The Great God Pan: Difference between revisions

update links
(defaultsort)
(update links)
Line 8:
''The Great God Pan'' is also [[wikipedia:The Great God Pan#Influence|considered by]] [[Stephen King]] to be "one of the best horror stories ever written. Maybe the best in the English language." He has stated that 2008 novella ''N.'' was a "riff" on it.
 
In Wales a scientist, Dr. Raymond, experiments on a woman named Mary to enable her to "see Pan". Sadly, her mind is broken and Clarke, who watched the experiment, gives up occultism. Cut to several years later in London, where another man named Villiers meets an old friend of his who was led to misery by his wife Helen Vaughan. Curious, Villiers begins investigating. Meanwhile, an alarming number of wealthy, prominent men are being driven to [[Go Mad Fromfrom the Revelation|madness]] and [[Driven to Suicide|suicide]] following their encounters with a mysterious woman known as Mrs. Beaumont. Though Clarke is initially hesitant to give him the information he needs, Villers soon learns that Mrs. Beaumont is indeed Helen Vaughan, the daughter of Mary and the [[Eldritch Abomination|pagan nature deity]] Pan.
 
You can read it [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Great_God_Pan here].
Line 50:
[[Category:Nineteenth Century Literature]]
[[Category:Horror Literature]]
[[Category:The Great God Pan]]
[[Category:Literature]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Great God Pan, The}}
[[Category:The Great God Pan{{PAGENAME}}]]