Lothian Cemetery in Old Delhi is believed to be haunted by the ghost of General Nicholas, a British officer who served during the colonial period. According to the legend, Nicholas fell in love with an Indian woman but was unable to marry her due to the rigid social conventions of the Raj. Despairing, he shot himself, and his restless spirit has haunted the cemetery since. The general's ghost is described as a tall European figure in military dress who walks among the graves at night. Those who encounter him describe an overwhelming sense of sadness and longing. Some visitors report hearing gunshot sounds from within the cemetery, and night watchmen describe seeing a figure that seems to be searching for someone among the tombstones. Lothian Cemetery, located near the Kashmere Gate in Old Delhi, is surrounded by some of the most historically significant sites of the 1857 Indian Rebellion. The cemetery's colonial-era graves, weathered and overgrown in Delhi's harsh climate, reflect the mortality rate among British personnel in India — disease, heat, and violence claimed many lives. The general's ghost, trapped between worlds by a love that his own society forbade, represents one of the most poignant hauntings in Indian folklore.
