
The Prelude. - THE GUEST WRITES AND TELLS THE STORY OF THE DINNER PARTY.
CHAPTER I. GREENWATER BROAD
CHAPTER II. TWO YOUNG HEARTS.
CHAPTER III. SWEDENBORG AND THE SIBYL.
CHAPTER IV. THE CURTAIN FALLS.
CHAPTER V. MY STORY.
CHAPTER VI. HER STORY.
CHAPTER VII. THE WOMAN ON THE BRIDGE. - MY mother looked in at the library door, and disturbed me over my books.
CHAPTER VIII. THE KINDRED SPIRITS
CHAPTER IX. NATURAL AND SUPERNATURAL.
An American couple fresh from their first voyage across the Atlantic finds themselves in London, eager to explore the city’s historic charms. A friendly letter of introduction leads them to the newly‑wed George and his wife, whose warm, unpretentious welcome feels oddly familiar despite the foreign setting. Their dinner invitation offers a lively portrait of transatlantic customs, from punctuality debates to the effortless grace of the hostess’s voice.
When the first guests arrive, they appear alone, each offering a polite excuse that their wives are confined by sudden ailments. The hosts’ uneasy glances and the whispered apologies hint at hidden tensions beneath the genteel façade. As more solitary gentlemen slip into the drawing‑room, the narrator senses that the evening will unravel subtle mysteries of friendship, reputation, and the unspoken rules of English society.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (477K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by James Rusk, and David Widger
Release date
1999-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1824–1889
A master of suspense and sensation fiction, this Victorian storyteller helped shape the modern mystery novel with unforgettable twists and sharply observed characters. Best known for The Woman in White and The Moonstone, he wrote stories that still feel lively, eerie, and surprisingly modern.
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