Leaf the Twenty-Third
Buried Alive
by John Williams
(The stories which follow and conclude this series are not details of my own experience, nor are they strictly of a detective character. They are the adventures of various personal friends of mine, and I am certain they are for the most part strictly true. In two or three of them perhaps, the relators may have allowed imagination to supply the place of facts. I have thought them sufficiently interesting to deserve a place in this collection. J. B.)
“Come, Grafton, it is your turn to tell us an adventure.”
“Oh, nothing has happened to me since I was buried alive!”
“What!” we all cried, in accents of the greatest astonishment.
There were half a dozen of us young fellows on a visit to George Grafton who was doing a first-rate practice in a small town in the State of Maryland. He had insisted on us visiting him for “Auld Lang Syne,” and this was the second evening we had passed at his house. The simple fact is, George was to be married in a day or two and we were there to assist at the ceremony, as the French say. George Grafton was as good a fellow as ever breathed; and we, his fellow-students, loved him with all our hearts.
“I repeat,” said George, “that nothing has happened to me since I was buried alive.”
“Oh, you’re joking,” said one of us.
“Why, I must have told that story over and over again,” returned George.
“We never heard it,” we all cried.
“Is it possible? well boys, light a fresh cigar, fill up your glasses, and I will tell you all about it.”
We all followed the advice given us by our friend, and fixed ourselves into listening attitudes.
“Eight years ago,” began Grafton, “I was studying my profession in the University Medical College of New York. I… Read More