A narrator spending a winter in Palermo describes lodging in an old palace and a portrait that piques his curiosity, then visits the Capuchin crypts where rows of robed skeletons inspire both horror and morbid fascination. Struck by a particular skeleton labeled Pietro Catala, he later finds an old chronicle that recounts a tragic event involving the young man and his betrothed. The narrative alternates vivid scenes of Sicilian streets, churches, and burial vaults with the archival discovery, probing themes of death, memory, and the uncanny. The account blends travelogue, historical anecdote, and a ghostly undertone that links past loss to present unease.