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y separately published work icon The Haunted Station and Other Stories selected work   short story  
Issue Details: First known date: 1894... 1894 The Haunted Station and Other Stories
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Contents

* Contents derived from the London,
c
England,
c
c
United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
:
F. V. White , 1894 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
The Odic Touch, Hume Nisbet , single work short story horror (p. 34-48)
An Ocean Dream, Hume Nisbet , single work novella horror mystery (p. 49-68)
A Queensland Iliad, Hume Nisbet , single work short story horror mystery fantasy (p. 69-88)
The Demon Spell, Hume Nisbet , single work short story horror (p. 89-98)
A Face at the Window, Hume Nisbet , single work short story (p. 99-111)
The Phantom Model, Hume Nisbet , single work short story horror (p. 112-130)
Marrie St. Pierre, Hume Nisbet , single work short story horror (p. 131-136)
Through the Gap, Hume Nisbet , single work novella adventure (p. 137-181)
A Deadly Voyage, Hume Nisbet , single work short story adventure (p. 182-226)
Delphine, Hume Nisbet , single work novella adventure (p. 227-279)
Humphrey Bolin's Account of the Spanish Armada Invasion, Hume Nisbet , single work novella historical fiction (p. 280-314)
The Haunted Station, Hume Nisbet , single work short story horror mystery

"The narrator of his ghost story, a medical practitioner, becomes a convict after he is wrongly accused of his wife’s murder and transported to the Australian colonies to work in Fremantle building roads. After landing in Australia he seeks his liberty by fleeing into the bush with two fellow convicts. Taking advantage of the capture and shooting of his accomplices, the narrator makes his escape into the wilderness—travelling to a “far off and as yet unnamed portion of Western Australia” (Nisbet 116). Wandering delirious in a hostile environment, Nisbet’s narrator, who is “expectant of something ghoulish and unnatural” to come upon him from “the sepulchral gloom and mystery” (110), suddenly comes upon “a house of two storeys”.

Source: "National Hauntings: The Architecture of Australian Ghost Stories" by David Crouch. 

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