The Golden Bough by David H Keller

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • David H. Keller was an American author known for his contributions to science fiction and pulp magazines during the early 20th century. He was born on December 23, 1880, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Keller pursued a career in medicine and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a medical degree in 1903. He worked as a general practitioner, specializing in the treatment of mental disorders.
    Despite his medical profession, Keller had a strong passion for writing. He began his literary career by submitting stories to various pulp magazines, where he gained recognition for his unique blend of science fiction, horror, and fantasy elements. Keller's writing often explored psychological and sociological themes, displaying his background in medicine and his interest in human behavior.
    In 1928, Keller published one of his most famous works, a novella titled "The Revolt of the Pedestrians." The story depicted a future society where automobiles ruled, and pedestrians were marginalized. It was highly regarded for its social commentary and futuristic vision. Keller continued to write and publish numerous short stories, novelettes, and novellas throughout his career, earning him a dedicated following.
    One of Keller's notable contributions to the science fiction genre was his series of short stories featuring the character T.H.E. Cat. T.H.E. Cat, an acronym for The Human Electro, was a scientist with the ability to transfer his consciousness into different bodies. These stories often explored ethical and philosophical questions related to identity and consciousness.
    Keller's writing career slowed down in the 1940s and 1950s as he faced personal and financial challenges. He struggled with health issues and experienced difficulties in finding publishers for his work. Despite these setbacks, Keller's influence on the science fiction genre remained significant, as his stories often delved into psychological and societal aspects that were ahead of their time.
    David H. Keller passed away on July 13, 1966, in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, leaving behind a legacy as an early pioneer of science fiction and a writer who explored the human condition through his imaginative tales. While his work may have been overlooked by mainstream literary circles, Keller's contributions to the genre continue to be appreciated by science fiction enthusiasts and scholars who recognize his unique voice and forward-thinking ideas.
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Комментарии • 85

  • @DestinyKiller
    @DestinyKiller 8 месяцев назад +5

    There's a quote I've always loved on an episode of the X- Files where Scully remarks that her father, a Navy man, always taught her to respect nature because it has no respect for you.
    And I've always thought that sums it up pretty well

  • @katiedouthwaite5479
    @katiedouthwaite5479 Год назад +37

    Didn't know how to send a message otherwise so I hope you see this! I'm a RMN with ADHD too (from Yorkshire) and I just wanted you to know you that you have really ignited my love of reading and wanting to write stories again ❤️. I absolutely love what you do and how you do it!! Thank you so much for putting your time out this way, I love to hear you can cut down your hours now, definitely earned it. I listen between my community crisis visits and it certainly helps to get my attention and distract from the work we do ❤️. You have a fantastic soothing accent, I love the voices you do as well! I'll get on patron asap but for now just know you're really appreciated and have such a talent ❤️❤️ hope shade and the pups are well!! All the best to you and yours X

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад +3

      ah sounds like we have a lot of experiences in common! listening between crisis visits lol!

    • @andrealee3901
      @andrealee3901 Год назад

      Sending healing prayers. 😢❤

  • @waltercook4868
    @waltercook4868 Год назад +9

    Deep story, deep comments. Lots to discuss. You took us very deep this time. In the end, I agree with you, find the middle way and I will add, and all that implies. Whether traveling on the road less traveled or not, life is difficult.

  • @juliecavanagh7399
    @juliecavanagh7399 8 месяцев назад +5

    Wow, this story is a gem! A beautiful, dark gem... Thank you so much!

  • @cobrachicken07
    @cobrachicken07 Год назад +4

    Amazing story with excellent narration. Thanks!

  • @jessisage4708
    @jessisage4708 Год назад +9

    Killer thumbnail art! The story was awesome as always, but the realistic look of her is terrifyingly wonderful!

  • @tammyb8742
    @tammyb8742 Год назад +4

    This is giving me great things to think about. I think wild animals are in the moment, they are present, they don't overthink and they accept and surrender.
    I feel things that don't move like trees, rocks, maybe even a sloth lol, are the great contemplators, even more so than humans but they do it un- neurotically.
    For the longest time I wanted to come back in my next life as a tree so I could sit and observe and contemplate but now I think I want to come back as the wind.

  • @martas9283
    @martas9283 11 месяцев назад +3

    Great story! Your thoughts on the more romantic take on Nature remind me of the long gone Dutch author Frederik van Eeden. Around 1898 Frederik and some like-minded souls started a kind of commune (the Walden Colony), to live closer to nature and mostly 'off the land'. The story I loved so much when I first heard it was that Frederik would regularly take a barefoot walk into town to buy a bag of biscuits, munching fresh biscuits on his way back to Walden. Which I get completely, I think we can all agree that Nature abhors an empty biscuit tin almost as much as a vacuum..

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  11 месяцев назад

      I didn’t know of him. Lovely story. aid heard of Walden but wasn’t very clear what it was. Thank you

  • @tricivenola8164
    @tricivenola8164 8 месяцев назад +3

    I'm with you. I'm all into the mystic Tolkien woods, but Little Tootsie toddling off to the pool with her widdle silver salver makes me slightly ill. The demand that her husband drive the car off the cliff could only have been made by someone who never went without to make car payments or heard the word "No." Like so many of us who left the pool and learned to live in the real world.

  • @soundsilence2604
    @soundsilence2604 Год назад +6

    Of course, I've never met your Sheila, but as you describe her, she's too level headed to ask you to drown the car. lol
    I enjoyed the focus on the natural world and Romanticism in your interpretation of the story. We can combat the natural world, but we'll never conquer it. Storms will rage, and black bears will steal our cupcakes (worth a Google). My mind called to a return to The Garden. Like Adam and Eve, the couple enjoyed a carefree life. But like her predecessor, the modern Eve still wanted more. Chasing moon beams cost both Eves (and Adams) their lives.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад +3

      that is a great interpretation! i missed that one but i think you’re right !

  • @mariameere5807
    @mariameere5807 Год назад +4

    Love this picture wow Tony! This was a f ing FABULOUS tale and the most unbelievable thing in it, remember I see spirit’s and so did my gran not mum they terrify her because she saw her mum after she died to say she was out of her wheelchair and no longer had Alzheimer’s and at 5 I saw her too that night but I didn’t understand this gift/curse she spoke of because I had no experience of death! But the reason this is more unbelievable than anything else you have written is because of the man letting his good car go off a cliff! Lol 😂 I had an ex that used to kiss his car good night when he thought we were not looking out the window!! Oh that brings back funny memories! Thank you so much for another great job! 🕯🕊🤍🕊🕯

  • @trilllllify
    @trilllllify Год назад +8

    Perfect for this stormy night! Thanks as always Tony, you're a gem

  • @DreamingCatStudio
    @DreamingCatStudio Год назад +5

    Yes Pan holds a fascination-chaos as god. Have you read William Morris’ News from Nowhere? Also Mervyn Peake’s The Gormenghast Trilogy? They sprang to mind as possible examples of the genre you were describing.

  • @Boogie_the_cat
    @Boogie_the_cat Год назад +7

    By the way, nice thumbnail choice. It definitely caught my eye. And since I've read Frazier's Golden Bough, I clicked!

  • @_SoBored
    @_SoBored Год назад +6

    Wow. A wonderfully written story. I loved the alliteration and repetition he uses as well as the very ending. And as always, your performance was perfect. Thanks again.

  • @evelanpatton
    @evelanpatton Год назад +3

    🎶🎵“Your Moms alright, your dads alright, they just seem a little weird…”🎶🎵 remember…THANK YOU! For your brilliance & consistent contribution to sooo many of us unknown folk out here. We are blessed by your gifts!🎉

  • @martiwilliams4592
    @martiwilliams4592 11 месяцев назад +1

    Amazon is the most freightening environment of all... . Terrifiying. Thank you, Tony.

  • @hathorearthfyre
    @hathorearthfyre Год назад +1

    Great story, how the Gods are roused at times, to play cruel games against mankind.

  • @davidwhelan1545
    @davidwhelan1545 Год назад +1

    Great story, well narrated.
    Reminds me somehow of wassailing in the orchards of Kent!🤟🇬🇧

  • @Suggest_Me_Books
    @Suggest_Me_Books Год назад +4

    This was a fantastic story! Thank you for reading! I can’t open books like I used to, but I can always turn on an audiobook. This is my happy place!

  • @garybryant4293
    @garybryant4293 4 дня назад

    Maybe the most important, informed, and interesting,
    post story ramble that you've ever had.

  • @Boogie_the_cat
    @Boogie_the_cat Год назад +4

    Thank you. I needed a story to relax to this evening, and you put in a lot of work narrating these stories for us. I don't enjoy all of them but that's life. I just wanted to show my thanks for the work you do. I'm living under the poverty level, so this is the best I can do (I have to feed my cat too).

  • @martinmucha4858
    @martinmucha4858 Год назад +2

    What a great story, both in style and content. And excellently performed. Thank you so much

  • @stellajames6936
    @stellajames6936 Год назад +2

    Loved this story thankyou! 😊

  • @CLCinflorida
    @CLCinflorida 9 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic Story, except for the End, that Sucked 👏👏👏👍👍👍

  • @lzeph
    @lzeph Год назад +2

    Oooo just in time for afternoon chores! Thank you so much!

  • @clevelandplonsey7480
    @clevelandplonsey7480 Год назад +1

    Fantastic post-discussion! Authentically superb

  • @Kernowcornwall
    @Kernowcornwall Год назад +1

    Great channel!

  • @dwellerofthedark
    @dwellerofthedark 2 месяца назад

    I finally got a minute between writing the music and draft of my new novel- ‘For the Love of a Phantom’-to check out your reading of ‘The Golden Bough’ Tony. It’s a tremendous reading of a classic. Great job as always!

  • @eowynriya1988
    @eowynriya1988 Год назад +1

    Pan has always fascinated me.. Even as a child...... ❤

  • @martiwilliams4592
    @martiwilliams4592 Год назад +1

    Where nightmares originate---horrorfull. Masterful narration and commentary as always. Thank you, Tony.

  • @rosiemcnaughton9933
    @rosiemcnaughton9933 Год назад +2

    Always...beware of pipes...😱 Heeding them never ends well...

  • @gerardkiff2026
    @gerardkiff2026 Год назад +1

    Sad story but thank you

  • @Josephinejefferies
    @Josephinejefferies 27 дней назад

    Enjoyed this

  • @terrymitchell2533
    @terrymitchell2533 Год назад +1

    Thoroughly enjoyed thank you 👍🥂

  • @joanieann6179
    @joanieann6179 Год назад +1

    Thank you, Tony. Good analysis. 👍

  • @clarewilde972
    @clarewilde972 Год назад

    as a fellow (post-)Jungian, I loved this. So numinous, full of images, beautifully written. brilliant choice, thank you

  • @tzaph67
    @tzaph67 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this Tony - I really enjoyed both the story and your reading. I’m definitely going to look out more of this guy’s work. A couple of things struck me. The first was the role of pipes - the musical pipe that seemed to bring death through the surrender of self to ecstasy and the plumber’s pipe which despite good intentions of the husband helped to hasten death anyway by mechanically piping away the water of the dark pool.
    I was also struck by the mistletoe and how as well as being a parasite that only grows on certain tree (oak, apple, hawthorn and ash I think, but could be wrong) was said to represent male fertility because of its likeness to sperm - holly with its red berries, the colour of menstrual blood, represented female creativity.
    There’s a lot more to unpick, but they were the two things you hadn’t mentioned that first occurred to me.
    I’m not sure if I like the ending or not, but I think I do. I think it’s showing us that these forces are real and humans who mess with them are doomed - a bit like modern humans and the Environment. Thanks lots💚xx

  • @Story-Voracious66
    @Story-Voracious66 Год назад +3

    Well!
    That sounds like a really bad hair day!
    Honestly Tony, from memory, your story 'The Grysdale Wedding ", was better.
    The imagery was lush, I'll give him that. Geese and goats are so much more dynamic than sheep and chickens. But the ending left me flat.
    It seemed that he became bored with writing this story so finished it off with "and they all died."
    Ho hum!
    You did better to glean so much from between the lines. You are a true scholar sir.
    Take care Tony.
    🙋🔻🇦🇺

  • @edf777
    @edf777 Год назад +2

    Thank you sir..😊❤

  • @dorthonian
    @dorthonian Год назад +2

    Thank you! 👍🏽

  • @Low_Carb_Or_DIEt
    @Low_Carb_Or_DIEt Год назад +2

    Wonderful reading and story! Thank you! As per the driving yhe car over the cluff, in the words of Luttle Britain, "If you LOVE me, you'll do it!" LOL ❤️😆

    • @davidwhite7294
      @davidwhite7294 Год назад +1

      Naaah man, thats as far as i,d have gone. l,d have driven her straight to the funny farm 😂😂😂😂

    • @Low_Carb_Or_DIEt
      @Low_Carb_Or_DIEt Год назад

      @@davidwhite7294 LOL

  • @lyndabrennan4560
    @lyndabrennan4560 Год назад

    Yippee, can't wait to for this story, thank you Tony 💙💛💚

  • @gillrippingale1173
    @gillrippingale1173 Год назад +2

    First tale I've listened to for a few weeks ( busy in the garden!) and I thoroughly enjoyed it! Absolutely fascinating and intriguing story...
    Even more I loved your commentary! 😊

  • @scottfree2248
    @scottfree2248 Год назад +3

    Never trust a Satyr.🌙💀🌠

  • @amandalee215
    @amandalee215 Год назад

    Lovely Friday night treat thank you Tony

  • @meganmcnelis7136
    @meganmcnelis7136 Год назад +2

    Very thought-provoking! Thanks for the description of the Romantic movement--I never pieced it together that way. And having grown up in Pennsylvania, I can see Keller's inspiration of thick pine forests hiding within reach of civilization. Just last year when I was visiting there, I felt that I could pull off the interstate highway where I was driving and walk into the forest to get lost for days.
    Given that Keller would have grown up hearing about women's suffrage, I felt like some conservative ideas from the time period were surfacing in this story: Is it wise to let women decide where they can live or whom they can love, etc., even if they feel so passionately about it? And in the year of publication, 1934, this was a discussion in popular culture, too. Hollywood was portraying independent women in film, and "screwball" comedies were emerging in which women had the opportunities and attitudes usually reserved for men.

  • @mikefischbein3230
    @mikefischbein3230 Год назад +1

    That was soooo good!

  • @robynmarler1951
    @robynmarler1951 Год назад +1

    I liked it that Pan's mother didn't approve.

  • @user-ng8nn1xd2m
    @user-ng8nn1xd2m Месяц назад

    This guy is the quintessential fool for love

  • @t34_guy90
    @t34_guy90 Год назад

    thanks for that 😀

  • @edf777
    @edf777 Год назад +1

    👌 👏 wow 👌

  • @norayoder3189
    @norayoder3189 Год назад

    AAhhhMazing❣️🙏🏻❣️ 42:23

  • @hawthorne1504
    @hawthorne1504 Год назад +1

    Can you narrate a midsummer eve (St John’s Eve) ghost story?

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад

      who wrote that one?

    • @hawthorne1504
      @hawthorne1504 Год назад

      @@ClassicGhost I don’t know it there is one, but if there is I thought you would know! Someone told me it’s supposed to be a spooky time of year, like Halloween.

    • @alisonkirkland6132
      @alisonkirkland6132 Год назад

      @@hawthorne1504 I think the eve of any holy day can be, in theory. Ghost stories are told on Christmas Eve, and the story of Dracula kicks off on St. George's Eve.

    • @hawthorne1504
      @hawthorne1504 Год назад

      @@alisonkirkland6132 Interesting

  • @kathrynbeetham5308
    @kathrynbeetham5308 Год назад +2

    The shears (sword) is a symbol of power. The husbands need for control over the woman (symbolising his own unconscious shadow) is played out, he puts the shears between them, trying to divide himself from his own unconscious shadow, but by denying it and cutting himself off from it, its greater power kills him. ....that's my take anyway.

  • @applthorn
    @applthorn 8 месяцев назад

    Reminds me of some stories by Saki -- The Music on the Hill, Gabriel-Ernest

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  8 месяцев назад +1

      yes. i see the similarities

  • @evazauner
    @evazauner 9 месяцев назад +1

    der ehemann tut mir nicht leid. er hat sein ende selber herbeigeführt.
    eine tolle geschichte, ich habe mit der frau mitgefiebert!

  • @ajcbng8289
    @ajcbng8289 Год назад

    Yes. She's dangerous. Still, no. 😂😂

  • @shelleymarquis2887
    @shelleymarquis2887 Год назад

    Wonderful story, wonderfully read. I've a fondness for the presence of female worshipers in stories of Pan and Bacchus. To me they represent a lost awareness of female freedom and connection to divine power. Lost to male dominated Christianity, no offence, don't go nuts folks. History tells us pagan men were reluctant to lose their female deities having an instinctual understanding that it takes two to make a world. It's extremely significant that THE woman in Christianity is a virgin. Sex is power....over men and vice versa, virginity lacks the essential female power.
    In National Velvet, the girl gets to win the Grand National (disguised as a boy) but must, must be robbed of victory and revealed by fainting from the "excitement" and falling from the saddle after clearing every jump. Pulese, and the beat goes on. 😬

  • @sonnetlikely
    @sonnetlikely Год назад +3

    I think I hear pages turning and that’s wonderful. Thank you!

  • @JennyLane8666
    @JennyLane8666 Год назад

    Tony, my good sir... Is there any way you could give us a teensy teaser in the description letting us know the plot of the story in the video? I love learning about the author but due to memory issues, I'll often get a fair long way into the story before I realize I've heard it already haha

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад

      +Jenny Lane i think there is. i the last i’ve done that but i’ve got out of the way of it recently.

  • @evelanpatton
    @evelanpatton 2 месяца назад

    Another modern fairytale! Great story. 🐐🦢 Another archetypal story to beware of finding a “lusty lover” & loosing the best thing you ACTUALLY HAVE in your life.