A Walk to the Night Side of Nature
Catherine Crowe (1790-1872) At the Park Gate by John Atkinson Grimshaw ( 1836-1893) painted 1878, Public domain,courtesy of Wikimedia Commons The Victorian era saw a massive rise in respect of deliberate communication with the Dead. Those who had passed over weren't just spectres who haunted the living, they were being invited to return. And contact with spirits had consequences. But was a seance really to blame for the 1854 breakdown of a prominent author in the mid Victorian era? Mrs Catherine Crowe wrote a series of novels published from around 1841 including, The Story of Lilly Dawson ,The Adventures of Susan Hopley or Circumstancial Evidence ( her most famous work ), The Adventures of a Beauty , Linny Lockwood. The 'Household Words' magazine, whilst edited by Charles Dickens published three short stories by Mrs Crowe in 1850 DICKENS JOURNAL ONLINE Mrs Crowe also wrote The Night Side of Nature or Ghosts and Ghosts Seers , p