The ghost story is as old as human speech and perhaps even antedates it. A naïve acceptance of
the supernatural was unquestionably one of the primal attributes of human intelligence. The
ghost story may thus quite conceivably be the first form of tale ever invented. It makes its
appearance comparatively early in the annals of literature. Who that has read it is likely to
forget Pliny's account in a letter to an intimate of an apparition shortly after death to a
mutual acquaintance? Old books of tales and legends are full of the ghost story. It has
persisted throughout the ages. It began to attain some real standing in literature to take its
definite place a little more than a century ago. Like the apparition it embodies it had always
been and is still to-day even more or less discredited. Mrs. Radcliffe gave it a new being and
even a certain dignity in her Castle of Otranto and after her came Sir Walter Scott who
frankly surrendered to the power and charm of the theme. The line of succession has been
continuous. The ghost has held his own with his human fellow in fiction and his tale has been
told with increasing skill as the art of the writer has developed. [...] Anthology of mystic
stories containing narratives from Guy de Maupassant Robert Louis Stevenson and many more.