Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Nightmare Abbey
- Appendix A Peacock’s Preface of 1837
- Appendix B An Essay on Fashionable Literature (1818)
- Appendix C The Four Ages of Poetry (1820)
- Note on the Text
- Emendations and Variants
- Ambiguous Line-End Hyphenations
- Explanatory Notes
- Select Bibliography
Chapter XII
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 June 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- General Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Nightmare Abbey
- Appendix A Peacock’s Preface of 1837
- Appendix B An Essay on Fashionable Literature (1818)
- Appendix C The Four Ages of Poetry (1820)
- Note on the Text
- Emendations and Variants
- Ambiguous Line-End Hyphenations
- Explanatory Notes
- Select Bibliography
Summary
IT was the custom of the Honorable Mr. Listless, on adjourning from the bottle to the ladies, to retire for a few moments to make a second toilette, that he might present himself in becoming taste. Fatout, attending as usual, appeared with a countenance of great dismay, and informed his master that he had just ascertained that the Abbey was haunted.Mrs.Hilary’s gentlewoman, for whom Fatout had lately conceived a tendresse,had been, as she expressed it, “fritted out of her seventeen senses” the preceding night, as she was retiring to her bed-chamber, by a ghastly figure, which she had met stalking along one of the galleries, wrapped in a white shroud, with a bloody turban on its head. She had fainted away with fear; and, when she recovered, she found herself in the dark, and the figure was gone. “Sacre—cochon—bleu!” exclaimed Fatout, giving very deliberate emphasis to every portion of his terrible oath,—“I vould not meet de revenant, de ghost—non—not for all de bowl-de-ponch in de vorld.”
“Fatout,” said the Honorable Mr. Listless, “did I ever see a ghost?”
“Jamais, Monsieur, never.”
“Then I hope I never shall, for, in the present shattered state of my nerves, I am afraid it would be toomuch for me.There— loosen the lace of my stays a little, for really this plebeian practice of eating—Not too loose—consider my shape. That will do. And I desire that you bring me no more stories of ghosts; for, though I do not believe in such things, yet, when one is awake in the night, one is apt, if one thinks of them, to have fancies that give one a kind of a chill, particularly if one opens one's eyes suddenly on one's dressing-gown, hanging in the moonlight, between the bed and the window.”
The Honorable Mr. Listless, though he had prohibited Fatout from bringing him any more stories of ghosts, could not help thinking of that which Fatout had already brought; and, as it was uppermost in his mind, when he descended to the tea and coffee cups, and the rest of the company in the library, he almost involuntarily asked Mr. Flosky, whom he looked up to as amost oraculous personage, whether any story of any ghost that had ever appeared to any one, was entitled to any degree of belief?
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- Information
- Nightmare Abbey , pp. 81 - 86Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016