Wilkie Collins (1824–1889) was the author of thirty major books, as well as essays, criticism, and plays. Like his mentor and friend Charles Dickens, Collins serialized his novels, which were hugely popular. He wrote about social issues, including the plight of women during the Victorian era, but it was The Woman in White and The Moonstone that T. S. Eliot called “the best of modern English detective novels.” Collins was famously addicted to opium, which he used to treat his severe arthritis, and died after a long decline.

Portrait by Rudolph Lehmann.

The Traveler’s Story of a Terribly Strange Bed

A Story

by Wilkie Collins

Shortly after my education at college was finished, I happened to be staying at Paris with an English friend. We were both young men then, and lived, I am afraid, rather a wild life, in the delightful city of our sojourn. One night we were idling about the neighborhood of the Palais Royal, doubtful to what amusement we should next betake ourselves. My friend proposed a visit to Frascati’s; but his suggestion was not to my taste. I knew Frascati’s, as the French saying is, by heart; had lost and won plenty of five-franc pieces there, merely for amusement’s sake, until it was amusement no longer, and was thoroughly tired, in fact, of all the ghastly respectabilities of such a social anomaly as a respectable gambling-house. “For Heaven’s sake,” said I to my friend, “let us go somewhere where we can see a little genuine, blackguard, poverty-stricken gaming with no false gingerbread glitter thrown over it all. Let us get away from fashionable Frascati’s, to a house where they don’t mind letting in a man with a ragged coat, or a man with no coat, ragged or otherwise.”

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