Little Novels
CONTENTS
The course of this narrative describes the return of a disembodied spirit to earth, and leads the reader on new and strange ground.
Not in the obscurity of midnight, but in the searching light of day, did the supernatural influence assert itself. Neither revealed by a vision, nor announced by a voice, it reached mortal knowledge through the sense which is least easily self-deceived: the sense that feels.
The record of this event will of necessity produce conflicting impressions. It will raise, in some minds, the doubt which reason asserts; it will invigorate, in other minds, the hope which faith justifies; and it will leave the terrible question of the destinies of man, where centuries of vain investigation have left it—in the dark.
Having only undertaken in the present narrative to lead the way along a succession of events, the writer declines to follow modern examples by thrusting himself and his opinions on the public view. He returns to the shadow from which he has emerged, and leaves the opposing forces of incredulity and belief to fight the old battle over again, on the old ground.
II.
THE events happened soon after the first thirty years of the present century had come to an end.
On a fine morning, early in the month of April, a gentleman of middle age (named Rayburn) took his little daughter Lucy out for a walk in the woodland pleasure-ground of Western London, called Kensington Gardens.
The few friends whom he possessed reported of Mr. Rayburn (not unkindly) that he was a reserved and solitary man. He might have been more accurately described as a widower devoted to his only surviving child. Although he was not more than forty years of age, the one pleasure which made life enjoyable to Lucy’s father was offered by Lucy herself.
Playing with her ball, the child ran on to the southern limit of the Gardens, at that part of it which still remains nearest to the old Palace of Kensington. Observing close at hand one of those spacious covered seats, called in England “alcoves,” Mr. Rayburn was reminded that he had the morning’s newspaper in his pocket, and that he might do well to rest and read. At that early hour the place was a solitude.
Wilkie Collins
LITTLE NOVELS
MRS. ZANT AND THE GHOST.
I.
MISS MORRIS AND THE STRANGER.
I.
MR. COSWAY AND THE LANDLADY.
I.
MR. MEDHURST AND THE PRINCESS.
I.
MR. LISMORE AND THE WIDOW.
I.
MISS JÉROMETTE AND THE CLERGYMAN.
I.
MISS MINA AND THE GROOM
I.
MR. LEPEL AND THE HOUSEKEEPER
FIRST EPOCH.
MR. CAPTAIN AND THE NYMPH.
I.
MR. MARMADUKE AND THE MINISTER.
I.
MR. PERCY AND THE PROPHET.
PART 1.—THE PREDICTION.
CHAPTER I.
THE QUACK.
CHAPTER II.
THE NUMBERS.
CHAPTER III.
THE CONSULTATION.
CHAPTER IV.
THE MAN.
PART II.—THE FULFILLMENT.
CHAPTER V.
THE BALLROOM.
CHAPTER VI.
LOVE.
CHAPTER VII.
POLITICS.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE WARNING.
CHAPTER IX.
OFFICIAL SECRETS
CHAPTER X.
THE ELOPEMENT.
CHAPTER XI.
PURSUIT AND DISCOVERY.
MISS BERTHA AND THE YANKEE.
MISS DULANE AND MY LORD.
Part I.
TWO REMONSTRATIONS.
Part II
PLATONIC MARRIAGE.
Part III.
NEWS FROM THE COLONY.
Part IV.
THE NIGHT NURSE.
MR. POLICEMAN AND THE COOK.
A FIRST WORD FOR MYSELF.