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Shapes that Haunt the Dusk Harper's Novelettes EDITED BY WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS AND HENRY MILLS ALDEN Harper & Brothers Publishers New York and London |
Copyright, 1891, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898,
1905, 1906, 1907, by Harper & Brothers.
All rights reserved.
| GEORG SCHOCK [THE CHRISTMAS CHILD] |
| RICHARD RICE [THE WHITE SLEEP OF AUBER HURN] |
| HOWARD PYLE [IN TENEBRAS] |
| MADELENE YALE WYNNE [THE LITTLE ROOM] |
| HARRIET LEWIS BRADLEY [THE BRINGING OF THE ROSE] |
| HILDEGARDE HAWTHORNE [PERDITA] |
| M. E. M. DAVIS [AT LA GLORIEUSE] |
| F. D. MILLET [A FADED SCAPULAR] |
| E. LEVI BROWN [AT THE HERMITAGE] |
| H. W. McVICKAR [THE REPRISAL] |
Introduction
The writers of American short stories, the best short stories in the world, surpass in nothing so much as in their handling of those filmy textures which clothe the vague shapes of the borderland between experience and illusion. This is perhaps because our people, who seem to live only in the most tangible things of material existence, really live more in the spirit than any other. Their love of the supernatural is their common inheritance from no particular ancestry, but is apparently an effect from psychological influences in the past, widely separated in time and place. It is as noticeable among our Southerners of French race as among our New-Englanders deriving from Puritan zealots accustomed to wonder-working providences, or among those descendants of the German
immigrants who brought with them to our Middle States the superstitions of the Rhine valleys or the Hartz Mountains. It is something that has tinged the nature of our whole life, whatever its varied sources, and when its color seems gone out of us, or, going, it renews itself in all the mystical lights and shadows so familiar to us that, till we read some such tales as those grouped together here, we are scarcely aware how largely they form the complexion of our thinking and feeling.
The opening story in this volume is from a hand quite new, and is, we think, of an excellence quite absolute, so fresh is it in scene, character, and incident, so delicately yet so strongly accented by a talent trying itself in a region hardly yet visited by fiction. Its perfect realism is consistent with the boldest appeal to those primitive instincts furthest from every-day events, and its pathos is as poignant as if it had happened within our own knowledge. In its way, it is as finely imaginative as Mr. Pyle's wonderfully spiritualized and moralized conception of the other world which he has realized on such terms as he alone can command; or as Mrs. Wynne's symphony of thrills and shudders, which will not have died out of the nerves of any one acquainted with it before. Mr. Millet's