Mark Twain’s Wild West and the Presidential Election of 1872

Mark Twain

In a daring act, facing frightful peril, Mark Twain exploited a legend to launch his onstage comic career. With his future as a lecturer on a knife’s edge, Twain decided to open with a worn-out narrative that had seen better days. A disgruntled audience nearly drove him from the stage … until they understood his brilliant manipulation of their own folklore.

A ghost story that caused a riot: the strange case of Maude Carew

Ghosts Image by Enrique Meseguer, Pixabay https://pixabay.com/illustrations/gothic-vintage-female-ghost-stories-1662756/

In February 1862 a riot broke out in a Suffolk churchyard over a ghost story. Margaretta Greene, the story’s author, originated an enduring legend of the ghost of a nun, Maude Carew, who haunts the ruins of the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds. But the story of Maude Carew, and the riot she inspired, raises intriguing questions about the origins of folklore and beliefs about the supernatural.

Trows, Changelings and Wise Women in Early Nineteenth Century Kirkwall

Photograph of the standing stones of Stennes in Orkney, with a sheep eating grass.

A nineteenth century autobiography written by the minister William Leask offers a fascinating insight into supernatural belief in contemporary Orkney.

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