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diff --git a/24879-h/24879-h.htm b/24879-h/24879-h.htm index c49ad0b..487f0bb 100644 --- a/24879-h/24879-h.htm +++ b/24879-h/24879-h.htm @@ -1,12 +1,8 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> -<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> -<title> -The Project Gutenberg eBook of Curious, If True. Strange Tales, by Elizabeth Gaskell -</title> -<style type="text/css"> - - <!-- +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html lang="en"> +<meta charset="utf-8"> +<title>Curious, If True. Strange Tales | Project Gutenberg</title> +<style> body {margin-left: 12%; margin-right: 12%;} @@ -57,6 +53,8 @@ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Curious, If True. Strange Tales, by Elizabeth Gas margin-bottom: .85em; line-height: 1.3em;} + h2 {font-size: 110%;} + hr {background-color: black; color: inherit; padding: 0;} hr.long {width: 90%; @@ -94,70 +92,33 @@ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Curious, If True. Strange Tales, by Elizabeth Gas text-decoration: none;} a:hover {color:#F00; background-color: inherit;} + .large {font-size: large;} + .xlarge {font-size: x-large;} + .xxlarge {font-size: xx-large;} </style> </head> <body> - - -<pre> - -The Project Gutenberg EBook of Curious, if True, by Elizabeth Gaskell - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with -almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or -re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included -with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org - - -Title: Curious, if True - Strange Tales - -Author: Elizabeth Gaskell - -Release Date: March 21, 2008 [EBook #24879] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CURIOUS, IF TRUE *** - - - - -Produced by Delphine Lettau and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - -</pre> +<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 24879 ***</div> <br> <h1> -CURIOUS, +CURIOUS,<br> +IF TRUE<br> +<span class="xlarge">STRANGE TALES</span> </h1> -<h1> -IF TRUE -</h1> -<h2> -STRANGE TALES -</h2> <br> -<h2> +<div class="xlarge"> Mrs Gaskell -</h2> +</div> <hr class="med"> <p class="ctr"> <strong> -<big> -Contents</big> +<span style="font-size: larger"> +Contents</span> </strong> </p> -<table summary="Contents" width="50%" cellpadding="1"> +<table style="width: 50%;"> <tr> <td class="txt"> The Old Nurse's Story @@ -205,12 +166,12 @@ Curious, if True </tr> </table> <hr class="long"> -<a name="old"> +<a id="old"> </a> -<p class="chapter"> +<h2> THE OLD NURSE'S STORY -</p> +</h2> <br> <p> <span class="dropcap"> @@ -376,15 +337,15 @@ And Miss Rosamond was torn as by a power stronger than mine and writhed in my ar <p> Yes! she was carried to her bed that night never to rise again. She lay with her face to the wall, muttering low, but muttering always: 'Alas! alas! what is done in youth can never be undone in age! What is done in youth can never be undone in age!' </p> -<a name="poor"> +<a id="poor"> </a> -<p class="chapter"> +<h2> THE POOR CLARE -</p> -<p class="head"> +</h2> +<h3> Chapter 1 -</p> +</h3> <p> <span class="dropcap"> D</span>ecember 12th, 1747.—My life has been strangely bound up with extraordinary incidents, some of which occurred before I had any connection with the principal actors in them, or, indeed, before I even knew of their existence. I suppose, most old men are, like me, more given to looking back upon their own career with a kind of fond interest and affectionate remembrance, than to watching the events—though these may have far more interest for the multitude—immediately passing before their eyes. If this should be the case with the generality of old people, how much more so with me!... If I am to enter upon that strange story connected with poor Lucy, I must begin a long way back. I myself only came to the knowledge of her family history after I knew her; but, to make the tale clear to any one else, I must arrange events in the order in which they occurred—not that in which I became acquainted with them. @@ -472,9 +433,9 @@ Mr. Gisborne shaded his eyes with his hand. </p> <br> <br> -<p class="head"> +<h3> Chapter 2 -</p> +</h3> <p> I now come to the time in which I myself was mixed up with the people that I have been writing about. And to make you understand how I became connected with them, I must give you some little account of myself. My father was the younger son of a Devonshire gentleman of moderate property; my eldest uncle succeeded to the estate of his forefathers, my second became an eminent attorney in London, and my father took orders. Like most poor clergymen, he had a large family; and I have no doubt was glad enough when my London uncle, who was a bachelor, offered to take charge of me, and bring me up to be his successor in business. </p> @@ -903,9 +864,9 @@ The next morning Lucy and I went to seek her, to bid her join her prayers with o </p> <br> <br> -<p class="head"> +<h3> Chapter 3 -</p> +</h3> <p> What was to be done next? was the question that I asked myself. As for Lucy, she would fain have submitted to the doom that lay upon her. Her gentleness and piety, under the pressure of so horrible a life, seemed over-passive to me. She never complained. Mrs. Clarke complained more than ever. As for me, I was more in love with the real Lucy than ever; but I shrunk from the false similitude with an intensity proportioned to my love. I found out by instinct that Mrs. Clarke had occasional temptations to leave Lucy. The good lady's nerves were shaken, and, from what she said, I could almost have concluded that the object of the Double was to drive away from Lucy this last and almost earliest friend. At times, I could scarcely bear to own it, but I myself felt inclined to turn recreant; and I would accuse Lucy of being too patient—too resigned. One after another, she won the little children of Coldholme. (Mrs. Clarke and she had resolved to stay there, for was it not as good a place as any other to such as they? and did not all our faint hopes rest on Bridget—never seen or heard of now, but still we trusted to come back, or give some token?) So, as I say, one after another, the little children came about my Lucy, won by her soft tones, and her gentle smiles, and kind actions. Alas! one after another they fell away, and shrunk from her path with blanching terror; and we too surely guessed the reason why. It was the last drop. I could bear it no longer. I resolved no more to linger around the spot, but to go back to my uncle, and among the learned divines of the city of London, seek for some power whereby to annul the curse. </p> @@ -1109,15 +1070,15 @@ He understood us, however, and, rousing himself as it were, he said: <p> 'I know you wish me to tell you, in my turn, of something which I have learnt or heard during my life. I could tell you something of my own life, and of a life dearer still to my memory; but I have shrunk from narrating anything so purely personal. Yet, shrink as I will, no other but those sad recollections will present themselves to my mind. I call them sad when I think of the end of it all. However I am not going to moralize. If my dear brother's life and death does not speak for itself, no words of mine will teach you what may be learnt from it.' </p> -<a name="lois"> +<a id="lois"> </a> -<p class="chapter"> +<h2> LOIS THE WITCH -</p> -<p class="head"> +</h2> +<h3> Chapter 1 -</p> +</h3> <p> <span class="dropcap"> I</span>n the year 1691, Lois Barclay stood on a little wooden pier, steadying herself on the stable land, in much the same manner as, eight or nine weeks ago, she had tried to steady herself on the deck of the rocking ship which had carried her across from Old to New England. It seemed as strange now to be on solid earth as it had been, not long ago, to be rocked by the sea, both by day and by night; and the aspect of the land was equally strange. The forests which showed in the distance all round, and which, in truth, were not very far from the wooden houses forming the town of Boston, were of different shades of green, and different, too, in shape of outline to those which Lois Barclay knew well in her old home in Warwickshire. Her heart sank a little as she stood alone, waiting for the captain of the good ship Redemption, the kind rough old sailor, who was her only known friend in this unknown continent. Captain Holdernesse was busy, however, as she saw, and it would probably be some time before he would be ready to attend, to her; so Lois sat down on one of the casks that lay about, and wrapped her grey duffle cloak tight around her, and sheltered herself under her hood, as well as might be, from the piercing wind, which seemed to follow those whom it had tyrannized over at sea with a dogged wish of still tormenting them on land. Very patiently did Lois sit there, although she was weary, and shivering with cold; for the day was severe for May, and the Redemption, with store of necessaries and comforts for the Puritan colonists of New England, was the earliest ship that had ventured across the seas. @@ -1315,9 +1276,9 @@ And Lois was left alone in New England. </p> <br> <br> -<p class="head"> +<h3> Chapter 2 -</p> +</h3> <p> It was hard up-hill work for Lois to win herself a place in this family. Her aunt was a woman of narrow, strong affections. Her love for her husband, if ever she had any, was burnt out and dead long ago. What she did for him she did from duty; but duty was not strong enough to restrain that little member the tongue; and Lois's heart often bled at the continual flow of contemptuous reproof which Grace constantly addressed to her husband, even while she was sparing no pains or trouble to minister to his bodily ease and comfort. It was more as a relief to herself that she spoke in this way, than with any desire that her speeches should affect him; and he was too deadened by illness to feel hurt by them; or, it may be, the constant repetition of her sarcasms had made him indifferent; at any rate, so that he had his food and his state of bodily warmth attended to, he very seldom seemed to care much for anything else. Even his first flow of affection towards Lois was soon exhausted; he cared for her because she arranged his pillows well and skilfully, and because she could prepare new and dainty kinds of food for his sick appetite, but no longer for her as his dead sister's child. Still he did care for her, and Lois was too glad of this little hoard of affection to examine how or why it was given. To him she could give pleasure, but apparently to no one else in that household. Her aunt looked askance at her for many reasons: the first coming of Lois to Salem was inopportune, the expression of disapprobation on her face on that evening still lingered and rankled in Grace's memory, early prejudices, and feelings, and prepossessions of the English girl were all on the side of what would now be called Church and State, what was then esteemed in that country a superstitious observance of the directions of a Popish rubric, and a servile regard for the family of an oppressing and irreligious king. Nor is it to be supposed that Lois did not feel, and feel acutely, the want of sympathy that all those with whom she was now living manifested towards the old hereditary loyalty (religious as well as political loyalty) in which she had been brought up. With her aunt and Manasseh it was more than want of sympathy; it was positive, active antipathy to all the ideas Lois held most dear. The very allusion, however incidentally made, to the little old grey church at Barford, where her father had preached so long,—the occasional reference to the troubles in which her own country had been distracted when she left,—and the adherence, in which she had been brought up, to the notion that the king could do no wrong, seemed to irritate Manasseh past endurance. He would get up from his reading, his constant employment when at home, and walk angrily about the room after Lois had said anything of this kind, muttering to himself; and once he had even stopped before her, and in a passionate tone bade her not talk so like a fool. Now this was very different to his mother's sarcastic, contemptuous way of treating all poor Lois's little loyal speeches. Grace would lead her on—at least she did at first, till experience made Lois wiser—to express her thoughts on such subjects, till, just when the girl's heart was opening, her aunt would turn round upon her with some bitter sneer that roused all the evil feelings in Lois's disposition by its sting. Now Manasseh seemed, through all his anger, to be so really grieved by what he considered her error, that he went much nearer to convincing her that there might be two sides to a question. Only this was a view, that it appeared like treachery to her dead father's memory to entertain. </p> @@ -1700,9 +1661,9 @@ Manasseh listened greedily to all this story, and when it was ended he smote upo </p> <br> <br> -<p class="head"> +<h3> Chapter 3 -</p> +</h3> <p> 'The sin of witchcraft.' We read about it, we look on it from the outside; but we can hardly realize the terror it induced. Every impulsive or unaccustomed action, every little nervous affection, every ache or pain was noticed, not merely by those around the sufferer, but by the person himself, whoever he might be, that was acting, or being acted upon, in any but the most simple and ordinary manner. He or she (for it was most frequently a woman or girl that was the supposed subject) felt a desire for some unusual kind of food—some unusual motion or rest her hand twitched, her foot was asleep, or her leg had the cramp; and the dreadful question immediately suggested itself, 'Is any one possessing an evil power over me, by the help of Satan?' and perhaps they went on to think, 'It is bad enough to feel that my body can be made to suffer through the power of some unknown evil-wisher to me, but what if Satan gives them still further power, and they can touch my soul, and inspire me with loathful thoughts leading me into crimes which at present I abhor?' and so on, till the very dread of what might happen, and the constant dwelling of the thoughts, even with horror, upon certain possibilities, or what were esteemed such, really brought about the corruption of imagination at least, which at first they had shuddered at. Moreover, there was a sort of uncertainty as to who might be infected—not unlike the overpowering dread of the plague, which made some shrink from their best-beloved with irrepressible fear. The brother or sister, who was the dearest friend of their childhood and youth, might now be bound in some mysterious deadly pact with evil spirits of the most horrible kind—who could tell? And in such a case it became a duty, a sacred duty, to give up the earthly body which had been once so loved, but which was now the habitation of a soul corrupt and horrible in its evil inclinations. Possibly, terror of death might bring on confession and repentance, and purification. Or if it did not, why away with the evil creature, the witch, out of the world, down to the kingdom of the master, whose bidding was done on earth in all manner of corruption and torture of God's creatures! There were others who, to these more simple, if more ignorant, feelings of horror at witches and witchcraft, added the desire, conscious or unconscious, of revenge on those whose conduct had been in any way displeasing to them. Where evidence takes a supernatural character, there is no disproving it. This argument comes up: 'You have only the natural powers; I have supernatural. You admit the existence of the supernatural by the condemnation of this very crime of witchcraft. You hardly know the limits of the natural powers; how then can you define the supernatural? I say that in the dead of night, when my body seemed to all present to be lying in quiet sleep, I was, in the most complete and wakeful consciousness, present in my body at an assembly of witches and wizards with Satan at their head; that I was by them tortured in my body, because my soul would not acknowledge him as its king; and that I witnessed such and such deeds. What the nature of the appearance was that took the semblance of myself, sleeping quietly in my bed, I know not; but admitting, as you do, the possibility of witchcraft, you cannot disprove my evidence.' This evidence might be given truly or falsely, as the person witnessing believed it or not; but every one must see what immense and terrible power was abroad for revenge. Then, again, the accused themselves ministered to the horrible panic abroad. Some, in dread of death, confessed from cowardice to the imaginary crimes of which they were accused, and of which they were promised a pardon on confession. Some, weak and terrified, came honestly to believe in their own guilt, through the diseases of imagination which were sure to be engendered at such a time as this. </p> @@ -2291,15 +2252,15 @@ But—as Captain Holdernesse shook his head (for what word could he say, or <p> 'Then on that day will I, here at Barford in England, join my prayer as long as I live with the repentant judge, that his sin may be blotted out and no more had in remembrance. She would have willed it so.' </p> -<a name="grey"> +<a id="grey"> </a> -<p class="chapter"> +<h2> THE GREY WOMAN -</p> -<p class="head"> +</h2> +<h3> Portion 1 -</p> +</h3> <p> <span class="dropcap"> T</span>here is a mill by the Neckar-side, to which many people resort for coffee, according to the fashion which is almost national in Germany. There is nothing particularly attractive in the situation of this mill; it is on the Mannheim (the flat and unromantic) side of Heidelberg. The river turns the mill-wheel with a plenteous gushing sound; the out-buildings and the dwelling-house of the miller form a well-kept dusty quadrangle. Again, further from the river, there is a garden full of willows, and arbours, and flower-beds not well kept, but very profuse in flowers and luxuriant creepers, knotting and looping the arbours together. In each of these arbours is a stationary table of white painted wood, and light moveable chairs of the same colour and material. @@ -2421,9 +2382,9 @@ I have almost forgotten to say that, in the early days of my life at Les Rochers </p> <br> <br> -<p class="head"> +<h3> Portion 2 -</p> +</h3> <p> A Norman woman, Amante by name, was sent to Les Rochers by the Paris milliner, to become my maid. She was tall and handsome, though upwards of forty, and somewhat gaunt. But, on first seeing her, I liked her; she was neither rude nor familiar in her manners, and had a pleasant look of straightforwardness about her that I had missed in all the inhabitants of the château, and had foolishly set down in my own mind as a national want. Amante was directed by M. de la Tourelle to sit in my boudoir, and to be always within call. He also gave her many instructions as to her duties in matters which, perhaps, strictly belonged to my department of management. But I was young and inexperienced, and thankful to be spared any responsibility. </p> @@ -2561,9 +2522,9 @@ Every now and then I was wakened from the painful doze into which I continually </p> <br> <br> -<p class="head"> +<h3> Portion 3 -</p> +</h3> <p> Far on in the night there were voices outside reached us in our hiding-place; an angry knocking at the door, and we saw through the chinks the old woman rouse herself up to go and open it for her master, who came in, evidently half drunk. To my sick horror, he was followed by Lefebvre, apparently as sober and wily as ever. They were talking together as they came in, disputing about something; but the miller stopped the conversation to swear at the old woman for having fallen asleep, and, with tipsy anger, and even with blows, drove the poor old creature out of the kitchen to bed. Then he and Lefebvre went on talking—about the Sieur de Poissy's disappearance. It seemed that Lefebvre had been out all day, along with other of my husband's men, ostensibly assisting in the search; in all probability trying to blind the Sieur de Poissy's followers by putting them on a wrong scent, and also, I fancied, from one or two of Lefebvre's sly questions, combining the hidden purpose of discovering us. </p> @@ -2815,12 +2776,12 @@ You know all the rest. How we both mourned bitterly the loss of that dear husban <p> Why has it been made, you ask. For this reason, my child. The lover, whom you have only known as M. Lebrun, a French artist, told me but yesterday his real name, dropped because the blood-thirsty republicans might consider it as too aristocratic. It is Maurice de Poissy. </p> -<a name="curious"> +<a id="curious"> </a> -<p class="chapter"> +<h2> CURIOUS, IF TRUE -</p> +</h2> <p class="head"> (<span class="sc">Extract from a letter from Richard Whittingham, Esq.</span>) </p> @@ -3075,387 +3036,7 @@ And just as I spoke, the great folding-doors were thrown open wide, and every on <p> And in a moment I was lying in the grass close by a hollow oak-tree, with the slanting glory of the dawning day shining full in my face, and thousands of little birds and delicate insects piping and warbling out their welcome to the ruddy splendour. </p> -<br> - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Curious, if True, by Elizabeth Gaskell - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CURIOUS, IF TRUE *** - -***** This file should be named 24879-h.htm or 24879-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/8/7/24879/ - -Produced by Delphine Lettau and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions -will be renamed. - -Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no -one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation -(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without -permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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