Ruminations.
The word "ghost" can be used in 54 ways.
It is derived from Old English "gast" meaning "breath; spirit; angel; demon; human being"
The verb form meaning "to haunt" is used by Shakespeare in Antony & Cleopatra : "...Julius Cæsar; Who at Phillippi the good Brutus ghosted."
The noun form meaning "life force" is used by Sir Philip Sydney in Arcadia : "But when indeede she found his ghost was gone, then Sorrowe lost the witte of vtterance."
An obsolete form of the noun, meaning "a corpse" is used by Shakespeare in Henry VI, Part 2 : "Oft haue I seene a timely parted ghost, Of ashie semblance, pale and bloodlesse."
Walter de la Mare wrote a poem called "Ghost." Links.
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