The Ghost by Arnold Bennet Chapter 6 Page 20

I knocked against something in the darkness. With an inarticulate scream, I raced up-stairs again to my parents’ bedroom. I seized my mother by her night-dress and dragged her towards the door. She stopped only to light a candle, and hand-in-hand we went down-stairs to the kitchen. The candle threw around its fitful, shuddering glare, and my mother’s eyes followed mine. Some strange thing happened in my throat.

“‘Mother!’ I cried, in a hoarse, uncouth, horrible voice, and, casting myself against her bosom, I clung convulsively to her. From a hook in the ceiling beam my father’s corpse dangled. He had hanged himself in the frenzy of his remorse. So my speech came to me again.”

All the man’s genius for tragic acting, that genius which had made him unique in