
A curious collection of early Victorian tales, this volume gathers the eerie experiments of a writer whose imagination thrived before his most famous novel ever appeared. The stories were originally scattered through magazine pages and now sit together, each a delicate blend of domestic life and the uncanny, where ordinary settings—drawing‑rooms, country estates, bustling Dublin streets—suddenly tremble under the weight of strange presences. The narrator’s own modest preface hints at a deliberate preservation of “picturesque superstition,” inviting listeners to linger over the subtle, almost scholarly, approach to the supernatural.
Among the pieces, the opening narrative follows a genteel naval officer returning to Dublin after the American war, his polished manners masking a lingering melancholy. As he re‑enters society, whispered rumors of a mysterious watcher begin to circulate, casting an unsettling shadow over his respectable world. The tale weaves social intrigue with a faint, lingering chill, promising a journey into the delicate border between rationality and the inexplicable.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (354K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Suzanne Shell, eagkw and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2012-08-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1814–1873
Best known for eerie classics like Uncle Silas and Carmilla, this Dublin-born writer helped shape the modern ghost story and vampire tale. His fiction mixes Gothic suspense with quiet psychological unease, which is why it still feels uncanny today.
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