
 
 
THE MAN WITH THE BLACK
FEATHER

In horror I recognized my own handwriting 
See page 21
 
 
THE
 
MAN WITH THE BLACK 
FEATHER 
Author of "The Mystery of the Yellow Room,"
"The Phantom of the Opera"
TRANSLATED BY
 
EDGAR JEPSON 
ILLUSTRATED BY
 
CHARLES M. RELYEA 
BOSTON 
 
SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY
 
PUBLISHERS
 
Copyright, 1912
By Small, Maynard and Company
(incorporated)
Entered at Stationers' Hall
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U. S. A.
 
 
CONTENTS
- Page 
- Historical Preface—The Sandalwood Box - v 
- Chapter 
- I - M. Theophrastus Longuet Desires to Improve His Mind and Visits Historical Monuments - 1 
- II - The Scrap of Paper - 13 
- III - Theophrastus Longuet Bursts into Song - 22 
- IV - Adolphe Lecamus is Flabbergasted but Frank - 48 
- V - Theophrastus Shows the Black Feather - 55 
- VI - The Portrait - 67 
- VII - The Young Cartouche - 89 
- VIII - The Wax Mask - 105 
- IX - Strange Position of a Little Violet Cat - 116 
- X - The Explanation of the Strange Attitude of a Little Violet Cat - 124 
- XI - Theophrastus Maintains that He Did Not Die on the Place de Grève - 135 
- XII - The House of Strange Words - 144 
- XIII - The Cure that Missed - 155 
- XIV - The Operation Begins - 171 
- XV - The Operation Ends - 186 
- XVI - The Drawbacks of Psychic Surgery - 200 
- XVII - Theophrastus Begins to Take an Interest in Things - 206 
- XVIII - The Evening Paper - 212 
- XIX - The Story of the Calf - 221 
- XX - The Strange Behaviour of an Express Train - 234 
- XXI - The Earless Man with His Head Out of the Window - 242 
- XXII - In which the Catastrophe which Appears on the Point of Being Explained, Grows yet More Inexplicable - 246 
- XXIII - The Melodious Bricklayer - 253 
- XXIV - The Solution in the Catacombs - 261 
- XXV - M. Mifroid Takes the Lead - 273 
- XXVI - M. Longuet Fishes in the Catacombs - 288 
- XXVII - M. Mifroid Parts from Theophrastus - 300 
- XXVIII - Theophrastus Goes into Eternal Exile - 308 
ILLUSTRATIONS
- In horror I recognized my own handwriting. See page 21 - Frontispiece 
- PAGE 
- Theophrastus still gazed in wonder. See page 157 - 100 
- "Theophrastus Longuet, awake!" - 200 
 
This work was published before January 1, 1927, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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