaven and hell where souls
too pure for hell but not yet fit for eternal salvation linger until their
venial sins are purged? Well, yes, there is always that. But surely purgatory
is not down here, either.
With the Devil, who is extremely
cunning, anything is possible. So it is entirely feasible that a ghost is
indeed the soul of a human being the Devil has hijacked, hopefully after death.
How empty my life seems by
comparison. I have never seen the Virgin Mary. Neither have I seen an angel.
Nor have I seen the Devil and all those demons of his. I have seen nary a fairy,
hobgoblin, or imp. And I have definitely never
seen a ghost, except in movies.
13 comments:
Words on a Victorian sampler:
"When we are young
We read and believe
The most fantastic things.
When we are older
We learn with regret
That these things cannot be"
We are quite, quite wrong! ~Blithe Spirit
On the other hand, what I like my music to do to me is awaken the ghosts inside of me.
Not the demons, you understand, but the ghosts.
-David Bowie
Now about those ghosts.
I'm sure they're here and I'm not half so alarmed at meeting up with any of them as I am at having to meet the live nuts I have to see every day.
“Oh, very good,' interrupted Snape, his lip curling. 'Yes, it is easy to see that nearly six years of magical education have not been wasted on you, Potter. 'Ghosts are transparent.”
Happy Hauntings; and, pleasant dreams!
Muses are ghosts, and sometimes they come uninvited.
What do you call a group of ghosts?
A Fraid of Ghosts!
Clever...
Smartypants
A conjunction of cosmic dust?
A superfluety of ‘nones’?
A choir of malajusted?
An unction of the undertaken?
A corps of the undying?
Very funny gang.
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