"gibbet hill" was published in the dublin edition of the "daily express" in eighteen—ninety, but haspass the time in the national library of ireland, and during that process, which took me several weeks, i found an advert for this story and i read the words gibbet hill, and i knew that that wasn't a bram stoker story that i'd ever heard of in any of the biographies or bibliographies, and i was just astounded, flabbergasted. i couldn't believe it that i was potentially looking at a lost ghost story from bram stoker, and especially a lost story from bram stoker around the time he was writing dracula, and that had elements of dracula in it. what an extraordinary find, i never find things like that. hello. for most places, saturday turned into a pleasant autumn day. sunday is looking like a very different affair. in fact, our first named storm of the season is on the way. storm ashley, which threatens to bring severe gales and coastal flooding, particularly across the western side of scotland. we can see the way in which that storm has been developing here on the satellite picture, a vas