’Twas the Night Before Halloween

’Twas the night before Halloween, and all through the crypt,

Not a soul dared to whisper, not one even slipped;

The pumpkins were carved by the headstones with care,

In hopes that dark spirits soon would be there;

The children were hidden, asleep in their beds,

While nightmares of goblins danced in their heads;

And mamma in her shawl, and I in my cloak,

Had just blown out candles, the room filled with smoke;

When out in the cryptyard there rose such a sound,

I sprang from the crypt to see what lurked around.

Away past the tombstones I crept in a flash,

Through shadows and ivy, through branches that clash;

The moon on the marble of stones old and white,

Cast eerie long shadows that glowed in the night,

When what to my fearful eyes did appear,

But a pumpkin-drawn cart pulled by eight phantom deer;

With a cloaked, crooked driver, so ghastly and slick,

I shivered and knew it was no St. Nick.

More rapid than ravens his coursers they came,

And he hissed, and he shouted, and called them by name:

“Now, Banshee! now, Phantom! now, Specter and Wraith!

On, Goblin! on, Demon! on, Nightmare and Faith!

To the top of the crypt! to the top of the wall!

Now haunt away! haunt away! haunt away all!”

As dry leaves before the dark whirlwinds fly,

When they meet with a tomb, mount up to the sky;

So over the cryptyard the phantoms they flew,

With the pumpkin cart full, and the Dark Rider too—

And then, in a twinkling, I heard near the tomb,

The rustling and scratching of claws in the gloom.

As I turned back in fear, and was spinning around,

Through cracks in the earth he rose with a bound;

He was dressed all in shadows, from head to his shoe,

And his cloak was all dripping with night’s blackest dew;

A sack full of curses he had on his back,

And it rattled and hissed as he opened his pack;

His eyes—how they hollowed! his grin, how grim!

His laughter was echo, all bone and all hymn!

His gaping wide mouth was drawn sharp like a blade,

And his breath in the air wove a deathly cascade;

The skull of a pipe he clenched tight in his teeth,

And smoke, green and ghostly, encircled him beneath;

His frame tall and crooked, his fingers like knives,

And shadows around him moved as if alive;

He was frightful and fierce, a dread ghoul of the night,

And I trembled to see him, and hid out of sight;

A glare of his eye and a twist of his hand,

Soon gave me to know I should not make a stand;

He spoke not a word, but went straight to his deed,

He scattered dark charms and he planted foul seed,

Then raising a finger, he gave a harsh hiss,

And up through the cryptstones he rose into mist;

He sprang to his cart, to his team gave a scream,

And away they all flew like a ghost in a dream.

But I heard him exclaim, as he vanished from sight—

“Happy Halloween to all, and to all a dark night!”

The Shadow Ward 

There is a sealed room in a haunted hospital basement where shadows move without bodies. WWII experiments, restless spirits, and paranormal activity keep this dark mystery alive.

At the lowest level of **St. Augustine Memorial Hospital**, behind a rusted boiler and a row of empty storage lockers, sits a welded steel door. No plaque, no handle, no hinges on the outside. Just a seam in the wall, reinforced by thick rivets, as though something inside was never meant to be opened again. Staff whisper about it in break rooms, calling it *The Shadow Ward*. Most claim not to know what’s behind it, dismissing it as “just storage.” But the weld marks are uneven, hurried—as if made under duress. What unnerves people most isn’t the door itself, but the air around it. **Ghost hunters**, paranormal investigators, and even thrill-seekers report flashlights flickering, EMF meters spiking, and shadows twisting against the concrete walls. Few linger long.

Hospital archives tell only fragments of the story. During **World War II**, St. Augustine was partly requisitioned by the military for classified medical research. Declassified papers reference *“cognitive endurance trials”*—an attempt to engineer soldiers who could fight without sleep for days. Test subjects, mostly psychiatric patients, were kept in sealed chambers with stimulants, sensory manipulation, and continuous exposure to harsh light. Witnesses described their deterioration: bloodshot eyes, trembling limbs, minds slipping into delirium. But when death finally came, something unexpected remained. Attendants swore the patients’ **shadows lingered**, stretching and moving on their own across the sterile walls. The bodies were cremated, yet their silhouettes never dissolved. What was left behind couldn’t be explained by science—or by any known paranormal phenomenon.

Decades later, retired hospital staff still speak in hushed tones of the **haunted basement**. An orderly named Paul Granger recalled escorting meals down to the “sealed floor.” *“You could hear them scratching,”* he said in a 1973 interview. *“But the patients were already gone. I carried trays to an empty room, but the shadows would crawl across the walls, hunched like animals.”* Another nurse, now in her 90s, described hearing soft moans in the ventilation system, followed by the rattling of gurney wheels—though no one was there. After several breakdowns among staff, administrators welded the ward shut in 1949. The public story claimed it was “unsafe infrastructure.” The truth, according to insiders, was that the shadows had grown restless.

Local thrill-seekers often try to find the welded door. Most turn back quickly. Those who press their ears against the steel report sounds that should be impossible: labored breathing, a wet dragging shuffle, or the faint drip of unseen water. One group of college students recorded audio near the door in the late 1980s. When played back, the tape carried a low voice repeating a single word: *“Stay.”* Paranormal investigators brought **infrared cameras** and EVP recorders, only to capture moving silhouettes flickering across the basement walls—though the room beyond remained sealed. The most disturbing accounts involve knocks: three sharp raps against the steel, always in response to someone knocking first, as if something on the other side was listening.

Hospital administrators insist there is no such place. When questioned, they describe it as a “boiler access corridor” or “outdated storage.” Blueprints of the basement are conspicuously missing entire sections, lines of ink blacked out or replaced with handwritten corrections. When pressed further, staff are warned not to indulge “baseless ghost stories.” Yet rumors persist that contractors brought in for renovations were told never to touch the welded door, no matter what. Security cameras conveniently fail in that section of the basement, feeds dissolving into static whenever aimed toward the sealed ward. Skeptics call it superstition. Believers insist the denial is deliberate—that opening the door would unleash what the welds were meant to contain.

Strangest of all are the reports from outside the hospital. Neighbors claim that on certain nights—particularly stormy ones—figures can be seen in the **basement windows of the haunted hospital**. Dark, elongated shapes pacing back and forth, though no lights are on inside. Others describe shadows stretching across the lawn under the full moon, long and bent, yet cast by no visible body. One man swore he saw a silhouette climb the hospital wall and pause at his window, staring in, before vanishing into the night. Paranormal groups flock to St. Augustine Memorial for these reasons, though most leave with nothing more than unease. But every so often, one returns pale and silent, refusing to speak of what they saw—or heard.

Over the years, a handful of people have tried to break open The Shadow Ward. In 1964, two men with acetylene torches attempted to cut through the welds. Their equipment failed—both flames extinguished simultaneously, as though smothered by invisible hands. More recently, a group of ghost hunters tried to pry open the seams with crowbars. They reported the steel turning ice-cold, frost forming on their tools despite the summer heat. One swore the metal began to bend inward, as if the door was breathing. The group fled before completing their task. Rumors claim anyone who stays too long near the ward begins to see their own **shadow detach**, writhing unnaturally, trying to crawl toward the door.

Today, the Shadow Ward remains sealed, hidden behind warning signs and boiler-room clutter. The hospital has modernized, but no renovation dares touch the lowest level. Locals whisper that the welds are weakening—that the knocks are louder now than they used to be. Some even claim that faint, shifting silhouettes can be seen creeping out beneath the seam, pooling like ink across the basement floor. Whether the ward truly holds the remnants of **WWII experiments**, restless spirits, or something older entirely, no one knows. But every story agrees on one point: the darkness inside is patient. It doesn’t rush. It waits. And those who dare approach feel it, pressing against the steel, eager for the moment the door finally opens.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑