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Classic Ghost Stories

Episode 28 The Corner Shop by Cynthia Asquith

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9 • 686 Ratings

🗓️ 3 January 2020

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Lady Cynthia AsquithLady Cynthia Asquith, born Charteris in 1887 in Wiltshire, England was an English aristocrat, best now known for her diaries and ghost stories. Her father was Hugo Richard Chatteris the 11th Earl of Wemyss which is a place in Fife in Scotland.Lady Cynthia Asquith married Herbert Asquith who was the son of the British prime minister. Lady Cynthia was also  well-connected in British literary circles: — a friend of DH Lawrence’s, she was also the secretary to JM Barrie who is most famously the author of Peter Pan. She worked with Barrie until he died in 1937 and he left her the bulk of his estate. Lady Cynthia was also a friend of another female writer of ghost stories LP Hartley. In terms of the ghost stories, as well as her own she became famous for being the editor of a whole series of anthologies put out by the Publisher’s Pan as The Ghost Book.The story which I have just read The Corner Shop is included in Roald Dahl’s anthology of ghost stories. In the introduction to that book, Roald Dahl says that he read hundreds of ghost stories and most of them were rubbish. He only included the ones he thinks are good in his anthology and I would agree with his choice. I like this ghost story by Cynthia Asquith. I like the evocation of the cold London winter’s night in the fog, with the hero stumbling into a candlelit curio shop. She paints the picture very well.In fact, I think that this story has many of the classic elements of a good ghost story. I'm writing a little article for the website on what I think makes a good ghost story as I'm reading so many of them at the moment. Certainly one of the key elements in a ghost story is the environment and we see  that in the cold foggy winter night, which is both hostile and cuts off the hero from the normal world. There is also an essential requirement in that the protagonist must end up somewhere quite otherworldly. In earlier fiction this was the Gothic Castle, but in the Corner Shop, the antique shop itself serves as the Gothic location. These locations have to be both terrible and enchanting and that’s certainly the case.A classic ghost story must also have a moral message. The message in this story isn't hidden at all it, and it is is that if you have a stroke of good luck you mustn't keep it to yourself! Play fair old man!Here the protagonist’s good luck and moral sense enables the ghost to rest in peace ultimately and so serves the moral purpose of the story. We often read that ghosts will wander until the task is concluded, and so here, as the finder of the frog gives half the money ultimately to charity, the ghost feels his guilt is resolved.The final thing I think that Asquith does well is that she misdirects the reader. But she does it in a way that the reader is probably guessing the outcome before the protagonist does so that allows us as readers to feel that we are very clever. We are probably guessing long before our hero that the old man is not in fact the caretaker, even though Asquith shapes the story to keep up the pretense right until the end. Until in fact the final sentence where it is that the ghost is revealed, although we possibly guessed it a little while before that. So another nice ghost story for the first week in January. I hope you enjoyed listening to it as much as I enjoyed reading it and I will be back with you next week to deliver another ghost story.http://ghostpod.org (ghostpod.org)Classic Ghost Stories Podcasthttps://www.patreon.com/barcud (Patreon)https://ko-fi.com/tonywalker (Kofi)Music by https://theheartwoodinstitute.bandcamp.com/album/witch-phase-four (Heartwood Institute)https://www.patreSupport 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

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0:00.0

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.4

Everybody come back, isn't that so?

0:14.4

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

0:17.7

How do the dead come back, mother?

0:20.0

What's the secret? The Corner Shop by Cynthia Asquith.

0:28.9

Peter Wood's Executors found their task a very easy one.

0:33.5

He had left his affairs in perfect order.

0:36.6

The only surprise yielded by his methodical writing table,

0:40.5

was a sealed envelope on which was written,

0:43.7

not wishing to be bothered by well-meaning research societies,

0:47.5

I have never shown the enclosed to anyone.

0:50.5

But after my death, all are welcome to read what, to the best of my knowledge, is a true story.

0:58.0

The manuscript which bore a date three years previously to the death of the writer was as follows.

1:05.0

I have long wished to record an experience of my youth.

1:08.0

I won't attempt any explanations. I draw no conclusions. I merely narrate

1:13.7

certain events. One foggy evening at the end of a day of enforced idleness in my chambers,

1:21.0

I had just been called to the bar, I was rather dejectedly walking back to my lodgings when my

1:26.7

attention was drawn to the brightly

1:28.1

lit window of a shop. Seeing the word antiques on its signboard and remembering that I owed

1:34.3

a wedding present to a lover of bric-a-brac, I grasped the handle of the green door, opening

1:39.7

with one of those cheerful jingle-jangle bells it admitted me into a large rambling premises,

1:45.8

thickly crowded with all the traditional treasure and trash of a curiosity shop.

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