I find your delivery of "fancy knowing you'd been Judas Iscariot, you can't get over it" absolutely hilarious. I had to rewind and hear it again. Love this story and your reading of it is wonderful.
I’m sorry that anybody sends you negative comments. As my Aunt Therese used to say, The next best thing to brains is silence“. This story is a real stand out! Very creepy and well told. You read it wonderfully well, too. I enjoyed your chat after. I would love to take one of those barges someday. I, for one, prefer classic ghost stories: the creepier the better! MR James and EF Benson are at the top of my list. Thank you for sharing your super readings! They bring me so much pleasure.
I cannot see how I missed this one last year, but lucky for me the algorithm brought it up on this sleepless night. E.F. Benson may be my favorite writer of classic ghost stories. My longtime favorite is Mrs. Amworth, but I've recently fallen desperately in love with How Fear Departed the Long Gallery. I find it at once spooky and tragic, but the end is Bure sweetness and beauty. It is such a unique combination. Tomorrow is my writing day (Monday through Thursday I work construction, Friday I write, and Saturday and Sunday we build our own house... a ground up build by two people in their mid-40s and mid-50s is a long process.) At any rate, now I feel an urge to undertake the challenge of writing a scary scene that takes place in perfect, sunny weather. Thank you for all you do. I hope my own rambling does some good.
Well Tony, I'm glad you decided on Classic Ghost Stories in this seminal recording because I've been listening to all of them, including your masterful Dracula. Pooh on any naysayers, your voice and delivery are magnificent.
Cheers from New Orleans: November 2023 - I have become quite fond of Benson's stories. And I notice here, the subject of reincarnation comes up. Fascinating how Benson lets his characters speak, and express their views, which of course in a sense are HIS views.. 'In The Tube' has the two main characters discuss the notion of 'time slippage'..past, present and future. And hypothetically - what it could mean if we were a little more flexible in our own perceptions of it. So, now these characters are discussing the idea of the paranormal. How lovely....
This was brilliant!! Spookiest story. Not just here but on YT. That beach scene … thank you. Dreadfully awfully good ❤️👻👻👻👻👻 I give it five ghosts out of five
In The Tube, another wonderful Benson tale has the two main characters settling in before the fire, after dinner - and their chat turns to the idea of 'eternity'..and the COMFORT of it....
Really loving the E F Benson stories! I have not heard of him before and am really enjoying your playlist of them! Thank you for introducing me to his work!
Really enjoyed this! Also this time around! Vivid narration, interesting, informative"ramblings".EF Benson is one of my most favorite writers. Thank you, Tony.
Personally, I like that you do ghost stories and stories with faeries. Being American I have never heard those stories before. I listen to HorrorBabble for weird tales and of course Bitesize Audio for the mystery stories and some victorian stuff. I also quite like your other channel which is focusing on "true" hauntings as it reminds me of the old ghost books I used to read. It's nice to have this range to choose from.
I'll have to look for the true stories. I had what we called the paint ghost, lol. She would show me the colors for each room, which were verified as we went along. She wanted the house back the way it "should be" and I was happy to oblige.
@@ClassicGhost I agree. My fiancé, (who was still alive and with me on that story you liked, Tony, about Coronado, but started hearing voices and killed herself years later), had been a brilliant Artist and I had taken a bunch of photos of her art and it helped to get her into Cal Arts. Well she worked in their Library, and stole all the ancient copies from the 1800s of the various Fairy Books. Wish I still had them, but had some rough years after that. I have her poems and stories and paintings though. Cheers
The stories are very well put over as maybe expected (cheers) but I enjoy the ramblings which give a little insight into our friends life. I havent heard in the last few listenings the lives of the authors and their works which i miss. Thank you
Absolutely chilling. Mr. Walker, only your delivery can make it even 'chillier'; I mean this in a totally complimentary way. I also must agree with you, re: EF Benson and his place at the top of ghost story authors of his era. I'll probably take a bit of flack for this, but while I know MR James is very talented..some of his stories just drone on and on for me. As I tell my 2 young grands, if we all liked the same things, what a dull world this would be. Thank you for sharing your talent with us.
I have liked every story you've ever narratored. I have always loved the classic haunted stories, psychological horror, especially vintage Gothic Horror. I love the authors of distant past. I live in Salem, Oregon USA 🇺🇸 So, for me your accent is captivating. I can listen to you for hours. You are the perfect narrator. You could read the back of a cereal box and I would listen to you. 😉 Thank You Ever So Much For Happening In My Life. ❤️
Such at fantastic story! I really enjoy your reading. Currently I am relistening to all the EF Benson stories you have posted. Thank you so much for them!
My favorite part of this ramble was learning that Tony listens to Lol the same TH-cam audio books i do. Also I adore when Horror babble does their own work, and I also feel similarly when Tony reads his own work.
This story riveted me and it has everything to do with your narration! I am so glad I have found you on You Tube. I look forward to evening when I can relax and listen. Thank you!
Thanks Tony, I always enjoy the stories that you choose. Some more than others, but I think that there is no rhyme or reason to that, short of my being intrigued or not. The one thing that I always enjoy is your talk (ramble on), at the end. I don't get to travel far, or even go out to the flicks more than a handful of times each year, and my home conversation is a literary void. So thank you. I look forward to each and every one; even more than the other channels, (although I do love Morgan Scorpion's channel ). Please do include some of your own short stories as well. 🙋🔻🇦🇺
Hi Tony I listen to your stories on TH-cam and I think you do a wonderful job I know that you get a small amount of money from me listening to all of the advertisements before your stories so I always listen to them since I'm not a patreon member of yours yet and I love the after videos when you are on video and you talk about the stories even if you're not showing your face talking about them I love the history that you give about the author or The Story You're So knowledgeable and I enjoy all of that and I also enjoy the live readings that you give where you're just seeing in a comfy chair with a lamp on and reading the story I think those are amazing also I think you do a great job I don't care what you change I don't care what you leave the same anything you do is okay with me thank you for the hours of entertainment you give me
Thanks for your words of support. My little rant was in response to complaints that I dare put ads on the podcast. I was saying that if you are not able or willing to contribute, that is totally fine, but like with TV and commercial radio, they're paid for by having ads. Thank you for being so understanding
I love your wanderings and feel I've been on a mini vacation honestly , meeting all your charming characters and places. Also, I thought you were starting a joke, 2 psychiatrists were walking ahead of me.......
Tony, when you talk about stories that other people do really well with and you don’t-it’s probably because we’ve just recently listened to those. There was the tragic debacle where l’Estrange and Hew Carr came out with the same story on the same day. TOTAL NIGHTMARE! I’m not going to listen to both. You do lots of great stories but I’ve already heard so many of them by others. Ps-Benson is my favorite too and I was so happy that I’d never heard this tale. My advice, for what it’s worth, is to check the channels we all listen too (bitesized, l’Estrange-I can’t bear Ian the Horrorbabbler’s voice-but I’m sure he’s big, etc) and see if they’ve done a piece in the last year or so). Try and find New old material that we’ve not heard. IMHO. Ps, I could suggest a few tales none have done lately
Lancashire is the land of my birth, though I was raised here in Australia. It's been a long time since I've had an Eccles cake🥰 though thankfully we can get proper cheese here lol. Enjoy your unwind 😊
Thank you, Tony! Tarleton is near Southport in the North West. It's near the sea. There could be other places with the same name, thought... much love! 👻💀💜!
Love your rambling conversations about nothing much, after the stories. Maybe you could do one podcast of nothing but rambling, maybe even a live podcast so we can ramble back to you.
+Allan Bryan-Tansley funny you should say that… number 2 in the bag. Number 2 - Discord???? I’m not in discord. Or internet radio but that’s a big commitment
Another wonderful reading, Tony, and I very much enjoyed it. You mentioned the name of Acres and what it could mean. I may be over-thinking it, but I wonder if we should consider it an anagram (or corruption, if you prefer) of 'Sacre', meaning sacred. She is, in other words, unholy.
Whoa, this one starts off with a bang, doesn't it. (Sorry, SORRY, I'm deleting it). It's almost in media res, which seems a unique choice for horror. One of the things I like best about Benson is his swings between creeping horror and sudden explosive action. Hope you're having a relaxing time on your barge!
I don't know of any legends about the burial of Judas (other than the account of his body falling/being tossed into the potter's field), but there is a tradition that the body of Pontius Pilate could not be buried. I remember reading a medieval drama that used the story. The body wouldn't remain in the earth or sink in the sea. It sank in the Tiber, but poisoned the water. According to the story, it was finally thrown into an isolated lake in Switzerland. This tradition is based on the assumption that he died unrepentant. There is another tradition that says that he became a Christian and died as a martyr.
I needed to look up a reference to the archaeological site of the city of Acre (no s) in the area of Palestine. Sounds like a fascinating archaeological source of information, but I could not see how it would have any symbolic implication and the woman in the story or her name. You can read anything you want into a name in a fiction. One may take her first name and say it suggests berth like a berth for a boat in a dock, say she needed an acre a large area of land to container because of simple grave will not container. I don't think this makes any sense but this is the kind of thing that happens when you start trying to read symbolism into names. Of course in some cases authors have chosen the name of some significance
actually I love the sherlock holmes stuff..bite size has a number of really good detective stories most of which are not about Holmes there are 2 channels you should check out if no one has mentioned them to you chip slaters story time new thinkable some of the old space horror stories are just as entertaining as lovecraft or benson think about adding them to the wheel house thanks
United States has always had barges, mostly flat open top boats, and all its water ways. Many still around today. Barges carrying garbage are common . There is an uncommon use of barge for a certain kind of horse-drawn carriage but I am not sure what is referred to here that Tony had to explain
A lot of the ideas brought together here are very much influenced by contemporary study of ancient religious themes. James George Frazer's 'The Golden Bough' was very influential at the time and described fertility rituals of rebirth and scapegoat. The stress on the Jewishness of the lady is relevant to the scapegoat idea, as is the cyclical nature of her relationships with husband and society. Her husband connected with her for the material benefits, but then rejected her after a span. The title 'The Outcast' is another reference. In the fertility myths, the chosen king is lauded and given gifts as he rules for a set span. His presence brings life and blessings. However when it wanes, or when the specified time is up - usually a year - he is discarded and replaced. This often involved casting him into the sea. The Fisher King is one version. The Christian story of resurrection also derives from these tales. While these are usually based around male figures, in this story it is stated more than once that sex is irrelevant and it can be either. The idea that it is the actual process that is malevolent and not the blameless participants is very satisfying and lifts this tale into a slightly more sophisticated level.
And I have discovered that his mother was an archaeologist of Ancient Egypt and into theosophy. There was also a family issue with bipolar disorder, which might also tie in with the notion of cycles of behaviour. Interestingly, many of his immediate family were homosexual, but that's probably irrelevant
Since this has been up for a year, I'm sure that the answer is already in here, but...IN THE BIBLE, The Jewish church leaders (who have him killed) tell Jesus that they want a sign (He's already given so many, but these guys are jerks). He tells them that the only sign He will give them is the story of Jonah. Jonah's three days in the big fish foreshadow Jesus' own three days in the earth. So...they are related. :)
Great stuff!!!
I find your delivery of "fancy knowing you'd been Judas Iscariot, you can't get over it" absolutely hilarious. I had to rewind and hear it again. Love this story and your reading of it is wonderful.
I’m sorry that anybody sends you negative comments. As my Aunt Therese used to say, The next best thing to brains is silence“.
This story is a real stand out! Very creepy and well told. You read it wonderfully well, too.
I enjoyed your chat after. I would love to take one of those barges someday.
I, for one, prefer classic ghost stories: the creepier the better! MR James and EF Benson are at the top of my list.
Thank you for sharing your super readings! They bring me so much pleasure.
I cannot see how I missed this one last year, but lucky for me the algorithm brought it up on this sleepless night.
E.F. Benson may be my favorite writer of classic ghost stories. My longtime favorite is Mrs. Amworth, but I've recently fallen desperately in love with How Fear Departed the Long Gallery. I find it at once spooky and tragic, but the end is Bure sweetness and beauty. It is such a unique combination.
Tomorrow is my writing day (Monday through Thursday I work construction, Friday I write, and Saturday and Sunday we build our own house... a ground up build by two people in their mid-40s and mid-50s is a long process.)
At any rate, now I feel an urge to undertake the challenge of writing a scary scene that takes place in perfect, sunny weather.
Thank you for all you do. I hope my own rambling does some good.
I don't know if I like your story telling or your ramblings more. ❤️❤️
Creepy and haunting. What a treat, thank you.
One of his weird ones. I like those best
Well Tony, I'm glad you decided on Classic Ghost Stories in this seminal recording because I've been listening to all of them, including your masterful Dracula. Pooh on any naysayers, your voice and delivery are magnificent.
I hope you will enjoy Frankenstein!
@@ClassicGhost You did Frankenstein? Oboy! I see more hand sewing in my future...
Cheers from New Orleans: November 2023 - I have become quite fond of Benson's stories. And I notice here, the subject of reincarnation comes up. Fascinating how Benson lets his characters speak, and express their views, which of course in a sense are HIS views.. 'In The Tube' has the two main characters discuss the notion of 'time slippage'..past, present and future. And hypothetically - what it could mean if we were a little more flexible in our own perceptions of it. So, now these characters are discussing the idea of the paranormal. How lovely....
This was brilliant!! Spookiest story. Not just here but on YT. That beach scene … thank you. Dreadfully awfully good ❤️👻👻👻👻👻 I give it five ghosts out of five
A chilling story. Thanks Tony. Very enjoyable in a macabre way.
Not at all boring. Very well read.
Thank you. Throughly enjoyed this story!
Great story and narration as always. Many thanks for all you do.
My favorite line from this story: “... you can comfortably recline on the cushion of coincidence.”
Yes, brilliant 💜
You so can...
In The Tube, another wonderful Benson tale has the two main characters settling in before the fire, after dinner - and their chat turns to the idea of 'eternity'..and the COMFORT of it....
Ooooo, perfect!
Really loving the E F Benson stories! I have not heard of him before and am really enjoying your playlist of them! Thank you for introducing me to his work!
A great honour for me to introduce you to him
Dogs always know....🐕🐾💜
Right directly from The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion
And kabbala!!
EF Bentsen was obviously in the know . Protocol #2 I think 🤔
Really enjoyed this! Also this time around! Vivid narration, interesting, informative"ramblings".EF Benson is one of my most favorite writers. Thank you, Tony.
Loved the story love the ramblings!
Thank you sir , another wonderful story and commentary. Thank you!
Personally, I like that you do ghost stories and stories with faeries. Being American I have never heard those stories before. I listen to HorrorBabble for weird tales and of course Bitesize Audio for the mystery stories and some victorian stuff. I also quite like your other channel which is focusing on "true" hauntings as it reminds me of the old ghost books I used to read. It's nice to have this range to choose from.
Thank you Shroomy. I just need more hours in the day
I'll have to look for the true stories. I had what we called the paint ghost, lol. She would show me the colors for each room, which were verified as we went along. She wanted the house back the way it "should be" and I was happy to oblige.
@@ClassicGhost
I agree. My fiancé, (who was still alive and with me on that story you liked, Tony, about Coronado, but started hearing voices and killed herself years later), had been a brilliant Artist and I had taken a bunch of photos of her art and it helped to get her into Cal Arts. Well she worked in their Library, and stole all the ancient copies from the 1800s of the various Fairy Books. Wish I still had them, but had some rough years after that. I have her poems and stories and paintings though.
Cheers
Can't wait for this. I love E F 💜
I loved this. Such an unusual concept
Great story Tony, I've not heard it before, nicely read. A really nice example of EF s craft with great lines.
Thank you for this great narration. Such an interesting story.
The stories are very well put over as maybe expected (cheers) but I enjoy the ramblings which give a little insight into our friends life. I havent heard in the last few listenings the lives of the authors and their works which i miss. Thank you
Nice one. I feel bad for the lady. Poor thing, she was so nice.
Great narration!
I really, REALLY needed this today. ❤
Love your work Tony. Whenever I feel down or out of sorts I know I can just listen to you and feel lifted ❤❤
That is a real encouragement to me. I love that I can help sometimes
Love this story. I have met people very much like Mrs. Acres.
I hope they didn’t come back
Superb, as always , thank you xx
Glad you enjoyed it
I'm a big Benson fan, but I've never heard this. It's a great classic, and well read.
Oooh..really liked this spooky one. I agree on Benson! Oh and I AM in South Carolina🤣
Enjoyed very much, thank you..
Yes love the classic ghost stories 👌
I do
I absolutely love your stories and storytelling. Fie on the moaners.
I totally got the the Easter connection. I've been binging on your show ever since I came across the 6 Christmas murders series a couple of days ago.
Ditto, Tony. Listening today, Easter Sunday, 2004. Hmmmmmm... . Love, your work, Tony, as always. Thank you!
Very effective story, gave me genuine chills.
This is absolute genius! 1000 million thank you’s!!!!🌟
Absolutely chilling. Mr. Walker, only your delivery can make it even 'chillier'; I mean this in a totally complimentary way. I also must agree with you, re: EF Benson and his place at the top of ghost story authors of his era. I'll probably take a bit of flack for this, but while I know MR James is very talented..some of his stories just drone on and on for me. As I tell my 2 young grands, if we all liked the same things, what a dull world this would be. Thank you for sharing your talent with us.
But we have to keep quiet about it
@@ClassicGhost
I should probably learn to keep quiet about many things..🤔
For instance: I’m not a fan of Lovecraft. 🤷🏻♀️😳
I have liked every story you've ever narratored. I have always loved the classic haunted stories, psychological horror, especially vintage Gothic Horror. I love the authors of distant past. I live in Salem, Oregon USA 🇺🇸 So, for me your accent is captivating. I can listen to you for hours. You are the perfect narrator. You could read the back of a cereal box and I would listen to you. 😉
Thank You Ever So Much For Happening In My Life. ❤️
I agree.
I actually really enjoy his adopted accents too.
Loved the story.! It’s an EF Benson one I’ve never heard before, which is always cool to come across. Should not have been surprised to find it here!
Such at fantastic story! I really enjoy your reading. Currently I am relistening to all the EF Benson stories you have posted. Thank you so much for them!
I do like EF Benson. Richard Crowest has done a lot so I hang back a bit with Benson
My favorite part of this ramble was learning that Tony listens to Lol the same TH-cam audio books i do.
Also I adore when Horror babble does their own work, and I also feel similarly when Tony reads his own work.
I just need to write it. Trouble is making videos is easier than writing stories so I do videos and tell myself I’m working !
This story riveted me and it has everything to do with your narration! I am so glad I have found you on You Tube. I look forward to evening when I can relax and listen. Thank you!
Not for the bin: love your rant at the end 💜 and everything else as well, of course.
nettie 💜🦉
Thanks Tony,
I always enjoy the stories that you choose.
Some more than others, but I think that there is no rhyme or reason to that, short of my being intrigued or not.
The one thing that I always enjoy is your talk (ramble on), at the end.
I don't get to travel far, or even go out to the flicks more than a handful of times each year, and my home conversation is a literary void.
So thank you.
I look forward to each and every one; even more than the other channels, (although I do love Morgan Scorpion's channel ).
Please do include some of your own short stories as well.
🙋🔻🇦🇺
Love love love!
Love your voice much better than others. Thank you.
So nice of you
Really like this one.
I always save tour readings for bedtime, brilliant 👏
I enjoyed that. Good accents!
Well done sir.
E.F.B. is always a good choice.
Hi Tony I listen to your stories on TH-cam and I think you do a wonderful job I know that you get a small amount of money from me listening to all of the advertisements before your stories so I always listen to them since I'm not a patreon member of yours yet and I love the after videos when you are on video and you talk about the stories even if you're not showing your face talking about them I love the history that you give about the author or The Story You're So knowledgeable and I enjoy all of that and I also enjoy the live readings that you give where you're just seeing in a comfy chair with a lamp on and reading the story I think those are amazing also I think you do a great job I don't care what you change I don't care what you leave the same anything you do is okay with me thank you for the hours of entertainment you give me
Thanks for your words of support. My little rant was in response to complaints that I dare put ads on the podcast. I was saying that if you are not able or willing to contribute, that is totally fine, but like with TV and commercial radio, they're paid for by having ads. Thank you for being so understanding
I like the classic ones.
Masterful, intreguing, gripping narration and entertaining, informative "ramblings"----also this time around. Thank you, Tony!
I love your wanderings and feel I've been on a mini vacation honestly , meeting all your charming characters and places. Also, I thought you were starting a joke, 2 psychiatrists were walking ahead of me.......
Agreed. E. F. Benson was the best. IMO, his range of tone plays no small part.
Fabulous!
Tony, when you talk about stories that other people do really well with and you don’t-it’s probably because we’ve just recently listened to those. There was the tragic debacle where l’Estrange and Hew Carr came out with the same story on the same day. TOTAL NIGHTMARE! I’m not going to listen to both. You do lots of great stories but I’ve already heard so many of them by others. Ps-Benson is my favorite too and I was so happy that I’d never heard this tale. My advice, for what it’s worth, is to check the channels we all listen too (bitesized, l’Estrange-I can’t bear Ian the Horrorbabbler’s voice-but I’m sure he’s big, etc) and see if they’ve done a piece in the last year or so). Try and find New old material that we’ve not heard. IMHO. Ps, I could suggest a few tales none have done lately
Suggest! Good advice
Wonderful! 😱💖
Lancashire is the land of my birth, though I was raised here in Australia. It's been a long time since I've had an Eccles cake🥰 though thankfully we can get proper cheese here lol. Enjoy your unwind 😊
This was a ripper of a story. Chilled me to the bone listening to this at 4.30 am with the pitter pay of a steady rain outside
That sounds nice actually. Glad you liked it
thanks Tony
Thank you, Tony! Tarleton is near Southport in the North West. It's near the sea. There could be other places with the same name, thought... much love! 👻💀💜!
Love the accents!
Loved this, thank you!
Fantastic story! Really chilling! Youre one of THE best readers of ghost stories! So, il give this 4,5/5... i wanted more! Wish it was longer ❤
You are always so nice. Thank you !
I just subbed to your channel
@@ClassicGhost thank you so much! ☺️ keep up your good work. I will always listen
I like the "locked drawer"! Adds a certain vintage je ne sais quoi ;)
"If you ever go mad..." 😂🤣 but "We're all mad here" Tony 💜
Ha ha! I thought the same.
😂
Refreshing new tales for Halloween
Love your rambling conversations about nothing much, after the stories. Maybe you could do one podcast of nothing but rambling, maybe even a live podcast so we can ramble back to you.
+Allan Bryan-Tansley funny you should say that… number 2 in the bag. Number 2 - Discord???? I’m not in discord. Or internet radio but that’s a big commitment
Thank you 🥰😘
That poor American lad is still doing circles up near Carlisle 🤣
Ha ha. I hope not. It's raining now
Another wonderful reading, Tony, and I very much enjoyed it. You mentioned the name of Acres and what it could mean. I may be over-thinking it, but I wonder if we should consider it an anagram (or corruption, if you prefer) of 'Sacre', meaning sacred. She is, in other words, unholy.
It could be, even if unintended by the author's conscious mind. The Unconscious loves puns and anagrams.
If only E.F. had been more proflic. Had the brilliant ideas and ease of conveying them. No weakness here.
Truly horrifying! 🦇🦇🦇
Whoa, this one starts off with a bang, doesn't it. (Sorry, SORRY, I'm deleting it). It's almost in media res, which seems a unique choice for horror. One of the things I like best about Benson is his swings between creeping horror and sudden explosive action. Hope you're having a relaxing time on your barge!
And also middle-class society fun.
Ooh nice and creepy!
I don't know of any legends about the burial of Judas (other than the account of his body falling/being tossed into the potter's field), but there is a tradition that the body of Pontius Pilate could not be buried. I remember reading a medieval drama that used the story. The body wouldn't remain in the earth or sink in the sea. It sank in the Tiber, but poisoned the water. According to the story, it was finally thrown into an isolated lake in Switzerland. This tradition is based on the assumption that he died unrepentant. There is another tradition that says that he became a Christian and died as a martyr.
Anyway, nice chilling story, Tony. The scenes at the beach and the graveyard have echoes of another of Benson's stories, "The Face."
If it’s not too late, please, keep “the locked drawer”. It immediately transports me into “ the other dimension”.
Yes I am going to do that
💜💜💜
I needed to look up a reference to the archaeological site of the city of Acre (no s) in the area of Palestine. Sounds like a fascinating archaeological source of information, but I could not see how it would have any symbolic implication and the woman in the story or her name. You can read anything you want into a name in a fiction. One may take her first name and say it suggests berth like a berth for a boat in a dock, say she needed an acre a large area of land to container because of simple grave will not container. I don't think this makes any sense but this is the kind of thing that happens when you start trying to read symbolism into names. Of course in some cases authors have chosen the name of some significance
Tarleton is in Lancs near Southport.
I much prefer the locked drawer start
actually I love the sherlock holmes stuff..bite size has a number of really good detective stories most of which are not about Holmes
there are 2 channels you should check out if no one has mentioned them to you
chip slaters story time
new thinkable
some of the old space horror stories are just as entertaining as lovecraft or benson
think about adding them to the wheel house
thanks
"Could you imagine being Judas Escariot..."
I found this story interesting because of the reincarnation theme.
⭐️⭐️💛⭐️⭐️
We had barges in the US, I think, maybe on the Erie Canal, but not sure if they are the same kind.
United States has always had barges, mostly flat open top boats, and all its water ways. Many still around today. Barges carrying garbage are common . There is an uncommon use of barge for a certain kind of horse-drawn carriage but I am not sure what is referred to here that Tony had to explain
You are perfectly charming. Have a lovely holiday.
A lot of the ideas brought together here are very much influenced by contemporary study of ancient religious themes. James George Frazer's 'The Golden Bough' was very influential at the time and described fertility rituals of rebirth and scapegoat.
The stress on the Jewishness of the lady is relevant to the scapegoat idea, as is the cyclical nature of her relationships with husband and society. Her husband connected with her for the material benefits, but then rejected her after a span.
The title 'The Outcast' is another reference.
In the fertility myths, the chosen king is lauded and given gifts as he rules for a set span. His presence brings life and blessings. However when it wanes, or when the specified time is up - usually a year - he is discarded and replaced. This often involved casting him into the sea.
The Fisher King is one version.
The Christian story of resurrection also derives from these tales.
While these are usually based around male figures, in this story it is stated more than once that sex is irrelevant and it can be either.
The idea that it is the actual process that is malevolent and not the blameless participants is very satisfying and lifts this tale into a slightly more sophisticated level.
And I have discovered that his mother was an archaeologist of Ancient Egypt and into theosophy.
There was also a family issue with bipolar disorder, which might also tie in with the notion of cycles of behaviour.
Interestingly, many of his immediate family were homosexual, but that's probably irrelevant
My ears have a crush on your voice. Read me anything you like.
Send me a menu and I'll read it.
Try some Warhammer horror. There's a massive fan base there. Drag a few your way.
I never thought Of that. You mean for me to write?
@@ClassicGhost maybe both. It's a vast universe, plenty of fiction there fan and official.
I heard 'subscribe like Cher'
+D She Cher is in fact one of our most loyal subscribers
@@ClassicGhost 😁
9:28
Lucifer... Shade... Lol mix of cultural religious versions of the underworld/hell
True true! Never thought of that, but it's true
Since this has been up for a year, I'm sure that the answer is already in here, but...IN THE BIBLE, The Jewish church leaders (who have him killed) tell Jesus that they want a sign (He's already given so many, but these guys are jerks). He tells them that the only sign He will give them is the story of Jonah. Jonah's three days in the big fish foreshadow Jesus' own three days in the earth. So...they are related. :)
Also Tony, do you mind if I promote a guy who has very few followers but deserves many many more?
Not at all