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Thiselton Dyer 
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Title: Strange Pages from Family Papers 
Author: T. F. Thiselton Dyer 
Release Date: November 11, 2005 [EBook #17050] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
0. START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STRANGE 
PAGES FROM FAMILY PAPERS *** 
Produced by Clare Boothby, Jeannie Howse and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
 
 
+------------------------------------------------+ 
| Transcriber's Note: Some very obvious typos | 
| were corrected in this text. For a list please |
 
| see the bottom of the document. 
| 
 
[Illustration: "FOR THE BLAST OF DEATH IS ON THE HEATH, 
AND THE GRAVE YAWNS WIDE FOR THE CHILD OF
MOY."] 
STRANGE PAGES 
FROM 
FAMILY PAPERS 
By T.F. THISELTON DYER 
AUTHOR OF 
"GREAT MEN AT PLAY," "CHURCH LORE GLEANINGS,"
"THE GHOST WORLD," &C. 
LONDON
SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & COMPANY
LIMITED
St. Dunstan's House,
FETTER LANE, FLEET 
STREET, E.C.
1895 
LONDON:
PRINTED BY HORACE COX, WINDSOR HOUSE,
BREAM'S BUILDINGS, E.C. 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER I.
Fatal Curses page 1 
CHAPTER II.
The Screaming Skull 29 
CHAPTER III.
Eccentric Vows 46 
CHAPTER IV.
Strange Banquets 69 
CHAPTER V.
Mysterious Rooms 88 
CHAPTER VI.
Indelible Bloodstains 114 
CHAPTER VII.
Curious Secrets 135
CHAPTER VIII.
The Dead Hand 154 
CHAPTER IX.
Devil Compacts 162 
CHAPTER X.
Family Death Omens 180 
CHAPTER XI.
Weird Possessions 198 
CHAPTER XII.
Romance of Disguise 208 
CHAPTER XIII.
Extraordinary Disappearances 229 
CHAPTER XIV.
Honoured Hearts 253 
CHAPTER XV.
Romance of Wealth 262 
CHAPTER XVI.
Lucky Accidents 279 
CHAPTER XVII.
Fatal Passion 289 
Index 309 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
0. "For the blast of Death is on the heath, And the grave yawns wide for 
the child of Moy." 
0. Frontispiece. 
0. She opened it in secret page 38 
0. "Madam, you have attained your end. You and I shall meet no more 
in this world" 72 
0. The figure stood motionless 150 
0. Lady Sybil at the Eagle's Crag 168 
0. Dorothy Vernon and the Woodman 214 
0. Lady Mabel and the Palmer 248 
0. There came an old Irish harper, and sang an ancient song 272 
STRANGE PAGES
FROM 
FAMILY PAPERS. 
CHAPTER I. 
FATAL CURSES. 
May the grass wither from thy feet! the woods
Deny thee shelter! 
Earth a home! the dust
A grave! The sun his light! and heaven her 
God. 
BYRON, Cain. 
Many a strange and curious romance has been handed down in the 
history of our great families, relative to the terrible curses uttered in 
cases of dire extremity against persons considered guilty of injustice 
and wrong doing. It is to such fearful imprecations that the misfortune 
and downfall of certain houses have been attributed, although, it may 
be, centuries have elapsed before their final fulfilment. Such curses, too, 
unlike the fatal "Curse of Kehama," have rarely turned into blessings, 
nor have they been thought to be as harmless as the curse of the 
Cardinal-Archbishop of Rheims, who banned the thief--both body and 
soul, his life and for ever--who stole his ring. It was an awful curse, but 
none of the guests seemed the worse for it, except the poor jackdaw 
who had hidden the ring in some sly corner as a practical joke. But, if 
we are to believe traditionary and historical lore, only too many of the 
curses recorded in the chronicles of family history have been 
productive of the most disastrous results, reminding us of that dreadful 
malediction given by Byron in his "Curse of Minerva": 
"So let him stand, through ages yet unborn,
Fix'd statue on the 
pedestal of scorn." 
A popular form of curse seems to have been the gradual collapse of the 
family name from failure of male-issue; and although there is, perhaps, 
no more romantic chapter in the vicissitudes of many a great house than 
its final extinction from lack of an heir, such a disaster is all the more to
be lamented when resulting from a curse. A catastrophe of this kind 
was that connected with the M'Alister family of Scotch notoriety. The 
story goes that many generations back, one of their chiefs, M'Alister 
Indre--an intrepid warrior who feared neither God nor man--in a 
skirmish with a neighbouring clan, captured a widow's two sons, and in 
a most heartless manner caused them to be hanged on a gibbet erected 
almost before her very door. It was in vain that, with well nigh 
heartbroken tears, she denounced his iniquitous act, for his comrades 
and himself only laughed and scoffed, and even threatened to burn her 
cottage to the ground. But as the crimson and setting rays of a summer 
sun fell on the lifeless bodies of her two sons, her eyes met those of 
him who    
    
		
	
	
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