J. S. LE FANU'S GHOSTLY TALES, VOLUME 3
The Haunted Baronet (1871)
by
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
The Haunted Baronet
CHAPTER I
The George and Dragon
The pretty little town of Golden Friars--standing by the margin of the lake, hemmed round by an amphitheatre of purple mountain, rich in tint and furrowed by ravines, high in air, when the tall gables and narrow windows of its ancient graystone houses, and the tower of the old church, from which every evening the curfew still rings, show like silver in the moonbeams, and the black elms that stand round throw moveless shadows upon the short level grass--is one of the most singular and beautiful sights I have ever seen.
There it rises, 'as from the stroke of the enchanter's wand,' looking so light and filmy, that you could scarcely believe it more than a picture reflected on the thin mist of night.
On such a still summer night the moon shone splendidly upon the front of the George and Dragon, the comfortable graystone inn of Golden Friars, with the grandest specimen of the old inn-sign, perhaps, left in England. It looks right across the lake; the road that skirts its margin running by the steps of the hall-door, opposite to which, at the other side of the road, between two great posts, and framed in a fanciful wrought-iron border splendid with gilding, swings the famous sign of St. George and the Dragon, gorgeous with colour and gold.
In the great room of the George and Dragon, three or four of the old _habitues_ of that cozy lounge were refreshing a little after the fatigues of the day.
This is a comfortable chamber, with an oak wainscot; and whenever in summer months the air is sharp enough, as on the present occasion, a fire helped to light it up; which fire, being chiefly wood, made a pleasant broad flicker on panel and ceiling, and yet did not make the room too hot.
On one side sat Doctor Torvey, the doctor of Golden Friars, who knew the weak point of every man in the town, and what medicine agreed with each inhabitant--a fat gentleman, with a jolly laugh and an appetite for all sorts of news, big and little, and who liked a pipe, and made a tumbler of punch at about this hour, with a bit of lemon-peel in it. Beside him sat William Peers, a thin old gentleman, who had lived for more than thirty years in India, and was quiet and benevolent, and the last man in Golden Friars who wore a pigtail. Old Jack Amerald, an ex-captain of the navy, with his short stout leg on a chair, and its wooden companion beside it, sipped his grog, and bawled in the old-fashioned navy way, and called his friends his 'hearties.' In the middle, opposite the hearth, sat deaf Tom Hollar, always placid, and smoked his pipe, looking serenely at the fire. And the landlord of the George and Dragon every now and then strutted in, and sat down in the high-backed wooden arm-chair, according to the old-fashioned republican ways of the place, and took his share in the talk gravely, and was heartily welcome.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: J. S. Le Fanu's Ghostly Tales, Volume 3 by Le Fanu
- 2: Jack Amerald put his foot on the floor
- 3: He taking the lease from Sir Tony Mardykes that was then
- 4: Doctor Torvey instructed the Captain aside
- 5: The Feltrams and the Mardykes was sib
- 6: And Doctor Torvey could hear him talking with Mr
- 7: Mardykes Hall is a pretty object from the water
- 8: Feltram bowed all round to the gentlemen
- 9: Called and entered the drawing room at Mardykes Hall
- 10: How thinly clergymen grow also down here in one sense
- 11: The old housekeeper at Mardykes Hall
- 12: There is a shelf on which Mrs Julaper had her Bible
- 13: Julaper drew her sad guest over by the arm
- 14: Julaper again in the white satin saque
- 15: It is just a little bit dowly and troubled
- 16: Julaper comforted him with kind words
- 17: And there found Philip Feltram awaiting him dejectedly
- 18: Exclaimed poor Feltram at last
- 19: He was still convinced that Feltram had stolen the note
- 20: There is a large bedroom at Mardykes Hall
- 21: Twyne was telling lies or truth
- 22: Were fond of poor Philip Feltram
- 23: Travelling this way over Blarwyn Fells
- 24: I'll not sleep at Mardykes to night
- 25: He's no tazzle he's no taggelt
- 26: Sir Bale was in the lobby in a moment
- 27: And sent for Feltram forthwith
- 28: Here's poor dear Philip Feltram come home dead
- 29: Julaper there can tell you more about it
- 30: There was nout to thraa tu him
- 31: And seeing that Feltram had been well liked
- 32: To draw the coverlet over the dead man's features
- 33: You'll send to Jos Fringer for the poor fellow's outfit
- 34: And Tom Ettles was walking home
- 35: And there was Philip Feltram living
- 36: The Doctor made his acknowledgments and filled his glass
- 37: Overtaken thus on the solitary expanse
- 38: Exclaimed Philip Feltram contemptuously
- 39: Said Feltram with the same sneer
- 40: Frequently he crossed to Cloostedd
- 41: The figure of a man standing behind Sir Bale Mardykes
- 42: There was a story of two Feltrams of Cloostedd
- 43: CHAPTER XVI The Message from Cloostedd Come back
- 44: And spoke faintly and drowsily
- 45: He fluctuated among many surmises about Feltram
- 46: Rode away for the Saracen's Head at Heckleston
- 47: The odds were forty five to one against Beeswing
- 48: You are looking up the Glen or Clough of Feltram
- 49: When that evening Feltram returned
- 50: If there was a Feltram rich enough
- 51: If you go across the lake and walk about Cloostedd
- 52: Feltram looked darkly in his face
- 53: Something between a mackaw and a vulture
- 54: More eager grew the face of Philip Feltram
- 55: Feltram was growing manifestly uneasy
- 56: With a harsh scream just over his head
- 57: Sir Bale put the liquor to his lips
- 58: And stuffed with a heavy burden
- 59: Feltram knew all about the transaction
- 60: Related all the wonders of this day to Doctor Torvey
- 61: You should not talk to Doctor Torvey so
- 62: And placed himself beside Feltram
- 63: Lady Mardykes was in hysterics
- 64: And Philip Feltram was sitting in his chair
- 65: But I must pay old Trebeck all the same
- 66: Especially respecting Mardykes Hall
- 67: For I must go to Mardykes Hall
- 68: Lady Mardykes pleaded earnestly
- 69: But the idea was propounded by Philip Feltram
- 70: To Lady Mardykes all this was very painful
- 71: Was Lady Mardykes happy with her lord
- 72: Isn't he like a wicked old mackaw
- 73: But from Sir Bale Mardykes it was something quite unusual
- 74: Lady Walsingham was the eldest
- 75: Nor when she struck her hand on the banister
- 76: Said Lady Haworth in increasing agitation
- 77: And Lady Walsingham issued her orders for horses
- 78: When had you last news from Mardykes
- 79: Lady Mardykes told her that she need not wait
- 80: Right across to the storied woods of Cloostedd
- 81: Not another word did Sir Bale exchange with his companion
- 82: Lady Walsingham went up with her sister Mary
- 83: Lady Mardykes appearing more collected
- 84: La'y Walsh Walse Walsing ham
- 85: Lady Mardykes leaned against the massive oak door case
- 86: Where is Sir Bale Mardykes now
