by Pliny the Younger
(translated by William Melmoth)
There
was in Athens a house, spacious and open, but with an infamous reputation, as
if filled with pestilence. For in the dead of night, a noise like the clashing
of iron could be heard. And if one listened carefully, it sounded like the
rattling of chains. At first the noise seemed to be at a distance, but then it
would approach, nearer, nearer, nearer. Suddenly a phantom would appear, an old
man, pale and emaciated, with a long beard, and hair that appeared driven by
the wind. The fetters on his feet and hands rattled as he moved them.
Any
dwellers in the house passed sleepless nights under the most dismal terrors
imaginable. The nights without rest led them to a kind of madness, and as the
horrors in their minds increased, onto a path toward death. Even in the
daytime--when the phantom did not appear--the memory of the nightmare was so
strong that it still passed before their eyes. The terror remained when the
cause of it was gone.
Damned
as uninhabitable, the house was at last deserted, left to the spectral monster.
But in hope that some tenant might be found who was unaware of the malevolence
within it, the house was posted for rent or sale.
It
happened that a philosopher named Athenodorus came to Athens at that time.
Reading the posted bill, he discovered the dwelling's price. The extraordinary
cheapness raised his suspicion, yet when he heard the whole story, he was not
in the least put off. Indeed, he was eager to take the place. And did so
immediately.
As
evening drew near, Athenodorus had a couch prepared for him in the front
section of the house. He asked for a light and his writing materials, then
dismissed his retainers. To keep his mind from being distracted by vain terrors
of imaginary noises and apparitions, he directed all his energy toward his
writing.
For
a time the night was silent. Then came the rattling of fetters. Athenodorus
neither lifted up his eyes, nor laid down his pen. Instead he closed his ears
by concentrating on his work. But the noise increased and advanced closer till
it seemed to be at the door, and at last in the very chamber. Athenodorus
looked round and saw the apparition exactly as it had been described to him. It
stood before him, beckoning with one finger.
Athenodorus
made a sign with his hand that the visitor should wait a little, and bent over
his work. The ghost, however, shook the chains over the philosopher's head,
beckoning as before. Athenodorus now took up his lamp and followed. The ghost
moved slowly, as if held back by his chains. Once it reached the courtyard, it
suddenly vanished.
Athenodorus,
now deserted, carefully marked the spot with a handful of grass and leaves. The
next day he asked the magistrate to have the spot dug up. There they
found--intertwined with chains--the bones that were all that remained of a body
that had long lain in the ground. Carefully, the skeletal relics were collected
and given proper burial, at public expense. The tortured ancient was at rest.
And the house in Athens was haunted no more.
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