Haunted Houses
There once lived a man in Seoul called Yi Chang, who frequently told
as an experience of his own the following story: He was poor and
had no home of his own, so he lived much in quarters loaned him by
others. When hard pressed he even went into haunted houses and lived
there. Once, after failing to find a place, he heard of one such house
in Ink Town (one of the wards of Seoul), at the foot of South Mountain,
which had been haunted for generations and was now left vacant. Chang
investigated the matter, and finally decided to take possession.
First, to find whether it was really haunted or not, he called his
elder brothers, Hugh and Haw, and five or six of his relatives,
and had them help clean it out and sleep there. The house had one
upper room that was fast locked. Looking through a chink, there was
seen to be in the room a tablet chair and a stand for it; also there
was an old harp without any strings, a pair of worn shoes, and some
sticks and bits of wood. Nothing else was in the room. Dust lay thick,
as though it had gathered through long years of time.
The company, after drinking wine, sat round the table and played at
games, watching the night through. When it was late, towards midnight,
they suddenly heard the sound of harps and a great multitude of
voices, though the words were mixed and unintelligible. It was as
though many people were gathered and carousing at a feast. The company
then consulted as to what they should do. One drew a sword and struck
a hole through the partition that looked into the tower. Instantly
there appeared from the other side a sharp blade thrust out towards
them. It was blue in colour. In fear and consternation they desisted
from further interference with the place. But the sound of the harp
and the revelry kept up till the morning. The company broke up at
daylight, withdrew from the place, and never again dared to enter.
In the South Ward there was another haunted house, of which Chang
desired possession, so he called his friends and brothers once more to
make the experiment and see whether it was really haunted or not. On
entering, they found two dogs within the enclosure, one black and
one tan, lying upon the open verandah, one at each end. Their eyes
were fiery red, and though the company shouted at them they did not
move. They neither barked nor bit. But when midnight came these two
animals got up and went down into the court, and began baying at the
inky sky in a way most ominous. They went jumping back and forth. At
that time, too, there came some one round the corner of the house
dressed in ceremonial robes. The two dogs met him with great delight,
jumping up before and behind in their joy at his coming. He ascended
to the verandah, and sat down. Immediately five or six multi-coloured
demons appeared and bowed before him, in front of the open space. The
man then led the demons and the dogs two or three times round the
house. They rushed up into the verandah and jumped down again into the
court; backwards and forwards they came and went, till at last all of
them mysteriously disappeared. The devils went into a hole underneath
the floor, while the dogs went up to their quarters and lay down.
The company from the inner room had seen this. When daylight came
they examined the place, looked through the chinks of the floor,
but saw only an old, worn-out sieve and a few discarded brooms. They
went behind the house and found another old broom poked into the
chimney. They ordered a servant to gather them up and have them
burned. The dogs lay as they were all day long, and neither ate nor
moved. Some of the party wished to kill the brutes, but were afraid,
so fearsome was their appearance.
This night again they remained, desiring to see if the same phenomena
would appear. Again at midnight the two dogs got down into the court
and began barking up at the sky. The man in ceremonial robes again
came, and the devils, just as the day before.
The company, in fear and disgust, left the following morning, and
did not try it again.
A friend, hearing this of Chang, went and asked about it from Hugh
and Haw, and they confirmed the story.
There is still another tale of a graduate who was out of house and
home and went into a haunted dwelling in Ink Town, which was said
to have had the tower where the mysterious sounds were heard. They
opened the door, broke out the window, took out the old harp, the
spirit chair, the shoes and sticks, and had them burned. Before
the fire had finished its work, one of the servants fell down and
died. The graduate, seeing this, in fear and dismay put out the fire,
restored the things and left the house.
Again there was another homeless man who tried it. In the night a woman
in a blue skirt came down from the loft, and acted in a peculiar and
uncanny way. The man, seeing this, picked up his belongings and left.
Again, in South Kettle Town, there were a number of woodmen who in
the early morning were passing behind the haunted house, when they
found an old woman sitting weeping under a tree. They thinking her
an evil bogey, one man came up behind and gave her a thrust with his
sickle. The witch rushed off into the house, her height appearing to
be only about one cubit and a span.
Im Bang.