I woke to hear a tapping noise
and then a dreadful groan.
A dragging sound, creak of board
and then a wheezing moan.
All through the night, I lay in dread,
sure a specter I would see,
come through the wall beside my bed,
to scare and haunt poor me.
Next morning when the sun had sped
the shadows of the night away.
I asked the host about the ghost,
to hear what he would say.
G-ghost, said he, turning quite white;
I know of none, said he.
Then what that awful moaning sound
I heard that frightened me?
Perhaps a tapping of a tile,
a shrinking board, a lose stair tread,
the plumbing or the central heat;
maybe the cistern overhead.
But still he looked a trifle white,
while finding reasons for my dread
and I still knew an inner fright,
for ghostly sounds, I’d heard in bed.
And I am sure that he was right,
to have his gills turn pale.
For I could find another place,
while he lived with my tale.
David Garlick, England, Summer, 1986