The House by the Church-Yard 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The House by the Church-Yard, by J. 
Sheridan Le Fanu 
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Title: The House by the Church-Yard 
Author: J. Sheridan Le Fanu 
 
Release Date: February 15, 2006 [eBook #17769] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOUSE 
BY THE CHURCH-YARD*** 
E-text prepared by Ted Garvin, Janet Blenkinship, and Project 
Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreaders Europe 
(http://dp.rastko.net) 
 
THE HOUSE BY THE CHURCH-YARD
by 
J. SHERIDAN LE FANU 
Author of 'Uncle Silas' and 'Torlogh O'brien' 
 
Dublin: James Duffy and Co., Ltd. New York: The MacMillan 
Company. 1904. Printed by Edmund Burke & Co., 61 & 62 Great 
Strand Street, Dublin. 
 
CONTENTS. 
CHAP. Page 
A Prologue--being a dish of village chat 1 
I.--The rector's night-walk to his church 9 
II.--The nameless coffin 12 
III.--Mr. Mervyn in his inn 15 
IV.--The Fair-green of Palmerstown 18 
V.--How the Royal Artillery entertained some of the neighbours at 
dinner 25 
VI.--In which the minstrelsy proceeds 32 
VII.--Showing how two gentlemen may misunderstand one another, 
without enabling the company to understand their quarrel 35 
VIII.--Relating how Doctor Toole and Captain Devereux went on a 
moonlight errand 40 
IX.--How a squire was found for the knight of the rueful countenance
44 
X.--The dead secret, showing how the fireworker proved to Puddock 
that Nutter had spied out the nakedness of the land 48 
XI.--Some talk about the haunted house--being, as I suppose, only old 
woman's tales 53 
XII.--Some odd facts about the Tiled House--being an authentic 
narrative of the ghost of a hand 57 
XIII.--In which the rector visits the Tiled House, and Doctor Toole 
looks after the Brass Castle 63 
XIV.--Relating how Puddock purged O'Flaherty's head--a chapter 
which, it is hoped, no genteel person will read 66 
XV.--Æsculapius to the rescue 69 
XVI.--The ordeal by battle 73 
XVII.--Lieutenant Puddock receives an invitation and a rap over the 
knuckles 81 
XVIII.--Relating how the gentlemen sat over their claret, and how 
Doctor Sturk saw a face 86 
XIX.--In which the gentlemen follow the ladies 91 
XX.--In which Mr. Dangerfield visits the church of Chapelizod, and 
Zekiel Irons goes a-fishing 94 
XXI.--Relating among other things how Doctor Toole walked up to the 
Tiled House, and of his pleasant discourse with Mr. Mervyn 100 
XXII.--Telling how Mr. Mervyn fared at Belmont, and of a pleasant 
little dejeuner by the margin of the Liffey 104 
XXIII.--Which concerns the grand dinner at the King's House, and who
were there, and something of their talk, reveries, disputes, and general 
jollity 108 
XXIV.--In which two young persons understand one another better, 
perhaps, than ever they did before, without saying so 113 
XXV.--In which the sun sets, and the merry-making is kept up by 
candle-light in the King's House, and Lily receives a warning which she 
does not comprehend 116 
XXVI.--Relating how the band of the Royal Irish Artillery played, and, 
while the music was going on, how variously different people were 
moved 122 
XXVII.--Concerning the troubles and the shapes that began to gather 
about Doctor Sturk 125 
XXVIII.--In which Mr. Irons recounts some old recollections about the 
Pied-horse and the Flower de Luce 129 
XXIX.--Showing how poor Mrs. Macnamara was troubled and haunted 
too, and opening a budget of gossip 132 
XXX.--Concerning a certain woman in black 137 
XXXI.--Being a short history of the great battle of Belmont that lasted 
for so many days, wherein the belligerents showed so much constancy 
and valour, and sometimes one side and sometimes t'other was 
victorious 141 
XXXII.--Narrating how Lieutenant Puddock and Captain Devereux 
brewed a bowl of punch, and how they sang and discoursed together 
143 
XXXIII.--In which Captain Devereux's fiddle plays a prelude to 'Over 
the hills and far away' 146 
XXXIV.--In which Lilias hears a stave of an old song and there is a 
leave-taking beside the river 148
XXXV.--In which Aunt Becky and Doctor Toole, in full blow, with 
Dominick the footman, behind, visit Miss Lily at the Elms 152 
XXXVI.--Narrating how Miss Lilias visited Belmont, and saw a 
strange cocked-hat in the shadow by the window 155 
XXXVII.--Showing how some of the feuds in Chapelizod wared fiercer, 
and others were solemnly condoned 158 
XXXVIII.--Dreams and troubles, and a dark look-out 161 
XXXIX.--Telling how Lilias Walsingham found two ladies awaiting 
her arrival at the Elms 166 
XL.--Of a messenger from Chapelizod vault who waited in the Tiled 
House for Mr. Mervyn 168 
XLI.--In which the rector comes home, and Lily speaks her mind, and 
time glides on, and Aunt Rebecca calls at the Elms 173 
XLII.--In which Doctor    
    
		
	
	
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