
On a bright Munich morning the narrator sets out on a carriage ride that quickly turns uneasy. A courteous maître d’, Herr Delbrück, reminds the driver that night will bring Walpurgis Night, a night steeped in folklore and foreboding, and the coachman Johann repeatedly crosses himself as the road grows wild. The journey takes them onto a desolate plateau where the horses sniff the air, strange noises echo, and an old superstition about burying suicides at crossroads surfaces, hinting at hidden danger.
As the carriage hesitates at a narrow, winding valley, Johann’s anxiety spikes, his watch clutched like a talisman, and the landscape seems to pulse with an unseen presence. A distant bark‑like howl, the sudden chill of a northern wind, and the driver’s frantic attempts to steer the horses away create a mounting sense of dread. Listeners are drawn into a haunting prelude that captures the tension between rational travel and ancient, uncanny forces, setting the stage for a night that promises more than just a storm.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (305K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
E-text prepared by Bill Keir, Susan Woodring, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team and revised by Jeannie Howse
Release date
2003-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1847–1912
Best known for creating Count Dracula, this Irish writer turned theatre insider and storyteller into one of horror literature’s most lasting names. His life moved from a sickly childhood in Dublin to the busy literary and stage world of London, where his most famous novel took shape.
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