| PAGE | ||
| I. |
May-Day Eve Algernon Blackwood | [ 3] |
| II. |
The Diamond Lens Fitz-James O'Brien | [ 38] |
| III. |
The Mummy's Foot Théopile Gautier | [ 77] |
| IV. |
Mr. Bloke's Item Mark Twain | [ 96] |
| V. |
A Ghost Lafcadio Hearn | [ 101] |
| VI. |
The Man Who Went Too Far E. F. Benson | [ 109] |
| VII. |
Chan Tow The Highrob Chester Bailey Fernando | [ 143] |
| VIII. |
The Inmost Light Arthur Machen | [ 158] |
| IX. |
The Secret of Goresthorpe Grange A. Conan Doyle | [ 203] |
| X. |
The Man With The Pale Eyes Guy de Maupassant | [ 230] |
| XI. |
The Rival Ghosts Brander Matthews | [ 238] |
Masterpieces of Mystery
MYSTIC-HUMOROUS STORIES
MAY DAY EVE
Algernon Blackwood
I
It was in the spring when I at last found time from the hospital work to visit my friend, the old folk-lorist, in his country isolation, and I rather chuckled to myself, because in my bag I was taking down a book that utterly refuted all his tiresome pet theories of magic and the powers of the soul.
These theories were many and various, and had often troubled me. In the first place, I scorned them for professional reasons, and, in the second, because I had never been able to argue quite well enough to convince or to shake his faith, in even the smallest details, and any scientific knowledge I brought to bear only fed him with confirmatory data. To find such a book, therefore, and to know that it was safely in my bag, wrapped up in brown paper and addressed to him, was a deep and satisfactory joy, and I speculated a good deal during the journey how he would deal with the overwhelming arguments it contained against the existence of any important region outside the world of sensory perceptions.