The feast of Bacchus : A study in dramatic atmosphere by Ernest G. Henham
"The feast of Bacchus" by Ernest G. Henham is a novel written in the early 20th century. It is an atmospheric, theatrically structured tale in which a neglected country manor called the Strath exerts shifting moods of comedy and tragedy over those who enter it, especially the reclusive classical scholar Dr. Berry and the blunt new owner, Henry Reed. Threaded through are sharp social conversations about love, marriage, and modernity, setting reason
against mysticism and appetite against restraint. The opening of the novel drifts from a languid river scene—where Maude Juxon and her friend Flora Neill spar over flirtation, convenience in marriage, and “spiritual” love—into the secluded valley of Thorlund and the uncanny garden of the Strath. There the gentle rector-scholar Dr. Berry, long inspired (and subtly ruled) by the garden’s alternating gaiety and gloom, meets Henry Reed, who has returned to occupy the long-deserted house; together they enter a dust-locked dining room eerily preserved as if a century-old feast had just ended, and find a leering comic mask on the wall. Outside the gate, Reed’s practical, defiant streak reasserts itself—he talks of felling trees and breeding poultry—while Berry warns that the place will break him, recounts the manor’s dark lore, and tests Reed’s soul with Greek verse to no effect. As a storm gathers, Berry yields to the garden’s tragic pull, burning incense at the sun-dial, then meets Lone Nance, a wild, visionary girl, and hears the flat fatalism of a hay-cutter about the “broken” old being sent to the workhouse; that night, Berry collapses over his manuscripts, and by morning Reed is found dead across the hall threshold. An interlude shifts to London, where the dissipated Charles Conway—Reed’s relative and heir—receives news of the murder and sets out for the Strath, as the local inquest returns the familiar verdict against unknown hands. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Download for free
For your e-reader or reading app — Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books, Calibre etc.
Kindle → Use Send-to-Kindle
Kobo, Nook etc. → Transfer via USB
Phone, tablet or computer → Open in a reading app
Other formats & older devices
There may be more files related to this item.
About this eBook
| Author | Henham, Ernest G. (Ernest George), 1870-1948 |
|---|---|
| LoC No. | 16007022 |
| Title | The feast of Bacchus : A study in dramatic atmosphere |
| Original Publication | London: Brown, Langham & Co., Ltd., 1907. |
| Credits | an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer |
| Language | English |
| LoC Class | PR: Language and Literatures: English literature |
| Subject | Horror tales |
| Subject | Gothic fiction |
| Subject | Paranormal fiction |
| Subject | Haunted houses -- Fiction |
| Category | Text |
| eBook-No. | 78162 |
| Release Date | Mar 10, 2026 |
| Copyright | Public domain in the USA. |
| Downloads | 218 downloads in the last 30 days. |
Project Gutenberg eBooks are always free!