Read the Ghost Story Anthology That Inspired Three Classic Scary Stories

Image credit: 
iStock

The best time to write is often when there is nothing else to do. This trick certainly worked in 1816, when a single writing contest—born out of boredom caused by intense and unseasonable rain—led to the creation of several classics that helped shape the Gothic literature genre: Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, John William Polidori’s The Vampyre, and Lord Byron’s poem “The Darkness.” The writers drew inspiration from variety of places, but one of the most important catalysts was a French anthology of German ghost stories called Fantasmagoriana. An abridged version of the tome of spooky tales, titled Tales of the Dead, has since been translated to English—and it can be read online.

Fantasmagoriana was curated and translated by Jean-Baptiste Benoît Eyriès in 1812. Eyriès hand-selected eight frightening tales from German literature to present to a French audience. Lord Byron had the book on hand while staying at a villa near Lake Geneva with Polidori, his personal doctor. Mary Godwin (soon to be Mary Shelley), Percy Shelley, and Godwin’s stepsister Claire Clairmont came to visit, but they all found themselves trapped inside due to the nasty weather. Lord Byron entertained his visitors by reading aloud from Fantasmagoriana, along with other scary stories like Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem “Christabel.”

While Lord Byron captivated his audience with stories of ghosts and spirits, a dark storm outside created the perfect atmosphere. The spooky mood inspired the group to create their own versions of scary stories in a friendly competition. According to The Lady and Her Monsters, Lord Byron declared “We will each write our own ghost story.”

The writers worked at their own pace, each struggling to get started on their story and being secretive with their ideas. Mary Shelley later said those summer nights were what started her famous novel, and named two stories from Fantasmagoriana that directly inspired Frankenstein: “The Family Portraits” and “History of the Inconstant Lover.”

As Mary Shelley wrote in her introduction to the 1831 edition of Frankenstein:

When I placed my head on my pillow, I did not sleep, nor could I be said to think. My imagination, unbidden, possessed and guided me, gifting the successive images that arose in my mind with a vividness far beyond the usual bounds of reverie. I saw — with shut eyes, but acute mental vision, — I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together.

Polodori settled on expanding one of Lord Byron’s discarded ideas. His story became The Vampyre, which is considered the first portrayal of the vampire as we know it today. The doctor would also claim that the writing sessions led to another story, Ernestus Berchtold, which was inspired by the rumors of Byron’s affair with his half sister. Lord Byron, meanwhile, wrote “The Darkness,” an apocalyptic tale of a world without any light.

Thanks to Archive.org you can read the English version of the anthology that inspired these classics for yourself. Maybe after reading, you’ll be inspired to write your own scary stories to tell this Halloween.

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October 26, 2016 – 12:30pm

What’s the Kennection?

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Tuesday, October 25, 2016 – 11:54

Quiz Number: 
103

Introducing a Handbag That Can Keep You Hydrated

filed under: fashion, health
Image credit: 
Kickstarter

Carrying around enough water to keep you hydrated throughout the day can be a tricky task, especially if you don’t want to travel with a bulky water bottle. A new Kickstarter campaign hopes to make getting your daily H2O easier. The Conway bag is a small purse with a hidden water pouch inside—a fashionable solution to dehydration.

“From clunky water bottles that you lose on a weekly basis to forgetting to drink water all together, 75% of Americans are chronically dehydrated,” the campaign explains. “The Conway makes drinking water throughout your busy day easier than ever.”

The creators of the Conway aim to combat a number of problems that plague thirsty Americans. Constantly buying plastic water bottles is expensive and bad for the environment, but carrying around a cumbersome water bottle can be annoying—especially if you lose things easily. With this new bag, they hope you’ll no longer have to worry about these issues.

Each bag has a hidden 17-ounce water pouch that fits snuggly inside a water resistant pocket. Designed by Platypus, the container is easily removed and refilled. It has a flat shape, giving plenty of room for all your other belongings. A long drinking tube is snaked through the strap and can be accessed through a zipper, giving you a sneaky way to quickly get a few gulps in on the go. (The page does not explicitly say you can fill this bag up with wine and sneak it into an event, but we’re all thinking it.)

The bag comes in two styles: Classic Black and Weekender. The subtle look and shape of the bag is meant to be a sleek option for customers that don’t want to trade fashion for function. The bag is 9 inches tall and 10 inches wide, but only 1 inch deep, meaning it falls flat on your hip but still has plenty of room for your wallet, keys, and phone. It’s also made from a light cotton material, so it won’t feel heavy, even with 17 ounces of water sloshing inside.

You can pre-order your own bag right here and say goodbye to shoving water bottles in your purse.


October 25, 2016 – 6:30am

Watch the Relaxing Process of Creating Traditional Japanese Dolls

filed under: art, video

If you’re familiar with Japanese culture, you’ve likely come across the prolific Daruma doll. The symbolic toys have a rich history in Japan: They’re based on Bodhidharma, the founder of Zen Buddhism. While the dolls can come in an array of different colors and styles depending on the region, the most popular models come from the city of Takasaki. In the video above, you can see Daruma dolls being created in that regional style. 

Each doll has a mustache made of turtles and cranes for eyebrows. (These animals both represent longevity.) Once the figures are sculpted, artists dip them in red paint, then hand-paint designs on their faces. As you might have noticed, the dolls have blank eyes, which look out of place when surrounded by the intricate animal patterns.

That’s because it’s up to the owner to paint them in: After purchasing a doll, the customer fills in the left eye, while thinking about a specific goal or wish. Once that objective has been completed, they can fill in the right eye. In this way, the doll serves as a physical reminder to the owner to keep working on his or her goal. 

Primary image courtesy of YouTube.

Know of something you think we should cover? Email us at tips@mentalfloss.com.


October 23, 2016 – 12:00am

Marie Connolly Owens, America’s First Female Police Officer

filed under: History
Image Credit: “Owens tails deadbeat dad” // Chicago Daily Tribune, October 28, 1906

When women first began to enter the police force around the turn of the 20th century, they came in through the back door as social workers tasked with upholding laws protecting women and children. Lola Greene Baldwin, sworn in “to perform police service” for the Portland, Oregon, police department on April 1, 1908, did the same thing as a “Female Detective” (that was her actual job title) as she had done for her previous employer, the Travelers Aid Society: keep young women safe from predators seeking to lure them into prostitution and a life of crime. Two years later Alice Stebbins Wells was hired by the Los Angeles Police Department to enforce laws protecting girls from hotbeds of white slavery like dance halls, skating rinks, and penny arcades.

Alice Stebbins Wells via The Day Book Chicago, February 10, 1914.

Because of their non-standard appointments and powers, determining who was the country’s first policewoman is challenging. Both Baldwin and Wells have vied for the title, but in fact they were beaten to the punch by almost 20 years. Marie Connolly Owens joined the Chicago Police Department in 1891 with the title of Detective Sergeant, full arrest powers, and a badge. She was on the department payroll and received a police pension when she retired in 1923 after 32 years on the force.

Marie Connolly was born the daughter of Irish famine immigrants in Bytown (later renamed Ottawa), on December 21, 1853. She married gas fitter Thomas Owens in 1879, and they moved to Chicago soon thereafter. Together they had five children before Thomas died of typhoid fever in 1888. Marie was widowed with five mouths to feed; her youngest was just a couple of years old. As she told the Chicago Daily Tribune in 1904, up until this point she had never “earned a penny” in her life.

She entered the workforce with a bang the next year. In 1889, the city of Chicago passed an ordinance prohibiting the employment of children under 14 years old unless they had extraordinary circumstances requiring them to work. To enforce the ordinance, the city hired five women as sanitary inspectors to monitor conditions in stores, factories, and tenements. Women, all of them married or widowed mothers, got the jobs because dealing with children was deemed to be in their natural purview. Mrs. Owens, Mrs. Byford Leonard, Mrs. J.R. Doolittle, Mrs. Ada Sullivan, and Mrs. Glennon formed the first board of sanitary inspectors in the country to be given official authority by the city. They reported to the Commissioner of Health and were paid salaries of $50 a month.

Sanitary inspector Marie Owens dove into her work with a passion, removing illegally employed children from their workplaces, helping them find other means of support and even paying out of her own pocket to help their destitute families. She soon earned a reputation for zeal and effectiveness tempered by a diplomatic approach to parents, children, and business owners that made her as popular as someone in her role could be.

In 1891, the newly appointed Chief of Police, Major Robert Wilson McClaughrey—a tireless reformer with a particular interest in the rehabilitation of juvenile offenders—took notice of Mrs. Owens’ efforts in tracking down wife deserters—men we now call deadbeat dads. Owens saw first-hand how many children were forced to seek employment to keep the family from starving after the father abandoned them. She was relentless in ferreting these men out and turning them into the police, so much so that McClaughrey decided to employ Owens in the detective bureau.

Owens photo via Chicago-Daily Tribune, Oct-28-1906

Marie Owens was now Sergeant No. 97, with the rank, salary, badge, and arrest powers of any detective (although she made infrequent use of the latter two). She was detailed to the Board of Education where her brief was enforcing child labor, truancy, and compulsory education laws. In an op-ed she wrote for the July 28, 1901, issue of the Chicago Daily Tribune, Owens described her early days on the job:

The sights to be seen in the slums today can in no way compare with those of ten years ago and the suffering due to the inability of the older members of the family to work is, indeed, pitiable. Children were found working in factories all over the city, the frail little things in many cases being under 7. The pittance of 75 cents or $1 a week, however, helped to buy food for a sick mother, though it was at the cost of health and education.

When the work was first begun a woman wearing a police sergeant’s star was a novelty. Manufacturers in some cases were not inclined to admit me to their workshops, but armed with the strong arm of the law and the will to do good I soon found that in most cases the merchants met me half way and rendered me great assistance. As a result the children were gradually thinned out, and the employers became accustomed to asking for affidavits required by law before work was given to children. Mothers had to depose as to the children’s ages, and with these papers the latter were enabled to get employment in the larger factories and stores.

Owens, like Baldwin and Wells after her, made a point of differentiating what she did from the work of male police officers. In almost every contemporary news article about her, her success in law enforcement was subsumed under her femininity, maternal instinct, charitable nature, and kind heart. A 1906 story in the Chicago Daily Tribune assured its readers that this lady police sergeant “has lost none of her womanly attributes and other detectives in the central office lift their hats when they chance to meet her.” If that wasn’t relief enough for anyone concerned about the dangers of masculinized womanhood, the words of Sergeant No. 97 herself were sure to soothe:

“I like to do police work,” said Mrs. Owens. “It gives me a chance to help women and children who need help. Of course I know little about the kind of work the men do. I never go out looking for robbers or highwaymen. That is left for the men. … My work is just a woman’s work. In my sixteen years of experience I have come across more suffering than ever is seen by any man detective. Why, it has kept me poor giving in little amounts to those in want. I have yet the time to come across a hungry family that they were not given food.”

Her superior officer, Captain O’Brien, gave her more credit than she gave herself in that article. “Give me men like she is a woman,” he said, “and we will have the model detective bureau of the whole world.”

Despite Owens’ effectiveness, a woman wearing a police sergeant’s star was supposed to remain a novelty. In 1895, Chicago adopted new civil service rules requiring all cops to pass the civil service exam (Owens scored a 99 percent) and allowing for appointment of women as regular factory, tenement, or child labor inspectors independent of the police force. Had those rules been in effect in 1891, Mrs. Owens would probably have been made a government inspector rather than a police detective. Because she was so great at her job and had an unblemished service record, she was kept on the police force after the new rules were in place instead of being transferred. In an article in the August 7, 1904, Chicago Daily Tribune, the new rules were assumed to have made women police officers obsolete. The civil service rules “will forever prevent the appointment of more feminine patrolmen. Mrs. Owens will undoubtedly remain as she has been for fifteen years, the only woman police officer in the world.”

Four years later, Lola Greene Baldwin put an end to that assumption with her April Fool’s Day appointment. Two years after that, Alice Stebbins Wells charged into the fray and soon became the national posterchild for female police officers. She went on lecture tours emphasizing the need for women on the force to deal appropriately with women and children. In one of those lectures, delivered at Brooklyn’s Civic Forum in 1914, Wells showed how foolish the poor Chicago Daily Tribune’s prognostications had been: “There are four policewomen in Los Angeles, five in Seattle, and 25 in Chicago,” she said, “and the time is coming when every city will have policewomen, both in plain clothes and in uniform.”

Lola Baldwin rocking her badge at 94, March-1954 via Oregon Historical Society Research Library

Wells’ tours made her so famous throughout the country that even though just a few years earlier Det. Sgt. Marie Owens had been the subject and author of numerous newspaper stories about her pioneering position in the Chicago Police Department, Wells became fixed in the cultural imagination as the first woman police officer in the nation. Owens was still on the job when this misconception took hold, keeping her shoulder to the wheel and never, so far as we know, seeking to correct the record publicly.

She retired in 1923 at the age of 70 and moved to New York to live with her daughter. When she died four years later, the notice made no mention of her 32 years on the police force. She faded even further from memory after a historian confused her with a Mary Owens, the widow of a policeman, in a 1925 book on female police officers.

The real Marie Owens and her many accomplishments were rediscovered by, appropriately, a retired DEA agent whose father, grandfather and great-grandfather were Chicago cops. Rick Barrett was researching fallen police officers when he found a reference to Owens as the wife of a slain cop. Death records revealed that Mr. Owens had been a gas fitter, not a cop, and Barrett pulled on the thread until the whole rich tapestry unraveled. After nigh on a decade of research, Barrett is writing a book about Detective Sergeant Marie Owens that will restore her to her proper role in history.


October 22, 2016 – 1:00am

Deck Yourself Out With Space-Themed Jewelry

Image credit: 
UncommonGoods

Amateur astronomers will probably want to make space for this jewelry series from Maryland-based artist Lauren Beacham. Along with her husband Tyler, the designer creates jewelry inspired by celestial objects.

Beacham has a degree in fine art photography and computer imaging, which led her to start making photography-based jewelry. She moved into astronomy-themed items in 2013 and has since made a whole collection. The series of handmade jewelry includes cufflinks, necklaces, earrings, bracelets, and more—each featuring an image of space.

For instance, her cufflinks are decorated with Earth, the Heart Nebula, and the golden record from the Voyager Probe. A bracelet and necklace bib features the planets in the solar system (plus Pluto and the sun), and a pair of earrings and a necklace show the phases of the moon.

You can find all her work sold on UncommonGoods.

Know of something you think we should cover? Email us at tips@mentalfloss.com.


October 22, 2016 – 12:00am

What’s the Kennection?

Schedule Publish: 
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Friday, October 21, 2016 – 12:31

Quiz Number: 
102

A New ‘Game of Thrones’ Coloring Book Is Coming This Month

filed under: tv, fun
Image credit: 
Amazon

With the final two seasons of the HBO show Game of Thrones on the horizon, fans are starting to get anxious. Now that the show’s plot has blown past the source material in the books, anything can happen; winter has arrived and no character is safe. Keep those nervous hands busy with a new coloring book filled with all the characters you know and love (or loathe).

This officially licensed book from HBO comes with 60 pages ready to be filled with your expert coloring abilities. You can shade your way through iconic scenes like the Battle of the Blackwater and the Night King assembling his undead army of Wights. You can pre-order the coloring book on Amazon—it’ll be released on October 27—and maybe throw in an extra pack of red crayons while you’re at it. If you can’t wait that long, you can also check out George R. R. Martin’s coloring book dedicated to the A Song of Ice and Fire book series that the show is based on.

Know of something you think we should cover? Email us at tips@mentalfloss.com.


October 20, 2016 – 6:30am