The Three Perils of Man; or, War, Women, and Witchcraft, Vol. 2 (of 3)

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The Three Perils of Man; or, War, Women, and Witchcraft, Vol. 2 (of 3)

by James Hogg

EN·~6 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

THE THREE PERILS OF MAN; OR, War, Women, and Witchcraft. A BORDER ROMANCE.

0:27
2

CHAPTER I.

41:15
3

CHAPTER II.

41:21
4

CHAP. III.

43:30
5

CHAPTER IV.

37:29
6

CHAPTER V.

22:35
7

CHAPTER VI.

44:53
8

CHAPTER VII.

54:02
9

CHAPTER VIII.

1:20:15
10

Transcriber's Notes

2:56

Description

A bleak winter evening finds a small party threading its way toward the looming silhouette of Aikwood Castle, a place whispered to be under the sway of an unseen enchantment. The landscape is stripped of life—no cattle, no laborers, only the cold wind and an unsettling stillness that seems to drain the valley of its very breath. As the travelers draw near, the ancient stone walls loom like a dark promise, their locked gates and solitary plume of smoke hinting at secrets long kept hidden.

Among the group, the bold yet uneasy Charlie and the spirited Delany confront the castle’s eerie silence together, their dialogue tinged with fear and a fragile hope for protection. A friar offers cryptic counsel, speaking of unseen guardians and a blessed talisman that might shield them from malevolent forces. The tale weaves romance, looming danger, and the whisper of witchcraft, inviting listeners into a world where the line between human ambition and supernatural intrigue is as thin as the winter fog.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (354K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Henry Flower, Carlo Traverso and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)

Release date

2012-05-31

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

James Hogg

James Hogg

1770–1835

A self-taught Scottish writer who rose from shepherding in the Borders to literary fame, he brought folk tradition, songs, and unsettling imagination into Romantic-era literature. He is still best remembered as the "Ettrick Shepherd" and for the strange power of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner.

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