Читать книгу The Second Macabre MEGAPACK® - Эдит Несбит - Страница 4
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“The Gray Lady,” by Mary E. Lee, originally appeared in the Southern Literary Messenger, July 1948.
“The Ebony Frame,” by Edith Nesbit, originally appeared in 1891.
“The Doom,” by Benedict, originally appeared in Southern Literary Messenger, January 1935.
“The Curse of the Catafalques,” by F. Anstey, originally appeared in The Black Poodle: And Other Tales (1884).
“The Striding Place,” by Gertrude Atherton, originally appeared in The Speaker, June 20, 1896.
“Extraordinary Indian Feats of Legerdemain,” by David Dawson Mitchell, originally appeared in Southern Literary Messenger, April 1935.
“Sister Seraphine,” by Edna W. Underwood, is taken from A Book of Dear Dead Women (1911).
“Lazarus,” by Leonid Andreyev, originally appeared in
“The Transfigured,” by Heinrich Zschokke, is translated from the German. This translation originally appeared anonymously in the Southern Literary Messenger, April 1839.
“The Uncanny Bairn,” by Mrs. Alfred (Louisa) Baldwin, originally appeared in 1892.
“Uncle Abraham’s Romance,” by Edith Nesbit, is taken from Grim Tales (1893).
“Man-Size in Marble,” by Edith Nesbit, originally appeared in 1886.
“The Secret of the Stradivarius,” by Hugh Conway (Frederick John Fargus) originally appeared in Blackwood’s Magazine (1881).
“Mr. Gray’s Strange Story,” by Louisa Murray, originally appeared in The Week (February 26, 1892).
“Mr. Lindsay’s Manuscript,” by T. H. E., originally appeared in Southern Literary Messenger, March 1850
“Rosaura and Her Relations,” by Baron Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué, originally appeared in Wild Love and Other Tales (1844).
“The Enchanted Gifts,” by Mrs. Jane L. Swift, originally appeared in Southern Literary Messenger, February 1844.
“The Gallows Man,” by Baron Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué, originally appeared in Southern Literary Messenger, in this original translation, in March 1846. The story is also known as “The Bottle-Imp.”
“The Rock of Hans Heiling,” by Theodor Koerner, originally appeared in Southern Literary Messenger, March 1846.
“The Vision of Agib” originally appeared anonymously in the Southern Literary Messenger, December 1837.
“Winderhans and The Gentleman in Black,” originally appeared anonymously in the Southern Literary Messenger, September 1851.