Vincent's Story".
{190} Anecdote received from the lady.
{191} Story at second-hand.
{192} See The Standard for summer, 1896.
{196} I have once seen this happen, and it is a curious thing to see,
when on the other side of the door there is nobody.
{198a} S.P.R., iii., 115, and from oral narrative of Mr. and Mrs.
Rokeby. In 1885, when the account was published, Mr. Rokeby had not
yet seen the lady in grey. Nothing of interest is known about the
previous tenants of the house.
{198b} Proceedings, S.P.R., vol. viii., p. 311.
{199} Letter of 31st January, 1884.
{200} Six separate signed accounts by other witnesses are given.
They add nothing more remarkable than what Miss Morton relates. No
account was published till the haunting ceased, for fear of lowering
the letting value of Bognor House.
{201} Mr. A. H. Millar's Book of Glamis, Scottish History Society.
{202} This account is abridged from Mr. Walter Leaf's translation of
Aksakoff's Predvestniki Spiritizma, St. Petersburg, 1895. Mr.
Aksakoff publishes contemporary letters, certificates from witnesses,
and Mr.
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