Rochester Knockings. Hubert Haddad. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Hubert Haddad
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Эзотерика
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781940953212
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      Copyright © Zulma, 2014

      Translation copyright © 2015 by Jennifer Grotz

      First published in France as Théorie de la vilaine petite fille by Zulma

      First edition, 2015

      All rights reserved

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: Available.

      ISBN-13: 978-1-940953-21-2

       This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

       Design by N. J. Furl

      Open Letter is the University of Rochester’s nonprofit, literary translation press: Lattimore Hall 411, Box 270082, Rochester, NY 14627

       www.openletterbooks.org

       In living memory of Élie Delamare-Deboutteville

       Real or invented, all the facts and characters evoked in this novel belong to the domain of the imagination.

      Contents

       XIII. Evening Visitors to the Haunted House

       XIV. Maggie’s Diary

       XV. The Columns of Duality

       XVI. In the Waves of Boiling Blood

       Part Two: Rochester

       I. I Want Only a Long Drunkenness

       II. Maggie’s Diary

       III. Exploration of a Mining Field

       IV. Oneida! Oneida!

       V. Like Galloping Carriage Horses

       VI. Assembly at Corinthian Hall

       VII. Fox & Fish Spiritualist Institute

       VIII. Farewell Dear Mother

       IX. The Aspiring Medium

       X. When to Burn Her Diary?

       XI. The Sleeping and the Dead

       XII. The Life of Phantoms

       XIII. The Conquest of Ice

       XIV. And Now We Roam in Sovreign Woods

       XV. With the Permission of Frederick Douglass and Ralph Waldo Emerson

       Part Three: New York

       I. Recent Disagreements

       II. Livermore’s Good Influence

       III. The Green Fairy and the Murderer

       IV. The Necromancers of the Old World

       V. A Normal Life

       VI. The Two Widows of Notting Hill

       VII. Mens agitat molem

       VIII. Three Letters for a Betrayal

       IX. Poltergeist at the Academy of Music

       X. With Congratulations from Mister Splitfoot

       Epilogue

       Translator’s Acknowledgments

       About the Author

       Hydesville

       Some things are inescapable;when they arrive, one must receive them.

      —Jan Van Ruysbroeck

       The Song of the Iroquois

      The sun at dusk lit the staircase through the upstairs window. Seated on a step of unfinished wood, Kate studied the dust motes. They floated inside a shaft of light, one of the many suspended throughout the house. Fascinated, she held her breath. Each particle seemed to follow its own trajectory in the dancing company of its tiny neighbors, of which there were thousands, millions, more than the stars fixed or spinning through the moonless nights. Motionless, so as not to stir the air, Kate tried hard to distinguish a single mote among them with the idea of not losing sight of its capricious flight; the instant after it was no longer the same one, she had lost it forever and the archangelic spear of sunlight crossed painfully over her face, as if to ignite the pollen lining the bottom of her eyelids. She had gathered so many wildflowers that autumn morning to decorate the grave of her dog, Irondequoit, that nausea had clenched her throat and her whole body was still burning from it. And yet Mother had warned her.

      There’s a creak of the staircase behind her and suddenly it’s dark: two freezing hands cover her eyes.

      “Leave me alone,” said Kate. “I saw you . . .”

      “So now you’ve got eyes in the back of your head?” Margaret sat on a step just above her younger sister. Her torso blocked the ray of sun and its galactic swirls.

      “You’re bothering me,” said Kate. “I was thinking of Irondequoit . . .”

      “Oh, Irondequoit, poor old thing! Don’t you worry, she’s gamboling through Dog Heaven. There’s no hell for animals, you know.”

      “Hell?