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Rosa Mulholland (1841–1921)

Author of Not to be Taken at Bed-Time & Other Strange Stories

32+ Works 70 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Image credit: Book Seven of the McBride Literature and Art Readers (1904), p. 82.

Works by Rosa Mulholland

Associated Works

The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories (1991) — Contributor — 584 copies, 5 reviews
Victorian Tales of Mystery and Detection (1991) — Contributor — 192 copies, 2 reviews
The Penguin Book of Irish Fiction (1999) — Contributor — 170 copies
101 Chilling Tales Great Horror Stories (2016) — Contributor — 169 copies
The Supernatural Omnibus (1931) — Contributor — 156 copies, 2 reviews
The Virago Book of Victorian Ghost Stories (1988) — Contributor — 151 copies
Great Supernatural Stories: 101 Horrifying Tales (2017) — Contributor — 119 copies
Delphi Complete Works of Charles Dickens (Illustrated) (2012) — Contributor, some editions — 96 copies
Wolf's Complete Book of Terror (1979) — Contributor — 89 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions (undetermined contents) (1865) — Contributor, some editions — 78 copies, 1 review
The Wordsworth Collection of Irish Ghost Stories (2005) — Contributor — 76 copies
Spectral Sounds: Unquiet Tales of Acoustic Weird (2022) — Contributor — 48 copies, 1 review
Irish Ghost Stories (Tales of Mystery & The Supernatural) (2011) — Contributor — 42 copies, 1 review
Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions (1865) — Contributor, some editions — 21 copies
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories: Volume 1 (2018) — Contributor — 17 copies
Bending to earth : strange stories by Irish women (2019) — Contributor — 16 copies, 1 review
Avenging Angels: Ghost Stories by Victorian Women Writers (2018) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Wimbourne Book of Victorian Ghost Stories: Volume 6 (2020) — Contributor — 7 copies
Duchy Nocy Świętojańskiej (2023) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Mulholland, Rosa
Legal name
Gilbert, Lady Rosa Mulholland
Mulholland, Rosa (Lady Gilbert)
Other names
Gilbert, Rosa M.
Murray, Ruth
Lady Gilbert
Birthdate
1841
1855 (var.)
Date of death
1921-04-21
Gender
female
Education
privately educated
Occupations
novelist
poet
playwright
Relationships
Dickens, Charles (friend)
Short biography
Lady Gilbert (Rosa Mulholland), Irish Catholic novelist and poet, was born in Belfast in 1855. Her father was Joseph Stevenson Mulholland was a noted doctor in that city. In 1891, Rosa married Sir John T. Gilbert, an archaeologist devoted to Irish history and a player in the modern Gaelic revival. They spent time living in a remote mountainous area in western Ireland. After his death, Rosa penned his biography.

She initially aspired to be an artist, but had more success with poetry. Her friendship with Charles Dickens led to the publication of "Hester's History," originally a serial story. She went on to publish many poems, short stories, and novels. Several of her early works incorporated the struggles the gentrified landlords and peasantry in Ireland at the time. Her later work moved toward young girls as an audience, advocating independence. A number of her works have supernatural themes. She died in Dublin in 1921.
Nationality
Ireland
Birthplace
Belfast, County Antrim, Ireland, UK
Places of residence
Blackrock, County Dublin, Ireland
Place of death
Dublin, Ireland
Burial location
Glasnevin Cemetery, Glasnevin, County Dublin, Ireland
Associated Place (for map)
Ireland

Members

Reviews

1 review
Solid ghost stories with a range of moods by Rosa Mulholland, an Irish author who was well-known in her day. She wrote many books, stories and poems, produced her first works in her teens and was encouraged by Charles Dickens, who published several of her works in All the Year Round.

Her best-known story is the title one, which has an Irish setting, as in many of her stories. This disturbing work is set in the Connemara mountains and describes the legend of gloomy, isolated Coll Dhu (Black show more Coll) who frightens the locals and has a grudge against the newly arrived Colonel Blake. Coll Dhu develops an obsession with Blake’s daughter, Evleen, and enlists the witch Pexie na Pishrogie to help him with a rather gruesome charm.

“The Ghost at the Rath” is a good haunted house story; the narrator stays at the Rath, his newly inherited estate, with a friend and sees various scenes from the past at night. He has to investigate the visions and right past wrongs.

“The Haunted Organist of Hurly Burly” has a terrific title, and the build-up to the supernatural events is good, but I was constantly annoyed by the description of Lisa, a young Italian woman who is manipulated by a long-dead man, who was constantly referred to as “little”, “dark” and “wild”. Some of these characteristics lead to the predictable ending, where people act annoyingly stupid.

In “The Mystery of Ora”, the narrator is on a walking tour of the Irish coast and is warned to avoid the reclusive and strange astronomer Collum and his daughter, but when he stumbles on the daughter, Ora, in obvious distress, he tries to learn their secrets. This one had a nicely tense development. I thought I knew where the story was going, but the ending turned out to be completely different. However, the ending and the supernatural events seemed somewhat random.

“A Strange Love Story” is indeed just that, a strange, twisty, sad and involving story. The author spends some time describing the relationship of Max and Hilda, artists who are deeply in love and move from Innsbruck to Rome. Although Hilda is as talented as Max (maybe more talented?), their relationship does not follow the usual pattern. Max encourages Hilda, but she is extremely self-sacrificing, which eventually leads to her death. Max becomes obsessed with the idea that Hilda will come back to him.

“The Ghost at Wildwood Chase” and “The Lady Tantivy” have very different moods from the previous stories: the former is, if possible, a sweet ghost story and the latter is a cheerful ghost story. The narrator of the former is an ill artist who seems resigned to his death and goes down to Wildwood Chase for a client. He has an enjoyable affair in his head with a woman in a portrait but then starts seeing her–is it his illness or a ghost? In the last story, the narrator sees the lady in question come up to the estate she’s watching in too-old clothes and with too much knowledge of past events. This ghost cheerfully sets out to visit her old home and fix some past errors.
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Statistics

Works
32
Also by
25
Members
70
Popularity
#248,178
Rating
3.8
Reviews
1
ISBNs
9
Languages
2

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