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The Horror Library

Immortality

2 stories

The Mortal Immortal

Mary Shelley·1833·24 min read

Written in 1833, Mary Shelley's "The Mortal Immortal" explores the curse of unintended immortality through the confessional narrative of a man who, three centuries earlier, accidentally drank an alchemist's elixir meant to cure love. Originally published in The Keepsake annual, the story reflects Shelley's fascination with the consequences of transgressing natural law—a theme central to her earlier *Frankenstein*. The narrator grapples with whether he is truly immortal or merely long-lived, while his ageless appearance isolates him from humanity and destroys his marriage to the aging Bertha. Readers should expect a philosophical meditation on the paradox of eternal life as a form of damnation rather than blessing.

The Alchemist

H. P. Lovecraft·1916·16 min read

Written in 1908, this Gothic tale of family curse and dark alchemy represents Lovecraft's exploration of inherited doom and the corrupting pursuit of forbidden knowledge. The story follows Antoine, the last comte of an ancient French house, as he uncovers the centuries-old curse that has claimed every male heir at the age of thirty-two—a vengeful hex born from his ancestor's murder of an alchemist. As Antoine approaches his own thirty-second birthday, he descends into the castle's forgotten depths and confronts the horrifying truth behind the generations of premature deaths.