The Horror Library
Browse Stories
46 public-domain horror, weird fiction, and dark fantasy stories. Filter by genre, mood, or reading time — or start with our curated shelves below.
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.
The Gallows
I. W. D. Peters·1923·9 min read A condemned man awaits execution at sunrise for a murder he technically committed but does not believe he deserves to die for. Written in the early 20th century, this story explores the psychological unraveling of a man whose disgust with life—particularly with his demanding wife—has driven him to deliberately engineer his own death through judicial means. Readers should expect a meditation on despair, marital dysfunction, and the deliberate ambiguity between justice and self-destruction.
The House of Death: A Strange Tale
F. Georgia Stroup·1923·13 min read "The House of Death" is a turn-of-the-century American rural tragedy that examines the psychological toll of farm life on isolated women. Written by F. Georgia Stroup, this story uses the suspicious death of a farmer's infant as a lens through which to explore the crushing hardships, social constraints, and hereditary mental illness that shaped the lives of frontier wives. Readers should expect a narrative that builds quiet dread through the observations of neighboring women preparing for a funeral, ultimately raising troubling questions about maternal desperation and the nature of guilt.
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 Basket An Odd Little Tale
"The Basket" is a subtle, atmospheric tale of mystery and mortality set in a San Francisco rooming house. Herbert J. Mangham crafts a quietly unsettling narrative about Dave Scannon, a peculiar lodger who lives a withdrawn, methodical existence before his sudden death goes largely unnoticed. The story explores themes of urban isolation and the mysterious nature of those we share space with but never truly know, building to an ambiguous conclusion that blurs the line between the mundane and the eerie.
The Closing Hand
A classic gothic tale of suspense and dread set in a forbidding mansion with a sinister history. Two sisters are left alone in the house overnight to guard the silverware, but what begins as the younger girl's nervous imagination transforms into genuine terror when something—or someone—prowls the darkened corridors. Wright crafts an atmosphere of mounting psychological horror that culminates in a shocking revelation that blurs the line between supernatural fear and brutal reality.
Fear
David R. Solomon·1923·10 min read "Fear" explores the primal terror of a city-bred lawyer, Coulter, whose childhood phobia of snakes is violently reactivated after a near-fatal encounter with a moccasin in a Southern swamp. When his young daughter Ruth faces the same danger, Coulter must confront whether his paralyzing fear will control his actions or whether he can transcend his deepest dread. Written in the early 20th century tradition of psychological suspense, this story examines how trauma intensifies our vulnerabilities and what we discover about ourselves when faced with our worst nightmares.
The Haunted Orchard
Richard Le Gallienne's 'The Haunted Orchard' is a lyrical ghost story that blends pastoral romanticism with the supernatural, published in the early 20th century during the author's peak years as a decadent poet and essayist. The narrator rents a remote Connecticut farmhouse seeking solitude and encounters the spectral presence of a young woman whose tragic love story unfolds through mysterious singing and a buried cache of love letters. Readers should expect a delicate, melancholic tale suffused with French Romantic sensibility, where the boundaries between dream and reality dissolve in the enchanted silence of an ancient orchard.
A Dream Within a Dream
Edgar Allan Poe·1849·1 min read This melancholic poem, published in 1849 near the end of Poe's life, distills his recurring preoccupation with the fragility of reality and human perception. Through the image of sand slipping through fingers on a tormented shore, Poe explores the existential terror of loss and the question of whether our lived experience—and by extension, our very existence—amounts to anything more than illusion. The work exemplifies Poe's mastery of lyric form and remains one of literature's most haunting meditations on the nature of being.
Ulalume
Edgar Allan Poe·1847·3 min read Published in 1847, "Ulalume" is one of Poe's most enigmatic and formally elaborate poems, written during a period of personal crisis and grief. The narrative follows a speaker guided by his soul (Psyche) through a haunted landscape on an October night, drawn by a mysterious celestial light toward a fateful discovery. Readers should expect dense, atmospheric verse with invented place names and a structure built on repetition and cyclical dread—the poem rewards close reading and reveals its horror gradually.
The Cask of Amontillado
Edgar Allan Poe·1846·11 min read Published in 1846, Edgar Allan Poe's masterpiece of psychological terror presents a first-person account of premeditated murder disguised as a casual outing. Set during carnival season in an Italian palazzo, the narrative explores the narrator's meticulous planning of revenge against his rival Fortunato through calculated manipulation and entombment. This brief but devastating story exemplifies Poe's genius for unreliable narration and moral ambiguity, inviting readers to witness a crime of chilling deliberation unfold beneath layers of polite conversation and dark humor.
The Street of the Four Winds
Robert W. Chambers' "The Street of the Four Winds" is a melancholic tale of fate and reunion set in Paris's Latin Quarter. When a starving cat bearing an embroidered garter appears at the door of an artist named Severn, he becomes drawn into a mystery surrounding the garment's owner—a woman named Sylvia from a town that haunts his past. This atmospheric story explores themes of destiny, memory, and the uncanny power of names and objects to reconnect us across time and loss.
Ex Oblivione
H. P. Lovecraft·1921·4 min read Written by H.P. Lovecraft in 1921, "Ex Oblivione" explores the narrator's gradual withdrawal from waking life into increasingly vivid and seductive dreams, culminating in a dark meditation on oblivion as an escape from existence. The story exemplifies Lovecraft's unique blend of psychological introspection and cosmic nihilism, presenting not external horrors but the terror of consciousness itself. Readers should expect a prose-poem atmosphere and a conclusion that challenges conventional notions of salvation and damnation.
Nemesis
H. P. Lovecraft·1918·2 min read "Nemesis" is a poem by H. P. Lovecraft that explores themes of cosmic dread and eternal punishment through the voice of an ancient, cursed being. Written in Lovecraft's characteristic style, the work uses vivid, nightmarish imagery to convey the speaker's tormented existence across vast stretches of time and impossible landscapes. Readers should expect a haunting meditation on sin, doom, and the insignificance of humanity in the face of cosmic forces.
The Outsider
H. P. Lovecraft·1926·12 min read First published in 1926, "The Outsider" is H. P. Lovecraft's masterwork of existential horror, exploring themes of identity, alienation, and the terrifying truth of one's own nature. The narrator emerges from a decaying castle where he has lived in isolation, driven by desperate longing for the sunlit world beyond, only to discover a horrifying revelation about himself and his place in reality. Readers should expect a gradually intensifying atmosphere of dread, psychological disorientation, and a twist ending that recontextualizes everything that came before.
The Unnamable
H. P. Lovecraft·1925·13 min read First published in 1925, 'The Unnamable' represents Lovecraft's meditation on the limits of language and rationality when confronting cosmic horror. The story frames a debate between a skeptical schoolmaster and a writer-narrator about whether truly horrific phenomena can exist beyond human description, a debate that culminates in terrifying validation of the narrator's theories. Readers should expect a masterwork of atmosphere and psychological dread rather than explicit description—the true terror lies in what cannot be named.
The White Ship
H. P. Lovecraft·1927·11 min read "The White Ship" is a dreamlike voyage narrative by H. P. Lovecraft, first published in 1919, that blends maritime fantasy with cosmic yearning and melancholic wisdom. The story follows a lighthouse keeper who is beckoned aboard a mysterious white ship and sails to enchanted lands—each more wondrous than the last—yet driven by an insatiable hunger to reach one final, unknowable destination. Readers should expect richly imagined otherworldly landscapes, lyrical prose, and a meditation on desire, contentment, and the danger of chasing dreams beyond mortal ken.
The Descendant
H. P. Lovecraft·1938·7 min read "The Descendant" is a Lovecraft story exploring the cursed lineage of Lord Northam, a scholar driven to madness by forbidden knowledge and ancestral horrors. When a young neighbor acquires a copy of the Necronomicon, Northam's carefully maintained facade of sanity crumbles, forcing him to reveal the dark secrets of his family's descent from pre-Saxon times and their connection to elder, non-human forces. Expect cosmic dread, genealogical terror, and the psychological unraveling of a man haunted by knowledge he cannot escape.
Dagon
H. P. Lovecraft·1923·10 min read Published in 1919, "Dagon" is one of H. P. Lovecraft's earliest and most influential cosmic horror tales, written during the author's formative years as a weird fiction writer. The story follows a merchant marine officer who, after escaping a German warship during World War I, becomes stranded on a mysterious landmass that has risen from the Pacific Ocean floor. Through increasingly disturbing discoveries, the narrator encounters evidence of an ancient, non-human civilization and a creature that challenges everything he understands about life and reality itself. Expect a masterclass in mounting dread, bizarre imagery, and the psychological unraveling of a rational mind confronted with the truly unknowable.
The Crawling Chaos
Written by H. P. Lovecraft and Winifred V. Jackson, "The Crawling Chaos" is a hallucinogenic fever dream triggered by an opium overdose administered during a plague. The narrator recounts a single, otherworldly experience that defies rational explanation—a journey through impossible landscapes, divine visions, and cosmic apocalypse. The story exemplifies the weird fiction tradition of exploring the fragile boundary between sanity and the unknowable, leaving readers uncertain whether the vision was literal, psychological, or something far stranger.
Celephaïs
H. P. Lovecraft·1922·11 min read Published in 1922, "Celephaïs" is H. P. Lovecraft's lyrical exploration of escapism and the power of dreams as a refuge from mundane reality. The story follows Kuranes, a lonely dreamer in London whose vivid nocturnal visions of a magnificent fantasy city become increasingly real and compelling. This celebrated work represents Lovecraft's most romantic and least overtly horrific contribution to weird fiction, emphasizing beauty and wonder rather than cosmic dread.
Azathoth
H. P. Lovecraft·1938·3 min read Published in 1922, this short prose poem by H. P. Lovecraft explores the metaphysical journey of a man trapped in an urban wasteland who discovers a gateway to the realm of dreams through patient contemplation of the stars. Written during Lovecraft's most productive period, the story exemplifies his characteristic blending of poetic language with cosmic wonder and existential yearning. Readers should expect a dreamlike, meditative narrative that prioritizes atmosphere and philosophical inquiry over plot or action.