Suspense is created in many parts of the story but most suspense is created when the candles start going out. He tries to relight them and they keep going out. The reader at this point is on a climax of suspense and tension. Many questions come up in the readers mind ‘Is it the ghost?’ ‘What’s it going to do?’ In the haste of running out of the room the man knocks himself put cold by hitting himself on the wall. When he regains consciousness in the morning, he comes to the conclusion that the fear in the room is what is haunting the room and not a ghost.
In ‘The Club Footed Grocer’ the story is not about haunting but it is about betrayal, theft and violence. In the beginning, the narrator describes what his life is like and what his uncle’s life was like. He also mentions that his uncle did not have a very good reputation in the family. He also indicates that the uncle is a rich man. The introduction of the story does not create any suspense or tension whatsoever. The first bit of suspense and tension in the story is created when John maple, the narrator, gets a letter from Stephen Maple, the Uncle, telling him to go visit him and if he accepts the offer he has got to get off at a certain station which is close to Stephens’s house. A few days later they receive a telegram which instructs John not to get off at the station mentioned before but to get off at the next one after that station. This is where suspense and tension builds up in the story and in the readers mind as the readers ask, ‘Why would the uncle want to change the address?’ ‘Why is the uncle’s acting strange?’ Similar questions runs in the mind of the narrator. The narrator brings up a lot of questions in the start. This is one reason why a lot of suspense is created as the reader wants to know the answer to the questions. When john is making his way to the farmer’s house he is stopped by a man who is later identified as a sailor which John finds strange as the sailor had a very absurd excuse to stop him. At this point the reader thinks ‘What is the use of the sailor?’ these types of questions come to mind which create tension. Furthermore the driver of the trap seemed frightened of the sailor which shows that there was something about the sailor the reader and John do not know about.
Another point where suspense and tension is created is when John is at the house of the farmer who is meant to give him a place to rest and eat. The wife of the farmer brings up a vital question which builds up a lot of tension, ‘You’ve made up your mind to go then?’ This question makes the reader think, ‘Why did she ask such a question? Is there anything that we do not know of that is important? Is the uncle a good man?’ Once John reaches the uncles house, he finds out that the uncle had called him for a reason. He had to help the uncle escape the claws of the sailors which John met when he was riding to the farmer’s house. This is where suspense any tension start to build up even more as the uncle tells John everything the uncle think it is relevant for John to know. The readers do get the feeling that the uncle is hiding something which creates tension.
Tension and suspense is created through out the story, but these feelings peak when the sailors use the manservant as bait to get into the house where they try to torture Stephen. At this point in the story the reader has a lot of questions which contribute to most of the tension created. ‘What will the sailors do to the Uncle?’ ‘What will they do to John?’ The uncle tries to trick the sailors by trying to escape through the window but unfortunately he dies trying to do this. At this point the reader wants to know if it was the sailors who killed the uncle and if they did what they will do to John. This creates suspense making the reader read further on to find out what happens. John is allowed to escape by one of the sailors ‘Here’s your chance, mate, off you go before worse comes of it.’
In the end of the story the manservant of Stephen tells John the real truth behind his uncle and the sailors. This is when the reader finally feels that the story has come to a proper end.
In ‘The Signalman’, the story is not about murder or haunting but it is about intuition. The whole story is based on the fact that the signalman was frightened by the words ‘Halloa there’ and he believed that this will lead to his death. The story outlines what the signalman is like and his feelings. The narrator in this story is a interviewer of sorts. The reader gets this feeling as the narrator raises a lot of questions which are directed to the signalman and the readers. Some of the questions are left for the readers to answer themselves which I think is the main cause of tension and suspense. In the start of the story the narrator describes the place in detail and makes it almost visual for the reader to imagine it.
The actions and the thoughts of the signalman are conveyed well and is another reason why there is a lot of suspense created. When the narrator actually calls out to the signal man in the start of the story, the signalman does not look up at the narrator but looks towards the tunnel. This makes the narrator curious and builds suspense and tension in the mind of the reader as the reader wants to find out why the signalman did that.
Suspense and tension is not really created as it is in ‘The red room’ and ‘The clubfooted grocer’. Overall there is less suspense created in the story compared to the other stories. There is a lot of tension created by the mere memories and worries of the signalman, ’the ghost was gone’ is a quote from the story related to his worries of supernatural forces. His thoughts create a lot of tension as well. The narrator creates a lot of tension and suspense in the way he has described the habits of the signalman, the area and the signalman’s cabin, and the signalman himself. The use of language by the narrator is very vital in this story as it contributes to the suspense and tension. The narrator does this very well, ‘a crooked prolongation of this great dungeon’, simply describes the tunnel but the way it is described makes it look like it a horrible place. This is another reason why tension is conveyed well. In the end of this story, the signalman dies of the exact same thing he feared after the first accident took place in the tunnel. The reader here thinks was it a coincidence or was it just fate?
Personally I think all these stories were very well written but ‘The Signalman’ did not meet my criteria of personal favourites. It did not excite me as ‘The red room’ and ‘The Clubfooted grocer’ did. It may also be because there was very little action in this story compared to the other two stories. I did not get the feeling of adrenaline rush when reading it.