![]() Although the professor is still not that interested in the house, his family is, so he agrees to spend the rest of the summer there, about a month. Giddings will feel better about the house and be willing to return there. ![]() Giddings asks if the professor and his family would be willing to stay at Windy Hill for the rest of summer and see if they see anything unusual. His friend had only believed that his house was haunted, and after the professor and his family had stayed there for awhile without experiencing anything unusual, his friend relaxed and was reassured that the house was alright. He doesn’t believe in ghosts, and when he helped his other friend, he didn’t get rid of any ghosts. Giddings has heard that Professor Carver once helped a friend get rid of a ghost haunting his house, and he asks the professor if he would be willing to do the same for him.Īt first, Professor Carver is reluctant to agree to help. Now, she is too upset to return to Windy Hill. She said that she felt strange in the house and that she had seen a ghost. ![]() However, when he finally succeeded in buying the house and he and his wife went to live there, his wife became very upset. For years, he has wanted to buy a particular farm with a beautiful house called Windy Hill. Giddings comes to see Professor Carver to request his help. It’s 1851, and Professor Carver of Boston is living in an apartment above a candle shop with his wife and two children, his son Jamie and daughter Lorna. ![]() ![]() The Ghost of Windy Hill by Clyde Robert Bulla, 1968. ![]()
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