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The epithets "Grotesque" and "Arabesque" will be found to indicate with sufficient precision the prevalent tenor of the tales here published. But from .... Read More
The epithets "Grotesque" and "Arabesque" will be found to indicate with sufficient precision the prevalent tenor of the tales here published. But from the fact that, during a period of some two or three years, I have written five-and-twenty short stories whose general character may be so briefly defined, it cannot be fairly inferred — at all events it is not truly inferred — that I have, for this species of writing, any inordinate, or indeed any peculiar taste or prepossession. I may have written with an eye to this republication in volume form, and may, therefore, have desired to preserve, as far as a certain point, a certain unity of design
Sr | Chapter Name | No Of Page |
---|---|---|
1 | Part 1 | 1 |
2 | Morella | 4 |
3 | Lionizing | 4 |
4 | William Wilson | 13 |
5 | The Man That Was Used Up | 7 |
6 | The Fall of the House of Usher | 12 |
7 | The Duc de L'Omelette | 3 |
8 | MS. Found in a Bottle | 7 |
9 | Bon-Bon | 11 |
10 | Shadow | 2 |
11 | The Devil in the Belfry | 6 |
12 | Ligeia | 10 |
13 | King Pest | 8 |
14 | How to Write a Blackwood Article | 7 |
15 | A Predicament | 6 |
16 | Part 2 | 1 |
17 | Four Beasts in One | 1 |