Erckmann-Chatrian
Born
France
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The Man-Wolf and Other Tales
49 editions
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published
1860
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The Invisible Eye
by
5 editions
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published
1880
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L'ami Fritz
172 editions
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published
1864
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Histoire Dun Conscrit De 1813
205 editions
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published
1864
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The Invisible Eye
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Waterloo
172 editions
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published
1865
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Cuentos de las orillas del Rin
18 editions
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published
1862
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The Owl's Ear
2 editions
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published
1860
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Best Tales of Terror of Erckmann-Chatrian
by
2 editions
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published
1980
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The Mysterious Sketch
2 editions
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published
1880
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“Meanwhile the colonel followed the mad woman, and by a strange effect of the superexcitation of his senses, saw her in the darkness, through the mist, as plainly as in broad daylight; he heard her sighs, her confused words, in spite of the continual moan of the autumn winds rushing through the deserted streets.
A few late townspeople, the collars of their coats raised to the level of their ears, their hands in their pockets, and their hats pressed down over their eyes, passed, at infrequent intervals, along the pavements; doors were heard to shut with a crash. An ill-fastened shutter banged against a wall, a tile torn from a housetop by the wind fell into the street; then, again, the immense torrent of air whirled on its course, drowning with its lugubrious voice all other sounds of the night.
It was one of those cold nights at the end of October, when the weathercocks, shaken by the north wind, turn giddily on the high roofs, and cry with shrilly voices, 'Winter! - Winter! - Winter is come!' ("The Child Stealer")”
― Reign of Terror Volume 2: Great Victorian Horror Stories
A few late townspeople, the collars of their coats raised to the level of their ears, their hands in their pockets, and their hats pressed down over their eyes, passed, at infrequent intervals, along the pavements; doors were heard to shut with a crash. An ill-fastened shutter banged against a wall, a tile torn from a housetop by the wind fell into the street; then, again, the immense torrent of air whirled on its course, drowning with its lugubrious voice all other sounds of the night.
It was one of those cold nights at the end of October, when the weathercocks, shaken by the north wind, turn giddily on the high roofs, and cry with shrilly voices, 'Winter! - Winter! - Winter is come!' ("The Child Stealer")”
― Reign of Terror Volume 2: Great Victorian Horror Stories
“The weather appeared to have somewhat cleared up; the rain no longer fell, a fresh wind swept the streets, and the moon, now and then surrounded by dark clouds, now and then shining in full brilliancy, shed its rays, smooth and cold as blades of steel, upon the thousand pools of water lying in the hollows of the paving-stones. ("The Child Stealer")”
― Reign of Terror Volume 2: Great Victorian Horror Stories
― Reign of Terror Volume 2: Great Victorian Horror Stories
“I reeled with giddiness - flames passed before my eyes.
I remembered those precipices that drew one towards them with irresistible power - wells that have had to be filled up because of persons throwing themselves into them - trees that have had to be cut down because of people hanging themselves upon them - the contagion of suicide and theft and murder, which at various times has taken possession of people's minds, by means well understood; that strange inducement, which makes people kill themselves because others kill themselves. My hair rose upon my head with horror!
("The Invisible Eye")”
― Terror by Gaslight: More Victorian Tales of Terror
I remembered those precipices that drew one towards them with irresistible power - wells that have had to be filled up because of persons throwing themselves into them - trees that have had to be cut down because of people hanging themselves upon them - the contagion of suicide and theft and murder, which at various times has taken possession of people's minds, by means well understood; that strange inducement, which makes people kill themselves because others kill themselves. My hair rose upon my head with horror!
("The Invisible Eye")”
― Terror by Gaslight: More Victorian Tales of Terror
Topics Mentioning This Author
topics | posts | views | last activity | |
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Literary Horror: Non-English Literary Horror | 33 | 106 | Apr 10, 2018 07:10PM | |
Horror Aficionados : Track the short fiction you read in 2018 | 36 | 161 | Jan 05, 2019 12:44PM | |
Spells, Space & S...:
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16213 | 504 | May 14, 2019 04:18AM | |
Horror Aficionados : Track the Short Fiction You've Read: 2020 | 22 | 138 | Nov 04, 2020 05:51PM |
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