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Classic Ghost Stories

Episode 20: The Kit-Bag by Algernon Blackwood

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9 • 686 Ratings

🗓️ 7 December 2019

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Algernon BlackwoodAlgernon Blackwood was an English writer born in 1869 who ended up as a broadcaster on the radio and TV. His writing was very well received at this time and critics loved him. Even the great American author of weird tales HP Lovecraft cited Blackwood is one of the masters of the craft.Blackwood came from a well-to-do family and was privately educated despite that he was quite an adventurous man. He was interested in Hinduism as a young boy and his career was varied. For example, he ran a dairy farm in Canada and also hotel in the country. It became a newspaper reporter in New York City and was also a bartender and a model and also a violin teacher!All of this time, though he was always writing. He liked being outdoors and his stories often feature the outdoors. He was also interested in the occult and was a member of the hermetic order of the Golden Dawn along with such other characters is Arthur Machen and WB Yeats and Alisteir Crowley.I chose this story The Kitbag because it fitted in with the Christmas period we are approaching but the kitbag is not Blackwoods most famous story. His two most famous stories are The Willows which features a trip down the River Danube in central Europe and The Wendigo which is set obviously in North America.The Kitbag is a simple story in terms of its structure. In this case rather than the protagonist being the victim of his own wickedness as is often the case in horror stories Johnson here is a complete innocent. His only crime is to have partaken in the trial of a notorious murderer. Blackwood portrays Johnson as a likeable if somewhat naive chap who has been shocked by the horrible things he has heard. He has a good relationship with his boss whom he asks to lend him his kitbag when he plans a very innocent and refreshing Christmas break in the Alps skiing in the bright frosty air and dancing with red cheeked girls in the apres-ski.By an unfortunate error Johnson’s boss has sent the wrong kitbag and instead of the fine new one, he is given the exhibit that the murderer cut up the victim and stuffed them into. Johnson ends up with this stained monstrosity, which he only seems to find dirty and odd after he has long packed his socks and skates. It seems that the spirit of the murderer comes with the kitbag. We find out at the end that the supernatural happenings only occurred after the murderer. unbeknownst to Johnson, killed himself.The story is very simple but what Blackwood does very well is ratchet up the mounting tension of the old monster in the house scenario. We hear, and we become aware that something threatening is there but we never quite get a glimpse of it until the very end.The great ghost writer MR James ,who was also an admirer of Algernon Blackwood, talked about the importance of subtlety in ghost stories. James is very much against being too blatant and showing too much. I think we see this still in modern horror stories and I'm aware that the movie alien use this to great effect at the beginning and a different part of that movie series where by the monstrous alien is suspected and heard but not directly seen. I recently watched a film called The Ritual set in a forest in Norway and again until quite late in the film we went we didn’t see the monster. When the monster is just in your imagination it is far more terrifying than when it is portrayed on the screen.That’s it for this week. More Christmas ghosts to come.https://tonywalker.substack.com/ (Sign up to Our Blog For Free Stuff PLUS Exclusive Episodes for $5 Subscribers)Support the showVisit us here: www.ghostpod.orgBuy me a coffee if you're glad I do this: https://ko-fi.com/tonywalkerIf you really want to help me, become a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/barcudMusic by The Heartwood Institute: https://bit.ly/somecomeback Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.4

That's something come back.

0:12.5

Isn't that so?

0:14.4

You tried to get into the locked drawer today, didn't you?

0:17.4

How do that they'd come back, mother?

0:20.0

What's the secrets?

0:21.2

The Kitbag by Algernon Blackwood.

0:25.5

When the words not guilty sounded through the crowded courtroom that dark December afternoon,

0:32.1

Arthur Wilbraham, the great criminal K.C., and leader for the triumphant defense,

0:36.9

was represented by his junior,

0:39.4

but Johnston, his private secretary, carried the verdict across to his chambers like lightning.

0:45.3

It's what we expected, I think, said the barrister without emotion, and personally, I'm glad

0:50.3

the case is over. There was no particular sign of pleasure that his defense of John Turk, the murderer,

0:56.8

on a plea of insanity, had been successful, for no doubt he felt, as everybody who had watched

1:01.6

the case felt, that no man had ever better deserved the gallows.

1:06.0

I'm glad, too, said Johnston.

1:08.1

He had sat in the court for ten days watching the face of the man who had

1:11.5

carried out with callous detail, one of the most brutal and cold-blooded murders of recent years.

1:18.1

The council glanced up at his secretary. They were more than an employer and employed. For

1:23.1

family and other reasons, they were friends. Ah, I remember, yes, he said with a kind smile,

1:29.1

and you want to get away for Christmas. You're going to skate and ski in the Alps, aren't you?

1:33.7

If I was your age, I'd come with you. Johnson laughed shortly. He was a young man of 26 with a

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