Edgar, Or, The Phantom of the CastleValancourt Books, 2005 - 107 pages "His foot struck against something, he stumbled, and had nearly fallen; he stooped to examine what it was, and his hand rested on the face of a human being, cold, putrid, and clammy " Young Edgar's father, the noble Baron Fitz-Elmar, has been mysteriously slain, and his uncle, the scheming Sir Armine, rules in his place. Determined to retain power, Armine will stop at nothing to destroy Edgar, who stands to inherit the castle. Now Edgar must flee his tyrannical uncle and outrun the murderous army of assassins sent to kill him. His flight will lead him, on a dark and stormy night, to a ruined priory, where he will discover the horrible truth behind his father's untimely end. A gothicized retelling of Hamlet, and heavily influenced by the tragedies of Shakespeare and the Gothic romances of Walpole and Radcliffe, The Phantom of the Castle was the first of Richard Sickelmore's Gothic novels. This edition, the first since its initial publication in 1798, includes a new introduction, notes, and the complete text of contemporary reviews. |
Other editions - View all
Edgar: Or, the Phantom of the Castle: a Novel;, Volume 1 Richard Sicklemore No preview available - 2017 |
Edgar: Or, the Phantom of the Castle: a Novel;, Volume 1 Richard Sicklemore No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
acquainted alarmed anchorite Ann Radcliffe apartment appeared armour arrived astonishment banditti Bardolph's cottage Baron began behold Bernardine Bernardine's black Mary Blair blood brother castle Fitz-Elmar Castle of Otranto CHAPTER concealed Conrad conveyed dark daughter dear death descended descried determined discovered dispatched domestics door dreadful edifice Edward Young endeavoured entered epigraph escape exclaimed extreme eyes father fear forest fortune Francis Lathom gang gloomy Gothic novels Hamlet heard heart Helen hero Hilderbrand honest Honour HORACE WALPOLE horrid horror hurried imagined immediately informed likewise Lucretia Macbeth master melancholy mind Minerva Press Montague Summers Morpheus murdered never night noise occasion old Dorothy once Osrick perceiving person Phantom possessed priory rendered requested retired Richard Sickelmore Robert Blair ruffians ruin seized SHAKESPEARE Sickelmore's silent Sir Armine Fitz-Elmar Sir Armine's Sir Edgar Fitz-Elmar situation soon summons surgeon surprize tempest thing thou tion trembling uncle villain villany violent voice wounded