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A Tale of County Carlow

A Tale of County Carlow

 


The Woman on the Dolmen

A Tale of County Carlow

It was in the late summer of the year 1848 that I made my visit to the town of Tullow in the county of Carlow. My business there, though of a trifling and unromantic nature, afforded me the opportunity of passing several days amidst scenery that, if not grand in the manner of the Wicklow mountains, yet possessed a certain sober charm which spoke to the imagination in a more secret, and therefore more lasting, fashion.

The Barrow river meandered with an easy grace; the hedgerows were thick with bramble and honeysuckle; and in the quiet of the evening one might hear the calling of corncrakes from the meadows. I took lodgings in a modest inn not far from the market square, and soon discovered that my host was a man of much conversation and a relish for recounting tales of the district. It was he who first directed my attention to Haroldstown Dolmen, that curious relic of forgotten antiquity, standing solitary in a field between Tullow and Carlow town.

“You’ll see it if you take the back road,” said he, pouring me a glass of the local cider. “A great flat stone balanced upon others, like a table set for giants. Some say it’s but the burial place of kings long turned to dust.” Here he leaned closer, lowering his voice with a relish, “others say it is a doorway. And once in a while, sir, the dead themselves will come out to sit upon it.”

I laughed lightly, as travellers often do when hearing the superstitions of a countryside not their own. Yet I made a note to visit this monument, for I confess I am not insensible to the charm of old stones and the whisperings they provoke.

Two evenings later, when the weather was clear and the sky washed with a mellow gold, I set out upon the road he had indicated. The hedges on either side were high, and the hum of bees was still in the air, though the day had begun to cool. I walked for some time before the road turned, and then suddenly it came into view.

There, in the middle of a wide, low field, stood the dolmen. A capstone of enormous weight lay supported upon uprights, casting a shadow long and black upon the grass. The field was otherwise empty, save for a scatter of nettles near the gate and the distant silhouettes of sheep against the horizon. It was a place of uncommon stillness, and I confess I paused at the gate, uncertain whether to proceed.

It was then I heard it—the faintest thread of music. At first I thought it the sound of some shepherd’s pipe carried on the wind. But no: it was not a rustic air, nor yet a jig or reel. It was a note of a harp, clear and pure, rising and falling with a solemnity that chilled me. And following that a voice!

The voice was of a woman, and such a voice I had never heard before nor since. It sang not in words that I could discern, but in tones that seemed to touch the very marrow of my bones. Sweet, mournful, tender yet with a power that shook the air like the tolling of a bell. I was drawn forward, step by step, until I stood at the edge of the field.

Upon the dolmen lay a woman, as though in careless repose. Her hair was of a deep red, falling about her shoulders like a mantle of fire. She wore a gown of green velvet that glimmered in the low light. Her arms were raised slightly, her pale hands outstretched as if to shape the air through which her song flowed.

Beside her, in the grass, was a man. He sat upon an ordinary chair, such as one might find in a parlour, though how it had come there I cannot imagine. His face was thin, his complexion ghastly pale, and his eyes fixed with an unnatural solemnity upon the strings of the harp which his hands commanded. His aspect was of one who performed not for pleasure, but by some inexorable compulsion.

The sight held me immobile. The woman’s gaze, though her eyes were half-closed in her song, seemed nevertheless to rest upon me. The harpist did not look up. The music rose, wound itself about me, and I felt my breath catch.

Then the woman ceased her singing, and the harpist let his fingers fall silent. The hush that followed was more terrible than the sound itself. Slowly, the woman turned her head. Her eyes, green as glass, clear as water, met mine.

“You hear us,” she said. Her voice was low, but carried across the distance without effort. “Most do not.”

I could not reply.

She rose then from the dolmen, her long gown trailing like mist. Yet I swear, and would swear upon any book, that the moss upon which she had lain bore no impress of her form, no trace of disturbance.

The harpist lifted his face. His expression was grave, and I observed with a start that the chair upon which he sat was sunken deep into the soil, though the ground about it was hard and dry. He struck a single string, one sharp, brittle note, and in that instant the dolmen itself seemed to shudder.

The woman advanced a step, her eyes never leaving mine. “Come closer,” she whispered. “Every ear that hears our song is chosen. We need one more voice.”

At this, some dreadful instinct awoke within me. My whole being revolted at her invitation, yet my limbs moved of their own accord, one step into the field, then another. The grass seemed higher than before, the nettles hemming me in, though I had not marked them so thickly when I entered.

I do not know how long I stood thus, poised between compulsion and terror. But suddenly a cloud passed across the setting sun, and a shadow fell. In that dimness I found strength, turned, and stumbled back through the gate to the road.

Behind me, as I fled, the music began again. This time it was sweeter, more coaxing, filled with sorrow, as though the very air grieved at my departure. Yet I did not look back. I ran until the roofs of Tullow were in sight, and the sound was lost in the ordinary bustle of the town.

When at last I returned to my lodging, I found my host waiting. He looked at me keenly and said, “So, you have been to Haroldstown.”

I could not answer him. I had no wish to speak of what I had seen, nor indeed could I have put it into plain words without doubting my own senses.

But in the nights that followed, as I lay awake in my chamber, I thought I heard, faint and far, the trembling of a harp string, and a woman’s voice calling in tones of sweetness and despair.

It is now many years since that evening. I have never returned to Haroldstown, nor do I intend to. Yet sometimes, when summer fades and the wind carries the scent of nettles and cut grass, I hear again the echo of that song. And then I wonder what would have become of me had I taken one step more, and placed my hand upon the dolmen’s cold stone.


 
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Posted by on September 29, 2025 in county carlow, dolmen

 

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Daleks in the Graveyard

Daleks in the Graveyard

The Daleks and the Graveyard of Ballykillduff

ghostly jig


Chapter One: The Midnight Patrol

It was a damp, moonlit night when Dalek Zeg announced to the others:
“REPORT: SUSPICIOUS MOANING SOUNDS DETECTED FROM THE OLD GRAVEYARD.”

Dalek Pog shuddered.
“MOANING IS A CLASSIC GHOST SIGNATURE. ALSO… IT IS PAST MY BEDTIME.”

“DALEKS DO NOT SLEEP!” barked Commander Zog. “WE SHALL INVESTIGATE.”

And so, with a clatter of wheels and a faint squeak of plungers, the Daleks rolled through the creaking gates of Ballykillduff’s graveyard.

The villagers, naturally, followed them for entertainment. “It’ll be better than the telly,” whispered Mrs. Brennan.


Chapter Two: Strange Noises

The graveyard was full of shadows. Headstones leaned at odd angles. The wind whistled through the yew trees.

Then came the sound.
A long, low groan, rising from the earth itself.
“Moooooooooo…”

Dalek Zag panicked.
“IT IS THE VOICE OF THE DEAD!”

Father Murphy peered closer. “No, lads — it’s just Doyle’s cow in the next field.”

But before they could relax, another voice whispered from the soil.
“…Leave… or lie with us forever…”

The villagers gasped. Even the cow stopped mooing.


Chapter Three: The First Apparition

A mist curled around the graves. Out of it stepped a translucent figure — tall, robed, with hollow eyes.

“TRESPASSERS,” it intoned. “DISTURBERS OF THE DEAD.”

Dalek Pog quivered.
“I DID NOT SIGN UP FOR HAUNTED AGRICULTURAL SETTINGS.”

Dalek Zog fired. The beam passed straight through the ghost and vaporised a headstone. The name Patrick O’Rourke, 1822–1876 vanished forever.

“BLASPHEMY!” cried the ghost. “YOU WILL PAY FOR THAT!”


Chapter Four: The Ghostly Choir

From the ground, more spirits rose. Dozens of them. They formed a circle around the Daleks, faces pale, mouths open.

Then — they began to sing.
Not a hymn. Not a lament.
But a terrible, echoing chorus of “Oooooooobey… Oooooooobey…”

The Daleks went rigid.
“ERROR. THE DEAD ARE CHANTING OUR SLOGAN.”
“DOES THAT MAKE THEM SUPPORTERS?” asked Pog nervously.

The villagers were less convinced. “That’s not right at all,” muttered Mrs. McGillicuddy, clutching her rolling pin.


Chapter Five: The Terrible Revelation

One ghost stepped forward. His voice was stronger than the rest.
“We remember you, Daleks. We faced you long ago, before Ballykillduff was even built. You destroyed our ploughs, our cows, our tea urns. We were EXTERMINATED.”

The Daleks recoiled.
“ERROR. WE DO NOT REMEMBER THIS CAMPAIGN.”

“Of course you don’t,” the ghost said. “Because it never happened. But we have eternity to spread rumours. And fear is power.”

The spirits began to advance, their chants growing louder.


Chapter Six: The Ballykillduff Defence

Dalek Zog was cornered.
“STRATEGY REQUIRED. GHOSTS CANNOT BE EXTERMINATED. THEY MUST BE… OUT-PARISHED.”

So he did the only thing he could think of.
He rang the graveyard bell.

The sound boomed across the village. And, as Ballykillduff tradition demanded, the villagers all joined in with the bell’s rhythm — clapping, stamping, singing.

The chaotic noise drowned out the ghosts’ chant. The spirits faltered.

Mrs. McGillicuddy leapt forward with her rolling pin. “Go back to your beds, you crowd of eejits!”

The ghosts wailed, shivered, and one by one, dissolved back into the earth.


Epilogue

The graveyard was silent once more. The villagers cheered. Father Murphy crossed himself.

The Daleks, however, were thoughtful.
“CONCLUSION: BALLYKILLDUFF IS MORE TERRIFYING THAN ANY SPECTRE.”
“AGREED,” said Pog. “NEXT TIME, LET’S STICK TO ROAD MAINTENANCE.”

And if you pass by the graveyard on a moonlit night, you might still hear the faintest echo of the ghostly choir, singing just for mischief:
“Ooooooobey… Oooooobey…”

 
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Posted by on August 23, 2025 in dalek, daleks, ghosts, graveyard, Horror

 

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The Giant Flying Head

The Giant Flying Head

The Iroquois Indians of the eastern United States have legends about a strange creature called the Flying Head. According to the legends, this creature originated from a head that was chopped from the body of an ancient tribal chief and thrown into a lake. Somehow this chopped-off head was transformed into a giant flying head more than six feet tall, with eyes made of fire, and fangs as sharp as needles. It flew by means of its long flowing hair which could spread out like wings to catch the wind.

The Flying Head would descend from the sky at night and devour both humans and animals. Although it was just a head without a body, it was still big enough to eat enormous amounts of meat. The people of the region were so terrified that many of them packed up their belongings and moved to other areas. But finally the monstrous head left the region and was never seen again.

 
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Posted by on May 19, 2016 in Scary

 

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A Scary Story

A Scary Story

A Scary Story

I found it so hard to get off to sleep last night, twisting and turning under the ‘tremendous’ weight of the quilt. And it was so hot, it was so incredibly hot – I just couldn’t understand it.
It must have been well past one a.m. before I finally dozed off, only to be awoken soon after, by a fear, a terrible sensation that something was in the room with us, something skulking, ready to get me, and to snuff out my miserable existence.
I tried to shout, to scream, to let my wife, Breda, know of the danger we were in, but I
couldn’t make a sound, not the slightest utterance left my startled lips. Then I began
rising, floating out and away from the bed. It wasn’t far mind you, no more than a few feet,
but more than enough to send my already frightened mind racing into startled convulsions.

Shouting, sweating, shaking, trembling with fear I suddenly awoke, having escaped from
this terrifying dream – It was only a dream, wasn’t it?
Breda insisted that it was only a dream. She told me not to be so silly, to go to sleep, that
everything would be all right in the morning. And I tried, I really tried so hard to get back to
sleep, to the good pattern of sleep that I am so fortunate to enjoy. But I was just so
uncomfortable, where neither my right or left-hand side was an option to lie on. The only
way that I could find any degree of comfort was in lying on my back. And that, unfortunately, was where it all began again!
I relaxed and drifted off to sleep, restful sleep, and it was a nice sleep, but so short, so
incredibly short. I had barely lost consciousness when I heard something, something so
very close to my ear, so close I could hear its every word, speaking, mumbling, and
gurgling. I awoke; it awoke me with a start, and for a moment, a brief instant, I thought I
saw a figure, a dark figure, a form skulking away from our bed, to the shadows in the darkest corner of the room. Putting it down to my imagination and perhaps even to the two
drinks that I had enjoyed before retiring, I again closed my eyes and relaxed, returning to
my slumbers.
But it returned, the voice, the speaking, and the mumblings, the unintelligible one-way
conversation awoke me with a start, and once again I saw a shadowy figure returning,
disappearing in the darkest part of the room.

This terrible process, this mocking torture repeated itself over and over again for the
remainder of the night, until the breaking dawn allowed me to asleep proper, and in
safety.
It rang; the alarm ringing so close to my ears told me that I had rested enough, that there
was a whole new day awaiting my attention. Yawning, I dragged myself out of bed, and
putting on my dressing gown and slippers I made my way across to the window, where I
opened the blinds. Yawning again, I inspected the day. It was a cold, dark, grey winter’s
morning. I wished that I had could have returned to my bed, to sleep, oh how I wished.

Something on the floor in the darkest part of the room, where I had seen the frightening
figure returning to again and again, suddenly caught my attention. It was a book. Bending
down, I picked it up; it was the book, the very same book that I had been reading in bed
the night before. But how did it get here? Scratching my head, thinking that was a
question too far, especially since I was so tired, I closed the book and returned it to its
place on my bedside locker. Then I saw its title, and I read it, it said, ‘Short, Scary Stories’.

A Scary Story

 
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Posted by on June 30, 2014 in Scary

 

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