Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

THE SCREAM - 60 Horror Tales in One Edition


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VIII. The Warning—Showing How Larry Toole Fared—Whom He Saw and What He Said—And How Much Good and How Little He Did—And Moreover Relating How Somebody Was Laid in the Mire—And How Henry Ashwoode Put His Foot in the Stirrup

       Chapter IX. The "Bleeding Horse"—Hollands and Pipes for Two—Every Bullet Has Its Billet

       Chapter X. The Master of Morley Court and the Little Gentleman in Bottle-Green—The Baronet's Daughter—And the Two Conspirators

       Chapter XI. The Old Beech—Tree Walk and the IVY-Grown Gateway—The Tryste and Tue Crutch-Handled Cane

       Chapter XII. The Appointed Hour—The Schemers and the Plot

       Chapter XIII. The Interview—The Parchment—And the Nobleman's Coach

       Chapter XIV. About a Certain Garden and a Damsel—And Also Concerning a Letter and a Red Leathern Box

       Chapter XV. The Traitor

       Chapter XVI. Showing Signor Parucci Alone With the Wig-Blocks—The Baronet's Hand-Bell and the Italian's Task

       Chapter XVII. Dublin Castle by Night—The Drawing-Room—Lord Wharton and His Court

       Chapter XVIII. The Two Cousins—The Neglected Jewels and the Broken Seal

       Chapter XIX. The Theatre—The Ruffian—The Assault, and the Rencontre

       Chapter XX. The Lodging—Young Melancholy and Old Remembrances—An Adventure Among the Yew Hedges of Morley Court

       Chapter XXI. Who Appeared to Mary Ashwoode as She Sate Under the Trees—The Champion

       Chapter XXII. The Spinet

       Chapter XXIII. The Dark Room—Containing Plenty of Scars and Bruises and Plans of Vengeance

       Chapter XXIV. A Critic—A Condition—And the Small-Swords

       Chapter XXV. The Combat and Its Issue

       Chapter XXVI. The Hell—Gordon Chancey—Luck—Frenzy and a Resolution

       Chapter XXVII. The Departure of the Peer—The Billet and the Shattered Mirror

       Chapter XXVIII. The Thunder-Storm—The Ebony Stick—The Unseen Visitant—Terror

       Chapter XXIX. The Crones—The Corpse, and the Sharper

       Chapter XXX. Sky-Copper Court

       Chapter XXXI. The Usurer and the Oaken Box

       Chapter XXXII. The Diabolic Whisper

       Chapter XXXIII. Showing How Sir Henry Ashwoode Played and Plotted—And of the Sudden Summons of Gordon Chancey

       Chapter XXXIV. The "Old St. Columbkil"—A Tête-À—Tête in the "Royal Ram"—The Tempter

       Chapter XXXV. Of the Cousin and the Black Cabinet—And of Henry Ashwoode's Decisive Interview with Lady Stukely

       Chapter XXXVI. Of Jewels, Plate, Horses, Dogs, and Family Pictures—And Concerning the Appointed Hour

       Chapter XXXVII. The Reckoning—Chancey's Large Cat—And the Coach

       Chapter XXXVIII. Strange Guests at the Manor

       Chapter XXXIX. The Bargain, and the New Confederates

       Chapter XL. Dreams—First Impressions—The Man in the Plum-Coloured Suit

       Chapter XLI. Of O'Connor and a Certain Travelling Ecclesiastic—And How the Darkness Overtook Them

       Chapter XLII. The Squires

       Chapter XLIII. The Wild Wood—The Old Mansion-House of Finiskea—Secrets, and a Surprise

       Chapter XLIV. The Doom

       Chapter XLV. The Man in the Cloak—And His Bed-Chamber

       Chapter XLVI. The Double Conference—Old Papers

       Chapter XLVII. "the Jolly Bowlers"—The Double Fray and the Flight

       Chapter XLVIII. The Stained Ruffles

       Chapter XLIX. Old Songs—The Unwelcome Listener—The Baronet's Pledge

       Chapter L. The Press in the Wall

       Chapter LI. Flora Guy

       Chapter LII. Of Mary Ashwoode's Walk to the Lonesome Well—And of What She Saw There—And Showing How Schemes of Peril Began to Close Around