
THE WHITE LADY MYSTERY
There are various versions of this urban legend, from Germany, England to the USA. Everyone tried to tell this legend as interesting as possible.
The White Lady is a well-known ghost in local lore. There are many specific variations on this story. The story of a mother's soul mourning the loss of her daughter. Some versions assert the White Lady can be seen at night, rising from one of the small ponds near the shores of Lake Ontario. The age of the princess and the nature of the girl also varies. In some versions, she is a teenager who runs off with a lover, but she kills him. In others, she is raped and killed by one or more robbers.
There is a version like this.
A driver was following the road around White Rock Lake, and saw a girl standing by the side in wet clothes through the road. The driver stopped to pick her up, and the girl got into the back seat. He gave instructions to a lakeside home, then told her about an accident in which his car was driven into the lake and he barely escaped.
The driver stopped in front of his house, but when he turned around, the girl had disappeared – and left only a puddle of water on the seat.
“She walks into the house, knocks on the door, and learns from the parents that the girl is her daughter who was killed in a car accident by the lake. Her car goes into the lake, and she drowns, but every year her ghost makes a look on her death anniversary.”
There are several variations, including some that have the girl knocking on the doors of the house by the lake asking to use the phone. When the homeowner opens the door, it has vanished, leaving only a puddle of water.
White Lady in Germany
The figure of the White Lady first appeared in Berliner Schloss in 1625 and continued until 1888. The appearance occurred in a palace where the kings of Prussia lived so that the White Lady is associated with several figures. Among them is:
* cunigunda of Orlamunde, born Iandgravin of Leuchtenberg (Oberpfalz). He was a nobleman who was sentenced to die for killing his own son.
* bertha of Rosenberg, widow from Bohemia, killed herself.
White Lady of the United States
There are several urban legends (local legend) tells about the story of the White Lady, including:
* The White Lady of Acra, the spirit of a woman who died on her way to her wedding in the 1800s. Many elders claimed to have seen him on the deserted streets.
* at Branch Brook Park in Newark, New Jersey, there is a legend of the White Lady of Branch Brook Park. There are two versions of the origin of the White Lady of Branch Brook Park, the first version tells that she is a newlywed who died in an accident with her husband, who was, another version tells about a couple who died in an accident when going to a party. Although the man survived but the girl died and until now still looking for her partner.
* White Lady of Durand Eastman Park is the story of a mother whose child was kidnapped and raped.
* Bodie is a former mining town and there is a story of the White Lady. A woman hanged herself at the Bridgeport Inn, desperately left for dead by her fiance who was killed by robbers. There were reported sightings of a woman dressed in white in the hallway of Bridgeport lodging until now waiting for her fiance to return.
The White Lady of Great Britain
Castle Huntly in Scotland, is said to be haunted by a woman dressed in white who is thought to be the son of the Lyon family, who owned the palace in the 17th century. When his affair with a servant was exposed, he was excommunicated in a tower and eventually committed suicide because he could not stand his suffering. The figure is reported to be still often seen today.
The White Lady of France
In France, the White Lady is known as Dames Blanches. It inhabits Lorraine and Normandy in the Pyrenees Mountains. They often appeared near the cave and asked passers-by to dance with him for a moment. People who are willing to accompany the dancing Dame will not be harmed, but those who refuse will disappear instantly.
It is believed that the Dame Blanches are one of the reincarnations of the pre-Christian era goddesses where the word dame here refers to the guardian goddesses.