The Door in The Wall by H G Wells

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
  • The Door in The Wall by H G Wells is a supernatural story about paradise lost, or paradise once found and perhaps regained. The Door in the Wall was written by Wells before he became a convinced atheist and carries echoes of a more hopeful spiritual view of the world. Wells was famous for knowing how to put a story together, and here we see him in action. It's a story that gets you thinking long after the last word is spoken.
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Комментарии • 151

  • @nancynickerson4341
    @nancynickerson4341 2 года назад +32

    We love it when you waffle on about not much. Oh, and the stories are good, too. :-)

  • @thermite_main_6545
    @thermite_main_6545 8 месяцев назад +5

    This short story is part of the curriculum for AICE literature, I've never tried an audio book, but I will say you did an amazing job and being read to genuinely helped me understand the theme and purpose of the short story

  • @louiseselfe616
    @louiseselfe616 8 месяцев назад +4

    This has always been my favourite short story, ever since I read it many years ago. And I havent read it for a long, long time. As before when I've read it, it brought me to tears when I heard your reading. Because I too have had dreams very similar to the paradisical garden in the protagonist's waking dream. And I've woken up feeling bereft that the dream ended and just wanting to go back into it.
    I think the descriptions of the trees, leaves, the golden light, and of course the wonderful garden itself are both ineffably beautiful and sad. It moves me deeply. Thank you Tony for doing it justice with your gorgeous voice. ❤️

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  7 месяцев назад +2

      thank you for your kind words and taking the trouble to comment

    • @Anuannanuann10
      @Anuannanuann10 4 месяца назад

      I absolutely adore your narrative and inclusion. You're amazing company! Thank you!

  • @JD-cw4qg
    @JD-cw4qg 11 месяцев назад +2

    thank you so much for this, one of my fav stories

  • @Aiko2-26-9
    @Aiko2-26-9 2 года назад +18

    A haunting story. I'm afraid I, too, will now be tormented by the thought that there is a door through which paradise, freedom, pure joy exists. I have but to find it. And have the courage to go through it. Thank you for your excellent choice of story and your excellent rendering of it.

  • @briandouglasahern7067
    @briandouglasahern7067 4 месяца назад +3

    That was utterly heartbreaking. A beautiful, soulful story tinged with lingering pain. Excellent reading, sir.

  • @carolowen6242
    @carolowen6242 2 года назад +44

    Don't listen to anyone who says you 'waffle'. Your chats are very interesting, specially about H G Wells coming from Kent. I live in Kent and I didn't know that! Thank you.

  • @brianmsahin
    @brianmsahin 2 года назад +11

    Just on the way to bed .. it's coming up to 1am here in Istanbul, so will put the earphones on and give myself a nightmare before going to sleep!! 😱😱😁

  • @andreac5724
    @andreac5724 2 года назад +8

    I never put on a video so fast! Thx for the story.

    • @mariameere5807
      @mariameere5807 2 года назад +4

      I wish I had said that instead of the big long message which expressed the exact same sentiment!!! Great minds think alike! Isn’t this channel the best in paranormal fiction!?! I think so But I always make a fool of myself when I leave a comment because I’m trying to express my gratitude in a clever way (trying too hard) & it always backfires on me......

    • @janetcw9808
      @janetcw9808 2 года назад +2

      @@mariameere5807 Be yourself, it shouldn't matter.
      Good wishes x

    • @mariameere5807
      @mariameere5807 2 года назад +1

      @@janetcw9808 That is so sweet of you! I actually deleted my original comment!!! It was criticised- so it was for the best! Thank you so much! You have made you feel better about myself! Angel blessings angel girl!🌹🕊🤍🕊🌹

  • @lesliegordon2313
    @lesliegordon2313 2 года назад +16

    One of my favourite stories of all time. An excellent rendition. Thank you.

  • @sarahsamaria8283
    @sarahsamaria8283 2 года назад +6

    To me the door in the wall was the path to happiness that Wallace never took. He gave up what really mattered for a meaningless existence. Your voice really do justice to his anguish and deep longing for paradise lost. Always enjoyed your comments and takes on the story and author. So waffle on.

  • @Failte630
    @Failte630 3 месяца назад +1

    I found it a very sad story to be honest. He was searching for a happier and more meaningful life and each time it was within his reach he let the call of the big wild world influence his decision.
    You read it very well. With great heart and feeling. Thank you.

  • @victoriasmith8308
    @victoriasmith8308 2 года назад +9

    Well what a lovely thing to see so many people touched by this ethereal story, we all aspire to a moving, unreachable idea which will provide the happiness we all seek, thank you Tony

  • @jeremycbarnhart2305
    @jeremycbarnhart2305 2 года назад +3

    This is one of my FAVORITE stories.
    And here - Read by one of my favorite narrators. Excellent.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад

      This story was very popular. Thank you :))

  • @EnCryptedHorror
    @EnCryptedHorror 2 года назад +10

    Ooh...one of me faves. Thanks Tony!

  • @halmycroft194
    @halmycroft194 2 года назад +8

    You really do seem to have a shortcut to my favourite stories

  • @mrs.cracker4622
    @mrs.cracker4622 2 года назад +3

    One of my favorite stories ever. Many, many thanks!

  • @FourthDerivative
    @FourthDerivative Год назад +1

    A beautiful short story, one of my all-time favorites. I wish more people knew about it. Loved your reading!

  • @djr1943
    @djr1943 2 года назад +7

    What a wonderful story, Tony. You’re telling of this tale has deeply affected me and reminded me of a time in my earlier years when I thought there was the possibility of so much more.

    • @itgetter9
      @itgetter9 2 года назад +1

      Your comment went straight to my heart and hit me in the soul. Wow. Thank you, and thank you, Tony! I love everything you do, and your commentaries at the end are a favorite aspect.

  • @josephnutley8744
    @josephnutley8744 9 месяцев назад +2

    I am amazed by Wells language and your narration. Couldn't be better. Honestly

  • @northernlights8126
    @northernlights8126 2 года назад +1

    I really love this story, one of my favourites ever.Your narration was beautiful and sensitive, so fitting for the story.

  • @julielevinge266
    @julielevinge266 2 года назад +14

    Really good story,I’m not normally that fond of Wells which is probably a terrible sin!
    But this was enjoyable, thanks.

  • @DreamingCatStudio
    @DreamingCatStudio 2 года назад +6

    Lovely poignant story. There’s such a draw to a hidden world and to a paradise. William Morris writes about another marvelous utopia in News from Nowhere. I appreciate your comments at the end. I’m gluten-free but like your kind of waffles! 😌 Thank you!

  • @Rosemarysummers2
    @Rosemarysummers2 Год назад +1

    I loved the story, wish I could find a paradise. Life is very hard as it is

  • @mariameere5807
    @mariameere5807 2 года назад +20

    That was just perfect Tony, as usual! I always genuinely look forward to your stories And I’ve been out with my girlfriends tonight, In West Kensington where I live, And coincidentally, where this story - or part of it is set!!! Anyway you have no idea how grateful I am because I’ve been looking forward To a story from either you or Jasper or Simon from bite sized audio.... in my opinion, the holy Trinity of entertainment on RUclips! That’s how I genuinely feel! So many thanks and blessings galore! Much appreciated!🙏☺️
    🕊✨☮️💜🤍💜☯️✨🕊

    • @michellebastiani6470
      @michellebastiani6470 2 года назад +2

      DITTO!!! They are the best right. I always think I can't be the only one who loves them all. Horror babble also ✌💛

    • @sunflowerhelen9933
      @sunflowerhelen9933 2 года назад +2

      Which Jasper is that? I already listen to Simon.

    • @mariameere5807
      @mariameere5807 2 года назад +3

      @@sunflowerhelen9933 Jasper le strange from encrypted horror! Enjoy!💀

    • @mariameere5807
      @mariameere5807 2 года назад +1

      @@michellebastiani6470 yes 👍 ditto indeed!☮️💜☯️

    • @michellebastiani6470
      @michellebastiani6470 2 года назад +1

      @@mariameere5807 🖤✌

  • @stardust949
    @stardust949 2 года назад +3

    I liked this story a lot...and your ramble. thank you

  • @JesusIsTheAnswer332
    @JesusIsTheAnswer332 2 года назад +1

    Amen!! What a Testimony for Christ!! My daughter is Autistic & loves to sing hymns & many Children’s Bible songs especially with us & others. I’m so proud of you too! God will surely bless you!!

  • @adriennewalker1715
    @adriennewalker1715 5 месяцев назад

    One of my all time favourite’s … it’s my second time of listening to you read it☺️ for what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world yet lose his soul? Probably mis-remembered, but that is how I’d sum up the “message” of the story, if there is one … more things in heaven and earth if you will, and perhaps materialistic gains, fame and laurel leaves are not such glittering prizes after all is said and done. By the by, don’t stop your rambles at the end of the stories, I am sure that, like me, many people get the heads up about other interesting authors, podcasters and the like that have hitherto evaded us … I find listening to the end not only very enjoyable but fruitful too.

  • @Elder-Witch299
    @Elder-Witch299 2 года назад +9

    I enjoyed this story a lot. It just goes to shows how we can get caught up in our supposedly important lives, putting off the pleasures in life, and end up regretting it. We only have so much time to seek happiness before death catches us out. Tony...your talks are far from waffle. Apart from being very informative they make us feel, or make me feel anyway, that we are getting to know you. It's a nice feeling. As you can see, I also have a propensity to waffle, but it's sincere waffle. I'd be lost without your stories that inspire my much more inferior writing. Keep it coming, that ghost story book sounds interesting. Looking forward to it 😊

  • @rosiemcnaughton9933
    @rosiemcnaughton9933 2 года назад +4

    Thank you. Hadn't heard this one.

  • @vickyingramnymann8543
    @vickyingramnymann8543 10 месяцев назад +2

    He had a near death experience as a child.
    He was sent back by the "lady" as it was not his time.
    I'd like to think he found his garden of paradise.

  • @Rosemarysummers2
    @Rosemarysummers2 Год назад

    You told the story beautifully with the correct intonation. Lovely. Wish I could find a paradise

  • @martiwilliams4592
    @martiwilliams4592 2 года назад +3

    Masterful story telling of a masterful story, informative, amusing commentary giving serious food for thought. Thank you, Tony, for broadening our horizons and enriching our lives. Lots of pumkins and thumbs up to you.!

  • @janetcw9808
    @janetcw9808 2 года назад +2

    SO pleased for your upload the nicht, thanks so much 🍻

  • @allysonlewis1576
    @allysonlewis1576 11 месяцев назад

    Waffle indeed. The cheek of it. I find your views at the end of your podcasts really interesting and entertaining and if this isn’t to the taste of some listeners then I would advise them to go and listen to someone else! No one is forcing them to listen . Keep talking it’s great. The stories and the narration are excellent. The door in the wall was very strange but thought evoking too. It’s the kind of story you find yourself thinking about long after you have listened to it. H G Wells was born ahead of his time. He was a genius. So please keep narrating exactly as you do now. It’s all amazing. Thank you.

  • @clareelliott8348
    @clareelliott8348 2 года назад +3

    You don't waffle at all...I find your commentary after you've read a story really interesting and informative and I like hearing how you interpret the meaning of a story. I miss not having this 'chatty' bit on the other ghost story/weird tales channels I also listen to so please continue 🙂

  • @BigDog366
    @BigDog366 2 года назад +7

    What a fascinating story. I'm intrigued by the idea that the adult man was as entranced by the paradise as the five-year-old boy, although the actual things he experienced there would only appeal to a child: playmates, monkeys, tame large cats etc. So in a way, this was more childhood than paradise? Don't we all (as we grow increasingly older in an awful world) yearn to return to our childhoods, and that's not our toys or being a child at all, it's being in a world where we feel safe. Although of course we can never go back because if we try to everything that made us safe is gone: parents, neighbourhoods, way of life. It's a very sad story I think. But who knows, perhaps in those final moments we all get to walk through the green door. I do hope so.

    • @allysonlewis1576
      @allysonlewis1576 11 месяцев назад +2

      I agree with you. The saddest part of my parents passing was leaving behind neighbours of 50 years and the house being sold. I can never again go through that front door up to my beloved bedroom and my dads attic retreat. I haven’t really come to terms with all that entails.

    • @elagabalusrex390
      @elagabalusrex390 6 месяцев назад

      Correction: In an awful civilization. The earth itself is perfect. It's people who ruin and sully it with their greed and dirtiness.

  • @carrielange2692
    @carrielange2692 2 года назад +4

    I've been listening to your podcast on Stitcher for...gosh...for a couple years now. I'm sure you hear it a lot, but you talk me to sleep almost every night. Your voice is perfection in any accent you do. 😊 I just now came to find your youtube channel so I could make a suggestion. One of my all time fave classic stories is The Wendigo by Algernon Blackwood. It would sound so amazing in your voice, so I hope you will consider it. Oh, also, I'm so glad you're reading The Picture of Dorian Grey. I love that story and had actually been pining to hear you read it, so my last couple weeks have been glorious. 🥰Thank you so much for your work. It's so helpful to so many people, I'm sure.

  • @katrinamitchell0112
    @katrinamitchell0112 2 года назад +1

    I quite enjoy your waffling and I always look forward to your brief summary of the author 😀

  • @jasonskarda100
    @jasonskarda100 2 года назад +2

    A beautiful story.

  • @Tinyflypie
    @Tinyflypie 2 года назад +4

    Does anyone else remember a song called 'Greendoor' from the 50's. I was fascinated by that song as a small child. I wonder if Wells' story provoked it though of course there was no garden behind it, there was 'an ole piano playing hot'. Why green? I wish I could find my own green door.

    • @KayBacci
      @KayBacci Месяц назад

      Yes, I remember this song! I think many singers sang it, but the one I remember was Frankie Vaughan.

    • @WWZenaDo
      @WWZenaDo Месяц назад

      That song was about Prohibition, or illicit drugs (marijuana), iirc.

  • @Mi-yc3oy
    @Mi-yc3oy 2 года назад +3

    Omg One of my favorite stories of all time. I only know of one other reading of it, not half as well done as yours 😍❤️❤️🥃

  • @clarewilde972
    @clarewilde972 2 года назад +2

    I thoroughly enjoy your random waffling about not much! I enjoy it as much as the story. Really fascinating about the story and the writers, but also a little window into life with baby seagulls and other northern things. Great company, thank you.

  • @culturedchic
    @culturedchic 2 года назад +1

    Awesome story and narration.

  • @MithrilMagic
    @MithrilMagic 2 года назад +3

    I love your notes at the end of the video! I’m scared of seagulls. Most birds really hahaha

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад

      Worried they'll get tangled in your hair?

  • @DarkestStarASMR
    @DarkestStarASMR 2 года назад +3

    Classic story and i love your ramblings lol

  • @gillrippingale1173
    @gillrippingale1173 Год назад +1

    Oh that was a wonderful story! And I agree with everyone about the 'after chat' it's essential listening! I look forward to it! 😄
    The description here of the visit to the garden reminded me strongly of ' near death experiences' which often feel like a homecoming, and have folk not wanting to return to the 'real' world..I wonder if Wells drew on personal experience or knew someone who described this...?

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад +1

      Idon't know. I must admit that I went through a period when RUclips showed me loads of NDE videos. I enjoyed them to be fair

  • @evelanpatton
    @evelanpatton 2 года назад

    I’ve never heard of the seagulls falling off roofs...useful information- thanks!

  • @sleethmitchell
    @sleethmitchell 2 года назад +3

    (gotta correct that little typo, 'the hole in the wall'... but funny.) great story, as always!

  • @ramblingirl1
    @ramblingirl1 2 года назад

    I had a tedious chore to complete tonight and your story helped me through. Thank you, Tony!

  • @anneinnes5691
    @anneinnes5691 2 года назад

    Love your narration … love your “waffle”… keep up the good work on both fronts, please. 👍🏻😊

  • @savagemaxx
    @savagemaxx 2 года назад

    Beautifully done.

  • @mikefischbein3230
    @mikefischbein3230 2 года назад +2

    Loved this.

  • @suecondon1685
    @suecondon1685 2 года назад +2

    H G Wells also lived in Leigh-on-Sea for a while when he had an affair with Rebecca West. She bore him a son Anthony. His familiarity with the Essex side of the Thames Estuary shows up in the War of the Worlds. I'm from Leigh so I had a waffle of my own to add! Loved your analysis. 😊

  • @martiwilliams4592
    @martiwilliams4592 2 года назад

    ditto this time around. Thank you!

  • @annabellreads
    @annabellreads 2 года назад

    Love H G Wells, and especially your interpretation -- know him primarily from Sci Fi, of course, but even his Sci Fi stories frequently seem just a whisper away from horror. I always enjoy your chats, both informative and just chatty. You're totally right on the difference between writing dialogue and actual discussion and speech. My husband has ADHD and I've always thought it would be interesting to write a horror story as told by an ADHD brain. He'll be telling me about something that happened at work and go on tangents that to him are related, about how, at his previous job they ran things like xyz, or how when he was younger, etc. Even when the main current of the story is (I hope he forgives me here) uninteresting, there's still an undefined tension, a suspense, to a diversion like that...... I hope the baby seagulls are ok. :(

  • @raceyjaseyAP50
    @raceyjaseyAP50 2 года назад +4

    Speculative trivia: There is a line in the early chapters of Brideshead Revisited. Charles is nineteen and falling in love with life, love and - bi-curiously perhaps - with Sebastian. He is being inexorably drawn into Sebastian's forbidden set and his romantic world. The line reads:
    "But I was in search of love in those days, and went full of curiosity and the faint unrecognized apprehension that here, at last, I should find that low door in the wall, which others, I knew had found before me, which opened on an enclosed and enchanted garden, which was somewhere, not overlooked by any window in the heart of that grey city."
    Of course, a literary scholar might suggest that the line alludes, albeit obliquely, to Charles's aforementioned bi-curiosity. It probably does. But I find myself wondering now if Evelyn Waugh was also referencing H.G.Wells in the process. The timeline would certainly fit, and any story by Wells would have been a well-known and referenced one at the time that Brideshead was written.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +2

      I'm fond of that book. Waugh is a beautiful writer and very funny too when he wants to be.

  • @makeletsomakara-xc5ru
    @makeletsomakara-xc5ru Год назад +1

    Wow that was amazing

  • @sylhayes8152
    @sylhayes8152 4 месяца назад

    So well read

  • @sugarfalls1
    @sugarfalls1 2 года назад +1

    I am loving this story and your reading of it, Tony! It sounds familiar, did you upload it before Feb 11th? H.G. Wells wrote some great short stories that I am becoming familiar with thanks to your channel and others like it! Thanks for taking the time to read this great story! Hope you have a great week ahead!

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +1

      It was on the audio podcast before now

    • @sugarfalls1
      @sugarfalls1 2 года назад

      @@ClassicGhost Interesting 'cause I only listen on youtube. There's a harpist I'd love you to listen to and perhaps have your friends check out her channel - it's ruclips.net/user/JacquelinePollauf - I never met her, but I think she's exceptional at what she does, like you. She even gives tutorials about how to play and fix your harp! I don't play it or have one but I think she's well worth a listen. I hope she gets more subscribers.

  • @ropeburnsrussell
    @ropeburnsrussell 2 года назад +2

    If I see that door, I shall miss you all, I'm sure.

    • @itgetter9
      @itgetter9 2 года назад

      Love this comment!

  • @chiamerahcat8673
    @chiamerahcat8673 2 года назад

    Hello again Mr or should I say Count Walker. Lol
    Anyway, I really ENJOYED the Narration and story.
    Wells and I have some things in common.
    For 1, I consider myself a Socialist, however I call myself a Social Democrat. I believe STRONGLY in social programs.
    And 2, I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes, at the age of 9. At that age growing up really fast, meant realizing that my life, for the rest of my life literally lay within a tiny glass vial and syringe. As a child not an easy thing to cope with. But I learned quickly enough.
    Thank you, for the WONDERFUL Narration and Scarie!!!!!

  • @sarahthieben810
    @sarahthieben810 2 года назад

    We had the most beautiful cedar waxwing that flew straight into our sliding glass door and sat, stunned, on our deck, for quite a long time. So long that I had to remove myself to another room to stop myself from creating a problem by trying to fix it. I was just working out how to explain a wild bird adoption to my husband when it finally flew off.
    I cannot imagine how many seagulls I would have if I lived in your part of the world....

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад

      Ah but, a lovely waxwing! What a beauty.

  • @mijiyoon5575
    @mijiyoon5575 Год назад

    I was resting when this came on ...half asleep w/my cats & you said *Wells* & a mind picture of *Orson Wells* appeared. I thought I didn't know Orson Wells wrote Time machine...that did not sound correct. Then I heard an outdoor sound & I thought it was my yard cats jumping from the oak onto the ground by my window. I jumped up (we have owls here) I turned on porch light & it was deer ... wild deer in the yard everywhere ... that's alright. Then I realized it was *HG Wells* not Orson Wells...I'm getting my Wells confused *THX Tony* you are always available day or night ... 🤔

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад

      Too many Wellses. Now orson had a good voice. And Richard burton! I should do a list of my favourite voices

  • @KayBacci
    @KayBacci Месяц назад

    I think we all have a childhood vision of Paradise, the Garden of Eden or similar fantasy but what we really long for is a return to the womb, when we had no responsibilties and no worries. Being born is bloody, painful and traumatic for both mother and child. We resist being born into a cold, harsh world, but we retain a memory of the safe, warm, comfortable womb. We then suffer a sense of guilt, when we wonder what we did, what terrible sins we committed, to be so cruelly ejected from Paradise.

  • @violetfemme411
    @violetfemme411 2 года назад

    It’s 4am here and I haven’t slept so of course I had to come here to stay sane (debatable) And I remembered a story I read long ago and thought I’d run it by you. It’s definitely one of a kind. Clive Barker is the author and the title is “In the Hills, the Cities”. Hope all is well with you and yours. We still have wayyyy too much snow on the ground for my liking. Cheers💜

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +1

      +Violet Femme i debated about reading that one this month. The Clive barker

    • @violetfemme411
      @violetfemme411 2 года назад

      @@ClassicGhost Great minds etc? That would be fabulous 👍

  • @KayBacci
    @KayBacci Месяц назад

    Wells lived for a few years in Surrey, in Woking. 'The War of the Worlds' begins with the landing of the Martian spaceships on Horsell Common, just outside the town. In Woking Town Centre, there is a reconstruction of the spaceship. The unnamed narrator escapes Woking and refers to other Surrey towns, such as Weybridge and Walton, until he manages to make his way to London, to Primrose Hill.

  • @timelordvictorious
    @timelordvictorious 2 года назад

    Does remind me of the myth of how good childhood is.Then As you get older you realise childhood if often exaggerated or maid easy for you.very interesting.

  • @gohboy56
    @gohboy56 2 года назад +3

    Haven't listened yet( had to finish with my dear Jasper 😄) but just to split a hair...is it a Hole or a Door in the wall?

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +1

      Door. I was influenced by a pub near waterloo station i used to frequent

  • @GradKat
    @GradKat 2 года назад +4

    Well is it the Door in the Wall or the Hole in the Wall, Tony? This could be significant; I think we should be told.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +3

      The Hole in The Wall is where I used to drink.

    • @janetcw9808
      @janetcw9808 2 года назад +1

      @@ClassicGhost In Dumfries, or? 🤔

  • @doc2146
    @doc2146 Год назад

    Thanks!

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  9 месяцев назад

      Sorry I didn't thank you immediately. Thank you very much! Very generous. Thank you

  • @Shineon83
    @Shineon83 5 месяцев назад

    ….The fact that the door always appears just when he’s being offered something important (worldly) brings up the quote:
    “What profit it a man if he gain the whole world, yet lose his soul?”…..”The door” represents faith.

  • @dismith73
    @dismith73 2 года назад

    Good one

  • @ruthwalton3457
    @ruthwalton3457 2 года назад

    A Kentish man of Kent 😜🥰😆
    Thank you 🥰
    Ps what waffle 🧐

  • @johnryan3913
    @johnryan3913 2 года назад

    Tony, I think you would be perfect reading something by Charles Williams. I don't know his short fiction but his novel.,"War In Heaven'" (1930) is a dazzling horror story that is somehow witty and fantastical as well.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +1

      Yes, I quite fancy doing some Charles Williams. Of course I've read pretty much all the fiction of the other Inklings, but not so much of his.

    • @johnryan3913
      @johnryan3913 2 года назад

      @@ClassicGhost War In Heaven, his funniest and most creepy as well.

  • @Bbergster
    @Bbergster 2 года назад +1

    I’m from Kent in Washington state. So, definitely Kentish! Funny he was a prolific womanizer, Wells….. I just stumbled upon his photo and was surprised by his look. Handsome cad. Didn’t match with the crazy books.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад +1

      he was a rock star before there were rock stars

    • @Bbergster
      @Bbergster 2 года назад

      So does ole HG fall under the rake category? I didn’t me that about u. I just go around referring to people as rakesh rouges. If they ask how I am, I say, “decently reasonable or reasonably decent.” Love the wordplay.

  • @marymary5494
    @marymary5494 Год назад

    You have been gifted with your voice. I’m trying to place your accent, somewhere in the north west Is my guess.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Год назад

      Yes . You are right. Very north and very west. West Cumbria

  • @denisegiannakis5667
    @denisegiannakis5667 8 месяцев назад

    It reminds me of a story by Daphne du Maurier called Man on the Strand....?

  • @marymary5494
    @marymary5494 Год назад +1

    👌💕

  • @nancyM1313
    @nancyM1313 2 года назад +1

    ❤🙂❤

  • @LixieHe
    @LixieHe Месяц назад

    ain't no way this is horror- I study this short story for A Level literature-😭😭😭

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  Месяц назад

      +@LixieHe Remember this isn’t a ‘horror’ channel . It’s a classic ghost stories channel that I extend to all ‘supernatural’ literature

  • @bethcastagnoli2911
    @bethcastagnoli2911 2 года назад

    FYI: my sweatshirt is holding up nicely 😎

  • @cheeboolay548
    @cheeboolay548 2 года назад

    I dont understand the use of language in the story at all. What should I do?

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад

      Maybe you could get a copy of the text and work through it? Might be easier than by ear

  • @grannykiminalaska
    @grannykiminalaska 2 года назад +2

    Waffle on

  • @JennyLane8666
    @JennyLane8666 Год назад +2

    Absolutely beautiful. I was riveted the whole way through. So happy I discovered your channel!

  • @ourdictatorship
    @ourdictatorship 2 года назад

    What an infantile name, "woo woo." So glad I left that ridiculous movement behind. It's a recipe for runaway, unchecked pride. At any rate the story seems like an allegory for imagination and how the rules of even success in the drab, corporate Victorian world increasingly blocked out imagination and freedom and encouraged many a loss of sanity (that and lead, at least), and the intense value of this gift our modern adulthood is designed to eclipse from so many "dreamers and men of vision."
    The Shire is, IIRC, based on Tolkien's happiest memories of rural England; the houses built in the hills for neolithic people who (because of poor nutrition) were smaller are of course famously located up in Scotland, I believe.

    • @ClassicGhost
      @ClassicGhost  2 года назад

      Dr Raspberry, i believe E F benson's Between the lights has more to say on this matter

  • @marymary5494
    @marymary5494 2 года назад

    👌💕