The Horror Library
Browse Stories
31 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
How Six Men Got on in the World
This classic Grimm tale follows a discharged soldier who recruits five extraordinary men with superhuman abilities—a tree-uprooting giant, a marksman with impossible precision, a man who can control wind, a runner faster than birds, and one who commands frost. Together, the six compete in a deadly race against a king's daughter, outwit the king's attempts at murder, and secure the kingdom's entire wealth through cunning and teamwork. A celebration of cleverness, loyalty, and the triumph of the resourceful underdog over tyrannical power.
The Mahout
Published in the early 20th century, "The Mahout" is Clark Ashton Smith's meticulously plotted tale of vengeance set in colonial India. When a British newspaper editor witnesses a mysterious mahout training an elephant in the jungle, he unknowingly observes the final preparations for an elaborate and patient revenge spanning over a decade. The story explores themes of concealment, caste sacrifice, and the terrible price of justice pursued in silence.
Blagdaross
Lord Dunsany·1910·8 min read Lord Dunsany's 'Blagdaross' is a melancholic fantasy in which discarded objects—a cork, a match, a kettle, a cord, and an old rocking-horse—gather on a waste ground at twilight to recount their histories and purposes. The story explores the pathos of abandonment and the fading of wonder, as each object reflects on its former glory and the roles it once played in human life. Through their poignant monologues, Dunsany meditates on loss, duty, and the tragedy of diminishment.
Gabriel-Ernest
Saki (H.H. Munro)·1909·11 min read "Gabriel-Ernest" is a masterwork of British supernatural fiction by Saki, written in the early 20th century. When a mysterious wild boy appears in Van Cheele's woods, charming his credulous aunt while frightening his animals, Van Cheele begins to suspect the boy is something far more sinister than an ordinary waif. This deceptively brief tale combines Saki's trademark wit and restraint with genuine horror, leaving the reader to grapple with the implied tragedy of its carefully constructed denouement.
Sredni Vashtar
Written by Saki in the early 20th century, "Sredni Vashtar" is a darkly ironic tale of a sickly boy's imaginative rebellion against his overbearing guardian. Conradin transforms a polecat-ferret into a god and conducts secret rituals in a forgotten tool-shed, creating a private religion that stands in defiant opposition to the oppressive respectability of his daily life. The story exemplifies Saki's mastery of psychological subtlety and darkly comic endings, exploring themes of powerlessness, imagination as resistance, and the consequences of cruelty.
Nimba, the Cave Girl
R. T. M. Scott·1923·9 min read Written in the early 20th century, "Nimba, the Cave Girl" presents a speculative fiction narrative set in a prehistoric epoch when Earth's climate was radically different from the present day. The story follows Nimba, an independent and formidable hunter-gatherer who lives alone in a cave sanctuary, as she navigates the violent social dynamics of her primitive tribe. Readers should expect a pulp adventure tale that explores themes of autonomy, survival, and primal passion within an imaginative prehistoric setting.
The Bowmen
Arthur Machen·1914·6 min read Written during World War I, "The Bowmen" depicts a desperate moment during the Retreat of the Eighty Thousand when an overwhelmed English battalion faces certain annihilation. When one soldier invokes St. George through an old Latin motto, the impossible occurs—ghostly medieval archers appear to turn the tide of battle. Machen's story became so influential that many readers believed the event to be historical fact, spawning the legend of the "Angels of Mons."