Tales of Mystery and Imagination
Showing posts with label Henry James. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry James. Show all posts

Henry James: The third person

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1 When, a few years since, two good ladies, previously not intimate nor indeed more than slightly acquainted, found themselves domici...

Henry James: Sir Edmund Orme

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The statement appears to have been written, though the fragment is undated, long after the death of his wife, whom I take to have been ...

Henry James: The romance of certain old clothes

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1 Towards the middle of the eighteenth century there lived in the Province of Massachusetts a widowed gentlewoman, the mother of thr...

Henry James: The Ghostly Rental

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I was in my twenty-second year, and I had just left college. I was at liberty to choose my career, and I chose it with much promptness....
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Henry James: Maud-Evelyn

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On some allusion to a lady who, though unknown to myself, was known to two or three of the company, it was asked by one of these if we...

Henry James: A tragedy of error

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I. A low English phaeton was drawn up before the door of the post office of a French seaport town. In it was seated a lady, with her...
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