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"This Society consisteth of seven Everlastings, who may be Corporeal or Incorporeal, as Destiny shall determine."
So dictates the first rule of The Everlasting Club, the ghastly and debauched history of which is faithfully recorded herein.
Assembled alongside are further narratives of supernatural misadventure and menace, including the curious tale of the death of mathematician Thomas Allen, possible necromancer, definite murder victim; the story of the final days of alchemist Anthony Fryar, discoverer of the Magisterium – the ‘master-cure for all human ailments’, but sadly not soon enough; and Matthew Makepeace’s cautionary tale of unforeseen regret wrought from the dark art of soul transference.
‘Ingulphus’ was the pseudonym of Arthur Gray (1852–1940), Master of Jesus College, Cambridge from 1912–40. It is this location that acts as the setting for the series of stories originally written for magazines and then collected as Tedious Brief Tales of Granta and Gramarye.
A contemporary of M.R. James, Gray wrote these stories in similar style as a compliment to the King's College Provost.
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Subjects
Ghost stories, anthology, antiquarian ghost storiesPlaces
Jesus College, University of CambridgeEdition | Availability |
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Tedious Brief Tales of Granta and Gramarye
Jan 29, 1993, Ghost Story Press
hardcover
0952049201 9780952049203
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