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Classic Ghost Stories

Episode 30: The Housekeeper by Marjorie Bowen

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 18 January 2020

⏱️ 42 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Marjorie BowenMarjorie Bowen was the  nom de plume of Margaret Gabrielle Vere Long, born Campbell. Marjorie Bowen was born in 1885 in Hampshire, England, and lived a very interesting life, especially in a time when women were generally expected to be confined to the kitchen or  other minor supporting roles.Unfortunately her father was an alcoholic and abandoned the family and the was eventually found dead on the street in London. There must've been some money in the family, and those of us who are English are ever conscious to subtle indicators of social class. For example, working-class Englishwomen are never called ‘Gabrielle Vere Long’.  Another clue to the fact that she came of refined stock was the fact that she studied at the Slade School of Art and later in Paris. I was about to say that working-class people did not study at fine art schools when I remembered my own grandfather ,who was an Irish immigrant, in fact went to an art school in Edinburgh just after the First World War.In any case, Bowen was a talented writer. Even though she married a Sicilian (who died of tuberculosis) and then in Englishman named Long (who survived) , it was Bowen who supported the family through her writing. Her first novel The Viper of Milan was published in 1906. Her work was prolific and she produced over 150 published items and she seems to have liked lurid subject matters such as black magic and murder. All praise to her for that say I. Women have been expected to write stories about love and domestic situations and while that is well and good, why can't they write about murder andblack magic as well!This story that I've just read: The Housekeeper is from a collection called The Bishop of Hell. Although I love the title ‘The Bishop of Hell’, I prefer this story. Like the Bishop of Hell it's a period story set in a historical epoch that was on her own and Bowen makes a good job of creating authentic sounding dialogue. I think she also is brilliant at conjuring characters; and  though neither Beau Sekforde, his evil wife the Countess, or even the ghost Jane Sekforde, come out very sympathetically, they may not be sympathetic but they are strong and memorable.In constructing the story we see how she drops the scar on the ghost’s cheek early on when The Countess sees the ghost and doesn’t know who she is, and neither do we at that point, and then then explains the scar at the end causing us we as readers give a gasp of final understanding! Nothing suggests until the end that Beau Sekforde murdered his wife, but when we find out that there is a bottle of poison that the ghost has significantly tidied up, we are not surprised, and we marry that with our prior assessment of Beau Sekforde as a bounder and a cad and are not surprised to find him a murderer.The ghost does what ghosts often do and sets the moral order straight, and murderer is punished  I think Marjorie Bowen writes very well. Her prose is strong, her characters vivid, her dialogue convincing, and her story construction is admirable, but in this as in other stories in the anthology the Bishop of Hell I think the weak point is actually the supernatural elementEven so, I hope I enjoyed reading the story very much, and I hope you enjoyed listening to it.LinksWebsitehttps://ghostpod.org (https://ghostpod.org)Musichttps://theheartwoodinstitute.bandcamp.com/album/witch-phase-four (Heartwood Institute)Patronage & Supporthttps://ko-fi.com/tonywalker (Donate a Coffee)https://www.patreon.com/barcud (Become a Patreon)https://www.patreon.com/barcud (Support the show) (https://www.patreon.com/barcud)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

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0:00.0

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.4

Everybody come back.

0:12.5

Isn't that so?

0:14.4

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

0:17.7

How do the dead come back, mother?

0:20.0

What's the secret? The housekeeper by Marjorie Bowen

0:23.6

Mr. Robert Seckford, a rather damaged man of fashion, entered with a lurching step his mansion

0:34.6

near the tavern of the Black Bull High Hoban. He was still known as

0:39.7

Bo Seckford, and was still dressed in the extreme of the fashion of this year 1710, with wide

0:46.1

brocade skirts, an immense peruke, and a quantity of lace and paste ornaments that were nearly

0:52.2

as brilliant as diamonds.

0:55.4

About Mr. Seckford himself was a good deal of this spurious gorgeousness.

1:00.3

From a little distance he still looked the magnificent man he once had been, but a closer

1:05.7

view showed him ruggled with powder and rouge like a woman. Heavy about the eyes and jaw, livid in the

1:13.6

cheeks, a handsome man yet, but one deeply marked by years of idleness, good living, and the cheap

1:21.6

dissipations of a nature at once brutal and effeminate. In the well-shaped features and dark eyes there was not a contour nor a shadow

1:32.3

that did not help towards a presentiment of a type vicious and worthless,

1:37.3

yet he had an air of breeding of gallantry and grace

1:41.5

that had hitherto never failed to win him facile admiration and help him

1:46.9

over awkward places in his career. This air was also spurious, spurious as the diamonds at his throat

1:54.9

and in his shoe-buckles. He was not even of gentle birth. The obscurity that hung around his origin was proof of the shame

2:02.4

he felt at the dismal beginning of a career that had once been so brilliant. He entered his

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