The Haunters & The Haunted. Various
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Название: The Haunters & The Haunted

Автор: Various

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

Серия:

isbn: 4057664130532

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ HAND OF GLORY

       Henderson's "Folk Lore"

       L

       THE BLOODY FOOTSTEP

       Local Records

       LI

       THE GHOSTLY WARRIORS OF WORMS

       "The Phantom World"

       LII

       THE WANDERING JEW IN ENGLAND

       "Notes and Queries"

       LIII

       BENDITH EU MAMMAU [15]

       By Edmund Jones

       LIV

       THE RED BOOK OF APPIN

       Campbell's "Tales of the West Highlands"

       LV

       THE GOOD O'DONOGHUE

       Irish Folk Tales

       LVI

       SARAH POLGRAIN

       By William Hunt

       LVII

       ELEANOR COBHAM, DUCHESS OF GLOUCESTER

       Godwin's "Lives of the Necromancers"

       Table of Contents

      In this Ghost Book, M. Larigot, himself a writer of supernatural tales, has collected a remarkable batch of documents, fictive or real, describing the one human experience that is hardest to make good. Perhaps the very difficulty of it has rendered it more tempting to the writers who have dealt with the subject. His collection, notably varied and artfully chosen as it is, yet by no means exhausts the literature, which fills a place apart with its own recognised classics, magic masters, and dealers in the occult. Their testimony serves to show that the forms by which men and women are haunted are far more diverse and subtle than we knew. So much so, that one begins to wonder at last if every person is not liable to be "possessed." For, lurking under the seeming identity of these visitations, the dramatic differences of their entrances and appearances, night and day, are so marked as to suggest that the experience is, given the fit temperament and occasion, inevitable.

      One would even be disposed, accepting this idea, to bring into the account, as valid, stories and pieces of literature not usually accounted part of the ghostly canon. There are the novels and tales whose argument is the tragedy of a haunted mind. Such are Dickens' Haunted Man, in which the ghost is memory; Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter, in which the ghost is cruel conscience; and Balzac's Quest of the Absolute, in which the old Flemish house of Balthasar Claes, in the Rue de Paris at Douai, is haunted by a dæmon more potent than that of Canidia. One might add some of Balzac's shorter stories, among them "The Elixir"; and some of Hawthorne's Twice-Told Tales, including "Edward Randolph's Portrait." On the French side we might note too that terrible graveyard tale of Guy de Maupassant, La Morte, in which the lover who has lost his beloved keeps vigil at her grave by night in his despair, and sees—dreadful resurrection—"que toutes les tombes étaient ouvertes, et tous les cadavres en étaient sortis." And why? That they might efface the lying legends inscribed on their tombs, and replace them with the actual truth. Villiers de l'Isle Adam has in his Contes Cruels given us the strange story of Véra, which may be read as a companion study to La Morte, with another recall from the dead to end a lover's obsession. Nature and supernature cross in de l'Isle Adam's mystical drama Axël a play which will never hold the stage, masterly attempt as it is to dramatise the inexplainable mystery.

      Among later tales ought to be reckoned Edith Wharton's Tales of Men and Ghosts, and Henry James's The Two Magics, whose "Turn of the Screw" gives us new instances of the evil genii that haunt mortals, in this case two innocent children. One remembers sundry folk-tales with the same motive—of children bewitched or forespoken—inspiring them. And an old charm in Orkney which used to run:

      "Father, Son, Holy Ghost!

       Bitten sall they be,

       Bairn, wha have bitten thee!

       Care to their black vein,

       Till thou hast thy health again!

       Mend thou in God's name!"

      John Aubrey in his Miscellanies has many naïve evidences of the twilight region of consciousness, like that between wake and sleep, which tends to fade when we are wideawake; so much so, that we call it visionary. Yet it is very real to the haunted folk, to Aubrey's correspondent, the Rector of Chedzoy, or to the false love of the Demon Lover, or that Mr. Bourne of whom Glanvil tells in The Iron Chest of Durley, or the Bishop Evodius who was St. Augustine's friend, or for that matter the son of Monica himself. The reality of these visitations may seem dim, but the most sceptical of us cannot doubt that, whether from some quickened fear of death or impending disaster, from evil conscience or swift intensification of vision; whether in the forms of beloved sons lost at sea or of other revenants who were held indispensably dear in life, the haunters have appeared, to the absolute belief of those who saw them or their simulacra.

      "It СКАЧАТЬ