The House by the Churchyard / Дом у кладбища

The House by the Churchyard / Дом у кладбища
Автор книги: id книги: 3183264     Оценка: 0.0     Голосов: 0     Отзывы, комментарии: 0 449 руб.     (5,03$) Купить и читать книгу Электронная книга Жанр: Правообладатель и/или издательство: Издательство АСТ Дата публикации, год издания: 1863 Дата добавления в каталог КнигаЛит: ISBN: 978-5-17-166137-3 Возрастное ограничение: 16+ Оглавление

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Описание книги

Напуганы объемом лексики в английском языке? Учите новые слова, читая увлекательные произведения на языке оригинала. «Дом у кладбища» – готический роман Джозефа Шеридана Ле Фаню, рассказывающий о загадочных и жутких событиях, происходящих в старом особняке рядом с кладбищем. Своё начало история берёт в деревушке Чейплизод, что недалеко от Дублина. В 1810 году на местном кладбище находят человеческий череп с пулевым отверстием. Рассказ ведётся от лица Чарлза де Крессерона, случайного свидетеля этой находки. По ходу истории читателю раскрываются всё новые и новые подробности пугающих событий минувших дней. У романа сложная структура – несколько сюжетных линий умело сплетены в одну. «Дом у кладбища» привлекает атмосферой ужаса и напряжения, мастерски созданной Ле Фаню, и раскрывает темы страха, предательства и обмана. Насладитесь готической атмосферой, читая роман «Дом у кладбища» на языке оригинала без перевода и адаптации.

Оглавление

Джозеф Шеридан Ле Фаню. The House by the Churchyard / Дом у кладбища

A Prologue – Being a Dish Of Village Chat

Chapter I. The Rector's Night-walk To His Church

Chapter II. The Nameless Coffin

Chapter III. Mr. Mervyn In His Inn

Chapter IV. The Fair-green Of Palmerstown

Chapter V. How the Royal Irish Artillery Entertained Some Of the Neighbours At Dinner

Chapter VI. In Which the Minstrelsy Proceeds

Chapter VII. Showing How Two Gentlemen May Misunderstand One Another, Without Enabling the Company To Understand Their Quarrel

Chapter VIII. Relating How Doctor Toole And Captain Devereux Went On a Moonlight Errand

Chapter IX. How a Squire Was Found For the Knight Of the Rueful Countenance

Chapter X. The Dead Secret, Showing How the Fireworker Proved To Puddock That Nutter Had Spied Out the Nakedness Of the Land

Chapter XI. Some Talk About the Haunted House – Being, As I Suppose, Only Old Woman's Tales

Chapter XII. Some Odd Facts About the Tiled House – Being an Authentic Narrative Of the Ghost Of a Hand

Chapter XIII. In Which the Rector Visits the Tiled House, And Doctor Toole Looks After the Brass Castle

Chapter XIV. Relating How Puddock Purged O'Flaherty's Head – A Chapter Which, It Is Hoped, No Genteel Person Will Read

Chapter XV. Æsculapius To the Rescue

Chapter XVI. The Ordeal By Battle

Chapter XVII. Lieutenant Puddock Receives an Invitation And a Rap Over the Knuckles

Chapter XVIII. Relating How the Gentlemen Sat Over Their Claret, And How Dr. Sturk Saw a Face

Chapter XIX. In Which the Gentlemen Follow the Ladies

Chapter XX. In Which Mr. Dangerfield Visits the Church Of Chapelizod, And Zekiel Irons Goes a Fishing

Chapter XXI. Relating Among Other Things How Doctor Toole Walked Up To the Tiled House; And Of His Pleasant Discourse With Mr. Mervyn

Chapter XXII. Telling How Mr. Mervyn Fared At Belmont, And Of a Pleasant Little Dejeuner By the Margin Of the Liffey

Chapter XXIII. Which Concerns the Grand Dinner At the King's House, And Who Were There, And Something Of Their Talk, Reveries, Disputes, And General Jollity

Chapter XXIV. In Which Two Young Persons Understand One Another Better, Perhaps, Than Ever They Did Before, Without Saying So

Chapter XXV. In Which the Sun Sets, And the Merry-making Is Kept Up By Candle-light In the King's House, And Lily Receives a Warning Which She Does Not Comprehend

Chapter XXVI. Relating How the Band Of the Royal Irish Artillery Played, And, While the Music Was Going On, How Variously Different People Were Moved

Chapter XXVII. Concerning the Troubles And the Shapes That Began To Gather About Doctor Sturk

Chapter XXVIII. In Which Mr. Irons Recounts Some Old Recollections About the Pied Horse And the Flower De Luce

Chapter XXIX. Showing How Poor Mrs. Macnamara Was Troubled And Haunted Too, And Opening a Budget Of Gossip

Chapter XXX. Concerning a Certain Woman In Black

Chapter XXXI. Being a Short History Of the Great Battle Of Belmont That Lasted For So Many Days, Wherein the Belligerents Showed So Much Constancy And Valour, And Sometimes One Side And Sometimes T'Other Was Victorious

Chapter XXXII. Narrating How Lieutenant Puddock And Captain Devereux Brewed a Bowl Of Punch, And How They Sang And Discoursed Together

Chapter XXXIII. In Which Captain Devereux's Fiddle Plays a Prelude To 'Over the Hills And Far Away.'

Chapter XXXIV. In Which Lilias Hears a Stave Of an Old Song And There Is a Leave-taking Beside the River

Chapter XXXV. In Which Aunt Becky And Doctor Toole, In Full Blow, With Dominick, the Footman, Behind Them, Visit Miss Lily At the Elms

Chapter XXXVI. Narrating How Miss Lilias Visited Belmont, And Saw a Strange Cocked-hat In the Shadow By the Window

Chapter XXXVII. Showing How Some Of the Feuds In Chapelizod Waxed Fiercer, And Others Were Solemnly Condoned

Chapter XXXVIII. Dreams And Troubles, And a Dark Look-out

Chapter XXXIX. Telling How Lilias Walsingham Found Two Ladies Awaiting Her Arrival At the Elms

Chapter XL. Of a Messenger From Chapelizod Vault Who Waited In the Tyled House For Mr. Mervyn

Chapter XLI. In Which the Rector Comes Home, And Lily Speaks Her Mind, And Time Glides On, And Aunt Rebecca Calls At the Elms

Chapter XLII. In Which Dr. Sturk Tries This Way And That For a Reprieve On the Eve Of Execution

Chapter XLIII. Showing How Charles Nutter's Blow Descended, And What Part the Silver Spectacles Bore In the Crisis

Chapter XLIV. Relating How, In the Watches Of the Night, a Vision Came To Sturk, And His Eyes Were Opened

Chapter XLV. Concerning a Little Rehearsal In Captain Cluffe's, Lodging, And a Certain Confidence Between Dr. Sturk And Mr. Dangerfield

Chapter XLVI. The Closet Scene, With the Part Of Polonius Omitted

Chapter XLVII. In Which Pale Hecate Visits the Mills, And Charles Nutter, Esq., Orders Tea

Chapter XLVIII. Swans On the Water

Chapter XLIX. Swans In the Water

Chapter L. Treating Of Some Confusion, In Consequence, In the Club-room Of the PhœNix And Elsewhere, And Of a Hat That Was Picked Up

Chapter LI. How Charles Nutter's Tea, Pipe, And Tobacco-box Were All Set Out For Him In the Small Parlour At the Mills; And How That Night Was Passed In the House By the Church-yard

Chapter LII. Concerning a Rouleau Of Guineas And the Crack Of a Pistol

Chapter LIII. Relating After What Fashion Dr. Sturk Came Home

Chapter LIV. In Which Miss Magnolia Macnamara And Dr. Toole, In Different Scenes, Prove Themselves Good Samaritans; And the Great Doctor Pell Mounts the Stairs Of the House By the Church-yard

Chapter LV. In Which Dr. Toole, In Full Costume, Stands Upon the Hearth-stone Of the Club, And Illuminates the Company With His Back To the Fire

Chapter LVI. Doctor Walsingham And the Chapelizod Christians Meet To the Sound Of the Holy Bell, And a Vampire Sits In the Church

Chapter LVII. In Which Dr. Toole And Mr. Lowe Make a Visit At the Mills, And Recognise Something Remarkable While There

Chapter LVIII. In Which One Of Little Bopeep's Sheep Comes Home Again, And Various Theories Are Entertained Respecting Charles Nutter And Lieutenant Puddock

Chapter LIX. Telling How a Coach Drew Up At the Elms, And Two Fine Ladies, Dressed For the Ball, Stepped In

Chapter LX. Being a Chapter Of Hoops, Feathers, And Brilliants, And Bucks And Fiddlers

Chapter LXI. In Which the Ghosts Of a By-gone Sin Keep Tryst

Chapter LXII. Of a Solemn Resolution Which Captain Devereux Registered Among His Household Gods, With a Libation

Chapter LXIII. In Which a Liberty Is Taken With Mr. Nutter's Name, And Mr. Dangerfield Stands At the Altar

Chapter LXIV. Being a Night Scene, In Which Miss Gertrude Chattesworth, Being Adjured By Aunt Becky, Makes Answer

Chapter LXV. Relating Some Awful News That Reached the Village, And How Dr. Walsingham Visited Captain Richard Devereux At His Lodgings

Chapter LXVI. Of a Certain Tempest That Arose And Shook the Captain's Spoons And Tea-cups; And How the Wind Suddenly Went Down

Chapter LXVII. In Which a Certain Troubled Spirit Walks

Chapter LXVIII. How an Evening Passes At the Elms, And Dr. Toole Makes a Little Excursion; And Two Choice Spirits Discourse, And Hebe Trips In With the Nectar

Chapter LXIX. Concerning a Second Hurricane That Raged In Captain Devereux's Drawing-room, And Relating How Mrs. Irons Was Attacked With a Sort Of Choking In Her Bed

Chapter LXX. In Which an Unexpected Visitor Is Seen. In the Cedar-parlour Of the Tiled House, And the Story Of Mr. Beauclerc And The 'Flower De Luce' Begins To Be Unfolded

Chapter LXXI. In Which Mr. Irons's Narrative Reaches Merton Moor

Chapter LXXII. In Which the Apparition Of Mr. Irons Is Swallowed In Darkness

Chapter LXXIII. Concerning a Certain Gentleman, With a Black Patch Over His Eye, Who Made Some Visits With a Lady, In Chapelizod And Its Neighbourhood

Chapter LXXIV. In Which Doctor Toole, In His Boots, Visits Mr. Gamble, And Sees an Ugly Client Of That Gentleman's; And Something Crosses an Empty Room

Chapter LXXV. How a Gentleman Paid a Visit At the Brass Castle, And There Read a Paragraph In an Old Newspaper

Chapter LXXVI. Relating How the Castle Was Taken, And How Mistress Moggy Took Heart Of Grace

Chapter LXXVII. In Which Irish Melody Prevails

Chapter LXXVIII. In Which, While the Harmony Continues In Father Roach's Front Parlour, a Few Discords Are Introduced Elsewhere; And Doctor Toole Arrives In the Morning With a Marvellous Budget Of News

Chapter LXXIX. Showing How Little Lily's Life Began To Change Into a Retrospect; And How On a Sudden She Began To Feel Better

Chapter LXXX. In Which Two Acquaintances Become, On a Sudden, Marvellously Friendly In the Church-yard; And Mr. Dangerfield Smokes a Pipe In the Brass Castle, And Resolves That the Dumb Shall Speak

Chapter LXXXI. In Which Mr. Dangerfield Receives a Visitor, And Makes a Call

Chapter LXXXII. In Which Mr. Paul Dangerfield Pays His Respects And Compliments At Belmont; Where Other Visitors Also Present Themselves

Chapter LXXXIII. In Which the Knight Of the Silver Spectacles Makes the Acquaintance Of the Sage 'Black Dillon,' And Confers With Him In His Retreat

Chapter LXXXIV. In Which Christiana Goes Over; And Dan Loftus Comes Home

Chapter LXXXV. In Which Captain Devereux Hears the News; And Mr. Dangerfield Meets an Old Friend After Dinner

Chapter LXXXVI. In Which Mr. Paul Dangerfield Mounts the Stairs Of the House By the Church-yard, And Makes Some Arrangements

Chapter LXXXVII. In Which Two Comrades Are Tete-a-tete In Their Old Quarters, And Doctor Sturk's Cue Is Cut Off, And a Consultation Commences

Chapter LXXXVIII. In Which Mr. Moore the Barber Arrives, And the Medical Gentlemen Lock the Door

Chapter LXXXIX. In Which a Certain Songster Treats the Company To a Dolorous Ballad Whereby Mr. Irons Is Somewhat Moved

Chapter XC. Mr. Paul Dangerfield Has Something On His Mind, And Captain Devereux Receives a Message

Chapter XCI. Concerning Certain Documents Which Reached Mr. Mervyn, And the Witches' Revels At the Mills

Chapter XCII. The Wher-wolf

Chapter XCIII. In Which Doctor Toole And Dirty Davy Confer In the Blue-room

Chapter XCIV. What Doctor Sturk Brought To Mind, And All That Doctor Toole Heard At Mr. Luke Gamble's

Chapter XCV. In Which Doctor Pell Declines a Fee, And Doctor Sturk a Prescription

Chapter XCVI. About the Rightful Mrs. Nutter Of the Mills, And How Mr. Mervyn Received the News

Chapter XCVII. In Which Obediah Arrives

Chapter XCVIII. In Which Charles Archer Puts Himself Upon the Country

Chapter XCIX. The Story Ends

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