"The Story of a Disappearance and an Appearance" is an
epistolary story presented as a series of letters from a writer identified only as "W. R." to his brother in December 1837. In the first letter, sent from
Great Chrishall on 22 December, W. R. informs his brother Robert that he cannot join him for Christmas due to having received a letter from his uncle Henry's housekeeper Mrs. Hunt asking him to come to "B——" to help search for Henry, who has "suddenly and mysteriously disappeared". W. R. intends to travel there and lodge at the King's Head inn. In the second letter, sent on 23 December, W. R. recounts the facts in Henry's disappearance and the unsuccessful search that has been made to date. Henry, a hardworking yet stern
rector who was known to wear traditional
bands, was last seen on the evening of 19 December when he visited a sick person around two miles from his home. Ponds, streams, and fields in the neighbourhood have been searched and the
Bow Street Runners have been alerted. W. R. speaks to the sick person and to Mr. Bowman (the characterful landlord of the King's Head, who alludes to an argument he had had with Henry concerning a cask of beer) but is confident that neither were not involved in Henry's disappearance. In the third letter, sent on 25 December, W. R. recounts that Mr. Bowman had apologised for his remarks, and joined W. R. on an unfruitful search of the fields. Later, W. R. speaks with a
bagman, who recommends a
Punch and Judy show he had seen. W. R. has a dream in which he is watching a Punch and Judy show in which a "Satanic"-looking Punch gruesomely and realistically murders the other puppets, with the stage darkening after each death. After the final murder, the backdrop of the puppet show changes to a moonlit grove of trees and sloping hill. A "sturdy figure clad in black [...] wearing bands" with his head covered with "a whitish bag" emerges and pursues Punch. As the figure catches up with Punch and throws itself upon him, removing the bag, W. R. awakens. W. R. remembers that the show did not feature a
Toby dog, and that the name on the booth was "Kidman and Gallop". , taken 1885|thumb In the fourth letter, sent on 26 December, W. R. informs his brother that Henry's body has been found, but the events of his death remain mysterious. On the prior day, while W. R. is attending a Christmas Day service at church, the
tenor bell repeatedly sounds, and a
bier and
pall are inexplicably found to have brought out of storage. That afternoon, a Punch and Judy show by Foresta and Calpigi is staged in the marketplace; W. R. watches from the first floor window of the inn. During the performance, the Toby dog repeatedly howls at the wrong times, then eventually flees. At the climax of the show, when a
gallows has been erected on the stage, the elevated position of W. R. enables him to see a figure with a "nightcapped head" in the booth, which pinions the arms of one of the puppeteer and lifts him towards the gallows. The booth falls over, and two figures are seen running from the wreckage towards the fields. W. R. and others follow; they find one of the puppeteers dead in a
chalk pit, having fallen over the edge and broken his neck. The other puppeteer is found dead in the booth. Henry's body is found buried in the chalk pit with a cut throat and a sack over the head. W. R. closes by telling Robert that the real names of the puppeteers were Kidman and Gallop, saying "I feel sure I have heard them, but no one here seems to know anything about them". == Publication ==